Red Bluff Daily News

April 30, 2015

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COLLEGEBASEBALL LSU vs. Mississippi State: 4:30p.m.,ESPNU. Oregon State vs. Washington: 5p.m., PAC-12. MLB BASEBALL Philadelphia Phillies at St. Louis Cardinals: 10:30a.m., MLB. Los Angeles Angels at Oak- land Athletics: 12:30p.m., CSN. Detroit Tigers vs. Kansas City Royals or Chicago White Sox vs. Minnesota Twins: 5p.m., MLB. NBA PLAYOFFS Chicago Bulls vs. Milwaukee Bucks: 4p.m., TNT. Los Angeles Clippers vs. San Antonio Spurs: 6:30p.m., TNT. BOXING Ishe Smith vs. Cecil McCalla: 6p.m., ESPN2. Mercito Gesta vs. Carlos Molina: 7p.m., FS1. NFL FOOTBALL NFL Dra : 5p.m., ESPN, NFL. GOLF LPGA North Texas Shootout Round 1: 7:30a.m., GOLF. Web.com United Leasing Championship Round 1: 10:30 a.m., GOLF. PGA WGC-Cadillac Champi- onship Day 2: 1p.m., GOLF. NHL PLAYOFFS Washington Capitals at New York Rangers: 4:30p.m., NBCSN. Ontheair thanks to a two-out error on a grounder to third base, tying the game at 4. That was a predomi- nant theme Tuesday. With PV starting Ryan Stein- dorf, who leads the North- ern Section in ERA at 0.28, and Schreter, ranked 12th at 1.10, going for Red Bluff, runs should have been at a premium. Defense ended up even scarcer. The Vikings (15-10-2, 6-5 EA-SRL) plated all four of their runs in the second inning with one hit but three Spartan errors. Jus- tin Morris, who had two of PV's three hits Tuesday, started it with an infield single. And it looked like Schreter would get out of it unscathed but a running catch in shallow center field was dropped, letting Morris score. Two walks loaded the bases. Ryan Busby then struck out but reached first on an errant pitch, and the throw to get him reached right field, giving PV two more runs. Another error, this one a third baseman's bobble saw Jay Salsbury score. Considering Steindorf's season has included yield- ing two earned runs in 50 innings pitched thus far, PV's advantage seemed even larger. TheVikings,though,gave back much of the lead the same way they took it. An error put Bryce Sinclair on first base to start the fifth. Two walks loaded the bases. Steindorf, who had been hit- ting 88-89 mph on a radar gun, induced Pritchard to hit a comebacker. An errant throw home, though, plated one run and kept the bases full. Walker Dodero ended Steindorf's outing with an RBI single. Ludwig went for broke and turned to customary Friday starter Ryan Vlasic. The lefty gave up a Ryan Gamboa sacrifice fly but kept PV in front at 4-3 with two groundouts to third baseman Jaret Flint. Vlasic struck out four in four in- nings in relief. But his ex- tended outing likely means the Vikings will turn to someone else Friday. "That would have been a big win for us and put us in a good spot," Ludwig said. "We've got pitching in the dugout so we've got four guys who can still go." The Spartans won't have such concerns after Schreter kept going out to the mound and kept com- ing through. He retired the final seven batters he faced, allowing three hits, two walks, and he hit two batters. He struck out seven and was ready for another inning if needed. "I could have if Sand- ers would've let me off my leash hopefully," said Schreter after he came out for the eighth inning de- spite reaching 100 pitches in the seventh. That leaves Red Bluff (23-4, 8-1 EA-SRL) with Kolby Button as the likely starter for Friday, and re- liever Pritchard rested and ready for Sanders to turn to when needed. "I was finishing this. There was a little bit of coaxing him, but he knew what I had in me," Schreter said after he gave the Spar- tans time to