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MLBBASEBALL Spring Training, Pittsburgh Pirates vs. To- ronto Blue Jays:10a.m.,MLB. Spring Training, Cleveland Indians vs. Cincin- nati Reds: 1p.m., MLB. COLLEGE MEN'S BASKETBALL Iowa vs. Indiana: 4p.m., ESPN. Georgetown vs. Butler: 4p.m., FS1. North Carolina vs. Georgia Tech: 4p.m., ESPNU. Kentucky vs. Georgia: 6p.m., ESPN. Villanova vs. Creighton: 6p.m., FS1. West Virginia vs. Kansas: 6p.m., ESPN2. Texas A&M vs. Florida: 6p.m., ESPNU. NHL HOCKEY Buffalo Sabres at Tampa Bay Lightning: 4:30 p.m., NBCSN. SOCCER EPL Soccer: noon, NBCSN. Ontheair the Lady Cardinals did Thursday night, coming from behind to advance to their own semifinal. Corning (16-11) will travel to Susanville to face third-seeded Lassen (19-6) at 7 p.m. The Cardinals are 1-2 against Lassen this sea- son, but won the most re- cent meeting 57-47 Feb. 13 in Corning. The Grizzlies beat West Valley 72-51 in their quar- terfinal game. The other semifinal has fourth-seeded Sutter visit- ing top-seed Anderson. SHASTA 65, RED BLUFF 54, OT The Spartans head scratcher of a season came to heart-breaking close Friday. Red Bluff got off to a bad start and trailed 15-2 before turning up their game. The Spartans went on a 19-2 run and were leading by four points at halftime. Red Bluff was leading by two points with 19 points remaining in the game, when Cory Twitchell made both ends of a 1-and-1 sit- uation to expand the lead to four points. Shasta then hit a con- tested 3-pointer with 8 seconds remaining. Twitchell once again made two free throws to push the Spartans lead back to three points. Even that wasn't enough. The Spartans just barely missed stealing the ball at half court, but Shasta was able to work it to the cor- ner in the waning seconds. Joseph Bosetti missed blocking the 3-point at- tempt by inches, but the ball soared over his out- stretched arm and swished into the bucket as the buzzer sounded to send the game from overtime. From there Shasta took over. "I am at a loss why these guys didn't get their de- served rewards," coach Stan Twitchell said. The Spartans opened the season 8-2 and won the Argonaut QB Club Tourna- ment in Jackson. Red Bluff continued to play well in the Eastern Athletic League, but strug- gled to win tight games. Enterprise beat the Spartans by one point and a second time in overtime. Shasta beat Red Bluff twice in the closing sec- onds. Red Bluff also lost tight games to Foothill and Pleasant Valley that could have went either way. Twitchell said despite that adversity the Spar- tans stayed together and prepared well all season. They even got a well- deserved road victory at Chico to close the regular season. Red Bluff finished 14-12. The D-III semifinals have Shasta visiting top seed Enterprise and Foot- hill hosting Oroville. Basketball FROM PAGE 1 succeed. It's awesome." Nick Maximov (184) joined Leal as an individ- ual champion, getting his own major decision at 12-1 over West Valley's Boni Es- cobar. "I think we wrestled as well as we possibly could," said Rollins, whose team finished with 208.5 points, clearing the field by 35.5. "There were no break- downs this weekend." Orland yielded three champions in Yonathan Esquivel (115), Layne Em- brey (147) and Steven Ab- bott (172) and Pleasant Val- ley produced two in con- secutive weight classes with Bailey Mora (122) and Michael Briscoe (128). "I was so happy for Bai- ley. It was awesome," said Briscoe, a two-time sec- tion champion joined by his workout partner of the past three years