Red Bluff Daily News

May 02, 2015

Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/506082

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 11 of 19

ByJohnHickey BayAreaNewsGroup ARLINGTON, TEXAS After putting one of their poor- est Aprils to rest, the A's started May 1 as if April was still with them. By the end of the night Friday, however, Oakland may have turned a corner in pulling out a 7-5 win over the Texas Rangers. Oakland finished April 9-14 and 6½ games out of first place in the American League West, the second- largest first-month defi- cit for the A's since divi- sional play was introduced in 1969. Then they went out and did nothing against Texas starter Colby Lewis as the Rangers built up a 5-0 lead through seven innings that seemed to be more than enough to keep Oakland at bay. It wasn't. The A's scored a sea- son-best seven runs in the eighth inning, Mark Canha opening the inning with a solo homer and closing it with an RBI single. In between, Stephen Vogt singled home a run, Josh Reddick added a two-run single and Brett Lawrie took theA'sfrombehindtoahead with one swing, a double into the right-field corner that chased Oakland's fifth and sixth runs home. That rally, which saw the A's chew through three Texas relievers, including closer Neftali Feliz, came after the A's finished April by losing six of their last seven games to tumble into fourth place in the West. Dan Otero got the win by getting the final out of the seventh inning, al- though he contributed to a two-run Texas rally. Evan Scribner threw a perfect eighth and Tyler Clippard put together his second save in the ninth. Oakland starter Scott Kazmir hadn't allowed a run in the first three in- nings of any of his four starts in April and had a 0.99 ERA for the month. But his May began with a former teammate, Kyle Blanks, hitting his first homer of the season in the second inning. BASEBALL A's rally late to beat Rangers Oakland scores 7 runs in 8th inning for comeback win AUTORACING NASCAR Xfinity Series Winn- Dixie 300Qualifying:8a.m., FS1. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Qualifying: 10a.m., FOX. FIA Endurance Racing World Championship: 10a.m., FS1. NASCAR Xfinity Series Winn- Dixie 300: 11:30a.m., FOX. COLLEGE BASEBALL Florida vs. Georgia: 9a.m., ESPNU. Arkansas vs. Alabama: 10a.m., ESPN2. LSU vs. Mississippi State: 1 p.m., ESPN2. Oregon State vs. Washington: 8:30p.m., PAC-12. MLB BASEBALL New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox: 10:30a.m., MLB. Los Angeles Angels at San Francisco Giants: 1p.m., CS- NBA, FS1. Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves: 4p.m., FS1. Oakland Athletics at Texas Rangers: 5p.m., CSN. Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Los Angeles Dodgers or Colo- rado Rockies vs. San Diego Padres: 7p.m., MLB. NBA BASKETBALL San Antonio Spurs vs. Los Angeles Clippers: 5p.m., TNT. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Oregon Spring Game: 11a.m., PAC-12. AFL FOOTBALL San Jose at Arizona: 6p.m., ESPN2. NFL FOOTBALL NFL Dra : 9a.m., ESPN. GOLF LPGA North Texas Shootout Round 3: 10a.m., GOLF. PGA WGC-Cadillac Cham- pionship Round of 16: noon, GOLF. PGA WGC-Cadillac Cham- pionship Round 3: 4:20p.m., NBC. Champions Tour Insperity Invitational Round 2: 4:30 p.m., GOLF. NHL HOCKEY Washington Capitals vs. New York Rangers: 9:30a.m., NBC. HORSE RACING Kentucky Derby: 1p.m., NBC. MOTORCYCLE RACING AMA Supercross: 7p.m., FS1. FIM Grand Prix of Spain MotoGP World Championship: 4:30a.m., FS1. COLLEGE RUGBY Varsity Cup Championship BYU vs. California: 1p.m., NBCSN. SOCCER EPL Soccer: 7a.m., NBCSN. MFL