come back. "Our one through nine is the best in the North- ern Section. I knew they'd come through." ConnectwithSports Writer Joseph Shufelberger at 896-7774. Spartans FROM PAGE 1 and Daniel Murphy strug- gling at the plate. A-ROD'S REVENGE Alex Rodriguez certainly didn't lose his swing during his year in exile. Rodriguez hit his way up in New York's batting order from seventh to the three-hole and is on pace for 35 homers and 100 RBIs. He's one homer away from tying Willie Mays for fourth on the all-time list with 660. But will the Yan- kees celebrate the mile- stone and pay him a $6 million bonus for doing it? HOUSTON, WE HAVE A WIN- NER The Astros finally broke a streak of three straight 100-loss seasons by going 70-92 last year. Now, they're off to a 13-7 start that has most observ- ers shaking their heads in wonder. "If people are surprised that's great, but that is not how we think in the club- house," Astros manager A.J. Hinch said. "I try to get the guys to not think about any of that stuff. We're playing good base- ball and we haven't played our best yet. That's the thing I love: we are win- ning without playing our best. We have good cama- raderie, a good culture on our team. We play hard and compete." BREW CREW BLUES Mil- waukee is off to a 4-17 start, the worst by an NL team since the Cubs did the same in 1997. The Brew- ers have lost each of their seven series and haven't won consecutive games yet. They're tied for the second- worst batting average and have the fourth-worst ERA. JOSH'S JOURNEY After a self-reported relapse for co- caine and alcohol use, Josh Hamilton was dumped by the Los Angeles Angels. The 2010 AL MVP returns to the Texas Rangers where he resurrected his career the first time around and became a perennial All- Star who earned a $125 million deal from the An- gels. "It's been tough the past 11 weeks or so, not know- ing what's going to happen, where I was going to be, and everything that was transpiring was tough," Hamilton said. DH TO THE RESCUE Cardi- nals ace Adam Wainwright tore his left Achilles while batting and will miss the rest of the season. Nation- als ace Max Scherzer will miss at least one start after injuring his thumb while batting. Both injuries fu- eled the longtime debate over bringing the desig- nated hitter to the NL. "I wish both leagues would convert to Na- tional League baseball," Wainwright said. "You can't point to another in- stance that the pitcher has hurt an Achilles (bat- ting). The game in the Na- tional League is just a bet- ter game." Scherzer joked that fans don't pay to see pitchers hit, said he enjoys batting and hopes both leagues have the same rules. BRYANT ARRIVES Cubs prized prospect Kris Bry- ant was called up one day after the club ensured he can't be eligible for free agency until 2021. Bryant hit nine homers in spring training but was sent to the minors for the first two weeks. He jumped into the cleanup spot in his debut and should be there for quite a while. WATCHTHECLOCK The in- corporation of pace-of-play rules cut NL games by 10 minutes and AL games are down eight minutes. Play- ers who don't adhere to the new rules can be fined starting May 1. Perhaps the threat will trim game times even a couple more minutes. AP Sports Writers Bernie Wilson, John Marshall, Steven Wine and Howie Rumberg contributed to this report. Baseball FROM PAGE 1 lanta's reserves. DeMarre Carroll scored 24 points, pushing the Hawks out to a big lead. But the Nets, as they did in each of the first two games in Atlanta, came back to make it another close one. Jack carried Brook- lyn down the stretch, hit- ting