Red Bluff Daily News

June 12, 2015

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todoourverybest." Adding to the buildup was a story about Sundhage in The New York Times that caused a stir this week. The interview was done in April, she said, acknowledging she can sometimes be pro- vocative. "If I just gave you the same answer it would be boring," she said. Sundhage was quoted as saying that midfielder Carli Lloyd was a challenge to coach and she suggested she wouldn't start Wam- bach at this point in the popular veteran's career. She said Solo was one of the most challenging players she'd coached, "especially when it comes to trouble." On Thursday, she called Solo "a piece of work," but went on to also call her the "the best goalkeeper in the world." She also said she would start Wambach on Friday night. "If you look at Abby, she is special," Sundhage said. "She is special in a lot of ways, especially her head- ing. I think she can go an- other four years." The U.S. won two Olym- pic golds and went to the World Cup final in Ger- many during Sundhage's tenure with the team. It was the first time the Americans had gone to the final since winning the ti- tle in 1999. She left after the 2012 London Games and re- turned home to coach her native Sweden's national team. As a player she led Sweden to a third-place finish in the first Women's World Cup in 1991, and the team's first European championship in 1984. U.S. coach Jill Ellis was an assistant under Sund- hage. She was named in- terim coach after Sund- hage stepped down, then again when former coach Tom Sermanni was dis- missed in April 2014. Ellis was formally named head coach about a month later. Ellis this week described Sundhage as "a sit-down- have-a-beer kind of friend." "Pia's got extraordinary character and I love hang- ing out with her," Ellis said. "We'll be friends for a long, long time." The United States de- feated No. 10 Australia 3-1 in its opening match, earn- ing three points. Sweden was not so fortu- nate. Nigeria was surpris- ingly fast and agile, com- ing back from a 2-0 deficit for a draw. Back in 2007, a draw with Nigeria in a group-stage match would keep Sweden out of the knockout round. Soccer FROMPAGE1 a big pitch was needed, it wound up being swatted off the outfield wall. And defense? Forget about it. Then came Wednes- day's walkoff win over the Rangers, Sam Fuld scor- ing the winning run on a Josh Reddick grounder after the A's spent most of the game in a 4-2 hole. When the A's reported for duty on Thursday, there was a little bit more crisp- ness in their play. They still had trouble getting big hits early in the game, but Billy Burns made two show-stopping catches in the outfield and Kazmir made, as Reddick put it "one mistake in eight in- nings." Too often in 2015 that's been enough to beat Oak- land, but this time El- vis Andrus' single in the fifth was little more than a speed bump. "There was a lot of re- ally high energy," Burns said. "We had a bunch of guys on base, and that re- lated back to (Wednesday) night." The power finally mate- rialized in the eighth in- ning. With rookie starter Chi Chi Gonzalez finally out of the game after hold- ing the A's to one runs, Mark Canha hit a two- run homer and Reddick followed with a three-run colossus as part of a six- run uprising. "It was a big deal to get him out of the game," Canha said of Gonzalez. "He was tough. It seemed like he pitched me a differ- ent