Red Bluff Daily News

June 05, 2015

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AUTORACING NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Axalta 400Practice:9a.m., FS1. F1Canadian Grand Prix Prac- tice: 11a.m., NBCSN. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Axalta 400Qualifying: 1:30 p.m., FS1. IndyCar Series Firestone 600 Qualifying: 3p.m., NBCSN. NASCAR Camping World Series Truck Racing Winstar World Casino 400Qualifying: 3p.m., FS1. NASCAR Camping World Series Truck Racing Winstar World Casino 400: 6p.m., FS1. COLLEGE BASEBALL Division I Tournament Super Regional Game 1: 9a.m., ESPNU. Division I Tournament Super Regional Game 1: 1p.m., ESPNU. Division I Tournament Super Regional: 1:30p.m., ESPN2. Division I Tournament Super Regional: 4:30p.m., ESPN2. MLB BASEBALL San Francisco Giants at Philadelphia Phillies: 4p.m., CSNBA. Los Angeles Angels vs. New York Yankees: 4p.m., MLB. Oakland Athletics at Boston Red Sox: 4p.m., CSN. EXTREME X Games Austin 2015: 5p.m., ESPN. GOLF LPGA Manulife Classic Round 2: 9a.m., GOLF. PGA The Memorial Tourna- ment Round 2: 11:30a.m., GOLF. EPGA Nordea Masters Round 3: 4:30a.m., GOLF. SOCCER FIFA International Friendly United States vs. Nether- lands: 11:20a.m., ESPN. FIFA U-20World Cup Mexico vs. Serbia Group D: 9p.m., FS1. Ontheair There is no logical expla- nation." Mouratoglou said the No. 1-ranked Williams has been dealing for several days with the flu, includ- ing a fever and difficulty breathing. Williams skipped her news conference — some- thing sister Venus did af- ter losing last week, draw- ing a $3,000 fine — and is- sued a statement reading: "I have been feeling un- well for a few days, and ... I needed to see the tourna- ment doctor." Now one victory from her third French Open championship and 20th major title in all, Williams faces 13th-seeded Lucie Sa- farova of the Czech Repub- lic on Saturday. "I tried everything. I thought if I lose, I will lose with a fight," Williams told the crowd in French. "I tried, I tried. I found the energy. I don't know where, but I found it. And I won. I hope that on Saturday, I hope ..." Cutting herself off, she stepped away from the mi- crophone, bent over and began coughing. She of- fered a quick wave, col- lected her things and left. Off the court, she got a hug from Mouratoglou, who helped her down stairs to- ward the locker room. "I was worried," said Williams' mother, Oracene Price. "But I knew if she could get through the sec- ond set, somehow maybe the adrenaline and God would help her get through the match." Next comes Williams' 24th Grand Slam final, and Safarova's first. In her statement, Williams called herself "determined to be 100 percent ready." The left-handed Sa- farova eliminated de- fending champion Maria Sharapova in the fourth round and 2008 champion Ana Ivanovic 7-5, 7-5 on Thursday. Williams won her semi- final despite dropping the first set for the fourth time in six matches. She'd never fashioned that many come- backs during one major tournament. When this one was over, finally over, Williams leaned forward and rested her head on her hands atop the handle of her upside- down racket. Bacsinszky — who said she noticed Williams "was taking some time between points" but tried to focus on herself — was asked how her own mistakes con- tributed to the result. "We say in French: 'If we could put Paris in a bottle.' Like, I could say, 'If, if, if. If my forehand was in. If I would maybe choose an- other tactic,'" Bacsinszky said. Bacsinszky wiped away tears as she left the court, her magical run abruptly done. She never had been past the second round in Paris — or the third round at any major. Two years ago, she took a hiatus from tennis to work at restaurants with an eye toward pursuing a degree in hotel management. Last year, she was ranked 112th and went through qualify- ing at the French Open. This year, equipped with a dangerous backhand and an affinity for drop shots, Bacsinszky beat