Red Bluff Daily News

March 27, 2015

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AUTORACING NASCAR Camping World Se- ries Truck Racing Kroger 250 Practice:7a.m.,FS1. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series STP 500Practice: 9a.m., FS1. NASCAR Camping World Se- ries Truck Racing Kroger 250 Practice: 10:30a.m., FS1. NASCAR Camping World Se- ries Truck Racing Kroger 250 Final Practice: noon, FS1. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series STP 500Qualifying: 1:30p.m., FS1. F1Malaysian Grand Prix Qualifying: 2a.m., NBCSN. COLLEGE BASEBALL California vs. Utah: 5p.m., PAC-12. MLB SPRING TRAINING Boston Red Sox vs. Atlanta Braves: 10a.m., ESPN. Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Los Angeles Angels: 1p.m., MLB. Seattle Mariners vs. Kansas City Royals: 6p.m., MLB. San Francisco Giants vs. Los Angeles Dodgers: 7p.m., (22). COLLEGE SOFTBALL Utah vs. Stanford: 3p.m., PAC-12. HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL CIF Championship Girls Divi- sion 5: 10a.m., CSN. CIF Championship Boys Divi- sion 5: noon, CSN. CIF Championship Girls Divi- sion 3: 2p.m., CSN. CIF Championship Boys Divi- sion 3: 4p.m., CSN. CIF Championship Girls Divi- sion 1: 6p.m., CSN. CIF Championship Boys Divi- sion 1: 8p.m., CSN. COLLEGE MEN'S BASKETBALL Division I Tournament, Sweet 16 UCLA vs. Gonzaga: 4p.m., CBS. Louisville vs. N.C. State: 4:30 p.m., TBS. Utah vs. Duke: 6:30p.m., CBS. Michigan State vs. Oklahoma: 7p.m., TBS. COLLEGE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Division I Tournament Sweet Sixteen: 4p.m., ESPN. Division I Tournament Sweet Sixteen: 4:30p.m., ESPN2. Division I Tournament Sweet Sixteen: 6:30p.m., ESPN. Division I Tournament Sweet Sixteen: 7p.m., ESPN2. NBA BASKETBALL Golden State Warriors at Memphis Grizzlies: 5p.m., CSNBA. Sacramento Kings at New Orleans Pelicans: 5p.m., CSN. GOLF Champions Tour Mississippi Gulf Resort Classic Round 1: 9 a.m., GOLF. PGA Texas Open Round 2: noon, GOLF. LPGA Kia Classic Round 2: 3 p.m., GOLF. HOCKEY Division I Tournament, Re- gional Semifinals Yale vs. Boston U.: 11a.m., ESPNU. Minnesota vs. Minnesota-D.: 2:30p.m., ESPNU. Quinnipiac vs. North Dakota: 5p.m., ESPNU. SOCCER UEFA Euro 2016Qualifier Ukraine vs. Spain: 12:30p.m., ESPN2. TENNIS ATP Miami Open Men's and Women's Second Round: 8 a.m., TENNIS. NCAA Oregon vs. UCLA: 1p.m., PAC-12. Ontheair The Associated Press CLEVELAND Perfect and pulverizing. Kentucky made West Virginia's press look pathetic. Trey Lyles scored 14 points, Andrew Harrison added 13 and the unbeaten Wildcats, chasing history and a ninth national title, rolled to a 78-39 victory over the Mountaineers on Thursday night in the Mid- west Regional semifinals of the NCAA Tournament. The tourney's top seed and an overwhelming fa- vorite to cut down the nets next month in Indi- anapolis, Kentucky (37-0) advanced to Saturday's re- gional final to play third- seeded Notre Dame, an 81-70 winner over Wich- ita State in the other semi- final. The Fighting Irish may need to call Rudy, consult with Digger Phelps and wake up the echoes from some of those stunning up- sets in football and hoops they have pulled off in the past. Kentucky is a monster this March. With stunning ease, the Wildcats built a 26-point lead in the first half over the Mountaineers (25-10), who led the nation in steals and figured their full-court press would at least bother Kentucky into some turn- overs. Not only did the press not work, West Vir- ginia shot only 24.1 percent (13 of 54), including 2 of 15 from 3-point range, against the Wildcats, who resemble a forest of blue-tinted red- woods inside the paint. West Virginia didn't eclipse 20 points until the 11:41 mark of the second half. Aaron Harrison scored 