way every at-bat. Most pitchers will try to do the same thing to get you out, but he just mixes it up so that he makes it tougher." The Rangers seemed to feel much the same about Kazmir, Prince Fielder go- ing so far to say "he's one of the toughest we're go- ing to face." That Kazmir toughness only matters if his team- mates are tough behind him. He'd been tough in other starts only to come up short when his team- mates didn't bring their A-game. Wednesday, as Fielder said, "every time he made a mistake, they made a play for him." A's FROM PAGE 1 before the ninth. Bochy had to stick with Romo because he'd already used long man Yusmeiro Petit, and Jeremy Affeldt was his only reliever left capable of multiple in- nings. For that reason, Lince- cum accepted blame. He also was displeased at his 6.30 ERA and 1.60 WHIP in his last four outings, over which he's averaged just five innings per start. "It's just not finishing guys off," said Lincecum, who unraveled the sec- ond time through the Mets lineup. "It comes down to challenging the zone more, just going back to doing what I was doing my first eight starts. They were be- ing patient, working walks and counts, and that kind of ate me alive today." Prior to the game, Bo- chy criticized the powers that be for allowing Thurs- day's game to start under the lights, ensuring his club wouldn't return home until sun-up Friday with a game scheduled for later that eve- ning at AT&T Park. Lincecum appeared fresh enough while holding the Mets hitless through the first three innings. He struck out four of the first 10 batters he faced, all swing- ing — two on his slider, one on his changeup and one on his fastball. His stuff was sharp, and memories of Chris Heston's no-hitter Tuesday night were fresh enough to put fans,thepressboxandprob- ably both dugouts on alert. But Lincecum had thrown 47 pitches in those three innings, and he was further taxed in the fourth. Third baseman Matt Duffy made a fielding error that led to an unearned run when Travis D'Arnaud hit a blooper that found a patch of grass near the foul line. It was a lucky/unlucky in- ning for Lincecum, since Nori Aoki flagged down Eric Campbell's hard liner to strand the bases loaded. It beat what happened in the fifth, when the Mets scored twice to take the lead. Pitcher Jonathon Niese started the rally with a double over the head of center fielder Angel Pa- gan, Granderson singled and Duda hit a sacrifice fly. Then Cuddyer's RBI dou- ble knocked Lincecum from the game. The Giants made their stand much earlier against Niese, scoring twice in the first inning. They seized another lead in the sixth when Duffy reached on Campbell's two-out error and Brandon Crawford hit Niese's hanging curveball for his ninth home run to make it 4-3. But the bullpen blinked. It took more than two months for that to hap- pen on the road. "This is our motto: ev- erybody has confidence in each other," said George Kontos. "No one puts their ego at the forefront." Giants FROM PAGE 1 the first quarter with nine points as the Warriors took a 31-24 lead. The Cavaliers scored the first seven points of the game, with James tossing a no-look pass over his shoul- der to Mozgov for a dunk and Iman Shumpert hit- ting a 3-pointer. But with Draymond Green playing center in a smaller lineup, the War- riors got an extra burst of energy and controlled the tempo. Green snapped out of his struggles on offense by scoring on a 3-point