Fútbol Toluca at Ameri- ca: 2:55p.m., (27), KUCO. EPL C. Palace at Chelsea: 5:30a.m., NBCSN. COLLEGE SOFTBALL Long Beach State vs. Cal Poly: noon, ESPNU. Arizona vs. UCLA: 2p.m., ESPNU. California vs. Oregon: 3:30 p.m., PAC-12. Kentucky vs. Tennessee: 4 p.m., ESPNU. Arizona State vs. Stanford: 5:30p.m., PAC-12. Alabama vs. Arkansas: 6p.m., ESPNU. On the air "Floyd Mayweather is going to try and take Manny Pacquiao's head off," said Mayweather's promoter, Leonard Ellerbe. "You can count on that happening. He'll do it in a manner where he follows a game plan, but Floyd May- weather is looking to fin- ish him off and I strongly believe that will happen." Oddsmakers don't be- lieve, making it a 3-1 fa- vorite that the fight will go at least until late in the 12th round. The argument can be made that May- weather hasn't legitimately knocked out an opponent since he stopped Ricky Hatton in 2007, and feels no pressure to do so with Pacquiao despite a payday that will likely be at least $180 million. "I truly believe I'm the smarter fighter," May- weather said. "He would be a better fighter if he wasn't so reckless. It's a gift and it's a curse. He's won a lot of fights by being reckless, but you can be reckless and get knocked out. And get- ting knocked out in a harsh way can affect you in the long run." Pacquiao, of course, has been knocked out, in the harshest of ways. He was on the attack in the sixth round of his December 2012 fight with Juan Man- uel Marquez when a right hand from Marquez left him face down and uncon- scious on the canvas. To beat Mayweather, though, Pacquiao will have to risk getting hit. More importantly, he'll have to figure out how to get to Mayweather without tak- ing big damage in return. "He is a little bit bigger but like David and Goli- ath, size doesn't matter," Pacquiao's trainer, Fred- die Roach said. "We are the better puncher and we are faster and have a much bet- ter resume." For the first time in his career, Pacquiao studied video — and a lot of it — of an opponent. He and Roach spent hours trying to figure out how May- weather sets traps for his opponent, then lures them in to get hit. They're prepared for that, but they're also pre- pared if Mayweather be- comes a different fighter in the biggest night of his career. "I get the feeling they might start fast because he's put a lot of muscle on," Roach said. "I think he might try and catch us cold, but that won't hap- pen." Fight FROM PAGE 1 votes and 82 total points from a panel of fellow league executives. Cleve- land's David Griffin was second with eight first- place votes and 69 points. And Atlanta Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer, who has overseen basketball opera- tions since general man- ager Danny Ferry's racially charged comments, fin- ished third with four first- place votes and 36 points. Myers called the rec- ognition by his peers the "highest honor" and views the award as a culmination of the franchise's three- year rise than any one thing he did. Modest as he may be, Myers has been at the forefront of team's big- gest basketball decisions. He helped assemble a tal- ented roster around star Stephen Curry that rolled to a franchise-record 67 wins, earned the league's top playoff seed and could compete for champion- ships for several years. Players credited Myers for being open and honest with them. Coach Steve Kerr, a former executive with the Phoenix Suns, said among Myers' best tal- ents is communicating well with people and developing trustworthy relationships. Former coach Mark Jack- son, who the Warriors fired after last season, was even