two-time Wimbledon champion Pe- tra Kvitova in the fourth round and lost a tourna- ment-low 33 games enter- ing Thursday. She was 7-0 in her French Open career when taking the first set. Ah, but none of those matches came against Wil- liams. Tennis FROM PAGE 1 baseball," DH Billy Butler said after watching Jesse Hahn throw seven innings, allowing one run. Seriously? A team 10 games under .500 (23-33) can lay claim to the title of best rotation? Butler, who had two RBIs with a double and a single, was dead serious. "You can only stay down so long when you have starters like this, pitching the way they've been pitch- ing," Butler said. "In ERA right now they are the best. We're a third of the way through the season. I don't see any sense that they are going to be letting up." Hahn seems to feel equally strongly about the staff. "We have some good arms in our starting ro- tation," he said. "It starts with Sonny Gray. Everyone kind of feeds off him." Gray pitched eight shut- out innings Tuesday and leads the AL with a 1.65 ERA. Over this stretch, A's starters have contributed eight quality starts. In all 12 of the starts, the A's have had a chance to win, the losses coming by scores of 1-0, 3-2 and 5-3. That consistency of pitching has meant the of- fense hasn't had to score much. Knowing that, the A's have gone back to their early season practice of scoring in bunches. "The way they've been throwing, our offense has been able to relax," catcher Josh Phegley said. "We feel they're going to give us a chance to win if we just push a couple of runs across the plate. "It's working two-sided. They're more relaxed and we're more relaxed and you can see how good we are when we play like that." Phegley was one of those relaxed. His second-inning triple, the first of his ca- reer, produced the second and third runs of the in- ning. Staked to a 3-0 lead, Hahn never gave it back. "I think it's contagious when guys are able to re- lax and get hits," Phegley said. "When you are not scoring a lot of runs every- body goes to the plate with the weight of the world on their backs." Still 10 games under .500, the A's may only have the weight of one or two continents on their backs. The level of confidence is grow, thanks in large parts to performances like the one Hahn turned in. "Certainly the starting pitching was good again," manager Bob Melvin said. "And we got the early lead. You feel real con- fidence, especially with the offense swinging the bats a little better that you might be able to add on. Those guys are going to take you deep enough into the game to get to the guys who usually put it away for you." Now the A's are off to Boston, the Red Sox could be vulnerable, coming into Thursday's series finale in Fenway Park against the Twins having lost seven of 10. There would seem to be room for the A's to make some inroads, if the pitch- ing holds up. "They are still a good team. They still have plenty of power," Melvin said of the Sox. "They have a lot pitching. I know a lot of their guys are hurt, but they're pitching a lit- tle bit better lately. Teams like that. You hope to catch them when they're down." The A's were a team like that. The last two weeks suggest maybe they aren't any more. A's FROM PAGE 1 to score 15 points. The Cavaliers got 23 points out of Kyrie Irving before he was injured once again in overtime. The night had seem- ingly belonged to James, who finished 18 for 38 from the field, grabbed eight re- bounds and dished off six assists. Time and time again, he backed down de- fenders including Barnes, Iguodala, Thompson and Draymond Green for bas- kets. But then James missed three shots and committed two turnovers before that final layup. The game went to over- time with the score tied at 98 after James missed a step-back jump shot over Iguodala and Iman Shumpert missed as well at the buzzer. Curry had put the War- riors ahead with a jump shot with 53.6 seconds left in regulation. But Timofey Mozgov calmly