12 points in the first half, Devin Booker dropped two 3-pointers and Marcus Lee andWillieCauley-Steintook turns soaring to convert al- ley-oop passes into dunks that had West Virginia fans longing to take the country road back home. Mountaineers coach Bob Huggins could only sit on his sideline stool and shrug. His good friend John Calipari has quite a team. Dakari Johnson scored 12 points and Cauley-Stein added 10 rebounds for Ken- tucky, which hasn't faced Notre Dame in the tourna- ment since 1970. Juwan Staten scored 14 points to lead West Vir- ginia. NOTRE DAME 81, WICHITA STATE70 Demetrius Jack- son scored 20 points and third-seeded Notre Dame dominated Wichita State to advance to the Elite Eight for the first time in 36 years. The Irish (32-5) shot 75 percent (18 of 24) in the second half, easily pull- ing away from the sev- enth-seeded Shockers (30- 5). Pat Connaughton added 16 points and 10 rebounds for Notre Dame and Jerian Grant had nine points and 11 assists as the Irish won their eighth straight. Notre Dame will play unbeaten Kentucky on Saturday night with a Fi- nal Four spot on the line. NCAA TOURNAMENT Kentucky overwhelms West Virginia in Sweet 16 Wildcats roll over Mountaineers to push mark to 37-0 to make our free throws or they're going to come down and score," Kaminsky said. "We've been through that a lot this season with situa- tions like that. So it's just nice to be able to go out there and do it." Zak Showalter came off the bench to score six points in the Badgers' 19-7 comeback run after they were forced into tough po- sitions by Carolina's perim- eter defense. "The plays he made for us in that two-minute span, we wouldn't have won without them," Hayes said. "This was similar to the Michigan State game except it didn't go to over- time. We weren't really playing our type of basket- ball. We were letting them have their way and their will. All we needed was a couple plays to get us go- ing." The teams shot exactly the same — 46 percent — for the game, but the Bad- gers improved to 58 per- cent in the second half and made 20 of 23 free throws to keep their hopes of a second straight Final Four berth alive. "These guys have been through a lot. They've seen the good runs. They've seen the bad runs," Bad- gers coach Bo Ryan said. "But this group never gets discouraged to the point where they get down on themselves or their team- mates, and that's what's fun." Brice Johnson and Jus- tin Jackson scored 15 points each for the fourth- seeded Tar Heels (26-12), who got within one with 4:21 remaining but couldn't retake the lead. Paige fin- ished with 12 points. "We wanted to pressure them and not allow them to be comfortable, and we did that for the most part," Paige said. "The problem was we couldn't finish our defense on key posses- sions." The Tar Heels appeared to have the game in hand when they were up by seven and Kaminsky went down with his hands cov- ering his eyes, having got- ten hit by Isaiah Hicks. Turns out "Frank the Tank" was just getting his team revved up. With Kaminsky on the bench, the Badgers launched the 19-7 run that put them back in front, 65- 60. Kaminsky quickly re- turned to hit a 3-pointer, and Showalter scored four straight, including a la- yup off his own steal, put- ting the red-clad Wiscon- sin fans in full-throated cheers. "It's just great to have so many voices understand- ing what needs to hap- pen and what we need to do out on the court, which was getting stops," Kamin- sky said, "and then coming down and getting good, easy looks at the bucket and we were able to do so." Carolina's Kennedy Meeks returned from a sprained left knee last weekend to bother Kamin- sky early before getting in foul trouble. Badgers FROM PAGE 1 Nieto made it a two- goal