among those who sent My- ers a congratulatory text message. Several current players, coaches and front-office members joined about 100 team employees who at- tended Myers' news con- ference to applaud him. The moment was almost too much for Myers. This is the same guy who grew up a Warriors fan in nearby Danville and still has the ticket stubs from his first Warriors game — Jan. 15, 1982, against the New York Knicks. "It's something you re- ally can't dream of or imag- ine. Sometimes you have to remove yourself from the situation to even realize that it's happening," My- ers said. Myers FROM PAGE 1 was sore coming out of his stall the next day. His ab- sence means Calvin Borel, a three-time Derby winner, won't ride. Todd Pletcher brings three horses to the race: Carpe Diem, the 8-1 third choice; Florida Derby win- ner Materiality; and It- saknockout, fittingly run- ning on the same day as the Floyd Mayweather Jr.- Manny Pacquiao fight in Las Vegas. "We're ready," Pletcher said. "Let's go." Materiality didn't run as s 2-year-old and no horse since Apollo in 1882 has won the Derby without racing as a sophomore. His pedigree suggests he could overcome the jinx: his sire Afleet Alex won the Preak- ness and Belmont in 2005. Blue Grass winner Carpe Diem cost $1.6 million and a win in the Derby (worth $1.4 million) would help his owners recoup most of their investment. John Velazquez clearly saw something in the colt be- cause he chose to ride Carpe Diem instead of Materiality in the Derby. But he will have to over- come the No. 2 post; get- ting away from the start- ing gate quickly could min- imize the chance of getting trapped inside. This year's field is deep and talented, and absent Baffert's dynamic duo, there are other horses with solid credentials who in a different year would be more highly regarded. Amongthem: • Mubtaahij, an Ire- land-bred trying to win the Derby by preparing outside the U.S. and then traveling halfway around the world to reach Louisville. Derby FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Los Angeles 13 8 .619 _ Colorado 11 10 .524 2 San Diego 11 12 .478 3 Arizona 10 11 .476 3 Giants 9 13 .409 4 ½ CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB St. Louis 15 6 .714 _ Chicago 13 8 .619 2 Pittsburgh 12 10 .545 3 ½ Cincinnati 11 12 .478 5 Milwaukee 5 18 .217 11 EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB New York 16 8 .667 _ At la nt a 11 1 2 .4 78 4 ½ Miami 11 12 .478 4 ½ Washington 10 14 .417 6 Philadelphia 8 16 .333 8 Thursday'sgames St. Louis 9, Philadelphia 3 Cincinnati 5, Atlanta 1 Washington 8, N.Y. Mets 2 Friday'sgames Chicago Cubs 1, Milwaukee 0 Miami 4, Philadelphia 3 N. Y. M et s 4 , W as hi ng ton 0 Atlanta 4, Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh at St. Louis, (n.) Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, (n.) Colorado at San Diego, (n.) L.A. Angels at Giants, (n.) Saturday'sgames Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-1) at St. Louis (Lackey 1-1), 11:15 a.m. Milwaukee (Fiers 0-3) at Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 3-1), 11:20 a.m. L.A. Angels (Giants (T.Hudson 0-2), 1:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 1-2) at Miami (Haren 2-1), 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Marquis 2-1) at Atlanta (Stults 1-1), 4:10 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 2-1), 4:10 p.