hit two free throws to tie it, and Irving blocked Curry on the other end to give the Cavaliers the last shot. Curry put on a show in the second quarter as the Warriors shot their way back into the game. He scored the final eight points of a 12-0 run that gave Golden State a 41-36 lead. Curry's off-balance cor- ner 3-pointer off a give- and-go tied the score at 35, and his steal at midcourt to set up a step-back shot from beyond the arc put the Warriors ahead. Marreese Speights also gave the Warriors a lift, coming off the bench to go 3 for 4 from the field in his return from a calf injury. James responded, lead- ing an 8-0 run to finish the first half with 19 points. J.R. Smith beat the buzzer with a 3-pointer to give the Cavaliers a 51-48 halftime lead, as he came off the bench to hit his third tri- fecta of the game. Iguodala appeared ten- tative at first, as he passed up on an open shot near the rim to pass. But he also came through with two big dunks that changed the feel of the game. One came as he was matched up one-on-one with James, who got off- balance and could only watch as Iguodala blew by for the jam that closed out the first quarter with the Cavaliers leading 29- 19. The other came af- ter Iguodala stole the ball from James and then on the other end dunked with 1.5 seconds left in the third to tie the score at 73. Iguodala then put the Warriors ahead with a 3-pointer and an assist to Shaun Livingston for a la- yup as they led 78-75. The Warriors had gotten off to an awful start, fall- ing behind by as many as 14 points in the first quar- ter. The Warriors were 6 for 21 from the field, including Bogut, Green and Thomp- son combining to shoot 0 for 8. Whether it was nerves or rust after seven days off from playing a game, the Warriors struggled to shoot and also got ham- mered on glass while giv- ing up a 17-9 rebounding advantage at the start. Warriors FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Los Angeles 31 22 .585 _ Giants 30 25 .545 2 San Diego 27 28 .491 5 Arizona 25 27 .481 5 ½ Colorado 24 28 .462 6 ½ CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB St. Louis 35 18 .660 _ Pittsburgh 29 24 .547 6 Chicago 27 24 .529 7 Cincinnati 23 29 .442 11 ½ Milwaukee 18 36 .333 17 ½ EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 29 24 .547 _ New York 29 25 .537 ½ Atlanta 26 27 .491 3 Miami 22 32 .407 7 ½ Philadelphia 21 34 .382 9 Wednesday'sgames St. Louis 7, Milwaukee 4 Arizona 9, Atlanta 8 Pittsburgh 5, Giants 2 Philadelphia 5, Cincinnati 4, 11 innings Toronto 8, Washington 0 Miami 7, Chicago Cubs 3 Colorado 7, L.A. Dodgers 6 San Diego 7, N.Y. Mets 3 Thursday'sgames Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia 4 Chicago Cubs at Washington, (n.) N.Y. Mets at Arizona, (n.) St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers, (n.) Friday'sgames Chicago Cubs (Wada 0-0) at Washington (Roark 1-2), 4:05 p.m. Giants (Lincecum 5-3) at Philadelphia (Williams 3-5), 4:05 p.m. San Diego (T.Ross 2-5) at Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 1-1), 4:10 p.m. Pi tt sb ur gh ( Mo rt on 2- 0) a t A tla nt a (W.Perez 1-0), 4:35 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 3-6) at Minnesota (Gibson 4-3), 5:10 p.m. Miami (Koehler 3-3) at Colorado (E.Butler 3-5), 5:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 3-5) at Arizona (Hellick- son 3-3), 6:40 p.m. St. Louis (C.Martinez 5-2) at L.A. Dodg- ers (B.Anderson 2-3), 7:10 p.m. AMERICANLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Houston 34 21 .618 _ Los Angeles 28 26 .519 5 ½ Texas 27 26 .509 6 Seattle 24 29 .453 9 A's 23 33 .411 11 ½ CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB Minnesota 32 21 .604 _ Kansas City 30 21 .588 1 Detroit 28 27 .509 5 Cleveland 26 27 .491 6 Chicago 24 27 .471 7 EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB New York 29 25 .537 _ Tampa Bay 28 26 .519 1 Toronto 25 30 .455 4 ½ Baltimore 24 29 .453 4 ½ Boston 24 31 .436 5 ½ Wednesday'sgames Boston 