in Mora. "I'm happy to have a drill partner go to state with me." Gridley's Jonathon Vil- lapania bested Briscoe's teammate, Cameron Mat- zen, for a 6-5 victory in the 162 final. Esquivel won his 115 ti- tle when Sutter's Gage Kim let him escape in the third round when they were tied at 2, and Esquivel held him off from there in a bout that was beset by injury time- outs as both combatants were left bloodied with Kim's nose bleeding mul- tiple times and Esquivel re- ceiving a cut above his left eye as both had to resort to being masked by ban- dages. "I just kept focused, kept going," Esquivel said. Mora, a third seed, had no problem taking care of Sutter's Michael Adams, the No. 1-ranked wrestler at 122. Mora scored a sec- ond-round takedown and then padded his lead in the third for a 9-1 major decision. Briscoe was systematic in his 7-0 decision over Chico's Ryan Rudkin, one of the five finalists for the Panthers. Embrey led Chico's Da- vid Leyva 6-2 in the 147 fi- nal when it was stopped because of a left shoulder injury to the Panther, giv- ing the Orland grappler the win by injury default. Leyva already was wearing a mask because of a blood- ied, broken nose suffered in the early going. Villapania led PV's Mat- zen 4-3 after two rounds. The Viking escaped to tie it at 4, but Villapania re- sponded with a takedown, one that Matzen escaped from but could not get the offensive points he needed as the Gridley senior took the title. The highest scoring fi- nal ended with Abbott se- curing the Trojans' third title thanks to a 17-12 deci- sion over Chester's Javier Contreras. Abbott fell be- hind at first but recovered in plenty of time and took control with a three-point near fall. He kept adding to his lead, which grew to 17-9 at one point. Maximov beat Esco- bar 6-2 at the D-I finals last week, but this time he dominated the 184 cham- pionship, leading 5-0 in the first round, 9-0 after the second and 12-0 in the third before finishing the major decision 12-1. Other finals included Sutter's Cole Shelton edg- ing Orland's Ricky Lande- ros 10-8 in overtime for the 108 title after Lande- ros forced extra time with a takedown with 1 second left in the third round to tie the match. But Shelton scored a takedown of his own to end it in sudden- death overtime. Anderson's Patrick Penick won the 197 final with a 5-3 decision over Chico's Lukas Bolen. Las- sen's Kenny Jones (134) and Chester freshman Tony Rogers (222) also won. Wrestling FROM PAGE 1 By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press PALMBEACH GARDENS,FLA. Whether he was piling up majors or playing so poorly that he lost his PGA Tour card, Padraig Harrington never wavered from one goal in golf. Just get him anywhere near the lead with nine holes to play, and he would happily take his chances. His caddie, Ronan Flood, reminded him of that Monday morning in the Honda Classic when Harrington was four shots behind at the turn. "He said, 'Look, would you have taken this on Thursday?' And I said, 'Yes, that's what you want,"' Harrington said. "You want to be in con- tention with nine holes to go, because anything can happen coming down the stretch. And it did." Not even Harrington could have written the script to his playoff vic- tory at rain-soaked PGA National. He ran off four straight birdies on the back nine to take the lead. He gave it back with a 5-iron into the water for double bogey on the par-3 17th. He made a 15-foot birdie putt to force a play- off. And given a shot at re- demption, he hit 5-iron to 3 feet on