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 0-1) at San Diego (Morrow 1-0), 5:40 p.m. Arizona (Hellickson 1-3) at L.A. Dodgers (S.Baker 0-1), 6:10 p.m. AMERICANLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Houston 16 7 .696 _ Los Angeles 11 11 .500 4 ½ Seattle 10 13 .435 6 A's 10 14 .417 6 ½ Texas 7 15 .318 8 ½ CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB Kansas City 16 7 .696 _ Detroit 15 9 .625 1 ½ Minnesota 11 12 .478 5 Chicago 8 12 .400 6 ½ Cleveland 8 14 .364 7 ½ EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB New York 14 9 .609 _ Tampa Bay 13 10 .565 1 Boston 12 11 .522 2 Baltimore 10 11 .476 3 Toronto 11 13 .458 3 ½ Thursday'sgames L.A. Angels 6, A's 5 Toronto 5, Cleveland 1 Minnesota 12, Chicago White Sox 2 Kansas City 8, Detroit 1 Houston 3, Seattle 2, 10 innings Friday'sgames Tampa Bay 2, Baltimore 0 N.Y. Yankees 3, Boston 2 Cleveland 9, Toronto 4 A's 7, Texas 5 Minnesota 1, Chicago White Sox 0 Kansas City 4, Detroit 1 Houston 4, Seattle 3 L.A. Angels at Giants, (n.) Saturday'sgames N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 1-0) at Boston (Miley 1-2), 10:35 a.m. Chicago White Sox (Noesi 0-2) at Min- nesota (Nolasco 0-1), 11:10 a.m. L.A. Angels (Giants (T.Hudson 0-2), 1:05 p.m. Toronto (Aa.Sanchez 1-2) at Cleveland (Kluber 0-3), 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Archer 3-2) vs. Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 2-1) at St. Petersburg, FL, 4:05 p.m. Detroit (Price 2-1) at Kansas City (Volquez 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Seattle (T.Walker 1-2) at Houston (McHugh 3-0), 4:10 p.m. A's (Pomeranz 1-2) at Texas (N.Martinez 2-0), 5:05 p.m. Athletics7,Rangers5 Oakland Texas AB R H B AB R H B Fuld cf 5 0 0 0 LMartn cf 4 0 1 1 Semien ss 4 1 0 0 Andrus ss 5 0 1 0 Vogt c 3 1 1 1 Fielder dh 4 1 2 1 Btler dh 4 0 0 0 Shlds pr-dh1 1 0 0 I.Davis 1b 2 0 1 0 Beltre 3b 4 1 2 1 C.Ross ph-lf1 0 0 0 Blanks 1b 4 1 1 1 Muncy ph-1b01 0 0 Choo rf 4 0 1 0 Reddck rf 3 1 1 2 Chirins c 2 0 0 0 Lawrie 3b 4 1 1 2 Smlnsk lf 2 0 0 1 Cnh lf-1b-lf 4 1 2 2 Pgur ph-lf 0 0 0 0 Gentry lf 0 0 0 0 Odor 2b 4 1 1 0 Sogard 2b 4 1 2 0 Totals 34 7 8 7 34 5 9 5 Oakland 000 000 070 — 7 Texas 010 200 200 — 5 LOB: Oakland 4, Texas 7;2B: Lawrie (3), Andrus (4), Fielder (6), Choo (2);3B: Odor (1);HR: Canha (3), Fielder (2), Blanks (1); CS: Canha (1);SF: L.Martin, Smolinski. IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Kazmir 6 6 3 3 1 6 Abad 2/3 2 2 2 0 1 Oter W,2-1 1/3 1 0 0 0 0 Scribner 1 0 0 0 1 1 Clipprd S,2-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Texas Lewis 6 2 0 0 2 8 Claudio 1 0 0 0 0 0 Sh.Tolleson 2/3 3 4 4 1 1 Mendez L,0-1 0 1 2 2 1 0 Feliz 1/3 2 1 1 0 0 Kela 1 0 0 0 0 0 Mendez pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. HBP: by Kazmir (Chirinos). Umpires: Home, Paul Emmel, First, Jordan Baker. Second, Andy Fletcher. Third, Jerry Meals. T: 3:11;A: 29,700 (48,114). NBA PLAYOFFSFIRSTROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Friday,May1 Atlanta 111, Brooklyn 87, Atlanta wins series 4-2 Saturday,May2 San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 5 p.m. PLAYOFFSSECONDROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Sunday,May3 Washington at Atlanta, 10 a.m. Memphis at Golden State, 12:30 p.m. Monday,May4 Chicago at Cleveland, 4 p.m. L.A. Clippers-San Antonio winner at Houston, 6:30 p.m. NHL PLAYOFFSSECONDROUND (Best-of-7) Thursday,April30 Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1, Washing- ton leads series 1-0 Anaheim 6, Calgary 1, Anaheim leads series 1-0 Friday,May1 Tampa Bay 2, Montreal 1, 2OT, Tampa Bay leads series 1-0 Minnesota at Chicago, (n.) Saturday,May2 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 9:30 a.m. Golf MATCHPLAYRESULTS AtHardingParkGolfCourse SanFrancisco Yardage:7,127;Par:71 FIRSTROUND Friday (Seedingsinparentheses) Justin