6, Minnesota 3, 1st game N.Y. Yankees 3, Seattle 1 Toronto 8, Washington 0 A's 6, Detroit 1 Minnesota 2, Boston 0, 2nd game Chicago White Sox 9, Texas 2 Houston 3, Baltimore 1 Kansas City 4, Cleveland 2 Tampa Bay 6, L.A. Angels 5, 10 innings Thursday'sgames A's 7, Detroit 5 Baltimore 3, Houston 2 Minnesota 8, Boston 4 Cleveland 6, Kansas City 2, 8 innings Chicago White Sox at Texas, (n.) Tampa Bay at Seattle, (n.) Friday'sgames L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-4) at N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 4-1), 4:05 p.m. Houston (R.Hernandez 2-4) at Toronto (Aa.Sanchez 4-4), 4:07 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 2-7) at Cleveland (Marcum 2-0), 4:10 p.m. A's (Kazmir 2-3) at Boston (Miley 4-5), 4:10 p.m. Detroit (Ryan 1-0) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 2-6), 5:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 3-6) at Minnesota (Gibson 4-3), 5:10 p.m. Texas (Ch.Gonzalez 1-0) at Kansas City (Volquez 4-3), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 4-5) at Seattle (Happ 3-1), 7:10 p.m. Athletics7,Tigers5 Oakland Detroit AB R H B AB R H B Burns cf 5 1 1 0 Gose cf 4 1 1 0 Zobrist 2b 4 1 0 0 JIglesis ss 4 0 1 0 Parrino ss 0 0 0 0 MiCarr 1b 4 0 1 1 Vogt 1b 3 2 1 0 Cespds lf 1 0 0 0 Muncy 1b 0 0 0 0 DFields lf 3 1 1 0 BButler dh 4 0 2 2 Kinsler 2b 3 1 2 1 Reddck rf 4 1 1 0 JMrtnz dh 4 1 1 0 Lawrie 3b 4 1 2 1 TyCllns rf 4 1 1 3 Sgrd ss-2b 4 1 2 1 Cstllns 3b 4 0 1 0 Phegly c 4 0 1 2 Holady c 3 0 0 0 Fuld lf 4 0 0 0 JMcCn ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 710 6 35 5 9 5 Oakland 031 020 100 — 7 Detroit 000 001 004 — 5 E: D.Fields (1), Greene (2);DP: Oakland 1, Detroit 2;LOB: Oakland 6, Detroit 4;2B: B.Butler (11), Lawrie (11), D.Fields (1); 3B: Phegley (1);HR: Ty.Collins (1);SB: Burns (10). IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Hahn W,3-5 7 5 1 1 1 5 Pomeranz 1 0 0 0 0 0 Otero 1/3 4 4 4 0 1 Clprd S,9-102/3 0 0 0 0 0 Detroit Grne L,4-5 41/3 8 6 4 2 2 B.Hardy 12/3 1 0 0 0 0 Gorzelanny 1 1 1 1 2 2 Alburquerque 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chamberlain 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP: Hahn, Greene, B.Hardy. Umpires: Home, Jim Joyce, First, Greg Gibson. Second, Chad Fairchild. Third, Marvin Hudson. T: 3:06;A: 37,411 (41,574). College Baseball NCAADIVISIONI BASEBALLREGIONALS DoubleElimination;x-ifnecessary AtDickHowserStadium Tallahassee,Fla. Sunday College of Charleston 3, Auburn 2, Auburn eliminated Monday Florida State 8, College of Charleston 1, Florida State advances AtAlfredA.McKethanStadium Gainesville,Fla. Sunday FAU 8, South Florida 4, USF eliminated Florida 2, FAU 1, Florida advances AtA-RodParkatMarkLightField CoralGables,Fla. Sunday Columbia 4, FIU 3, FIU eliminated Columbia 3, Miami 0 Monday Miami 21, Columbia 3, Miami advances AtJimPattersonStadium Louisville,Ky. Sunday Michigan 4, Bradley 3, Bradley elimi- nated Louisville 13, Michigan 4, Louisville advances AtHawkinsField Nashville,Tenn. Sunday Radford 5, Indiana 3, Indiana eliminated Vanderbilt vs. Radford, ppd., rain Mond ay Vanderbilt 21, Radford 0, VU advances AtIllinoisField Champaign,Ill. Sunday Wright State 8, Ohio 3, comp. of susp. game, Ohio eliminated Illinois 3, Notre Dame 0 Wright State 4, Notre Dame 0, Notre Dame eliminated Monday Illinois 8, Wright State 4, Illinois advances AtHammonsField Springfield,Mo. Sunday Iowa 2, Oregon 1, 11 innings, Oregon eliminated Missouri State 3, Iowa 2, Missouri State advances AtAlexBoxStadium BatonRouge,La. Sunday UNC Wilmington 8, Tulane 2, Tulane eliminated Monday LSU 2, UNC Wilmington 0, LSU advances AtAllieP.ReynoldsStadium Stillwater,Okla. Sunday St. John's 2, Oklahoma State 1, OSU eliminated Arkansas 4, St. John's 3, Arkansas advances AtLuptonBaseballStadium FortWorth,Texas Sunday TCU 8, Stony Brook 3, Stony Brook eliminated TCU 8, N.C. State 2 Monday TCU 9, N.C. State 8, 10 innings, TCU advances AtHornerBallpark Dallas Sunday Dallas