the 17th to win on the second playoff hole when 21-year-old rookie Daniel Berger hit into the water and made double bo- gey. Ten years after winning the Honda Classic for his first PGA Tour victory, Harrington won it again. It was his first PGA Tour victory since he won the 2008 PGA Championship at Oakland Hills for back- to-back majors. GOLF Padraig Harrington wins Honda Classic in playoff Deron Williams 22 for the Nets. Andrew Bogut scored 16 for Golden State, but Klay Thompson shot 3 for 17. He was 1 of 9 on 3-point- ers and finished with seven points. Alan Anderson scored 16 for the Nets, who had played eight in a row on the road since beating New York at Barclays Center on Feb. 6, a 24-day stretch between home games that ranked as the longest in franchise history. Now the Warriors can't wait to get home, ending their six-game trip and a stretch of 10 road games out of 11. A night after overcom- ing a 26-point deficit to beat Boston, the War- riors looked as though they longed for their own beds for most of this one. Curry was only 1 of 6 for five points by the final min- ute of the third, but his 3-pointer with 11 seconds left in the period set him up for his big fourth. On the same floor where he won last month's 3-point contest at All-Star weekend, Curry made four 3s in the fourth. But the Warriors tried to get the ball to him going toward the rim on an inbounds af- ter Jack's basket, and he couldn't get a shot up be- fore the buzzer. Andrew Bogut threw the ball away trying to get it to Curry, giving possession to the Nets. That set up the jumper by Jack, who also hit one here to beat the Clippers on Feb. 2. Warriors FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Basketball WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB GoldenState 46 12 .793 — Clippers 40 21 .656 7½ Phoenix 31 30 .508 16½ Sacramento 20 37 .351 25½ Lakers 16 42 .276 30 SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB Memphis 42 16 .724 — Houston 41 18 .695 1½ Dallas 40 22 .645 4 San Antonio 36 23 .610 6½ New Orleans 32 28 .533 11 NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 39 19 .672 — Oklahoma City 33 27 .550 7 Utah 23 35 .397 16 Denver 20 39 .339 19½ Minnesota 13 46 .220 26½ EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB Toronto 38 22 .633 — Brooklyn 25 33 .431 12 Boston 23 34 .404 13½ Philadelphia 13 47 .217 25 New York 12 46 .207 25 SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB Atlanta 47 12 .797 — Washington 34 26 .567 13½ Miami 26 33 .441 21 Charlotte 24 33 .421 22 Orlando 19 42 .311 29 CentralDivision W L Pct GB Chicago 37 23 .617 — Cleveland 37 24 .607 ½ Milwaukee 32 27 .542 4½ Indiana 25 34 .424 11½ Detroit 23 36 .390 13½ Sunday'sgames Clippers 96, Chicago 86 Houston 105, Cleveland 103, OT Portland 110, Sacramento 99 Charlotte 98, Orlando 83 Indiana 94, Philadelphia 74 Golden State 106, Boston 101 Oklahoma City 108, Lakers 101 New Orleans 99, Denver 92 Monday'sgames Toronto 114, Philadelphia 103 Miami 115, Phoenix 98 Brooklyn 110, Golden State 108 Clippers 110, Minnesota 105 Dallas 102, New Orleans 93 Tuesday'sgames Lakers at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Boston at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Sacramento at New York, 4 p.m. Houston at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 5 p.m. Utah at Memphis, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Denver, 6 p.m. Wednesday'sgames Phoenix at Orlando, 4 p.m. New York at Indiana, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Utah