lead midway through the period when his shot nicked the right goal post before going in — but the advantage lasted just 40 seconds. Jurco knocked the puck home on his third swipe in front of Niemi to cut the deficit at the 10:04 mark and Tatar tied it a few minutes later when he redirected Danny DeKey- ser's shot past the Sharks goalie. Tierney gave the Sharks the lead for good late in the period with a wrap-around past Howard, who surren- dered three goals on the first nine shots he faced on his 31st birthday. After a scoreless sec- ond, the teams took turns scoring in the third. Cou- ture scored 31 seconds into the period after his wrist shot banked in off a post and Weiss added a re- bound goal three minutes later. Marleau's wrist shot made it a 5-3 lead at 4:56 of the period, but Detroit's Abdelkader cut the advan- tage to a goal a few min- utes later with a rebound marker of his own. The Red Wings had a power play midway through the third, but could not manage a shot on Niemi. Marleau closed the scoring with an empty- net goal. The Red Wings heard a smattering of boos from the fans who stuck around for the final horn. They didn't lose ground to Ottawa because the Sena- tors fell 5-1 on Thursday to the visiting New York Rangers. The Sharks still have a lot of work — and need some help — in their quest for a wild-card spot in the Western Conference. "Right now, we're look- ing at every game and say- ing, 'Let's get two points, let's get two points," Tier- ney said. "I think we seized a lot of our opportunities, got chances off the rush and got a couple of lucky bounces." Neither Detroit goalie spoke with reporters after the game. Sharks FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Basketball NBA WESTERNCONFERENCE PacificDivision W L Pct GB y-Golden State 58 13 .817 — Clippers 47 25 .653 11½ Phoenix 38 34 .528 20½ Sacramento 26 45 .366 32 Lakers 19 51 .271 38½ SouthwestDivision W L Pct GB x-Memphis 50 22 .694 — Houston 48 23 .676 1½ San Antonio 45 26 .634 4½ Dallas 45 27 .625 5 New Orleans 37 34 .521 12½ NorthwestDivision W L Pct GB Portland 45 25 .643 — Oklahoma City 41 31 .569 5 Utah 31 40 .437 14½ Denver 27 45 .375 19 Minnesota 16 55 .225 29½ EASTERNCONFERENCE AtlanticDivision W L Pct GB x-Toronto 42 30 .583 — Boston 31 40 .437 10½ Brooklyn 30 40 .429 11 Philadelphia 18 54 .250 24 New York 14 58 .194 28 SoutheastDivision W L Pct GB y-Atlanta 54 17 .761 — Washington 40 32 .556 14½ Miami 33 38 .465 21 Charlotte 30 40 .429 23½ Orlando 22 51 .301 33 CentralDivision W L Pct GB x-Cleveland 47 26 .644 — x-Chicago 44 29 .603 3 Milwaukee 36 36 .500 10½ Indiana 31 41 .431 15½ Detroit 27 44 .380 19 x-clinchedplayoffspot y-clincheddivision Wednesday'sgames Indiana 103, Washington 101 Chicago 116, Toronto 103 Atlanta 95, Orlando 83 Brooklyn 91, Charlotte 88 Clippers 111, New York 80 Miami 93, Boston 86 Houston 95, New Orleans 93 Cleveland 111, Memphis 89 Lakers 101, Minnesota 99, OT Philadelphia 99, Denver 85 Portland 92, Utah 89 San Antonio 130, Oklahoma City 91 Sacramento 108, Phoenix 99 Thursday'sgames Milwaukee 111, Indiana 107 Friday'sgames Clippers at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Charlotte at Washington, 4 p.m. Detroit at Orlando, 4 p.m. Miami at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Lakers at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Cleveland at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Boston at New York, 4:30 p.m. Sacramento at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Houston, 5 p.m. Golden State at Memphis, 5 p.m. Dallas at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Utah at Denver, 6 p.m. Portland at Phoenix, 7 p.m. MEN'SNCAATOURNAMENT EASTREGIONAL AtTheCarrierDome Syracuse,N.Y. RegionalSemifinals