Baptist 8, Texas 1, Texas elimi- na te d VCU 5, Oregon State 1 Dallas Baptist 7, Oregon State 1, Oregon State eliminated Monday Dallas Baptist 2, VCU 1 VCU 3, Dallas Baptist 1, VCU advances AtOlsenField CollegeStation,Texas Sunday Texas A&M 8, Coastal Carolina 1, CCU eliminated Texas A&M 4, California 3, 12 innings Monday Texas A&M 3, California 1, Texas A&M advances AtCougarField Houston Sunday Rice 3, Houston Baptist 1, comp. of susp. game, HBU eliminated Louisiana-Lafayette 2, Houston 1 Rice 3, Houston 2, 20 innings, Houston eliminated Monday Louisiana-Lafayette 5, Rice 2, ULL advances AtJackieRobinsonStadium LosAngeles Sunday UCLA 9, Cal State Bakersfield 1, Cal State Bakersfield eliminated UCLA 4, Maryland 2 Monday Maryland 2, UCLA 1 AtGoodwinField Fullerton,Calif. Sunday Pepperdine 7, Arizona State 4 Cal State Fullerton 10, Pepperdine 1, Cal State Fullerton advances AtTheDiamond LakeElsinore,Calif. Sunday Southern Cal 12, San Diego State 11, San Diego State eliminated Virginia 14, Southern Cal 10, 11 innnings, Virginia advances SuperRegionals June5-8 Maryland (41-22) vs. Virginia (37-22) Arkansas (38-22) vs. Missouri State (48-10) Miami (47-15) vs. VCU (40-23) Florida State (44-19) vs. Florida (47-16) LSU (51-10) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (42-21) Texas A&M (49-12) vs. TCU (49-12) Illinois (50-8-1) vs. Vanderbilt (45-19) Cal State Fullerton (37-22) vs. Louisville (46-16) NBA NBAFINALS (Best-of-7;x-ifnecessary) GOLDENSTATE1,CLEVELAND0 Thursday,June Golden State 108, Cleveland 100, OT Sunday,June7 Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. Tuesday,June9 Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Thursday,June11 Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Sunday,June14 Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday,June16 Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Friday,June19 Cleveland at Golden State, 6 p.m. Warriors108,Cavaliers100 CAVALIERS(100) James 18-38 6-10 44, T.Thompson 1-4 0-0 2, Mozgov 5-10 6-8 16, Irving 10-22 1-1 23, Shumpert 2-6 0-0 6, Smith 3-13 0-0 9, Jones 0-1 0-0 0, Dellavedova 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 39-94 13-19 100. WARRIORS(108) Barnes 4-9 0-0 11, Green 4-13 4-4 12, Bogut 2-5 0-0 4, Curry 10-20 4-4 26, K.Thompson 5-14 8-8 21, Iguodala 6-8 1-2 15, Livingston 2-6 0-0 4, Ezeli 1-1 3-4 5, Barbosa 1-4 0-0 2, Speights 4-8 0-0 8. Totals 39-88 20-22 108. Cleveland 29 22 22 25 2 — 100 GoldenState 19 29 25 25 10 — 108 3-PointGoals: Cleveland 9-31 (Smith 3-10, Shumpert 2-4, James 2-8, Irving 2-8, Jones 0-1), Golden State 10-27 (Barnes 3-5, K.Thompson 3-9, Iguodala 2-3, Curry 2-6, Barbosa 0-1, Green 0-3);Fouled out: None;Rebounds: Cleveland 56 (T.Thompson 15), Golden State 56 (Bogut 7);Assists: Cleveland 19 (Irving, James 6), Golden State 24 (Curry 8);Totalfouls: Cleveland 20, Golden State 16;A: 19,596 (19,596). NHL STANLEYCUPFINALS (Best-of-7;x-ifnecessary) CHICAGO1,TAMPABAY0 Wednesday,June3: Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1 Saturday,June6: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 4:15 p.m. Monday,June8: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. Wednesday,June10: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Saturday,June13: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. x-Monday,June15: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday,June17: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. Golf THEMEMORIALTOURNAMENT Thursday At Muirfield Village Golf Club Dublin, Ohio Purse: $6.2 million Yardage: 7,392;Par72(36-36) FirstRound Bo Van Pelt...............................30-34—64 -8 Hideki Matsuyama.................. 32-32—64 -8 Jason Dufner............................ 31-35—66 -6 Russell Knox.............................33-33—66 -6 Ken Duke...................................33-34—67 -5 Ryan Moore.............................. 31-36—67 -5 Brendon Todd .......................... 