play to tie the score at 20, beating his chest in excitement af- ter falling to the floor when he drew the foul on Mozgov. Klay Thompson scored to give the Warriors their first lead since Game 2. Green, who scored 13 of his 17 points in the first half, celebrated similarly af- ter hitting a 3-pointer to ex- tend the lead to 44-32. "I'm back," Green screamed. David Lee, whose impact- ful Game 3 performance earned him more playing time, became the Warriors' sixth man and was used at center. When Bogut checked into the game, he committed three fouls in three minutes and sent an airborne James sprawling out of bounds, where he cut his head on a camera with 4:43 left in the second quarter. James after wrapping a towel over the bloody gash remained in the game. He hit one of two free throws, but the Warriors proceeded to push the lead to 15 and led 54-42 at halftime. Iguodala started the sec- ond half as well, but the Warriors couldn't keep the momentum. The Cavaliers went on a 12-2 run capped by James completing an alley-oop from Matthew Dellavedova to cut the Warriors' lead to 65-62. The Warriors went into the fourth quarter leading 76-70 after Curry's 3-pointer closed out the third. Curry threw a pass in transition to Green fora dunktopush the lead to eight. Curry pushed the ball off a rebound and fed Thompson for a layup to make it 80-70. The MVP's runner made it a 12-point lead. I g uo d a l a's t h i r d 3-pointer of the game made it 88-74. Warriors FROM PAGE 1 PAULSANCYA—THEASSOCIATEDPRESS Warriors forward Draymond Green (23) goes up for a dunk over Cavaliers guard Iman Shumpert during the second half of Game 4of the NBA Finals in Cleveland on Thursday. Scoreboard Baseball NATIONALLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Los Angeles 35 25 .583 _ Giants 34 27 .557 1 ½ San Diego 31 31 .500 5 Arizona 27 32 .458 7 ½ Colorado 27 32 .458 7 ½ CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB St. Louis 39 21 .650 _ Chicago 32 26 .552 6 Pittsburgh 32 27 .542 6 ½ Cincinnati 27 32 .458 11 ½ Milwaukee 23 38 .377 16 ½ EASTDIVISION W L P ct G B New York 32 29 .525 _ Washington 31 29 .517 ½ Atlanta 29 31 .483 2 ½ Miami 25 36 .410 7 Philadelphia 22 39 .361 10 Wednesday'sgames Cincinnati 5, Philadelphia 2 Toronto 7, Miami 2 Washington 5, N.Y. Yankees 4, 11 innings St. Louis 4, Colorado 2 Pittsburgh 2, Milwaukee 0 Chicago Cubs 12, Detroit 3 Atlanta 4, San Diego 1 Giants 8, N.Y. Mets 5 L.A. Dodgers 7, Arizona 6 Thursday'sgames San Diego 6, Atlanta 4, 11 innings Miami 6, Colorado 0 N.Y. Mets 5, Giants 4 Chicago Cubs 6, Cincinnati 3 Milwaukee 6, Washington 5 Friday'sgames Cincinnati (Cueto 4-4) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 5-2), 1:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Correia 0-0) at Pittsburgh (Locke 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (A.Wood 4-3) at N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 8-4), 4:10 p.m. Colorado (K.Kendrick 2-7) at Miami (Urena 0-2), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 5-3) at Milwaukee (Fiers 2-6), 5:10 p.m. Kansas City (Ventura 3-5) at St. Louis (Jai.Garcia 1-3), 5:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 5-3) at San Diego (Despaigne 3-4), 7:10 p.m. Arizona (C.Anderson 1-1) at Giants (Bumgarner 7-2), 7:15 p.m. Mets5,Giants4 SanFran NewYork AB R H B AB R H B Aoki lf 4 1 2 0 Grndrs rf 4 2 2 1 Panik 2b 4 1 1 0 Lagars cf 5 0 1 0 Pagan cf 2 0 0 0 Duda 1b 2 1 0 1 Posey 1b 3 0 1 