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AUTORACING F1Australian Grand Prix Prac- tice:10:30p.m.,NBCSN. MLB SPRING TRAINING Miami Marlins vs. Minnesota Twins: 10a.m., MLB. Los Angeles Dodgers vs. San Diego Padres: 1p.m., MLB. Atlanta Braves vs. New York Yankees: 4p.m., MLB. COLLEGE MEN'S BASKETBALL ACC Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 9a.m., ESPN. A-10Tournament Second Round: 9a.m., NBCSN. Big East Tournament TBA vs. Villanova Quarterfinal: 9 a.m., FS1. Big 12Tournament West Vir- ginia vs. Baylor Quarterfinal: 9:30a.m., ESPN2. C-USA Tournament UT at El Paso vs. TBA Quarterfinal: 10 a.m., CSNBA. ACC Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 11a.m., ESPN. A-10Tournament Second Round: 11:30a.m., NBCSN. Big East Tournament St. John's vs. Providence Quar- terfinal: 11:30a.m., FS1. Big 12Tournament Oklahoma State vs. Oklahoma Quarterfi- nal: 11:30a.m., ESPN2. Pac-12Tournament Quarterfi- nal: noon, PAC-12. C-USA Tournament Old Do- minion vs. TBA Quarterfinal: 12:30p.m., CSNBA. AAC Tournament C. Florida vs. East Carolina First Round: 12:30p.m., ESPNU. Pac-12Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 2:30p.m., PAC-12. A-10Tournament Second Round: 3:30p.m., NBCSN. Big-10Tournament North- western vs. Indiana Second Round: 3:30p.m., ESPN2. ACC Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 4p.m., ESPN. Big East Tournament TBA vs. Georgetown Quarterfinal: 4 p.m., FS1. Big 12Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 4p.m., ESPNU. Big-10Tournament TBA vs. Ohio State Second Round: 5:30p.m., ESPN2. ACC Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 6p.m., ESPN. A-10Tournament Second Round: 6p.m., NBCSN. Pac-12Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 6p.m., PAC-12. Big 12Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 6p.m., ESPNU. Big East Tournament Xavier vs. Butler Quarterfinal: 6:30 p.m., FS1. Pac-12Tournament Quarterfi- nal: 8:30p.m., ESPN. NBA BASKETBALL Memphis Grizzlies at Wash- ington Wizards: 4p.m., TNT. Cleveland Cavaliers at San Antonio Spurs: 6:30p.m., TNT. PGA GOLF Valspar Championship Round 1: noon, GOLF. NHL HOCKEY Nashville Predators at San Jose Sharks: 7:30p.m., CSN. TENNIS ATP BNP Paribas Open Men's and Women's First Round: 11 a.m., TENNIS. Ontheair leyTournament. PRINCETON 13, LOS MOLI- NOS 7 Visiting Princeton beat the Lady Bulldogs on Tuesday. Los Molinos (1-1) was scheduled to play Maxwell on Wednesday and visits University Prep on March 19. Tennis OROVILLE 5, CORNING 4 Visiting Oroville pulled out a close match Tuesday. Corning's Michael Mess- mer won his No. 1 singles match 6-3, 6-2 over Hug Yang. Marcos Valencia also picked up a win for Corn- ing at No. 3 singles 6-3, 4-6, 10-8 over Tommy Vang. In doubles Messmer and Wyatt Haywood beat Yang and Sunny Vang 8-5. Ethan Munoz and Valen- cia beat Tommy Vang and Tyler Chao 8-3. Corning was close to get- ting the win, with Cruz Pa- dilla falling in a tiebreaker and the third doubles team of Izzy Romo and Padilla losing 8-5. WILLOWS 9, MERCY 0 Wil- lows swept all nine matches in Red Bluff on Tuesday. Mercy travels to Live Oak at 3:30 p.m. today. Roundup FROM PAGE 1 Gerber's Michell Woolbert seventh, Cottonwood's Sa- brina Cantu eighth and Corning's Gianna Esteve was ninth. Greenville's Faith Ann Cassol won breakaway rop- ing with a time of 8.25 sec- onds. Bean was fourth, Hen- cratt was fifth and Cotton- wood's