Friday,March27 N.C. State (22-13) vs. Louisville (26-8), 4:37 p.m. Michigan State (25-11) vs. Oklahoma (24-10), 7:07 p.m. RegionalChampionship Sunday,March29 Semifinal winners SOUTHREGIONAL AtNRGStadium Houston RegionalSemifinals Friday,March27 UCLA (22-13) vs. Gonzaga (34-2), 4:15 p.m. Duke (31-4) vs. Utah (26-8), 6:45 p.m. RegionalChampionship Sunday,March29 Semifinal winners MIDWESTREGIONAL AtQuickenLoansArena Cleveland RegionalSemifinals Thursday,March26 Notre Dame 81, Wichita State 70 Kentucky (36-0) vs. West Virginia (25-9), (n.) RegionalChampionship Saturday,March28 Semifinal winners WESTREGIONAL AtTheStaplesCenter LosAngeles RegionalSemifinals Thursday,March26 Wisconsin 79, North Carolina 72 Arizona (33-3) vs. Xavier (23-13), (n.) RegionalChampionship Saturday,March28 Semifinal winners FINALFOUR AtLucasOilStadium Indianapolis NationalSemifinals Saturday,April4 Midwest champion vs. West champion East champion vs. South champion NationalChampionship Monday,April6 Semifinal winners NCAAWOMEN'STOURNAMENT ALBANYREGIONAL RegionalSemifinals AtAlbany,N.Y. Saturday,March28 UConn (34-1) vs. Texas (24-10), 9 a.m. Dayton (27-6) vs. Louisville (27-6), 11:30 a.m. SPOKANEREGIONAL RegionalSemifinals AtSpokane,Wash. Saturday,March28 Maryland (32-2) vs. Duke (23-10), 1:30 p.m. Gonzaga (26-7) vs. Tennessee (29-5), 4 p.m. OKLAHOMACITYREGIONAL Monday,March23 RegionalSemifinals AtOklahomaCity Friday,March27 Iowa (26-7) vs. Baylor (32-3), 4:30 p.m. Notre Dame (33-2) vs. Stanford (26-9), 7 p.m. GREENSBOROREGIONAL RegionalSemifinals AtGreensboro,N.C. Friday,March27 South Carolina (32-2) vs. North Carolina (26-8), 4 p.m. Arizona State (29-5) vs. Florida State (31-4), 6:30 p.m. WOMEN'SNIT THIRDROUND Thursday,March26 Villanova 63, St. John's 55 Temple 80, NC State 79, OT Michigan 65, Missouri 55 West Virginia 60, Duquesne 39 Middle Tennessee 82, Mississippi 70 Northern Colorado (22-12) at UCLA (15-18), (n.) Saint Mary's (Cal) (22-10) at Sacramento State (18-15), (n.) NHL WESTERNCONFERENCE PACIFICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 76 47 22 7 101 222 213 Vancouver 73 43 26 4 90 211 195 Los Angeles 74 37 23 14 88 199 184 Ca lg ar y 74 4 0 27 7 8 7 21 7 19 5 San Jose 74 36 30 8 80 207 210 Edmonton 74 21 40 13 55 177 254 Arizona 75 23 44 8 54 158 249 CENTRALDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 75 46 21 8 100 214 180 St. Louis 74 46 21 7 99 226 182 Chicago 73 44 23 6 94 207 167 Minnesota 74 42 25 7 91 211 183 Winnipeg 75 39 24 12 90 212 197 Dallas 74 36 28 10 82 232 236 Colorado 73 33 28 12 78 196 205 EASTERNCONFERENCE ATLANTICDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 75 46 21 8 100 197 167 Tampa Bay 75 46 22 7 99 244 194 Detroit 73 39 22 12 90 212 201 Ottawa 73 37 25 11 85 213 195 Boston 74 36 25 13 85 195 193 Florida 74 34 26 14 82 184 202 Toronto 75 27 42 6 60 194 241 Buffalo 74 20 46 8 48 141 249 METROPOLITANDIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-N.Y. Rangers73 47 19 7 101 224 168 N.Y. Islanders 75 44 26 5 93 228 208 Pittsburgh 74 40 23 11 91 204 186 Washington 74 40 24 10 90 215 182 Philadelphia 75 30 29 16 76 196 216 New Jersey 74 31 31 12 74 166 189 Columbus 73 34 35 4 72 198 228 Carolina 73 27 36 10 64 170 201 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. x-clinched playoff spot Wednesday'sgames Dallas 4, Calgary 3, SO Philadelphia 4, Chicago 1 Edmonton 4, Colorado 3 Thursday'sgames Anaheim 3, Boston 2, OT Arizona 4, Buffalo 3, OT Los Angeles 3, N.Y. Islanders 2 Washington 3, New Jersey 2, OT Carolina 5, Pittsburgh 2 Florida 4, Toronto 1 N.Y. Rangers 5, Ottawa 1 San Jose 6, Detroit 4 Nashville 3, Tampa Bay 2 Winnipeg 5, Montreal 2 Colorado at Vancouver, (n.) Friday'sgames Calgary at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Columbus at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Dallas at Edmonton, 6:30 p.m. Sharks6,RedWings4 SanJose 3 0 3 — 6 Detroit 2 0 2 — 4 FirstPeriod: 1, San Jose, Vlasic 9 (Karls- son), :19. 