Red Bluff Daily News

January 13, 2015

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COLLEGEBASKETBALL Michigan vs. Ohio State:4 p.m., ESPN. Butler vs. Seton Hall: 4p.m., FS1. Oklahoma State vs. Kansas: 4 p.m., ESPN2. Arkansas vs. Tennessee: 4 p.m., ESPNU. Missouri vs. Kentucky: 6p.m., ESPN. Georgetown vs. DePaul: 6 p.m., FS1. Miami vs. Duke: 6p.m., ESPN2. UNLV vs. Boise State: 8p.m., ESPNU. NBA BASKETBALL Golden State Warriors at Utah Jazz: 6p.m., CSNBA. Dallas Mavericks at Sacra- mento Kings: 7p.m., CSN. NHL HOCKEY Minnesota Wild at Pittsburgh Penguins: 4p.m., NBCSN. San Jose Sharks at Arizona Coyotes: 6p.m., CSN. Ontheair Mercy boys and girls both picked up wins at Fridays Homecoming. The Mercy boys beat Burney 58-49. The Lady Warriors were down to just four players during the fourth quar- ter, but held on for a 46- 44 win over Burney. Laura Keane finally got back onto the court after injury and was a key com- ponent in the victory with five points. Cheyenne Johnson led Mercy with 14 points. Marissa Starman had eight points and Daphne Nandino, Mary Dimmagio and Tasha Pimentel each had five points. Madaline Flynn added four points. SOCCER The Red Bluff boys and girls both picked up wins Friday against Foothill. Mikenna Corry had both goals as the Lady Spartans beat visiting Foothill. 2-0. Jordan Vazquez and Alyssa Mena added as- sists. Cheyenne Houghtby had five assists for the clean sheet. The boys won 4-2 at Foothill. Roundup FROM PAGE 1 year after taking the 145 di- vision, the Bobcats' stand- out senior won the 152 weight class with a 7-5 de- cision over Del Oro's Tan- ner Robinson. Wyckoff's right ankle was hurt during the match, forcing an injury timeout. "When I went to step out, I just happened to roll on it," said Wyckoff, who improved to 25-1 on the season despite the ankle getting twisted again late. That limited the two- time state finalist's custom- ary aggressiveness — he led 4-1 in the first round with a takedown and reversal. Late escapes led to Wyck- off's winning margin de- spite him fighting off Rob- inson as the seconds ticked off much like Jeppson tried with Maximov. While Maximov trailed for much of the match after Jeppson had his own take- down in the first round, he nearly evened the score in the second round when he started on top, driving Jeppson around the mat. He finally broke through in the third that included a two-point reversal when he started in the down po- sition. "I just gave all I had," Maximov said. His victor y even prompted Leal to say his award for outstanding heavyweight should have gone to his teammate. "He had a great match there in the finals. It was awesome watching it," Leal said. As dramatic as Maxi- mov's win, Leal's was anti- climactic. He got a fast two- point takedown and the pin came quickly after it as Ber- reyesa was stunned. "I don't know if he was ready. I was right out of the gate trying to shoot," Leal said. Del Oro easily won the team title with 302 points thanks to three cham- pions and eight finalists among the 14 divisions. Landon McBride (120), Jan- sen Engelbrecht (126) and Zach Ruybal (132) gave the school from Loomis three straight individual titles. Benicia was second with 244.5 points, and Liberty of Brentwood was third at 166. Spanish Springs of Sparks, Nev., took fourth at 162.5, and host Chico tied Las Lomas of Walnut Creek for fifth with 161. Corning took ninth over- all with 110 points, earn- ing the small-school ti- tle among the field of 46 schools. Gavin Nye, who was third at 285, was the Cardinals' top finisher. The tournament's 46 teams was as an increase from the 39 that competed in the event's debut last year to honor Rios' life and contributions to the sport with a tournament. "I knew Joe pretty well, and the fact that I can be at this tournament that's held for him and to be able to win, it's pretty nice," Wyck- off said of Rios, a longtime supporter of wrestling who worked with many wres- tlers in the area over sev- eral years. Wyckoff helped