back-to-back 3-point- ers and then driving for a floater in the lane that closed the gap to 90-89 with less than 5 minutes to go. Teague responded with a 3, then stole it from Jack at the other end. The Hawks fought for an offen- sive rebound after missing underneath, leading to an easy bucket for Carroll off a pass for Horford. Joe Johnson hit two more 3s to pull the Nets to 97-95 — their last gasp, it turned out. Horford, who also had 15 rebounds, hit one of his patented jump- ers from the top of the key, Jack walked trying to cre- ate something, and Teague scored on two straight drives — going right by Jack each time — to finally seal the victory. Teague didn't look the least bit bothered by a twisted ankle that briefly sent him to the locker room to get taped. With prospective new owner Antony Ressler sit- ting courtside alongside his wife, actress Jami Gertz, the Hawks were on the verge of blowing out Brooklyn in the open- ing quarter. Attacking the basket at every opportu- nity, Atlanta created shots inside and outside, going 14 of 24 from the field and 4 of 8 from 3-point range. Car- roll capped off the quarter with a leaning 3-pointer at the buzzer, giving the home team a commanding 33-16 lead. Hawks FROM PAGE 1 said, "and a $20 million fight for him." The frenzy for the box- ing's biggest event of the century continued to build Wednesday, even if the two fighters themselves were very subdued. They ap- peared at a final prefight press conference with nothing bad to say about each other, and couldn't even bring themselves to scowl for pictures. If the past five years were personal, with the two camps trading barbs, the fight itself is not. Pacquiao will be fighting for his leg- acy and a country desper- ate for him to win, while Mayweather will be fight- ing to add to his already substantial bank accounts. That was apparent when Mayweather was asked if being undefeated was the biggest motivation for him. "At the end of the day my daughter can't eat no zero," Mayweather said of his unbeaten mark. "She can't spend a boxing ring." Money shouldn't be a problem for the May- weather family after this fight. Not with total reve- nue of some $300 million — and possibly more if the pay-per-view is the hit that network executives pri- vately think it will be. Mayweather won't be the only one getting rich. Pacquiao will also share in the $120 million or so. Fight FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Los Angeles 12 8 .600 _ Colorado 11 9 .550 1 San Diego 11 12 .478 2 ½ Arizona 9 11 .450 3 Giants 9 12 .429 3 ½ CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB St. Louis 14 6 .700 _ Chicago 12 8 .600 2 Pittsburgh 12 10 .545 3 Cincinnati 10 11 .476 4 ½ Milwaukee 5 17 .227 10 EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB New York 15 7 .682 _ Atlanta 10 11 .476 4 ½ Miami 10 12 .455 5 Washington 9 13 .409 6 Philadelphia 8 14 .364 7 Tuesday'sgames Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 2 Miami 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Washington 13, Atlanta 12 Chicago Cubs 6, Pittsburgh 2 St. Louis 11, Philadelphia 5 Arizona 12, Colorado 5 Houston 14, San Diego 3 Giants 2, L.A. Dodgers 1 Wednesday'sgames Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 3 Houston 7, San Diego 2 Miami 7, N.Y. Mets 3 Washington 13, Atlanta 4 Pittsburgh 8, Chicago Cubs 1 St. Louis 5, Philadelphia 2 Colorado at Arizona, (n.) Giants at L.A. Dodgers, (n.) Thursday'sgames Philadelphia (Buchanan 0-4) at St. Louis (Cooney 0-0), 10:45 a.m. Cincinnati (Leake 0-1) at Atlanta (S.Miller 