2, San Jose, Nieto 8 (Tierney, Braun), 9:14. 3, Detroit, Jurco 3 (Miller, DeKeyser), 10:04. 4, Detroit, Tatar 27 (DeKeyser), 11:44. 5, San Jose, Tierney 4 (Wingels, Mueller), 16:02;Penalties: Thornton, SJ (slashing), 3:41, Pavelski, SJ (holding), 17:56. SecondPeriod: None;Penalties: Thorn- ton, SJ (tripping), 1:03, Zidlicky, Det (cross-checking), 7:50. ThirdPeriod: 6, San Jose, Couture 24 (Marleau), :31. 7, Detroit, Weiss 8 (Pulkkinen, Br.Smith), 3:39. 8, San Jose, Marleau 16 (Burns), 4:56. 9, Detroit, Abdelkader 22 (Ericsson, Kronwall), 7:27. 10, San Jose, Marleau 17 (Hertl, Couture), 18:43 (en);Penalties: Marleau, SJ (hooking), 9:49, Vlasic, SJ (roughing), 15:31, Abdelkader, Det (roughing), 15:31. ShotsonGoal: San Jose 10-7-13=30. Detroit 12-12-10=34. Goalies: San Jose, Niemi 29-22-7 (34 shots-30 saves). Detroit, Howard (10-7), Mrazek 14-7-1 (0:00 second, 19-17). A: 20,027 (20,027);T: 2:28. Referees: Dan O'Halloran, Justin St. Pierre;Linesmen: Ryan Galloway, Shane Heyer. Baseball MLBSPRINGTRAINING Thursday'sgames Miami 5, St. Louis 3 Detroit 6, Baltimore 4 Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Yankees 5 Atlanta 7, Pittsburgh 5 Boston 5, Minnesota 4, 10 innings Toronto 4, Philadelphia 1 Kansas City 3, Seattle (ss) 0 Cincinnati 13, Cleveland 2 Milwaukee 15, Seattle (ss) 1 Dodgers 9, Chicago White Sox 6 Arizona 3, San Diego 3, tie, 10 innings N.Y. Mets 8, Washington 3 Angels 8, Chicago Cubs 4 Colorado vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., (n.) Oakland vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, Ariz., (n.) Friday'sgames N.Y. Yankees vs. Philadelphia at Clear- water, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Tampa Bay vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Boston vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee, Fla., 10:05 a.m. N.Y. Mets vs. St. Louis (ss) at Jupiter, Fla., 10:05 a.m. St. Louis (ss) vs. Washington at Viera, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Pittsburgh vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Detroit vs. Toronto at Dunedin, Fla., 10:07 a.m. Texas vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox vs. Chicago Cubs at Mesa, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Cleveland vs. Arizona (ss) at Scottsdale, Ariz., 1:10 p.m. Arizona (ss) vs. Angels at Tempe, Ariz., 1:10 p.m. Miami vs. Houston at Kissimmee, Fla., 3:05 p.m. Seattle vs. Kansas City at Surprise, Ariz., 6:05 p.m. San Francisco vs. Dodgers at Glendale, Ariz., 7:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Cincinnati at Goodyear, Ariz., 7:05 p.m. Colorado vs. San Diego at Peoria, Ariz., 7:05 p.m. Golf PGA-VALEROTEXASOPEN Thursday At TPC San Antonio, Oaks Course San Antonio Purse: $6.2 million Yardage: 7,435;Par: 72 (36-36) (a-amateur) FirstRound Charley Hoffman.....................33-34—67 -5 Aaron Baddeley.......................34-34—68 -4 Max Homa................................ 36-33—69 -3 Phil Mickelson ..........................35-35—70 -2 Ryan Palmer..............................36-34—70 -2 Cameron Beckman..................36-35—71 -1 Daniel Summerhays ................35-36—71 -1 Jordan Spieth............................38-33—71 -1 Jimmy Walker ...........................36-35—71 -1 Chris Kirk...................................36-35—71 -1 Zach Johnson............................35-36—71 -1 Chesson Hadley........................35-36—71 -1 Cameron Percy..........................38-34—72 E Matt Kuchar...............................36-36—72 E S.J. Park ......................................37-35—72 E Kevin Na......................................38-34—72 E Billy Horschel.............................35-37—72 E John Merrick..............................38-34—72 E Scott Piercy ...............................36-36—72 E Jason Kokrak .............................35-37—72 E William McGirt ..........................38-34—72 E Fabian Gomez............................36-36—72 E Brian Davis .............................. 