Par- adise finish 14th with 85 points, and Pleasant Valley was 19th with 59 points, led by Michael Briscoe's third-place fin- ish at 126. Wrestling FROM PAGE 1 son record with the Jag- uars and made the playoffs in 2005 and 2007, winning one playoff game in his sec- ond postseason trip. He was fired with five games remaining in the 2011 sea- son. He has extensive NFL experience, having played 12 seasons as a linebacker and coaching with New Or- leans, Baltimore and Caro- lina before getting the head coaching job with the Jag- uars. The Raiders are seek- ing a full-time coach after firing Dennis Allen four games into last season. Like Del Rio, Allen was hired in Oakland in 2012 after a stint as defensive coordi- nator in Denver. But un- like Allen, Del Rio has ex- perience as an NFL head coach, which could appeal to Davis. Oakland has had eight coaches since the start of the 2003 season. The Raid- ers have not had a winning record or playoff berth in that span as the constant turnover has contributed to the struggles on the field. There could be pressure on the Raiders to make a decision soon. Raiders FROM PAGE 1 DA VI D Z AL UB OW SKI — T HE A SS OC IA TE D P RE SS F IL E Ja ck D el R io w ill b e t he fi rs t c an di da te t o h av e a s ec on d in te rv iew wi th t he O ak la nd R ai der s f or t he ir h ea d c oa ch in g jo b a s t he t wo -w ee k s ea rc h c ou ld b e n ea ri n g a c on cl us io n. By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press ENGLEWOOD, COLO. Coach John Fox and the Denver Broncos are parting ways following the team's latest playoff meltdown. Fox won the AFC West all four of his years in Den- ver, but each of those sea- sons ended in ugly fashion in the playoffs, culminating with Sunday's 24-13 loss to Indianapolis. Asked after the game about a pregame report that he could be available if the Broncos suffered a loss to the Colts, Fox didn't shoot it down, saying, "I don't make those decisions. I don't con- trol that. My intentions are to be a Denver Bronco and have been since I got here." Fox might already have something in the works with another team. Nei- ther Fox nor John Elway would say what was dis- cussed Monday when they met other than it was time to split up. "It became clear that it was best for both the Den- ver Broncos and Coach Fox to move on and make this change," Elway said in a statement. So, Fox is out after going 49-22 in Denver, including the playoffs, following a 73- 71 record in nine years with the Carolina Panthers. The Broncos went 8-8 in Fox's first year, when Tebowmania was in full pitch. The stakes were raised when Denver won the Peyton Manning sweep- stakes and replaced Tim Tebow in 2012. Denver went 38-10 in the regular season with Man- ning but the Broncos were upset twice at home in the divisional round and got up- ended by the Seahawks 43-8 in last year's Super Bowl. Elway thanked Fox for helping "establish a posi- tive, winning culture for this team and (he) deserves a lot of credit for the Bron- cos' turnaround," but added "there is still work to be done" to win a Super Bowl. "Our organization is fully dedicated to reaching Pat Bowlen's high standards for his team as we begin the process of finding the next head coach to lead the Den- ver Broncos." Fox characterized his meeting with Elway as pro- ductive and honest and the two "mutually agreed that the timing was right for this decision." "Although we came up short of our ultimate goal, I am proud of our team's many accomplishments during these last four years. I truly appreciate all of the hard work put in by ev- ery player, coach and staff member within this organi- zation," Fox said in a state- ment. "It was an honor to coach the Denver Broncos, a first-class franchise with great fans and a winning tradition." "I am eager to continue my coaching career and look forward to the oppor- tunities that lie ahead," Fox added. Fox became the only coach in NFL history to win a dozen consecutive di- visional road games on his