Shelby Adams was ninth. Morsa won pole bending withatimeof41.343seconds. Clendenen was second, Esteve was third and Wool- bert was seventh. Grants Pass, Oregon's Helena DeCasas won girls goat tying with a time of 17.38 seconds. Bean was second, Cot- tonwood's Scotti Murphy was seventh and Loverin was 10th. Bravos won tie down roping with a time of 22.39 seconds. Red Bluff's Casey Moore was fourth and Corning's Wyatt Spencer was eighth. Bravos also picked up the win in steer wrestling with a time of 13.92 sec- onds. Jones was third. Gill won boys cutting with a score of 144. In team roping Cash and Fort Jones' Larry Lampert won with a time of 18.22 seconds. Vaughan and Cotton- wood's Caleb Heitman were second. Spencer and Jones were third. Moore and Tulelake's Taylor Her- man were sixth. Red Bluff's Kolton King and Loverin were eighth. Blake Shepard won bare- back riding with a score of 50. None of the five contes- tants in bull riding had a successful ride. The next rodeo is April 11-12 in Cottonwood. Rodeo FROM PAGE 1 By Andrew Baggarly BayAreaNewsGroup SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. Kyle Crick sees role models wherever he looks in the San Francisco Giants' spring clubhouse. Few pitching staffs are as sea- soned or accomplished as the group that includes Madison Bumgarner, Matt Cain, Jake Peavy, Tim Hud- son, Ryan Vogelsong and Tim Lincecum. Crick idolizes them all. But it was a Brave and a Cardinal who helped him understand how to take the next step in his devel- opment as a right-handed power pitcher. Crick spent nearly all of December and January near Houston working out at the same sports medicine cen- ter with Shelby Miller and Michael Wacha. He roomed with Wacha and Miller lived across the street. "I was lucky, being around a group of guys who would push me," Crick said. "I talked to Shelby a lot: what he'd think about before games, after games, what he takes out of a start. We were kind of similar, both being drafted out of high school." Miller, whom Atlanta acquired in the November trade that sent Jason Hey- ward to St. Louis, made 78 starts in three full minor league seasons before grad- uating to the Cardinals in 2012. Crick will need more time to earn his promo- tion. The 22-year-old will enter his fourth full minor league season after com- ing to the Giants as a sup- plemental first-round pick in 2011. Although Crick's crack- ling, mid-90s fastball con- tinues to make him the most elite arm in the Giants' pitching factory of a system, he has had difficulty throw- ing enough strikes to pitch deep into games. GIANTS SPRING TRAINING Crick may become next big thing ated Press that he agreed Wednesday to a three-year deal with Oakland. The Raiders are coming off a 3-13 season and have gone 11 straight years with- out a playoff berth or win- ning record. They have just 11 wins the past three sea- sons but the new additions sense a positive vibe from Del Rio and his new staff. Williams was part of a turnaround in Arizona where Arians took over a five-win team following the 2012 season and led them to double-digit win totals his first two years, including a playoff berth this season. The Raiders will need plenty of help to do that but they have some build- ing block pieces in line- backer Khalil Mack and quarterback Derek Carr — the team's top two picks in last year's draft. Williams said he was also enticed by talking to