34-39—73 +1 Jerry Kelly................................ 38-35—73 +1 Kevin Chappell........................ 38-35—73 +1 Brendon Todd ..........................36-37—73 +1 Michael Thompson.................37-36—73 +1 Bryce Molder .......................... 38-35—73 +1 John Huh...................................37-36—73 +1 Scott Pinckney ....................... 35-38—73 +1 Thomas Birdsey ..................... 35-38—73 +1 Retief Goosen ......................... 36-38—74 +2 John Peterson..........................35-39—74 +2 Marc Warren........................... 38-36—74 +2 LPGA-KIACLASSIC Thursday At Aviara Golf Club Course Carlsbad, Calif. Purse: $1.7 million Yardage: 6,593;Par: 72 (36-36) (a-amateur) FirstRound Mirim Lee.................................. 33-32—65 -7 Yani Tseng................................33-33—66 -6 Cristie Kerr...............................33-34—67 -5 Lydia Ko ....................................33-34—67 -5 Xiyu Lin ..................................... 32-35—67 -5 Karrie Webb.............................33-34—67 -5 In Gee Chun..............................34-34—68 -4 Laura Diaz ................................34-34—68 -4 Austin Ernst .............................34-34—68 -4 Karine Icher .............................33-35—68 -4 Hyo Joo Kim..............................34-34—68 -4 Brittany Lang............................31-37—68 -4 Stacy Lewis..............................32-36—68 -4 Inbee Park................................34-34—68 -4 Jackie Stoelting.......................33-35—68 -4 Lexi Thompson........................32-36—68 -4 Paula Creamer.........................34-35—69 -3 Moriya Jutanugarn ................. 34-35—69 -3 Alison Lee................................. 35-34—69 -3 Se Ri Pak................................... 35-34—69 -3 Brooke Pancake ...................... 35-34—69 -3 Jane Rah....................................34-35—69 -3 Beatriz Recari.......................... 34-35—69 -3 Jennifer Rosales...................... 34-35—69 -3 Tennis MIAMIOPENRESULTS Thursday At The Tennis Center at Crandon Park Key Biscayne, Fla. Purse: Men, $6.27 million (Masters 1000);Women,$5.38million(Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles MEN FirstRound Alejandro Falla, Colombia, def. Michael Berrer, Germany, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-4. Mikhail Youzhny, Russia, def. Andrey Golubev, Kazakhstan, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3. Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, def. Steve Johnson, United States, 6-4, 3-6, 6-2. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, def. Pablo Andujar, Spain, 0-6, 7-6 (4), 6-3. Martin Klizan, Slovakia, def. Paolo Lorenzi, Italy, 6-3, 6-4. Simone Bolelli, Italy, def. Marcos Bagh- datis, Cyprus, 6-2, 6-2. Borna Coric, Croatia, def. Andreas Haider-Maurer, Austria, 1-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3). Alexander Zverev, Germany, def. Sam Groth, Australia, 7-5, 6-7 (5), 6-4. Jerzy Janowicz, Poland, def. Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, 6-4, 6-2. Vasek Pospisil, Canada, def. Juan Martin Del Porto, Argentina, 6-4, 7-6 (7). Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, def. Ricardas Berankis, Lithuania, 6-4, 6-1. Steve Darcis, Belgium. def. Malek Jaziri, Tunisia, 2-6, 7-5, 7-5. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, def. Ryan Har- rison, United States, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Federico Delbonis, Argentina, def. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 7-6 (4), 3-6, 7-5. Andrey Rublev, Russia, def. Pablo Car- reno Busta, Spain, 1-6, 6-1, 6-4. WOMEN SecondRound Agnieszka Radwanska (7), Poland, def. Anna Schmiedlova, Slovakia, 6-4, 7-5. Carla Suarez Navarro (12), Spain, def. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 6-3, 6-1. Irina-Camelia Begu (31), Romania, def. Tereza Smitkova, Czech Republic, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4. Paula Badosa Gibert, Spain, def. Zheng Saisai, China, 6-1, 7-5. Andrea Petkovic (9), Germany, def. Christina McHale, United States, 6-2, 6-2. Karolina Pliskova (14), Czech Republic, def. Annika Beck, Germany, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Kristina Mladenovic, France, def. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova (19), Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-2. Kaia Kanepi, Estonia, def. Varvara Lep- chenko (28), United States, 6-2, 6-4. Alize Cornet (22), France, def. Elena Vesnina, Russia, 6-4, 6-1. Elina Svitolina (26), Ukraine, def. Bojana Jovanovski, Servia, 6-3, 7-6 (3). Ekaterina Makarova (8), Russia, def. Karin Knapp, Italy, 6-1, 6-3. Caroline Wozniacki (4), Denmark, def. Madison Brengle, United States, 6-0, 6-1. Venus Williams (16), United States, def. Urszula Radwanska, Poland, 6-3, 6-2. Samantha Stosur (23), Australia, def. Pa ul in e P ar me nt ie r, Fr an ce, 6 -1 , 3 -6 , 6 -0 . Kurumi Nara, Japan, def. Carolina Garcia (25), France, 6-3, 7-6 (9). Daria Gavrilova, Russia, def. Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, 7-6 (4), 6-3. Soccer MAJORLEAGUESOCCER WESTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 3 0 0 9 6 1 San Jose 2 1 0 6 5 4 Vancouver 2 1 0 6 3 3 Los Angeles 1 0 2 5 5 3 Houston 1 1 1 4 2 2 Seattle 1 1 0 3 5 3 Portland 0 0 3 3 2 2 Salt Lake 0 0 2 2 3 3 Colorado 0 0 2 2 0 0 Kansas City 0 1 2 2 2 4 EASTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA N.Y. City FC 1 0 2 5 3 1 New York 1 0 1 4 3 1 Orlando City 1 1 1 4 2 2 Columbus 1 1 0 3 2 1 Toronto FC 1 1 0 3 3 3 D.C. United 1 1 0 3 1 2 Philadelphia 0 1 2 2 3 5 Montreal 0 1 1 1 0 1 New England 0 2 1 1 0 5 Chicago 0 3 0 0 1 5 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday,March28 San Jose at New England, noon Orlando City at Montreal, 1 p.m. Los Angeles at D.C. United, 4 p.m. Kansas City at N.Y. City FC, 4 p.m. New York at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. Portland at Vancouver, 5 p.m. Seattle at FC Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Colorado at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Sunday,March29 Philadelphia at Chicago, 2 p.m. Toronto FC at Salt Lake, 4 p.m. Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For March 27 NCAATournament TONIGHT AtSyracuse,N.Y. Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog Louisville 3 (130) NC State Michigan St. 2 (135) Oklahoma AtHouston Gonzaga 8½ (145) UCLA Duke 5 (134) Utah NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Orlando Pk (198½) Detroit Clippers 11½ (203½) at 76ers at Washington 3½ (189½) Charlotte at Toronto 8½ (202½) Lakers Cleveland 8 (208) at Brooklyn at Atlanta 10½ (198½) Miami Boston 8 (199) at New York at New Orleans 8 (208) Sacramento at Houston 15 (203) Minnesota Golden State 3 (195½) at Memphis at San Antonio 8 (205½) Dallas at Denver 1 (191½) Utah Portland 2 (206) at Phoenix NHL Favorite Line Underdog at Minnesota -175/+155 Calgary at Chicago -230/+190 Columbus Dallas -160/+140 at Edmonton | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015 2 B

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