36-31—67 -5 Harris English ..........................34-33—67 -5 Kevin Kisner.............................34-33—67 -5 David Lingmerth...................... 31-36—67 -5 Kyle Reifers.............................. 32-35—67 -5 Brian Stuard.............................33-35—68 -4 Francesco Molinari.................34-34—68 -4 Pat Perez ..................................33-35—68 -4 Keegan Bradley.......................34-34—68 -4 Justin Rose ...............................35-33—68 -4 Jordan Spieth...........................34-34—68 -4 Lucas Glover............................33-35—68 -4 Erik Compton...........................34-34—68 -4 Jonathan Byrd..........................34-34—68 -4 Gonzalo Fdez-Castano........... 36-33—69 -3 Justin Thomas ......................... 35-34—69 -3 Greg Chalmers ........................ 35-34—69 -3 Patrick Rodgers....................... 33-36—69 -3 Thomas Aiken.......................... 34-35—69 -3 Marc Leishman.........................32-37—69 -3 Graham DeLaet .......................35-34—69 -3 Steven Bowditch ..................... 35-34—69 -3 Chris Kirk.................................. 36-33—69 -3 Steve Stricker .......................... 35-34—69 -3 Jim Furyk .................................. 35-34—69 -3 David Hearn ..............................35-35—70 -2 Chris Stroud..............................34-36—70 -2 Shawn Stefani...........................33-37—70 -2 Seung-Yul Noh..........................35-35—70 -2 Scott Stallings..........................34-36—70 -2 Bill Haas.....................................35-35—70 -2 Retief Goosen ...........................32-38—70 -2 Billy Horschel............................32-38—70 -2 Andrew Svoboda......................34-36—70 -2 Ja so n K ok ra k ....... ..... .......... ...... 33 -3 7— 70 - 2 Colt Knost..................................34-36—70 -2 Matt Kuchar..............................32-38—70 -2 William McGirt .........................33-37—70 -2 Scott Langley............................36-34—70 -2 Troy Merritt...............................32-38—70 -2 Jim Herman...............................35-35—70 -2 Andy Sullivan............................35-35—70 -2 Daniel Berger............................37-34—71 -1 Jeff Overton ..............................33-38—71 -1 James Hahn...............................36-35—71 -1 John Senden..............................36-35—71 -1 Brooks Koepka .........................35-36—71 -1 Scott Brown ..............................35-36—71 -1 Matt Jones.................................35-36—71 -1 Nick Watney..............................34-37—71 -1 Kenny Perry ..............................34-37—71 -1 Kevin Chappell..........................36-35—71 -1 Brendan Steele.........................38-33—71 -1 Hudson Swafford.....................32-39—71 -1 Sean O'Hair ...............................34-37—71 -1 Tony Finau.................................35-36—71 -1 K.J. Choi.....................................36-35—71 -1 Kevin Streelman.......................36-35—71 -1 Vijay Singh ................................37-34—71 -1 Kevin Na.....................................35-36—71 -1 Steve Wheatcroft.....................37-34—71 -1 Ben Curtis...................................36-36—72 E Carl Pettersson.........................35-37—72 E Brendon de Jonge .....................32-40—72 E Jason Day ...................................37-35—72 E Patrick Reed...............................36-36—72 E Martin Laird...............................36-36—72 E Stewart Cink..............................36-36—72 E John Huh.....................................35-37—72 E Rory Sabbatini...........................36-36—72 E Scott Piercy ...............................37-35—72 E George McNeill..........................36-36—72 E Dustin Johnson..........................38-34—72 E Rickie Fowler .............................33-39—72 E Phil Mickelson ...........................36-36—72 E Adam Hadwin ............................35-37—72 E Gunn Yang..................................34-38—72 E Andrew Putnam ........................35-37—72 E Will MacKenzie....................... 