3-0), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Friday'sgames Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Philadelphia at Miami, 4:10 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 4:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Giants, 7:15 p.m. AMERICANLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Houston 14 7 .667 _ Seattle 10 11 .476 4 Los Angeles 9 11 .450 4 ½ A's 9 12 .429 5 Texas 7 14 .333 7 CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB Detroit 15 7 .682 _ Kansas City 14 7 .667 ½ Chicago 8 10 .444 5 Minnesota 9 12 .429 5 ½ Cleveland 7 13 .350 7 EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB New York 13 9 .591 _ Boston 12 10 .545 1 Tampa Bay 12 10 .545 1 Baltimore 10 10 .500 2 Toronto 10 12 .455 3 Tuesday'sgames Kansas City 11, Cleveland 5 Toronto 11, Boston 8 N.Y. Yankees 4, Tampa Bay 2 Chicago White Sox at Baltimore, ppd., public safety Seattle 2, Texas 1 Minnesota 3, Detroit 2 A's 6, L.A. Angels 2 Houston 14, San Diego 3 Wednesday'sgames Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Yankees 2, 13 innings Detroit 10, Minnesota 7 Baltimore 8, Chicago White Sox 2 Houston 7, San Diego 2 Cleveland 7, Kansas City 5 Boston 4, Toronto 1 Seattle 5, Texas 2 L.A. Angels at A's, (n.) Thursday'sgames L.A. Angels (Richards 1-1) at A's (Chavez 0-1), 12:35 p.m. Toronto (Da.Norris 1-1) at Cleveland (House 0-3), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Sale 2-0) at Min- nesota (May 1-1), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Simon 4-0) at Kansas City (D.Duffy 1-0), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Paxton 0-2) at Houston (Feld- man 2-2), 5:10 p.m. Friday'sgames Tampa Bay vs. Baltimore at St. Peters- burg, FL, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. A's at Texas, 5:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Detroit at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 5:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Giants, 7:15 p.m. NBA PLAYOFFSFIRSTROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Tuesday,April28 Houston 103, Dallas 94, Houston wins series 4-1 San Antonio 111, L.A. Clippers 107, San Antonio leads series 3-2 Wednesday,April29 Atlanta 107, Brooklyn 97, Atlanta leads series 3-2 Portland at Memphis, (n.) Thursday,April30 Chicago at Milwaukee, 4 p.m. L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Friday,May1 Atlanta at Brooklyn, 5 p.m. x-Memphis at Portland, 10 or 7:30 p.m. Saturday,May2 x-Milwaukee at Chicago, 6:30, 8 or 6 p.m. x-San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 8 or 6 p.m. Sunday,May3 x-Brooklyn at Atlanta, 10 a.m. x-Portland at Memphis, 12:30 p.m. NHL PLAYOFFSFIRSTROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Wednesday,April29 Tampa Bay 2, Detroit 0, Tampa Bay wins series 4-3 PLAYOFFSSECONDROUND (Best-of-7) Thursday,April30 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 4:30 p.m. Calgary at Anaheim, 7 p.m. Friday,May1 Tampa Bay at Montreal, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago, 6:30 p.m. Saturday,May2 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 9:30 a.m. Sunday,May3 Tampa Bay at Montreal, 3 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Calgary at Anaheim, 7 p.m. Monday,May4 N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 4:30 p.m. Tuesday,May5 Chicago at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday,May6 N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 4:30 p.m. Montreal at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. Thursday,May7 Montreal at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. Chicago