Rose (6) def. Ryan Palmer (22), 2 and 1. Marc Leishman (56) def. Anirban Lahiri (34), 1 up. Ian Poulter (27) def. Jimmy Walker (11), 4 and 2. Gary Woodland (50) def. Webb Simpson (46), 1 up. Henrik Stenson (3) def. Bill Haas (24), 3 and 1. John Senden (60) def. Brendon Todd (42), 1 up. Hunter Mahan (31) def. Matt Kuchar (14), 5 and 4. Ben Martin (61) def. Stephen Gallacher (41), 20 holes. Zach Johnson (24) def. Jason Day (7), 3 and 2. Branden Grace (38) def. Charley Hoff- man (49), 2 and 1. Jamie Donaldson (30) def. Sergio Garcia (10), 2 and 1. Tommy Fleetwood (54) def. Bernd Wies- berger (39), 19 holes. Lee Westwood (26) def. Jordan Spieth (2), 2 up. Mikko Ilonen (62) def. Matt Every (40), 8 and 6. Patrick Reed (15) def. Ryan Moore (28), 1 up. Danny Willett (48) def. Andy Sullivan (57), 1 up. Jim Furyk (5) def. Martin Kaymer (17), 20 holes. George Coetzee (59) def. Thongchai Jaidee (44), 21 holes. J.B. Holmes (12) def. Brooks Koepka (19), 2 a nd 1 . Russell Henley (45) def. Marc Warren (51), 1 up. Louis Oosthuizen (29), def. Bubba Wat- son (4), 19 holes. Miguel Angel Jimenez (63) def. Keegan Bradley (33), 2 up. Rickie Fowler (13) def. Graeme McDowell (32), 5 and 4. Harris English (55) def. Shane Lowry (47), 1 up. Dustin Johnson (8) def. Victor Dubuisson (21), 2 and 1. Charl Schwartzel (37) def. Matt Jones (58), 20 holes. Chris Kirk (25) def. Adam Scott (9), 1 up. Paul Casey (36) def. Francesco Molinari (64), 1 up. Rory McIlroy (1) def. Billy Horschel (18), 20 holes. Jason Dufner (53) def. Brandt Snedeker (35), 1 up. Hideki Matsuyama (16) def. Kevin Na (20), 5 and 4. Joost Luiten (43) def. Alexander Levy (52), 1 up. CHAMPIONSTOUR-INSPERITY INVITATIONAL Friday At The Woodlands Country Club Woodlands, Texas Purse: $2.05 million Yardage: 7,002;Par72 FirstRound Marco Dawson.........................34-32—66 -6 Michael Allen...........................32-34—66 -6 Colin Montgomerie.................33-34—67 -5 Joe Durant................................34-33—67 -5 Jeff Maggert ............................33-34—67 -5 Steve Pate ................................34-34—68 -4 Billy Andrade ...........................35-33—68 -4 Jesper Parnevik....................... 34-35—69 -3 Stephen Ames ......................... 35-34—69 -3 Kevin Sutherland..................... 36-33—69 -3 Esteban Toledo........................ 35-34—69 -3 Olin Browne ............................. 34-35—69 -3 Mark O'Meara.......................... 34-35—69 -3 Jeff Sluman .............................. 36-33—69 -3 Wes Short, Jr............................ 34-35—69 -3 Scott Hoch.................................37-32—69 -3 Duffy Waldorf...........................36-34—70 -2 Mike Goodes .............................35-35—70 -2 Mark McNulty...........................37-33—70 -2 Fred Funk...................................34-36—70 -2 Mark Wiebe...............................37-33—70 -2 Roger Chapman........................37-33—70 -2 Kirk Triplett...............................37-33—70 -2 Bart Bryant ...............................34-36—70 -2 Woody Austin ...........................34-36—70 -2 Russ Cochran............................31-39—70 -2 Tom Lehman .............................36-34—70 -2 John Cook..................................36-34—70 -2 Kenny Perry ..............................37-33—70 -2 Sandy Lyle.................................35-35—70 -2 Peter Senior..............................38-33—71 -1 Ian Woosnam............................35-36—71 -1 Frank Esposito..........................35-36—71 -1 Bernhard Langer......................35-36—71 -1 Corey Pavin...............................36-35—71 -1 Gene Sauers..............................37-34—71 -1 LPGATOUR-NORTHTEXAS SHOOTOUT Friday At Las Colinas Country Club Irving, Texas Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,462;Par71 SecondRound a-denotes amateur Brooke M. Henderson ..........69-65—134 -8 Inbee Park.............................. 69-66—135 -7 Juli Inkster.............................. 