at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Charlotte at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Detroit at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Philadelphia at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Memphis at Houston, 5 p.m. Denver at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Lakers at Miami, 5 p.m. Sacramento at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Portland at Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Nets110,Warriors108 WARRIORS(108) Barnes 2-7 1-2 6, Green 1-5 1-2 3, Bogut 8-10 0-0 16, Curry 8-16 4-4 26, Thompson 3-17 0-0 7, Iguodala 5-8 0-0 12, Livingston 5-8 1-3 11, Speights 3-6 0-0 6, Holiday 1-3 0-0 3, Lee 2-4 0-0 4, Ezeli 4-6 6-7 14. Totals 42-90 13-18 108. NETS(110) Anderson 7-10 0-0 16, Johnson 2-7 1-1 5, Plu mle e 3 -7 1 -4 7 , W illi am s 8 -1 9 2- 2 2 2, Brown 1-4 2-2 4, Lopez 11-22 4-5 26, Jack 4-7 0-0 9, Young 5-9 2-2 14, Bogdanovic 3-4 0-0 7. Totals 44-89 12-16 110. GoldenState 23 28 29 28 _ 108 Brooklyn 33 24 29 24 _ 110 3-PointGoals_GoldenState11-30(Curry 6-12,Iguodala2-3,Holiday1-1,Barnes 1-2,Thompson1-9,Speights0-1,Green 0-2),Brooklyn10-21(Williams4-7,Young 2-3,Anderson2-5,Bogdanovic1-2,Jack 1-2,Johnson0-2);Fouledout: None; Rebounds: Golden State 57 (Green 11), Broo kl yn 4 5 ( Plu mle e 7 ); A ssi st s: G ol den State 26 (Curry 7), Brooklyn 20 (Jack 5); Totalfouls: Golden State 20, Brooklyn 12;Technicals: Golden State defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls: Bogut;A: 17,732 (17,732). NCAAMEN'STOP25 Monday 1. Kentucky (29-0) did not play. 2. Virginia (28-1) beat Syracuse 59-47. 3. Duke (26-3) did not play. 4. Villanova (27-2) did not play. 5. Arizona (26-3) did not play. 6. Wisconsin (26-3) did not play. 7. Gonzaga (29-2) did not play. 8. Wichita State (27-3) did not play. 9. Kansas (23-6) did not play. 10. Maryland (24-5) did not play. 11. Northern Iowa (27-3) did not play. 12. Notre Dame (24-5) did not play. 13. Utah (22-6) did not play. 14. Baylor (22-8) lost to Texas 61-59, OT. 15. Oklahoma (20-9) lost to No. 17 Iowa State 77-70. 16. Louisville (23-6) did not play. 17. Iowa State (21-8) beat No. 15 Okla- homa 77-70. 18. Arkansas (23-6) did not play. 19. North Carolina (20-9) did not play. 20. West Virginia (22-7) did not play. 21. Butler (21-8) did not play. 22. SMU (23-6) did not play. 23. Ohio State (21-8) did not play. 24. Providence (20-9) did not play. 25. Murray State (26-4) did not play. NCAAWOMEN'STOP25 Monday 1. UConn (29-1) beat South Florida 88-65. 2. Notre Dame (28-2) did not play. 3. South Carolina (27-2) did not play. 4. Maryland (27-2) did not play. 5. Tennessee (25-4) did not play. 6. Baylor (27-3) beat Texas Tech 75-65. 7. Florida State (27-3) did not play. 8. Oregon State (26-3) did not play. 9. Arizona State (26-4) did not play. 10. Louisville (24-5) did not play. 11. Mississippi State (26-5) did not play. 12. Kentucky (21-8) did not play. 13. Princeton (27-0) did not play. 14. Iowa (23-6) did not play. 15. North Carolina (23-7) did not play. 16. Duke (20-9) did not play. 17. Chattanooga (26-3) did not play. 18. Texas A&M (22-8) did not play. 19. Stanford (21-9) did not play. 20. Florida Gulf Coast (27-2) did not play. 21. George Washington (26-3) did not play. 22. Syracuse (21-8) did not play. 23. Rutgers (21-8) did not play. 24. Northwestern (22-7) did not play. 25. Seton Hall (26-4) did not play. NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 64 40 17 7 87 189 177 Vancouver 62 36 23 3 75 180 167 Calgary 62 33 25 4 70 175 160 Los