Super Bowl champions Justin Tuck and Charles Woodson. "Those guys have won Super Bowls and reading their energy and dedica- tion and how much they really want to turn things around in Oakland," Wil- liams said. "Today, I just decided, I definitely want to be a part of this." Williams is a stout run- stopper who played mostly nose tackle in Arizona's 3-4 defense. He had the sev- enth best run stop percent- age last season, according to Pro Football Focus. He played almost exclusively on first and second down but said the Raiders want him to "push the pocket" as a pass rusher. The move to sign Hud- son to a five-year deal worth $44.5 million means the Raiders will cut ties with incumbent center Ste- fen Wisniewski, who is also an unrestricted free agent. Chiefs general manager John Dorsey said he was unwilling to match Oak- land's offer for Hudson. Raiders FROM PAGE 1 ferson to a strained right calf late in the third quar- ter. Jefferson will be evalu- ated on a day-by-day basis. "He heard something pop, so that's obviously concerning," Hornets coach Steve Clifford said. Michael Kidd-Gilchrist had 23 points on 9-of-12 shooting for the Hornets, who have lost back-to-back games at home. Mo Wil- liams added 20 points and eight assists, and Gerald Henderson had 17 points and a career-high 11 assists for Charlotte. But Clifford ripped into his team after the game. "If we're going to play like this, forget the play- offs," Clifford said. "We can't win like this. We can't win like this. You've got to know who you are and play to your game." The Kings took control with about 5 minutes re- maining in the game. With Sacramento lead- ing by one, Cousins made a pair of free throws and then knocked down a 6-footer and drew a foul to complete a three-point play. Cousins followed with an alley-oop dunk from An- dre Miller to put the Kings up by 102-94 with 3:21 left. Every time the Hornets tried to make a run, Cous- ins or Gay seemed to have an answer. Cousins hit a 20-footer to push the lead back to four with a minute to go. After Charlotte cut the lead back to two, Gay drove the lane and drew a foul on Kidd-Gilchrist and scored, giving the Kings a 109- 104 lead with 46 seconds left. And when Henderson scored on a driving layup, Gay answered by drilling a 21-footer over Henderson as the shot clock expired to push the lead back to five. Tip-Ins Kings: Cousins has scored in double digits in all 49 games he's played. Kings FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Basketball NBA WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB Golden State 50 12 .806 — Clippers 42 23 .646 9½ Phoenix 33 32 .508 18½ Sacramento 22 41 .349 28½ Lakers 17 46 .270 33½ SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB Memphis 45 19 .703 — Houston 43 20 .683 1½ San Antonio 40 23 .635 4½ Da ll as 4 1 25 . 62 1 5 New Orleans 36 29 .554 9½ NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 41 20 .672 — Oklahoma City 35 29 .547 7½ Utah 27 36 .429 15 Denver 23 41 .359 19½ Minnesota 14 48 .226 27½ EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB Toronto 38 26 .594 — Boston 27 36 .429 10½ Brooklyn 25 38 .397 12½ Philadelphia 14 50 .219 24 New York 12 51 .190 25½ SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB x-Atlanta 50 13 .794 — Washington 36 28 .563 14½ Miami 29 35 .453 21½ Charlotte 28 35 .444 22 Orlando 21 45 .318 30½ CentralDivision W L Pct GB Cleveland 41 25 .621 — Chicago 40 26 .606 1 Milwaukee 34 30 .531 6 Indiana 29 34 .460 10½ Detroit 23 40 .365 16½ x-clinchedplayoffspot Tuesday'sgames Indiana 118, Orlando 86 New Orleans 111, Brooklyn 91 Cleveland 127, Dallas 94 San Antonio 117, Toronto 107 Utah 87, New York 82 Lakers 93, Detroit 85 Wednesday'sgames Chicago 104, Philadelphia 95, OT Sacramento 113, Charlotte 106 Miami 104, Brooklyn 98 Boston 95, Memphis 92 Clippers 120, Oklahoma City 108 Milwaukee 97, Orlando 91 Atlanta at Denver, (n.) Minnesota at Phoenix, (n.) Detroit at Golden State, (n.) Houston at Portland, (n.) Thursday'sgames Memphis at Washington, 4 p.m. Milwaukee at Indiana, 4 p.m. Houston at Utah, 6 p.m. Cleveland at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. New York at Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Friday'sgames Sacramento at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Chicago at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Miami at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Orlando at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Clippers at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Detroit at Portland, 7 p.m. Kings113,Hornets106 KINGS(113) Gay 9-17 6-8 26, Landry 3-4 4-4 10, Cousins 8-17 4-5 20, McCallum 1-7 4-5 6, McLemore 10-16 4-4 27, Casspi 2-6 2-2 7, D.Williams 1-5 0-0 3, Thompson 3-4 1-2 7, Miller 3-9 0-0 7. Totals 40-85 25-30 113. HORNETS(106) Kidd-Gilchrist 9-12 5-8 23, Ma.Williams 4-12 2-2 13, Jefferson 4-9 1-2 9, M. Wil- liams 8-20 3-3 20, Henderson 7-16 3-4 17, Walker 2-9 0-2 6, Biyombo 3-3 1-2 7, Maxiell 0-2 0-2 0, Stephenson 5-10 1-1 11. Totals 42-93 16-26 106. Sacramento 24 27 27 35 _ 113 Charlotte 21 25 32 28 _ 106 3-PointGoals: Sacramento 8-20 (McLemore 3-4, Gay 2-3, Casspi 1-1, Miller 1-3, D.Williams 1-5, McCallum 0-2, Cousins 0-2), Charlotte 6-18 (Ma. Williams 3-8, Walker 2-4, M. Williams 1-3, Stephenson 0-1, Henderson 0-2);Fouled out: None;Rebounds: Sacramento 53 (Cousins 14), Charlotte 58 (Kidd-Gilchrist 9);Assists: Sacramento 25 (McCallum 9), Charlotte 28 (Henderson 11);Totalfouls: Sacramento 21, Charlotte 24;Technicals: Miller, Jefferson, Stephenson;A: 15,885 (19,077). NCAAMEN TOURNAMENT AtlanticCoastConference SecondRound Florida St. 76, Clemson 73 North Carolina 81, Boston College 63 BigTenConference FirstRound Penn St. 68, Nebraska 65 MountainWestConference FirstRound Air Force 68, New Mexico 61 UNLV 67, Nevada 46 Pacific-12Conference FirstRound California 84, Washington St. 59 Southern Cal 67, Arizona St. 64 California84,WashingtonSt.59 WASHINGTONST.(13-18) Iroegbu 6-10 4-4 17, Railey 6-10 0-1 12, Kernich-Drew 1-5 2-2 4, Hawkinson 5-9 4-4 14, Lacy 4-11 1-2 9, Davis 0-0 0-0 0, Redding 0-3 0-0 0, Dunbar 0-1 0-0 0, Longrus 0-0 0-0 0, Cheatum 0-0 0-0 0, Johnson 1-3 0-0 3, Boese 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 23-55 11-13 59. CALIFORNIA(18-14) Tarwater 1-5 0-0 2, Wallace 5-11 1-2 12, Bird 3-5 0-0 9, Mathews 6-8 4-5 19, Kravish 10-17 5-5 25, Singer 0-1 0-3 0, Chauca 1-1 0-0 3, Moute a Bidias 1-1 0-0 2, Behrens 3-3 0-0 6, Okoroh 1-1 2-4 4, Glapion 0-0 2-2 2, Welle 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 31-53 14-21 84. NCAAWOMEN TOURNAMENT MountainWestConference Semifinals Boise St. 76, San Jose St. 67 NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 68 42 19 7 91 199 186 Vancouver 66 38 24 4 80 189 179 Calgary 66 36 25 5 77 191 172 Los Angeles 66 32 21 13 77 