way to an unprecedented four straight AFC West ti- tles in Denver. But the goal when Man- ning came on board was Su- per Bowl trophies. Instead, Manning is 2-3 in the play- offs with the Broncos and all his three seasons have ended in ugly fashion after tying for the best record in the NFL during the regular season. NFL Fox out a er 4 AFC West titles, 4 playoff nosedives Scoreboard Football NFLPLAYOFFS ConferenceChampionships Sunday,Jan.18 Dallas-GreenBaywinneratSeattle, 12:05 p.m. (FOX) Indianapolis-Denver winner at New England, 3:40 p.m. (CBS) ProBowl Sunday,Jan.25 At Glendale, Ariz. Team Irvin vs. Team Carter, 5 p.m. (ESPN) SuperBowl Sunday,Feb.1 At Glendale, Ariz. AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 3:30 p.m. (NBC) COLLEGEFOOTBALLFBS BOWLGLANCE Monday,Jan.12 CollegeFootballChampionship AtArlington,Texas Ohio State 42, Oregon 20 Saturday,Jan.17 East-WestShrineClassic AtSt.Petersburg,Fla. East vs. West, 1 p.m. (NFLN) NFLPACollegiateBowl AtCarson,Calif. National vs. American, 1 p.m. (ESPN2) Saturday,Jan.24 SeniorBowl AtMobile,Ala. North vs. South, 1 p.m. (NFLN) COLLEGEFOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIPWINNERS Jan. 12, 2015 _ Ohio St. 42, Oregon 20 Jan. 6, 2014 _ Florida St. 34, Auburn 31 Jan. 7, 2013 _ Alabama 42, Notre Dame 14 Jan. 9, 2012 _ Alabama 21, LSU 0 Jan. 10, 2011 _ Auburn 22, Oregon 19 Jan. 7, 2010 _ Alabama 37, Texas 21 Jan. 8, 2009 _ Florida 24, Oklahoma 14 Jan. 7, 2008 _ LSU 38, Ohio State 24 Jan. 8, 2007 _ Florida 41, Ohio State 14 Jan. 4, 2006 Rose Bowl _ Texas 41, South- ern Cal-x 38 Jan. 1, 2005 Orange Bowl _ Southern Cal-x 55, Oklahoma 19 Jan. 4, 2004 Sugar Bowl _ LSU 21, Oklahoma 14 Jan. 3, 2003 Fiesta Bowl _ Ohio St. 31, Miami 24, 2OT Jan. 3, 2002 Rose Bowl _ Miami 37, Nebraska 14 Jan. 3, 2001 Orange Bowl _ Oklahoma 13, Florida St. 2 Jan. 4, 2000 Sugar Bowl _ Florida St. 46, Virginia Tech 29 Jan. 4, 1999 Fiesta Bowl _ Tennessee 23, Florida St. 16 x-participation vacated Basketball WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB Golden State 29 5 .853 — Clippers 25 13 .658 6 Phoenix 22 18 .550 10 Sacramento 16 21 .432 14½ Lakers 12 26 .316 19 SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB Houston 27 11 .711 — Memphis 26 11 .703 ½ Dallas 26 12 .684 1 San Antonio 23 15 .605 4 New Orleans 18 19 .486 8½ NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 30 8 .789 — Oklahoma City 18 19 .486 11½ Denver 17 20 .459 12½ Utah 13 25 .342 17 Minnesota 5 31 .139 24 EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB Toronto 25 12 .676 — Brooklyn 16 22 .421 9½ Boston 13 23 .361 11½ Philadelphia 7 29 .194 17½ New York 5 35 .125 21½ SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB Atlanta 29 8 .784 — Washington 25 12 .676 4 Miami 16 21 .432 13 Charlotte 15 24 .385 15 Orlando 14 27 .341 17 CentralDivision W L Pct GB Chicago 26 13 .667 — Milwaukee 20 19 .513 6 Cleveland 19 19 .500 6½ Indiana 15 24 .385 11 Detroit 14 24 .368 11½ Sunday'sgames Atlanta 120, Washington 89 Miami 104, Clippers 90 Memphis 122, Phoenix 110,2OT Sacramento 103, Cleveland 84 Portland 106, Lakers 94 Monday'sgames Detroit 114, Toronto 111 Houston 113, Brooklyn 99 Boston 108, New Orleans 100 Orlando 121, Chicago 114 Tuesday'sgames Atlanta at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. San Antonio at Washington, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Indiana, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Golden State at Utah, 6 p.m. Dallas at Sacramento, 7 p.m. Miami at Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday'sgames Houston at Orlando, 4 p.m. San Antonio at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. New Orleans at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Memphis at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 5 p.m. Atlanta at Boston, 5 p.m. Dallas at Denver, 6 p.m. Miami at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Clippers at Portland, 7:30 p.m. NCAAMEN'STOP25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 11, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Kentucky (63) 15-0 1,623 1 2. Virginia (2) 15-0 1,561 3 3. Gonzaga 16-1 1,446 6 4. Duke 14-1 1,432 2 5. Villanova 15-1 1,358 8 6. Louisville 14-2 1,264 5 7. Wisconsin 15-2 1,200 4 8. Utah 13-2 1,185 9 9. Kansas 13-2 1,100 12 10. Arizona 14-2 1,037 7 11. Iowa St. 12-2 922 17 12. Notre Dame 15-2 903 13 13. Wichita St. 14-2 832 15 14. Maryland 15-2 801 11 15. North Carolina 12-4 719 18 16. West Virginia 14-2 627 14 17. VCU 13-3 578 20 18. Oklahoma 11-4 485 16 19. Arkansas 13-2 431 23 20. Texas 12-4 345 10 21. Seton Hall 13-3 298 19 22. Baylor 12-3 278 21 23. N. Iowa 14-2 212 — 24. Oklahoma St. 12-3 132 — 25. Wyoming 15-2 71 — Othersreceivingvotes: Ohio St. 70, Michigan St. 67, Dayton 55, Providence 17, Indiana 15, LSU 12, St. John's 10, Ala- bama 7, Georgetown 7, NC State 6, Green Bay 3, Syracuse 3, Butler 2, Oregon 2, San Diego St. 2, TCU 2, Colorado St. 1, Davidson 1, Hofstra 1, Old Dominion 1, SMU 1. BallotsOnline: http://collegebasketball. ap.org/poll NCAAWOMEN'STOP25 The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' women's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 11, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. South Carolina (28) 16-0 868 1 2. UConn (7) 14-1 846 2 3. Baylor 14-1 777 5 4. Louisville 15-1 728 6 4. Texas 13-1 728 3 6. Tennessee 14-2 722 7 7. Notre Dame 15-2 678 4 8. Maryland 13-2 583 12 9. Oregon St. 14-1 579 11 10. Kentucky 14-3 545 10 11. Texas A&M 15-3 515 9 12. North Carolina 15-2 488 8 13. Stanford 12-4 453 15 14. Arizona St. 15-1 399 18 15. Mississippi St. 18-1 341 14 16. Duke 11-5 332 13 17. Nebraska 12-3 275 19 18. Georgia 15-2 271 20 19. Princeton 17-0 178 22 20. Florida St. 15-2 168 — 21. Oklahoma St. 11-3 162 16 22. Iowa 12-3 139 17 23. Minnesota 14-2 114 23 24. Rutgers 12-4 98 24 25. Syracuse 11-5 91 21 Othersreceivingvotes: W. Kentucky 78, Chattanooga 49, Miami 41, Washington 24, South Florida 21, Iowa St. 19, North- western 18, Green Bay 14, Long Beach St. 7, St. John's 7, Seton Hall 6, California 5, DePaul 4, George Washington 2, Ohio St. 2. NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 43 27 10 6 60 121 118 Vancouver 40 23 14 3 49 113 104 San Jose 43 22 16 5 49 116 118 Los Angeles 42 19 13 10 48 119 112 Calgary 43 22 18 3 47 123 114 Arizona 41 16 21 4 36 97 136 Edmonton 43 10 24 9 29 97 145 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 41 28 9 4 60 125 93 Chicago 43 28 13 2 58 134 95 St. Louis 42 26 13 3 55 136 105 Winnipeg 43 21 14 8 50 113 109 Colorado 43 18 17 8 44 113 124 Dallas 41 18 16 7 43 126 135 Minnesota 41 18 18 5 41 111 121 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 44 27 13 4 58 143 118 Montreal 41 26 12 3 55 111 95 Detroit 42 22 11 9 53 117 106 Boston 43 22 15 6 50 113 111 Florida 40 20 11 9 49 100 105 Toronto 42 22 17 3 47 137 130 Ottawa 41 17 16 8 42 110 113 Buffalo 43 14 26 3 31 81 147 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Islanders 42 28 13 1 57 131 116 Pittsburgh 41 25 10 6 56 122 98 Washington 42 23 11 8 54 125 106 N.Y. Rangers 39 24 11 4 52 124 95 Philadelphia 43 17 19 7 41 119 129 Columbus 40 18 19 3 39 104 131 New Jersey 44 15 21 8 38 96 124 Carolina 42 13 24 5 31 88 112 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday'sgames Anaheim 5, Winnipeg 4, SO Florida 4, Edmonton 2 Chicago 4, Minnesota 1 Monday'sgames Philadelphia 7, Tampa Bay 3 Washington 2, Colorado 1 Toronto at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday'sgames Tampa Bay at Boston, 4 p.m. Detroit at Buffalo, 4 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Colorado at Carolina, 4 p.m. Edmonton at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Vancouver at Nashville, 5 p.m. Florida at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Ottawa at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. San Jose at Arizona, 6 p.m. Wednesday'sgames Montreal at Columbus, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 5 p.m. Toronto at Anaheim, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Tennis APIAINTERNATIONALRESULTS Monday At Olympic Park Tennis Centre Sydney Purse: Men, $494,310 (WT250);Women, $731,000(Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles MEN FirstRound Pablo Cuevas (6), Uruguay, def. Nicolas Almagro, Spain, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Leonardo Mayer (5), Argentina, def. Ben- jamin Becker, Germany, 7-6 (3), 6-2. Simone Bolelli, Italy, def. Marinko Mato- sevic, Australia, 6-3, 6-2. WOMEN FirstRound Ekaterina Makarova (6), Russia, def. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine, 7-6 (1), 6-2. Garbine Muguruza, Spain, def. Sara Er- rani, Italy, 6-0, 7-5. Sam Stosur, Australia, def. Lucie Safa- rova, Czech Republic, 7-6 (3), 5-7, 6-3. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, Czech Republic, def. Caroline Wozniacki (4), Denmark, 6-4, 1-1, retired. Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia, def. An- drea Petkovic, Germany, 6-1, 7-6 (5). Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain, def. Sabine Lisicki, Germany, 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (4). Peng Shuai, China, def. Anastasia Pavly- uchenkova, Russia, 1-6, 7-6 (1), 6-4. Agnieszka Radwanska (3), Poland, def. Alize Cornet, France, 6-3, 6-2. Tsvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria, def. Flavia Pennetta (8), Italy, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Dominika Cibulkova (7), Slovakia, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, 6-2, 6-2. Karolina Pliskova, Czech Republic, def. Polona Hercog, Slovenia, 6-4, 6-4. Angelique Kerber (5), Germany, def. Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, 1-6, 6-4, 6-3. Golf PGATOUR-TOURNAMENTOF CHAMPIONS Monday At Kapalua Resort, The Plantation Course Kapalua, Hawaii Purse: $5.7 million Yardage: 7.452;Par73 Final (x-won on first playoff hole) $1,140,000 x-Patrick Reed(500)....... 67-69-68-67—271 $665,000 Jimmy Walker(300)........ 67-68-67-69—271 $332,667 Jason Day(145) ................70-69-71-62—272 Russell Henley(145)........65-70-70-67—272 Hideki Matsuyama(145)70-66-66-70—272 $213,000 Sang-Moon Bae(100)..... 66-69-69-70—274 $190,000 Zach Johnson(90)............68-67-73-67—275 $175,000 Robert Streb(83) .............67-69-71-69—276 Brendon Todd(83) ...........69-67-69-71—276 $160,000 Bubba Watson(75)......... 70-69-68-70—277 $140,000 Seung-Yul Noh(65)......... 71-70-69-68—278 Ben Martin(65) ................67-72-70-69—278 Matt Jones(65) ............... 69-72-68-69—278 $110,000 Chris Kirk(56)...................68-76-73-62—279 Charley Hoffman(56) .....70-66-73-70—279 Scott Stallings(56).......... 67-70-70-72—279 $90,333 Brian Harman(53) ...........70-70-75-65—280 Matt Kuchar(53)..............68-70-74-68—280 Hunter Mahan(53) ..........71-71-69-69—280 $80,000 Chesson Hadley(51) .......70-73-68-70—281 Ryan Moore(51)............... 71-70-69-71—281 $70,667 Steven Bowditch(48)......69-73-71-69—282 Billy Horschel(48) ...........72-70-70-70—282 Kevin Streelman(48).......69-73-67-73—282 $65,000 John Senden(46).............. 68-71-73-71—283 Tim Clark(46)...................70-75-67-71—283 $61,000 Geoff Ogilvy(44)............. 72-69-74-69—284 Matt Every(44).................73-71-70-70—284 $58,000 Angel Cabrera(41)........... 71-73-72-70—286 Ben Crane(41)..................74-67-73-72—286 Nick Taylor(41).................69-73-72-72—286 $56,000 Camilo Villegas(39) ........ 