Angeles 62 29 21 12 70 166 162 San Jose 63 30 25 8 68 175 181 Arizona 63 20 36 7 47 138 214 Edmonton 63 18 35 10 46 143 208 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 64 41 16 7 89 192 155 St. Louis 63 40 18 5 85 197 159 Chicago 64 38 21 5 81 188 152 Winnipeg 64 32 20 12 76 179 172 Minnesota 62 33 22 7 73 176 161 Colorado 63 27 25 11 65 167 182 Dallas 63 27 26 10 64 196 210 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 62 41 16 5 87 171 135 Tampa Bay 64 38 20 6 82 210 171 Detroit 61 35 15 11 81 180 159 Boston 62 31 22 9 71 165 161 Florida 63 28 22 13 69 154 178 Ottawa 60 27 23 10 64 171 163 Toronto 63 25 33 5 55 170 193 Buffalo 63 19 39 5 43 123 212 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Rangers 62 39 17 6 84 196 153 N.Y. Islanders 64 41 21 2 84 205 179 Pittsburgh 62 36 17 9 81 181 155 Washington 64 34 20 10 78 188 159 Philadelphia 63 27 25 11 65 168 183 New Jersey 63 26 27 10 62 141 164 Columbus 62 26 32 4 56 160 196 Carolina 62 24 31 7 55 144 167 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday'sgames Vancouver 6, St. Louis 5, SO Winnipeg 5, Los Angeles 2 Florida 4, Tampa Bay 3 Pittsburgh 5, Columbus 3 Washington 4, Toronto 0 Anaheim 3, Dallas 1 Monday'sgames N.Y. Rangers 4, Nashville 1 Chicago 5, Carolina 2 Montreal at San Jose, 7 p.m. Tuesday'sgames Nashville at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Calgary at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Washington at Columbus, 4 p.m. Buffalo at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Toronto at Florida, 4:30 p.m. Ottawa at Minnesota, 5 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Anaheim at Arizona, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Edmonton, 6:30 p.m. San Jose at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Wednesday'sgames Ottawa at Winnipeg, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Detroit, 5 p.m. Pittsburgh at Colorado, 7 p.m. Montreal at Anaheim, 7 p.m. Motorsports NASCARSPRINTCUPLEADERS ThroughMarch1 Points 1, Joey Logano, 88. 2, Jimmie Johnson, 87. 3, Kevin Harvick, 86. 4, Dale Earn- hardt Jr., 84. 5, Martin Truex Jr., 75. 6, Casey Mears, 68. 7, Kasey Kahne, 65. 8, AJ Allmendinger, 62. 9, Aric Almirola, 62. 10, Clint Bowyer, 58. 11, David Gilliland, 56. 12, Sam Horn- ish Jr., 55. 13, Greg Biffle, 54. 14, Carl Edwards, 54. 15, David Ragan, 53. 16, Danica Patrick, 51. 17, Paul Menard, 50. 18, Matt Kenseth, 49. 19, Denny Hamlin, 48. 20, Michael Annett, 47. Money 1, Joey Logano, $1,820,791. 2, Kevin Harvick, $1,470,225. 3, Dale Earnhardt Jr., $1,071,425. 4, Jimmie Johnson, $976,543. 5, Denny Hamlin, $817,038. 6, Jeff Gordon, $759,277. 7, Matt Kenseth, $721,167. 8, Casey Mears, $641,571. 9, Martin Truex Jr., $639,243. 10, Clint Bowyer, $597,146. 11, Greg Biffle, $546,284. 12, Aric Almirola, $537,802. 13, Kasey Kahne, $522,480. 14, Austin Dillon, $512,195. 15, Ky le L ar so n, $ 50 6, 49 1. 1 6, T re vo r B a yn e, $503,325. 17, AJ Allmendinger, $501,081. 18, Brad Keselowski, $500,767. 19, Sam Hornish Jr., $496,158. 20, Ryan Newman, $488,073. Tennis WTABMWMALAYSIANOPEN RESULTS Monday At Royal Selangor Golf Club Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Purse: $250,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles FirstRound Kurumi Nara (6), Japan, def. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Kateryna Kozlova, Ukraine, def. Zheng Saisai, China, 6-3, 6-4. Duan Ying-Ying, China, def. Xu Yi-Fan, China, 6-0, 3-6, 6-3. Luksika Kumkhum, Thailand, def. Junri Namigata, Japan, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Magda Linette, Poland, def. Wang Qiang, China, 2-6, 6-3, 6-0. Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, def. Jawairiah Noordin, Malaysia, 6-2, 6-1. Elizaveta Kulichkova, Russia, def. Bojana Jovanovski (7), Serbia, 6-3, 6-3. Golf THEHONDACLASSICPAR Monday At PGA National (Champion Course) Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. Purse: $6.1 million Yardage: 7,140;Par: 70 Final (FedEx Cup points in parentheses) Harrington won on second playoff hole $1,098,000 Padraig Harrington.....67-66-71-70—274 -6 $658,800 Daniel Berger...............68-71-71-64—274 -6 $317,200 Paul Casey...................69-70-68-68—275 -5 $317,200 Russell Knox................69-68-70-68—275 -5 $317,200 Ian Poulter................... 71-64-66-74—275 -5 $219,600 Jamie Donaldson.........68-71-71-66—276 -4 $183,763 Luke Donald .................69-67-74-67—277 -3 $183,763 Jim Herman..................65-72-71-69—277 -3 $183,763 Jeff Overton ................71-68-69-69—277 -3 $183,763 Patrick Reed.................67-67-70-73—277 -3 $129,320 Brian Harman ..............70-74-70-64—278 -2 $129,320 Joost Luiten..................71-71-67-69—278 -2 $129,320 George McNeill...........72-70-68-68—278 -2 $129,320 Rory Sabbatini............68-75-69-66—278 -2 $129,320 Brendan Steele............66-69-71-72—278 -2 $103,700 Camilo Villegas ...........73-71-67-68—279 -1 $85,400 Jason Dufner.................71-69-70-70—280 E $85,400 Martin Flores ................67-71-74-68—280 E $85,400 John Huh.......................70-73-68-69—280 E $85,400 Phil Mickelson ..............71-67-69-73—280 E $85,400 Daniel Summerhays ....71-68-70-71—280 E $63,440 Zac Blair.......................71-71-69-70—281 +1 $63,440 William McGirt ...........71-71-69-70—281 +1 $63,440 Steve Wheatcroft......74-70-69-68—281 +1 $46,563 Sean O'Hair .................70-71-71-70—282 +2 $46,563 Ryan Palmer................71-72-71-68—282 +2 $46,563 Brendon de Jonge ...... 69-71-71-71—282 +2 $46,563 Ryo Ishikawa...............74-65-72-71—282 +2 $46,563 David Lingmerth........68-75-70-69—282 +2 $46,563 Lee Westwood........... 71-73-72-66—282 +2 $32,452 Jonas Blixt................... 71-71-70-71—283 +3 $32,452 Stewart Cink.............. 73-71-69-70—283 +3 $32,452 Sergio Garcia..............72-70-70-71—283 +3 $32,452 Robert Garrigus ........ 70-69-74-70—283 +3 $32,452 Adam Hadwin ............ 72-71-68-72—283 +3 $32,452 Jamie Lovemark ........ 72-70-69-72—283 +3 $32,452 Ben Martin ................. 70-72-76-65—283 +3 $32,452 S.J. Park .......................68-71-72-72—283 +3 $32,452 John Peterson.............74-68-71-70—283 +3 $32,452 Scott Piercy ...............68-73-69-73—283 +3 $23,790 Rickie Fowler ............. 70-73-70-71—284 +4 $23,790 Stephen Gallacher ....73-71-68-72—284 +4 $23,790 Nick Watney............... 73-71-71-69—284 +4 $1 8, 00 4 Charles Howell III.......70-71-72-72—285 +5 $18,004 Michael Thompson...69-73-69-74—285 +5 $18,004 Cameron Tringale ......71-70-72-72—285 +5 $18,004 Russell Henley........... 73-70-72-70—285 +5 $18,004 Martin Kaymer .......... 68-75-72-70—285 +5 $18,004 Patrick Rodgers.........75-69-74-67—285 +5 $18,004 Y.E. Yang......................71-72-72-70—285 +5 $14,274 Robert Allenby...........72-69-76-69—286 +6 $14,274 Kevin Kisner............... 74-68-74-70—286 +6 $14,274 Brooks Koepka ..........78-64-70-74—286 +6 $14,274 Scott Langley..............72-71-72-71—286 +6 $14,274 Marc Leishman..........73-69-75-69—286 +6 $14,274 Carl Pettersson......... 72-69-71-74—286 +6 $14,274 Tim Wilkinson............ 