180 170 San Jose 67 33 26 8 74 189 187 Arizona 67 21 38 8 50 143 224 Edmonton 67 18 38 11 47 152 227 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 68 42 19 7 91 199 166 St. Louis 66 42 19 5 89 209 167 Chicago 66 39 21 6 84 190 154 Minnesota 67 37 23 7 81 192 170 Winnipeg 67 33 22 12 78 187 181 Colorado 67 30 26 11 71 179 190 Dallas 67 30 27 10 70 209 221 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 67 42 18 7 91 177 147 Tampa Bay 68 42 20 6 90 223 177 Detroit 65 37 17 11 85 192 172 Boston 66 34 22 10 78 179 171 Florida 66 29 23 14 72 163 188 Ottawa 65 30 24 11 71 185 176 Toronto 68 27 35 6 60 183 212 Buffalo 67 19 42 6 44 129 228 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Rangers 66 42 17 7 91 203 157 N.Y. Islanders 69 43 22 4 90 219 194 Pittsburgh 66 38 18 10 86 189 162 Washington 68 36 22 10 82 201 168 Philadelphia 68 28 27 13 69 178 197 New Jersey 67 28 29 10 66 153 176 Columbus 66 28 34 4 60 170 210 Carolina 65 25 32 8 58 155 178 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for ov er ti me l os s. Tuesday'sgames Columbus 4, Carolina 3, SO N.Y. Rangers 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 Dallas 2, Philadelphia 1 Tampa Bay 1, Montreal 0, OT Boston 3, Ottawa 1 St. Louis 5, Winnipeg 4 Minnesota 6, New Jersey 2 Los Angeles 5, Colorado 2 Wednesday'sgames Toronto 4, Buffalo 3, SO N.Y. Rangers 3, Washington 1 Anaheim at Calgary, (n.) Thursday'sgames Tampa Bay at Boston, 4 p.m. Edmonton at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Dallas at Carolina, 4 p.m. Ottawa at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. Co lu mbu s a t D et ro it , 4 :3 0 p .m . Winnipeg at Florida, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at St. Louis, 5 p.m. New Jersey at Colorado, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Chicago at Arizona, 7 p.m. Nashville at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Friday'sgames Ottawa at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Dallas at Washington, 4 p.m. Edmonton at Columbus, 4 p.m. Anaheim at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Toronto at Calgary, 5 p.m. Baseball MLBSPRINGTRAINING Wednesday'sgames Boston 10, N.Y. Yankees 6 Miami 7, N.Y. Mets 4 Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 2 Washington 9, Detroit 2 St. Louis 6, Atlanta 2 Tampa Bay 5, Minnesota 2 Toronto 5, Baltimore 2 Colorado 4, Seattle 1 Ch ic ag o C ubs 4 , L .A. D od ger s 3 Kansas City (ss) 4, San Diego 3 Chicago White Sox 4, Texas 4, tie Kansas City (ss) 5, Cincinnati 2 Oakland 3, Cleveland 2 Milwaukee 6, San Francisco 3 Arizona 6, L.A. Angels 5 Thursday'sgames Boston vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Philadelphia vs. Detroit (ss) at Lakeland, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Toronto vs. Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Baltimore vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Miami vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Detroit (ss) vs. Houston at Kissimmee, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Washington vs. N.Y. Mets at Port St. Lucie, Fla., 10:10 a.m. Seattle vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz., 12:00 p.m. Kansas City vs. Cleveland at Goodyear, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (ss) vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Colorado vs. Milwaukee at Phoenix, 1:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs vs. L.A. Angels at Tempe, Ariz., 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati vs. Arizona at Scottsdale, Ariz., 2:10 p.m. San Francisco vs. Chicago White Sox (ss) at Glendale, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Atlanta vs. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa, Fla., 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers vs. San Diego at Peoria, Ariz., 6:15 p.m. AtMesa,Ariz. Cleveland 001 100 000—2 8 1 Oakland 030 000 00x—3 6 1 Salazar, D.Molleken (2), Allen (4), Hagadone (5), B.Price (6), R.Merritt (7), C.Anderson (8) and Y.Gomes, A.Moore; Graveman, Abad (4), Clippard (5), Verdugo (6), A.Castro (7), B.Huntzinger (8), Fe.Rodriguez (9) and Vogt, Bry. Anderson. W— Graveman;L— Salazar;Sv— Fe.Rodriguez;HRs— Cleveland, Moss (2). Oakland, B.Butler (2). AtScottsdale,Ariz. Milwaukee 003 010 200—6 10 0 SanFrancisco 020 100 000—3 7 0 Garza, C.Perez (4), W.Smith (5), Kintzler (6), T.Jungmann (7), A.Pena (9) and Maldonado, A.Weisenburger; T.Hudson, Partch (2), Lincecum (3), Affeldt (4), Kontos (5), S.Casilla (7), A.Mejia (9) and Posey, Susac, A.Garcia. W— C.Perez;L— Affeldt;Sv— A.Pena; HRs— San Francisco, Belt (1). Soccer MAJORLEAGUESOCCER WESTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 1 0 0 3 3 0 Los Angeles 1 0 0 3 2 0 Houston 1 0 0 3 1 0 FC Dallas 1 0 0 3 1 0 Kansas City 0 0 1 1 1 1 Portland 0 0 1 1 0 0 Salt Lake 0 0 1 1 0 0 Colorado 0 0 1 1 0 0 San Jose 0 1 0 0 0 1 EASTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Toronto FC 1 0 0 3 3 1 D.C. United 1 0 0 3 1 0 New York 0 0 1 1 1 1 NYC FC 0 0 1 1 1 1 Orlando City 0 0 1 1 1 1 Philadelphia 0 0 1 1 0 0 Columbus 0 1 0 0 0 1 Montreal 0 1 0 0 0 1 Chicago 0 1 0 0 0 2 New England 0 1 0 0 0 3 Vancouver 0 1 0 0 1 3 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Friday,March13 Orlando City at Houston, 7 p.m. Saturday,March14 Vancouver at Chicago, 6 p.m. Toronto FC at Columbus, 7:30 p.m. Kansas City at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Salt Lake, 9:30 p.m. San Jose at Seattle, 10 p.m. Tennis BNPPARIBASOPENRESULTS Wednesday At The Indian Wells Tennis Garden Indian Wells Purse: Men: $7.1 million (Masters 1000); Women: $5.38 million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles WOMEN FirstRound Donna Vekic, Croatia, def. Louisa Chirico, United States, 6-4, 6-3. Heather Watson, Britain, def. Julia Goerges, Germany, 6-4, 5-7, 6-3. Monica Niculescu, Romania, def. Alek- sandra Krunic, Serbia, 6-2, 6-1. Elena Vesnina, Russia, def. Kateryna Kozlova, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-3. Daria Gavrilova, Russia, def. Silvia Soler- Espinosa, Spain, 6-3, 6-4. Mona Barthel, Germany, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4. Irina Falconi, United States, def. Ajla Tomljanovic, Croatia, 7-6 (6), 6-4. Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic, def. Evgeniya Rodina, Russia, 6-3, 6-3. Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, def. Nicole Gibbs, United States, 6-3, 7-5. Sachia Vickery, United States, def. Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, 7-6 (6), 7-6 (6). Lara Arruabarrena, Spain, def. Magda- lena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 6-0, 6-1. Alison Van Uytvanck, Belgium, def. Kurumi Nara, Japan, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, def. Grace Min, United States, 6-3, 6-1. Alison Riske, United States, def. Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, 6-2, 6-3. Sloane Stephens, United States, vs. Chanelle Scheepers, South Africa Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE NCAABasketball BigTenConference AtChicago SecondRound Favorite Line Underdog Illinois 3½ Michigan Iowa 7½ Penn St. or Io wa 8½ N ebr as ka Indiana 3½ Northwestern Ohio St. 14 Rutgers or Ohio St. 4 Minnesota AtlanticCoastConference AtGreensboro,N.C. Quarterfinals Virginia 13 Florida St. North Carolina 2½ Louisville Duke 10½ Pittsburgh or Duke 8 NC State Notre Dame 13 Virginia Tech or Notr e D am e 3 Mia mi BigEastConference AtNewYork Quarterfinals Villanova 12½ Marquette or Villanova 13½ Seton Hall at St. John's 2 Providence Georgetown 6½ Creighton or Georgetown 9½ DePaul Butler 1½ Xavier ATLANTIC10 AtBrooklyn,N.Y. SecondRound La Salle 1 UMass VCU 11 George Mason or VCU 13½ Fordham St. Bonaventure 3 Saint Joseph's G. Washington 10 Saint Louis or G. Washington 7½ Duquesne BIG12 AtKansasCity,Mo. Quarterfinals Baylor 3 West Virginia Kansas 8½ TCU or Kansas 8½ Kansas St. Iowa St. 13½ Texas Tech or Iowa St. 2½ Texas Oklahoma 4 Oklahoma St. SoutheasternConference AtNashville,Tenn. SecondRound Florida 4 Alabama Texas A&M 7½ Auburn or Texas A&M 6½ Mississippi St. Vanderbilt 4½ Tennessee Mississippi 11½ Missouri or Mississippi 4 South Carolina ConferenceUSA AtBirmingham,Ala. Quarterfinals UTEP 10 FIU Old Dominion 4 Charlotte or Old Dominion 5½ Middle Tenn. UAB 8 Marshall or UAB 1½ W. Kentucky Louisiana Tech 10½ Rice or Louisiana Tech 9½ North Texas Pac-12Conference AtLasVegas Quarterfinals Arizona 15½ California UCLA 9 Southern Cal or UCLA 2½ Arizona St. Oregon 3½ Colorado or Oregon 4½ Oregon St. Utah 14½ Washington or Utah 6½ Stanford MountainWestConference AtLasVegas Quarterfinals Boise St. 9 Air Force Wyoming 2 Utah St. San Diego St. 13½ Nevada or San Diego St. 2 at UNLV Colorado St. 8½ Fresno St. BigWestConference AtAnaheim FirstRound UC Davis 9½ CS Northridge Long Beach St. 1 Hawaii UC Irvine 7 UC Riverside UC Santa Barbara 3½ Cal Poly AmericanAthleticConference AtHartford,Conn. FirstRound East Carolina 3 UCF Tulane 1 Houston UConn 14 South Florida SunBeltConference AtNewOrleans FirstRound Texas-Arlington 1½ Texas St. UALR 4½ South Alabama Mid-AmericanConference AtCleveland ThirdRound Toledo 3½ E. Michigan or Toledo 1 Bowling Green KentSt.;PK;Akron or Kent St. 1 W. Michigan NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Indiana 6½ (185) Milwaukee at Washington 1 (184) Memphis Cleveland 3 9202½) at San Antonio Houston 3 (197½) at Utah at Lakers 6 (192) New York NHL Favorite Line Underdog at Carolina -120/+100 Dallas at Pittsburgh -330/+260 Edmonton at Boston -120/+100 Tampa Bay at Florida -110/-110 Winnipeg at Detroit -220/+180 Columbus at Montreal -200/+170 Ottawa at St. Louis -220/+180 Philadelphia at Colorado -155/+135 New Jersey Chicago -230/+190 at Arizona Los Angeles -130/+110 at Vancouver at San Jose -125/+105 Nashville Transactions BASEBALL AmericanLeague BaltimoreOrioles: Optioned RHP Eddie Gamboa to Norfolk (IL). ClevelandIndians: Agreed to terms with RHP Corey Kluber on a one-year contract. TexasRangers: Selected the contract of OF Antoan Richardson from Round Rock (PCL). Placed LHP Martin Perez on the 60-day DL. NationalLeague AtlantaBraves: Agreed to terms with RHP Peter Moylan on a minor league contract. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 2015 2 B