33-40—73 +1 Justin Leonard.........................37-36—73 +1 Camilo Villegas ...................... 33-40—73 +1 Tiger Woods............................ 33-40—73 +1 Andres Gonzales.....................36-37—73 +1 Robert Streb ........................... 33-40—73 +1 Alex Cejka.................................37-36—73 +1 D.A. Points............................... 39-34—73 +1 LPGA-MANULIFELPGACLASSIC Thursday At Whistle Bear Golf Club Cambridge, Ontario Purse: $1.5 million Yardage: 6,613;Par: 72 (36-36) FirstRound Cristie Kerr...............................34-29—63 -9 P.K. Kongkraphan ....................31-32—63 -9 Cheyenne Woods .....................32-31—63 -9 Laetitia Beck............................ 31-33—64 -8 Sandra Gal................................ 32-32—64 -8 Julieta Granada........................34-31—65 -7 Sei Young Kim.......................... 32-33—65 -7 Brittany Lang........................... 32-33—65 -7 Anna Nordqvist ....................... 30-35—65 -7 Mariajo Uribe........................... 33-32—65 -7 Na Yeon Choi............................33-33—66 -6 Hyo Joo Kim..............................32-34—66 -6 Ilhee Lee ...................................33-33—66 -6 Pernilla Lindberg.....................32-34—66 -6 Mo Martin.................................34-32—66 -6 Suzann Pettersen ...................33-33—66 -6 Sophia Popov...........................32-34—66 -6 Karin Sjodin..............................32-34—66 -6 Angela Stanford......................30-36—66 -6 Katie Burnett ...........................33-34—67 -5 Tennis FRENCHOPENRESULTS Thursday At Stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $30.86 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles WOMEN Semifinals Lucie Safarova (13), Czech Republic, def. Ana Ivanovic (7), Serbia, 7-5, 7-5. Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Timea Bacsinszky (23), Switzerland, 4-6, 6-3, 6-0. Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For June 5 MajorLeagueBaseball NATIONALLEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at Washington -130/+120 Chicago San Francisco -125/+115 at Phillies at Cincinnati -110/+100 San Diego Pittsburgh -125/+115 at Atlanta at Colorado -110/+100 Miami at Arizona -130/+120 New York at Los Angeles -130/+120 St. Louis AMERICANLEAGUE at New York -115/+105 Los Angeles at Toronto -135/+125 Houston at Cleveland -120/+110 Baltimore at Boston -115/+105 Oakland at Chicago -125/+115 Detroit at Kansas City -160/+150 Texas at Seattle -105/-105 Tampa Bay INTERLEAGUE at Minnesota -125/+115 Milwaukee NHL TOMORROW Favorite Line Underdog at Tampa Bay -130/+110 Chicago BELMONTSTAKESODDSCHART The field for Saturday's 147th Belmont Stakes: PPHorse Jockey Odds 1. Mubtaahij Ortiz 10-1 2. Tale of Verve Stevens15-1 3. Madefromlucky Castellano 12-1 4. Frammento Smith30-1 5. American Pharoah Espinoza 3-5 6. Frosted Rosario 5-1 7. Keen Ice Desormeaux20-1 8. Materiality Velazquez 6-1 Weights: 126 pounds. Distance: 1.5 miles. Purse: $1.5 million. First place: $800,000. Second place: $280,000. Third place: $150,000. Fourth place: $100,000. Fifth place: $60,000. Post time: 3:50 p.m. Transactions BASEBALL AmericanLeague TexasRangers: Placed OF Josh Hamilton on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to Monday. Assigned INF Tommy Field outright to Round Rock (PCL). Reinstated LHP Ross Detwiler from the 15-day DL. Agreed to terms with SS Beamer Weems on a mi- nor league contract. Sent OF Ryan Rua to Round Rock for a rehab assignment. NationalLeague ArizonaDiamondbacks: Placed RHP Ar- chie Bradley on the 15-day DL. Recalled LHP Robbie Ray from Reno (PCL). Traded OF Mark Trumbo and LHP Vidal Nuno to Seattle for C Welington Castillo, RHP Dominic Leone, OF Gabby Guerrero and SS Jack Reinheimer. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2015 2 B

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