73-71-68-74—286 +6 $13,664 Blayne Barber.............75-69-72-71—287 +7 $13,359 Chad Campbell...........71-72-71-74—288 +8 $13,359 Brian Davis ..................71-71-71-75—288 +8 $13,359 Derek Fathauer...........74-69-71-74—288 +8 $13,359 Robert Streb ...............73-71-74-70—288 +8 $12,871 Ricky Barnes..............74-69-70-76—289 +9 $12,871 Matt Every.................. 70-73-76-70—289 +9 $12,871 Andres Gonzales....... 73-70-74-72—289 +9 $12,871 Scott Stallings........... 71-70-78-70—289 +9 $12,566 Derek Ernst ...............74-70-75-71—290 +10 $12,383 Ben Crane..................69-74-73-75—291 +11 $12,383 Scott Pinckney ......... 73-71-73-74—291 +11 $12,200 Fabian Gomez.......... 73-69-75-75—292 +12 $12,078 Jon Curran.................71-72-74-76—293 +13 Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For March 3 NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Charlotte 8 (192) Lakers at Cleveland 12 (210) Boston at Atlanta 7 (204) Houston at Memphis 8½ (182½) Utah at Chicago 2½ (188) Washington Milwaukee 4½ (194½) at Denver Sacramento 3 (198) at New York NHL Favorite Line Underdog Washington -150/+130 at Columbus Nashville -125/+105 at New Jersey at Philadelphia -150/+130 Calgary at Tampa Bay -400/+300 Buffalo at Florida -180/+160 Toronto at Minnesota -165/+145 Ottawa N.Y. Islanders -130/+110 at Dallas Anaheim -230/+190 at Arizona Los Angeles -220/+180 at Edmonton at Vancouver -155/+135 San Jose NCAABasketball Favorite Line Underdog Maryland 7 at Rutgers North Carolina 6 at Georgia Tech at Dayton 4 Rhode Island at Butler 3½ Georgetown at Indiana 1 Iowa E. Michigan 2 at Ball St. at Buffalo 14½ Ohio Akron 4 at Miami;(Ohio) at Cent. Michigan 4 Toledo at Bowling Green 6 Kent St. at Alabama 1½ Mississippi at N. Illinois Pk W. Michigan at Northwestern 2 Michigan at Missouri 3 Auburn Kentucky 10½ at Georgia at Kansas 9½ West Virginia at Clemson Pk NC State at Florida 4½ Texas A&M Villanova 8½ at Creighton at North Dakota Pk Nebraska-Omaha HORIZONLEAGUE FirstRound at Detroit 9 Youngstown St. at Ill.-Chicago Pk Wright St. AtlanticSunConference FirstRound at N. Kentucky 7 Lipscomb at SC-Upstate 17 Kennesaw at Fla. Gulf Coast 13½ Jacksonville at North Florida 17 Stetson PATRIOTLEAGUE FirstRound at Holy Cross 5 Loyola;(Md.) at Navy 1½ Army Transactions BASEBALL NationalLeague AtlantaBraves: Agreed to terms with RHPs Mauricio Cabrera, Brandon Cun- niff, Mike Foltynewicz, Juan Jaime, Tyrell Jenkins, Shelby Miller, Williams Perez, Shae Simmons, Arodys Vizcaino and Dan Winkler, LHPs Luis Avilan, Manny Banuelos, Yean Carlos Gil, Ian Thomas and Alex Wood, INFs Phil Gosselin, Jose Peraza, Jace Peterson and Elmer Reyes, Ofs Todd Cunningham, Eury Perez and Joey Terdoslavich and C Christian Bethancourt on one-year contracts. WashingtonNationals: Agreed to terms with OF Tony Gwynn Jr. on a minor league contract. AmericanAssociation Fargo-MoorheadRedhawks: Signed C Travis Higgs and RHP Josh Wright. GarySouthshoreRailcats: Traded RHP James Parr to Suger Land for cash. Traded INF Henry Wrigley to Lancaster for cash and a player to be named. LincolnSaltdogs: Signed LHP Kevin McGovern. AtlanticLeague LongIslandDucks: Signing RHP Bobby Blevins. Announced RHP Kevin Vance was signed by Arizona (NL). Announced the retirement of RHP Brett Lorin. Can-AmLeague NewJerseyJackals: Released RHP Keith Bilodeau. OttawaChampions: Signed RHP Jack Wagoner. QuebecCapitales: Signed RHP Derrick Miramontes and LHP Sheldon McDonald. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 2015 2 B