66-69—135 -7 Mi Hyang Lee .........................70-66—136 -6 Hee Young Park..................... 69-67—136 -6 Karine Icher ........................... 67-69—136 -6 Lexi Thompson...................... 67-69—136 -6 Ha Na Jang..............................68-69—137 -5 Amy Yang ...............................68-69—137 -5 Sandra Gal...............................67-70—137 -5 Cristie Kerr..............................66-71—137 -5 Hyo Joo Kim............................69-69—138 -4 Brittany Lang.........................69-69—138 -4 Maria McBride.......................69-69—138 -4 Michelle Wie .......................... 68-70—138 -4 Natalie Gulbis .........................67-71—138 -4 Wei-Ling Hsu...........................67-71—138 -4 Ryann O'Toole.........................67-71—138 -4 Alena Sharp.............................67-71—138 -4 Angela Stanford.....................67-71—138 -4 Ayako Uehara ........................ 71-68—139 -3 NFL 2015NFLDRAFTSELECTIONS AtChicago Friday,May1 SECONDROUND 33. New York Giants (from Tennessee), Landon Collins, db, Alabama. 34. Tampa Bay, Donovan Smith, ot, Penn State. 35. Oakland, Mario Edwards, de, Florida State. 36. Jacksonville, T.J. Yeldon, rb, Ala- bama. 37. New York Jets, Devin Smith, wr, Ohio State. 38. Washington, Preston Smith, lb, Mis- sissippi State. 39. Chicago, Eddie Goldman, dt, Florida State. 40. Tennessee (from New York Giants), Dorial Green-Beckham, wr, Missouri. 41. Carolina (from St. Louis), Devin Funchess, wr, Michigan. 42. Atlanta, Jalen Collins, db, LSU. 43. Houston (from Cleveland), Bena- rdrick McKinney, lb, Mississippi State. 44. New Orleans, Hau'oli Kikaha, lb, Washington. 45. Minnesota, Eric Kendricks, lb, UCLA. 46. San Francisco, Jaquiski Tartt, db, Samford. 47. Philadelphia (from Miami), Eric Rowe, db, Utah. 48. San Diego, Denzel Perryman, lb, Miami. 49. Kansas City, Mitch Morse, ot, Mis- souri. 50. Buffalo, Ronald Darby, db, Florida State. 51. Cleveland (from Houston), Nate Orchard, lb, Utah. 52. Miami (from Philadelphia), Jordan Phillips, dt, Oklahoma. 53. Cincinnati, Jake Fisher, ot, Oregon. 54. Detroit, Ameer Abdullah, rb, Nebraska. 55. Baltimore (from Arizona), Maxx Wil- liams, te, Minnesota. 56. Pittsburgh, Senquez Golson, db, Mississippi. 57. St. Louis (from Carolina), Robert Havenstein, ot, Wisconsin. 58. Arizona (from Baltimore), Markus Golden, lb, Missouri. 59. Denver, Ty Sambrailo, ot, Colorado State. 60. Dallas, Randy Gregory, de, Nebraska. 61. Tampa Bay (from Indianapolis), Ali Marpet, ot, Hobart. 62. Green Bay, Quinten Rollins, db, Miami (Ohio). 63. Seattle, Frank Clark, de, Michigan. 64. New England, Jordan Richards, db, Stanford. THIRDROUND 65. Indianapolis (from Tampa Bay), D'Joun Smith, db, FAU. 66. Tennessee, Jeremiah Poutasi, ot, Utah. 67. Jacksonville, A.J. Cann, g, South Carolina. 68. Oakland, Clive Walford, te, Miami. 69. Seattle (from Washington), Tyler Lockett, wr, Kansas State. 70. Houston (from New York Jets), Jaelen Strong, wr, Arizona State. 71. Chicago, Hroniss Grasu, c, Oregon. 72. St. Louis, Jamon Brown, ot, Louisville. 73. Atlanta, Tevin Coleman, rb, Indiana. 74. New York Giants, Owamagbe Odighi- zuwa, de, UCLA. 75. New Orleans, Garrett Grayson, qb, Colorado State. 76. Kansas City (from Minnesota), Chris Conley, wr, Georgia. 