at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m. Friday,May8 x-Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 6:30 p.m. Saturday,May9 x-Tampa Bay at Montreal, TBD x-Minnesota at Chicago, TBD Sunday,May10 x-N.Y. Rangers at Washington, TBD x-Calgary at Anaheim, TBD Monday,May11 x-Chicago at Minnesota, TBD Tuesday,May12 x-Montreal at Tampa Bay, TBD x-Anaheim at Calgary, TBD Wednesday,May13 x-Washington at N.Y. Rangers, TBD x-Minnesota at Chicago, TBD Thursday,May14 x-Tampa Bay at Montreal, TBD x-Calgary at Anaheim, TBD Golf MATCHPLAYRESULTS AtHardingParkGolfCourse SanFrancisco Yardage:7,127;Par:71 Wednesday (Seedingsinparentheses) Marc Leishman (56), Australia, def. Justin Rose (6), England, 3 and 2. Anirban Lahiri (34), Indian, def. Ryan Palmer (22), United States, 4 and 2. Gary Woodland (50), United States, def. Jimmy Walker (11), United States, 19 holes. Webb Simpson (46), United States, def. Ian Poulter (27), England, 3 and 2. John Senden (60), Australia, def. Henrik Stenson (3), Sweden, 19 holes. Bill Haas (23), United States, def. Bren- don Todd (42), United States, 3 and 2. Ben Martin (61), United States, def. Matt Kuchar (14), United States, 1 up. Hunter Mahan (31), United States, def. Stephen Gallacher (41), 7 and 6. Charley Hoffman (49), United States, def. Jason Day (7), Australia, 4 and 3. Zach Johnson (24), United States, def. Branden Grace (38), South Africa, 2 up. Sergio Garcia (10), Spain, def. Tommy Fleetwood (54), England, 2 up. Jamie Donaldson (30), Wales, def. Bernd Wiesberger (39), Austria, 1 up. Jordan Spieth (2), United States def. Mikko Ilonen (62), Finland, 4 and 2. Lee Westwood (26), England def. Matt Every (40), United States, 1 up. Patrick Reed (15), United States, def. Andy Sullivan (57), England, 2 and 1. Danny Willett (48), England, def. Ryan Moore (28), United States, 3 and 2. Jim Furyk (5), United States, def. George Coetzee (59), South Africa, 3 and 2. Martin Kaymer (17), Germany, def. Thongchai Jaidee (44), Thailand, 3 and 1. Marc Warren (51), Scotland, def. J.B. Holmes (12), United States, 2 and 1. Brooks Koepka (19), United States, def. Russell Henley (45), United States, 1 up. Bubba Watson (4), United States, def. Miguel Angel Jimenez (63), Spain, 5 and 4. Louis Oosthuizen (29), South Africa, def. Keegan Bradley (33), United States, 6 and 5. Rickie Fowler (13), United States, def. Harris English (55), United States, 1 up. Shane Lowry (47), Ireland, def. Graeme McDowell (32), Northern Ireland, 1 up. Dustin Johnson (8), United States, def. Matt Jones (58), Australia, 3 and 1. Charl Schwartzel (37), South Africa, def. Victor Dubuisson (21), France, 5 and 4. Francesco Molinari (64), Italy, def. Adam Sco tt ( 9) , A us tr al ia , 5 a nd 4 . Paul Casey (36), England, def. Chris Kirk (25), United States, 22 holes. Rory McIlroy (1), Northern Ireland def. Jason Dufner (53), United States, 5 and 4. Billy Horschel (18), United States def. Brandt Snedeker (35), United States, 5 and 4. Hideki Matsuyama (16), Japan, def. Alex- ander Levy (52), France, 5 and 4. Joost Luiten (43), The Netherlands, def. Kevin Na (20), United States, 19 holes. Tennis ATPWORLDTOURTEBBNP PARIBASISTANBULOPEN RESULTS Wednesday At Koza World of Sports Istanbul Purse: $537,400 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain, def. Mikhail Kukushkin (6), Kazakhstan, 6-3, 6-3. Diego Schwartzman (8), Argentina, def. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, 6-0, 6-2. Roger Federer (1), Switzerland, def. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, 6-2, 7-5. Santiago Giraldo (4), Colombia, def. Andrey Rublev, Russia, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. Soccer MAJORLEAGUESOCCER WESTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Vancouver 5 3 1 16 11 9 FC Dallas 4 2 2 14 11 11 Seattle 4 2 1 13 10 5 Los Angeles 3 2 3 12 9 8 Houston 2 2 4 10 10 8 Kansas City 2 2 4 10 11 12 San Jose 3 4 0 9 7 9 Portland 2 3 3 9 7 8 Salt Lake 2 2 3 9 6 9 Colorado 1 2 5 8 7 7 EASTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA New England 4 2 2 14 10 7 D.C. United 4 1 2 14 8 6 New York 3 0 4 13 11 6 Columbus 3 2 2 11 12 6 Chicago 3 3 0 9 6 7 Orlando City 2 4 2 8 6 10 Toronto FC 2 4 0 6 10 11 N.Y. City FC 1 4 3 6 5 7 Philadelphia 1 5 3 6 10 17 Montreal 0 2 2 2 2 6 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday'sgames New York 1, Colorado 1, tie Friday'sgames FC Dallas at Houston, 8 p.m. San Jose at Salt Lake, 10 p.m. Saturday'sgames Toronto FC at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Columbus at D.C. United, 7 p.m. New York at New England, 7:30 p.m. Colorado at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Vancouver at Portland, 10:30 p.m. Golf WORLDGOLFRANKING 1. Rory McIlroy NIR 11.21 2. Jordan Spieth USA 9.08 3. Henrik Stenson SWE 7.35 4. Bubba Watson USA 7.18 5. Jim Furyk USA 6.71 6. Justin Rose ENG 6.58 7. Jason Day AUS 6.45 8. Dustin Johnson USA 6.17 9. Adam Scott AUS 5.92 10. Sergio Garcia ESP 5.64 11. Jimmy Walker USA 5.35 12. J.B. Holmes USA 4.85 13. Rickie Fowler USA 4.57 14. Matt Kuchar USA 4.48 15. Patrick Reed USA 4.44 16. Hideki Matsuyama JPN 4.39 17. Martin Kaymer GER 4.33 18. Phil Mickelson USA 4.19 19. Billy Horschel USA 3.81 20. Brooks Koepka USA 3.55 21. Kevin Na USA 3.47 22. Victor Dubuisson FRA 3.46 23. Ryan Palmer USA 3.34 24. Bill Haas USA 3.27 25. Zach Johnson USA 3.26 26. Chris Kirk USA 3.24 27. Lee Westwood ENG 3.22 28. Ian Poulter ENG 3.20 29. Ryan Moore USA 3.14 30. Louis Oosthuizen SAF 3.08 31. Jamie Donaldson WAL 3.05 32. Hunter Mahan USA 3.04 33. Graeme McDowell NIR 3.00 34. Keegan Bradley USA 2.91 35. Anirban Lahiri IND 2.86 36. Brandt Snedeker USA 2.78 37. Paul Casey ENG 2.77 38. Charl Schwartzel SAF 2.72 39. Branden Grace SAF 2.69 40. Bernd Wiesberger AUT 2.61 41. Matt Every USA 2.59 42. Stephen Gallacher SCO 2.58 43. Brendon Todd USA 2.54 44. Joost Luiten NED 2.51 45. Thongchai Jaidee THA 2.48 46. Russell Henley USA 2.45 47. Webb Simpson USA 2.45 48. Shane Lowry IRL 2.38 49. Danny Willett ENG 2.30 Motorsports NASCARSPRINTCUPPOINTS LEADERS ThroughApril26 1. Kevin Harvick, 357. 2. Joey Logano, 324. 3. Martin Truex Jr., 315. 4. Jimmie Johnson, 299. 5. Brad Keselowski, 283. 6. K as ey K ah ne, 2 75 . 7. Matt Kenseth, 273. 8. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 271. 9. Jamie McMurray, 264. 10. Jeff Gordon, 263. 11. Aric Almirola, 250. 12. Denny Hamlin, 245. 13. Paul Menard, 239. 14. Clint Bowyer, 235. 15. Ryan Newman, 234. 16. Danica Patrick, 230. 17. Carl Edwards, 228. 18. Kurt Busch, 222. 19. David Ragan, 218. 20. Kyle Larson, 205. 21. Greg Biffle, 203. 22. AJ Allmendinger, 202. 23. Casey Mears, 200. 24. Austin Dillon, 194. 25. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 188. 26. David Gilliland, 175. 27. Trevor Bayne, 174. 28. Justin Allgaier, 171. 29. Brett Moffitt, 151. 30. Tony Stewart, 148. 31. Sam Hornish Jr., 144. 32. Cole Whitt, 136. 33. Alex Bowman, 103. 34. Michael Annett, 101. 35. Michael McDowell, 79. 36. Josh Wise, 65. 37. Matt DiBenedetto, 64. 38. Jeb Burton, 51. 39. Alex Kennedy, 40. 40. Brian Vickers, 32. 41. Reed Sorenson, 22. 42. Bobby Labonte, 20. 43. Michael Waltrip, 18. 44. Mike Wallace, 8. Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For April 30 MajorLeagueBaseball NATIONALLEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at St. Louis -165/+155 Philadelphia at New York -115/+105 Washington at Atlanta -120/+110 Cincinnati AMERICANLEAGUE Los Angeles -115/+105 at Oakland at Cleveland -105/-105 Toronto Chicago -160/+150 at Minnesota at Houston -120/+110 Seattle at Kansas City -115/+105 Detroit NBA Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog Chicago 3½ (187½) at Milwaukee at San Antonio 5½ (205½) Clippers NHL TONIGHT Favorite Line Underdog at Anaheim -190/+165 Calgary at N.Y. Rangers -170/+150 Washington TOMORROW at Chicago -140/+120 Minnesota ODDSTOWINSERIES Anaheim -220/+180 Calgary Chicago -135/+115 Minnesota N.Y. Rangers -190/+165 Washington Boxing SATURDAY UnifiedWelterweightTitle AtLasVegas Favorite Line Underdog Mayweather Jr. -220/+180 Pacquiao KENTUCKYDERBYODDS PPHorse Jockey odds 1. Ocho Ocho Ocho Trujillo50-1 2. Carpe Diem Velazquez 8-1 3. Materiality Castellano 12-1 4. Tencendur Franco30-1 5. Danzig Moon Leparoux30-1 6. Mubtaahij Soumillon20-1 7. El Kabeir Borel30-1 8. Dortmund Garcia 3-1 9. Bolo Bejarano30-1 10. Firing Line Stevens 12-1 11. Stanford Geroux30-1 12. International Star Mena20-1 13. Itsaknockout Saez30-1 14. Keen Ice Desormeaux50-1 15. Frosted Rosario15-1 16. War Story Talamo50-1 17. Mr. Z Vazquez50-1 18. American Pharoah Espinoza 5-2 19. Upstart Ortiz15-1 20. Far Right Smith30-1 Weights: 126 pounds. Distance: 1 mile. Purse: $2,203,800 if 20 start. First place: $1,443,800. Second place: $400,000. Third place: $200,000. Fourth place: $100,000. Fifth place: $60,000. Post time: 6:34 p.m. Transactions BASEBALL MLB: Announced that Minnesota Twins Minor League RHP Adrian Salcedo has received an 80-game suspension with- out pay after testing positive for Tamoxi- fen and Heptaminol both of which are in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. AmericanLeague BostonRedSox: Selected the contract of RHP Dalier Hinojosa and recalled LHP Tommy Layne from Pawtucket (IL). Optioned OF Jackie Bradley Jr. to Pawtucket. Designated RHP Anthony Varvaro for assignment. ClevelandIndians: Selected the contract of RHP Ryan Webb from Columbus (IL). Designated OF Jerry Sands for assign- ment. LosAngelesAngels: Reinstated RHP Matt Shoemaker from the bereavement list. Optioned RHP Cam Bedrosian to Salt Lake (PCL). NewYorkYankees: Recalled INF Grego- rio Petit from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. TampaBayRays: Voided the option of RHP Kirby Yates to Durham (IL) and placed him on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to April 15. Released RHP Grant Balfour. Optioned RHP Matt Andriese to Durham. TexasRangers: Purchased the contract of 1B Kyle Blanks from Round Rock (PCL). Placed 1b-DH Mitch Moreland on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to April 26. Designated OF Alex Hassan for assignment. NationalLeague ArizonaDiamondbacks: Placed RHP Ar- chie Bradley on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Enrique Burgos from Mobile (SL). CincinnatiReds: Selected the contract of RHP Michael Lorenzen from Louisville (IL). Placed LHP Manny Parra on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to April 24. Transferred RHP Homer Bailey to the 60-day DL. WashingtonNationals: Recalled LHP Sammy Solis from Harrisburg (EL) and OF Michael A. Taylor from Syracuse (IL). Placed OF Reed Johnson on the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP A.J. Cole to Syracuse. Signed RHP Jose Valverde to a minor league contract. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 2015 2 B

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