71-70-71-75—287 $55,000 J.B. Holmes(38)................69-71-73-76—289 Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For Jan. 13 NFL SUNDAY Favorite Today(O/U) Underdog at Seattle 7½ (46½) Green Bay at New England 7 (53½) Indianapolis NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Indiana 10½ (197) Minnesota Atlanta 10 (193½) at Philadelphia at Washington 3 (192) San Antonio at Phoenix 6 (212½) Cleveland Golden State 8½ (202) at Utah Dallas 6½ (210½) at Sacramento at Lakers 1 (197) Miami NHL Favorite Line Underdog at N.Y. Rangers -165/+145 N.Y. Islanders at Boston -140/+120 Tampa Bay Detroit -200/+170 at Buffalo at Carolina -130/+110 Colorado at Pittsburgh -190/+165 Minnesota at Nashville -155/+135 Vancouver at St. Louis -300/+240 Edmonton at Winnipeg -145/+125 Florida at Dallas -160/+140 Ottawa San Jose -140/+120 at Arizona NCAABasketball Favorite Line Underdog at Kansas 6½ Oklahoma St. at Ohio St. 9 Michigan at Seton Hall 2½ Butler at South Carolina 4 Alabama Arkansas 3 at Tennessee at Louisville 22½ Virginia Tech at West Virginia 3 Oklahoma at Indiana 8 Penn St. VCU 2½ at Rhode Island at Virginia 17 Clemson at Syracuse 10 Wake Forest N. Iowa 8 at Bradley at Texas A&M 12 Mississippi St. at Kentucky 27 Missouri at Duke 16½ Miami Georgetown 6 at DePaul at Minnesota 3½ Iowa UConn 1 at Tulsa at Boise St. 4 UNLV at Niagara 1 Penn at Iona 16 Fairfield Transactions BASEBALL AmericanLeague BaltimoreOrioles: Agreed to terms with RHP Tommy Hunter on a one-year contract. ChicagoWhiteSox: Agreed to terms with OF Dayan Viciedo on a one-year contract. NewYorkYankees: Named Jeff Pentland hitting coach, Joe Espada third base coach and Alan Cockrell assistant hit- ting coach. Reassigned third base coach Rob Thomson to bench coach and bench coach Tony Pena to first base coach. OaklandAthletics: Agreed to terms with RHP Jesse Chavez on a one-year contract. SeattleMariners: Named Pat Listach manager of Tacoma (PCL), Aaron Reis performance coach of Bakersfield (Cal), Matt Corvo trainer of Clinton (MWL), Scott Burgett performance specialist of the AZL Mariners, and Jose Guillen coach of the DSL Mariners. NationalLeague LosAngelesDodgers: Named Scott Radinsky pitching coach and Johnny Washington coach of Oklahoma City (PCL), Matt Herges pitching coach an d L eo G arc ia c oa ch o f T uls a ( TL ), B ill Simas pitching coach and Rafael Ozuna coach of Rancho Cucamonga (Cal), Glenn Dishman pitching coach, Jay Gib- bons hitting coach and Luis Matos coach of Great Lakes (MWL), John Shoemaker manager, Bobby Cuellar pitching coach, Darryl Brinkley hitting coach and Fumi Ishibashi coach of Ogden (Pioneer), Jack McDowell manager, Greg Sabat pitching coach, Aaron Bates hitting coach and Gil Velazquez coach of the AZL Dodgers, Clayton McCullough minor league field coordinator, Damon Mashore minor league hitting coordinator, Brady Clark minor league outfield/baserunning co- ordinator, and Kremlin Martinez lower- level minor league pitching rover. PhiladelphiaPhillies: Agreed to terms with RHP Jeanmar Gomez on a minor league contract. PittsburghPirates: Named Jamey Carroll special assistant to the baseball opera- tions staff. TexasLeague FriscoRoughriders: Named Jason Dambach executive vice president and general manager. AmericanAssociation JoplinBlasters: Named Carlos Lezcano manager. LaredoLemurs: Signed INF Nick Giar- raputo and 1B AJ Kirby-Jones. AtlanticLeague LongIslandDucks: Signed INF Dan Lyons. FrontierLeague FlorenceFreedom: Signed 1B/Of Ryan Solberg to a contract extension. RockfordAviators: Named Jeff Brooks hitting coach and John Foster pitching coach. TraverseCityBeachBums: Signed 1B B.J. Robinson. BASKETBALL MemphisGrizzlies: Traded F Tayshaun Prince and a projected future first-round draft pick to Boston and G/F Quincy Pon- dexter and a 2015 second-round draft pick to New Orleans. Boston sent F Jeff Green to Memphis. New Orleans sent G Russ Smith and a 2014 second-round draft pick to Memphis and G Austin Riv- ers to Boston. MiamiHeat: Signed G Tyler Johnson to a 10-day contract. NBADevelopmentLeague RioGrandeValleyVipers: Acquired G/F Glen Rice Jr. Released G Tristan Carey. Traded the returning player rights to G Maalik Wayns to Delaware for the returning player rights to C Hamady N'diaye. FOOTBALL NationalFootballLeague BuffaloBills: Named Rex Ryan coach. DallasCowboys: Signed CB Robert Steeples, OT John Wetzel, Wrs Reggie Dunn and Chris Boyd and Lbs Troy Davis and Will Smith to future contracts. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2015 2 B

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