77. Cleveland, Duke Johnson, rb, Miami. 78. New Orleans (from Miami), P.J. Wil- liams, db, Florida State. 79. San Francisco, Eli Harold, de, Virginia. 80. Detroit (from Kansas City through Minnesota), Alex Carter, db, Stanford. 81. Buffalo, John Miller, g, Louisville. 82. New York Jets (from Houston), Lorenzo Mauldin, lb, Louisville. 83. San Diego, Craig Mager, db, Texas State. 84. Philadelphia, Jordan Hicks, lb, Texas. 85. Cincinnati, Tyler Kroft, te, Rutgers. 86. Arizona, David Johnson, rb, Northern Iowa. 87. Pittsburgh, Sammie Coates, wr, Auburn. 88. Minnesota (from Detroit), Danielle Hunter, de, LSU. 89. St. Louis (from Carolina), Sean Man- nion, qb, Oregon State. 90. Baltimore, Carl Davis, dt, Iowa. 91. Dallas, Chaz Green, ot, Florida. 92. Denver, Jeff Heuerman, te, Ohio State. 93. Indianapolis, Henry Anderson, de, Stanford. 94. Green Bay, Ty Montgomery, wr, Stanford. 95. Washington (from Seattle), Matt Jones, rb, Florida. 96. Cleveland (New England), Xavier Cooper, dt, Washington State. 97. x-New England, Genio Grissom, de, Oklahoma. 98. x-Kansas City, Steven Nelson, db, Oregon State. 99. x-Cincinnati, Paul Dawson, lb, TCU. Soccer MAJORLEAGUESOCCER WESTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 5 2 2 17 15 12 Vancouver 5 3 1 16 11 9 Seattle 4 2 1 13 10 5 Los Angeles 3 2 3 12 9 8 Houston 2 3 4 10 11 12 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. Friday'sgames FC Dallas 4, Houston 1 San Jose at Salt Lake, (n.) Saturday'sgames Toronto FC at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. Columbus at D.C. United, 4 p.m. New York at New England, 4:30 p.m. Colorado at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For May 2 MajorLeagueBaseball NATIONALLEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at St. Louis -125/+115 Pittsburgh at Chicago -180/+170 Milwaukee at Miami -110/+100 Philadelphia at New York -105/-105 Washington at Atlanta -110/+100 Cincinnati at San Diego -135/+125 Colorado at Los Angeles -145/+135 Arizona AMERICANLEAGUE at Boston -125/+115 New York at Minnesota -125/+115 Chicago at Cleveland -150/+140 Toronto at Tampa Bay -125/+115 Baltimore-x at Houston -140/+130 Seattle Detroit -125/+115 at Kansas City at Texas -110/+100 Oakland INTERLEAGUE at Giants -120/+110 Los Angeles (AL) x-Baltimore is designated home team NBA TONIGHT Favorite Line(O/U) Underdog at Clippers 2 (204) San Antonio TOMORROW at Golden State 9½ (197½) Memphis MONDAY at Cleveland 5½ (194½) Chicago ODDSTOWINSERIES Golden State -1000/+700 Memphis Cleveland -250/+210 Chicago NHL TODAY Favorite Line Underdog at N.Y. Rangers -170/+150 Washington TOMORROW at Anaheim -220/+180 Calgary Boxing UnifiedWelterweightTitle AtLasVegas Favorite Line Underdog Mayweather Jr. -200/+175 Pacquiao KENTUCKYDERBYODDS PPHorse Jockey Odds 1. Ocho Ocho Ocho Trujillo 27-1 2. Carpe Diem Velazquez 7-1 3. Materiality Castellano 17-1 4. Tencendur Franco 61-1 5. Danzig Moon Leparoux18-1 6. Mubtaahij Soumillon 16-1 7. El Kabeir Borel SCR 8. Dortmund Garcia 9-2 9. Bolo Bejarano45-1 10. Firing Line Stevens 9-1 11. Stanford Geroux SCR 12. International Star Mena19-1 13. Itsaknockout Saez 32-1 14. Keen Ice Desormeaux29-1 15. Frosted Rosario 9-1 16. War Story Talamo40-1 17. Mr. Z Vazquez 27-1 18. American Pharoah Espinoza 5-2 19. Upstart Ortiz33-1 20. Far Right Smith 41-1 21. Frammento Nakatani99-1 Weights: 126 pounds. Distance: 1\ miles. 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. EDT | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM SATURDAY, MAY 2, 2015 2 B

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Red Bluff Daily News - May 02, 2015