1 Cuddyr lf 5 0 2 2 Maxwll rf 4 1 0 0 WFlors ss 3 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 4 1 1 2 dArnad c 4 0 2 1 MDuffy 3b 3 0 0 0 DHerrr 2b 3 0 0 0 Susac c 4 0 1 0 Campll 3b 4 0 0 0 Linccm p 1 0 0 0 Niese p 2 1 1 0 Y.Petit p 0 0 0 0 Cecilin ph 1 1 1 0 Arias ph 1 0 0 0 Goeddl p 0 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 Famili p 0 0 0 0 Lopez p 0 0 0 0 MyryJr ph 1 0 0 0 Kontos p 0 0 0 0 Belt ph 1 0 0 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 4 6 3 34 5 9 5 SanFran 200 002 000 — 4 NewYork 000 120 101 — 5 Two outs when winning run scored. E: M.Duffy (5), Campbell (8);DP: San Francisco 1, New York 2;LOB: San Francisco 5, New York 9;2B: Cuddyer (9), d'Arnaud (3), Niese (1), Ceciliani (2);HR: B.Crawford (9);S: Lincecum;SF: Duda. IP H R ER BB SO SanFrancisco Lincecum 42/3 4 3 2 3 5 Y.Petit 11/3 0 0 0 0 1 Strickland 0 3 1 1 0 0 Lopez 2/3 0 0 0 0 0 Kontos 11/3 1 0 0 0 0 Romo L,0-32/31 1 1 1 1 NewYork Niese 7 5 4 2 2 4 Goeddel 1 0 0 0 1 0 Familia W,2-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Strickland pitched to 3 batters in the 7th. HBP: by Romo (Granderson), by Goeddel (Posey);PB: Susac. T: 3:03;A: 25,143 (41,922). AMERICANLEAGUE WESTDIVISION W L Pct GB Houston 34 27 .557 _ Texas 31 29 .517 2 ½ Los Angeles 30 30 .500 3 ½ Seattle 27 33 .450 6 ½ A's 25 37 .403 9 ½ CENTRALDIVISION W L Pct GB Kansas City 34 23 .596 _ Minnesota 33 26 .559 2 Detroit 31 29 .517 4 ½ Chicago 28 30 .483 6 ½ Cleveland 28 31 .475 7 EASTDIVISION W L Pct GB New York 33 26 .559 _ Tampa Bay 32 29 .525 2 Toronto 31 30 .508 3 Baltimore 29 30 .492 4 Boston 27 34 .443 7 Wednesday'sgames Toronto 7, Miami 2 Washington 5, N.Y. Yankees 4, 11 innings Baltimore 5, Boston 2 Chicago Cubs 12, Detroit 3 Tampa Bay 4, L.A. Angels 2 Seattle 9, Cleveland 3 Chicago White Sox 4, Houston 1 Kansas City 7, Minnesota 2 A's 5, Texas 4 Thursday'sgames Cleveland 6, Seattle 0 A's 7, Texas 0 Baltimore 6, Boston 5 L.A. Angels 6, Tampa Bay 2 Friday'sgames N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 7-2) at Baltimore (U.Jimenez 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 6-1) at Detroit (Price 5-2), 4:08 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Danks 3-5) at Tampa Bay (Andriese 0-1), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Hutchison 5-1) at Boston (J.Kelly 2-4), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Milone 2-1) at Texas (W.Rodriguez 3-2), 5:05 p.m. Seattle (F.Hernandez 9-2) at Houston (Oberholtzer 0-1), 5:10 p.m. Kansas City (Ventura 3-5) at St. Louis (Jai.Garcia 1-3), 5:15 p.m. A's (Chavez 2-6) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 4-3), 7:05 p.m. Athletics7,Rangers0 Texas Oakland AB R H B AB R H B DShlds lf 4 0 0 0 Burns cf 3 1 2 1 Choo rf 4 0 0 0 Semien ss 4 0 1 0 Fielder dh 2 0 0 0 Parrino ss 0 1 0 0 Blanks 1b 3 0 0 0 Reddck rf 4 1 2 3 Rosales 3b 2 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b 5 0 1 1 Andrus ss 3 0 1 0 Vogt dh 2 1 0 0 LMartn cf 3 0 0 0 Lawrie 3b 3 0 0 0 Corprn c 3 0 0 0 Canha 1b 4 1 2 2 Alberto 2b 3 0 0 0 Phegly c 3 1 0 0 Fuld lf 4 1 3 0 Totals 27 0 1 0 32 711 7 Texas 000 000 000 — 0 Oakland 100 000 06x — 7 DP: Texas 2, Oakland 1;LOB: Texas 2, Oakland 9;2B: Fuld (8);HR: Reddick (9), Canha (8);SB: Burns (11), Fuld (5);SF: Burns. IP H R ER BB SO Texas Gzalez L,2-1 7 8 1 1 3 4 S.Freeman 0 0 1 1 1 0 Edwards 2/3 2 4 4 2 0 Detwiler 1/3 1 1 1 0 0 Oakland Kazmir W,3-4 8 1 0 0 2 6 Scribner 1 0 0 0 0 0 S.Freeman pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. HBP: by Ch.Gonzalez (Lawrie);Balk:Ch. Gonzalez. T: 2:35;A: 14,489 (35,067). NCAACOLLEGEWORLDSERIES AtTDAmeritradeParkOmaha Omaha,Neb. DoubleElimination x-ifnecessary Saturday,June13 Game 1 _ Arkansas (40-23) vs. Virginia (37-22), 9 a.m. Game 2 _ Florida (46-19) vs. Miami (49- 15), 2 p.m. Sunday,June14 Game 3 _ TCU (51-13) vs. LSU (53-10), 9 a.m. Game 4 _ Cal State Fullerton (39-23) vs. Vanderbilt (47-19), 2 p.m. Monday,June15 Game 5 _ Game 1 loser vs. Game 2 loser, 9 a.m. Game 6 _ Game 1 winner vs. Game 2 winner, 2 p.m. Tuesday,June16 Game 7 _ Game 3 loser vs. Game 4 loser, 9 a.m. Game 8 _ Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 winner, 2 p.m. Wednesday,June17 Game 9 _ Game 5 winner vs. Game 6 loser, 2 p.m. Thursday,June18 Game 10 _ Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 loser, 2 p.m. Friday,June19 Game 11 _ Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 9 a.m. Game 12 _ Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 2 p.m. Saturday,June20 x-Game 13 _ If Game 9 winner also wins game 11, TBD x-Game 14 _ If Game 10 winner also wins Game 12, TBD ChampionshipSeries (Best-of-3) Monday, June 22: Teams TBD, 2 p.m. Tuesday, June 23: Teams TBD, 2 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 24: Teams TBD, 2 p.m. Basketball NBAFINALS (Best-of-7;x-ifnecessary) GOLDENSTATE2,CLEVELAND2 Thursday,June4 Golden State 108, Cleveland 100, OT Sunday,June7 Cleveland 95, Golden State 93, OT Tuesday,June9 Cleveland 96, Golden State 91 Thursday,June11 Golden State 103, Cleveland 82 Sunday,June14 Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. Tuesday,June16 Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Friday,June19 Cleveland at Golden State, 6 p.m. Warriors103,Cavaliers82 WARRIORS(103) Barnes 4-9 4-4 14, Iguodala 8-15 2-2 22, Green 6-11 4-7 17, Curry 8-17 2-2 22, K.Thompson 4-9 0-0 9, Lee 3-7 3-6 9, Livingston 2-4 3-4 7, Barbosa 1-3 0-0 2, Bogut 0-0 0-0 0, Speights 0-2 1-2 1, Holi- day 0-0 0-0 0, McAdoo 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-77 19-27 103. CAVALIERS(82) James 7-22 5-10 20, T.Thompson 6-10 0-0 12, Mozgov 9-16 10-12 28, Dellavedova 3-14 2-2 10, Shumpert 2-9 0-0 5, Smith 2-12 0-0 4, Jones 0-3 0-0 0, Perkins 0-2 2-2 2, Harris 0-0 1-2 1, Miller 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-88 20-28 82. GoldenState 31 23 22 27 — 103 Cleveland 24 18 28 12 — 82 3-PointGoals: Golden State 12-30 (Curry 4-7, Iguodala 4-9, Barnes 2-5, Green 1-3, K.Thompson 1-5, Barbosa 0-1), Cleveland 4-27 (Dellavedova 2-9, James 1-4, Shumpert 1-5, Jones 0-1, Smith 0-8); Fouledout: None;Rebounds: Golden State 53 (Iguodala, Barnes, Livingston 8), Cleveland 63 (T.Thompson 13); Assists: Golden State 24 (Green, Curry 6), Cleveland 16 (James 8);Totalfouls: Golden State 21, Cleveland 19;A: 20,562 (20,562). WNBA WESTERNCONFERENCE W L Pct GB Minnesota 3 0 1.000 — Tulsa 2 1 .667 1 Phoenix 1 1 .500 1½ Seattle 1 2 .333 2 Sparks 0 1 .000 2 San Antonio 0 2 .000 2½ EASTERNCONFERENCE W L Pct GB Washington 2 0 1.000 — New York 3 1 .750 — Connecticut 2 1 .667 ½ Atlanta 1 2 .333 1½ Chicago 1 2 .333 1½ Indiana 0 3 .000 2½ Wednesday'sgames No games scheduled Thursday'sgames Atlanta 72, San Antonio 69 New York 68, Phoenix 57 Connecticut 67, Chicago 65 Minnesota 94, Seattle 70 Friday'sgames Atlanta at Washington, 4 p.m. Phoenix at Indiana, 4 p.m. NHL Playoffs STANLEYCUPFINALS (Best-of-7;x-ifnecessary) TAMPABAY2,CHICAGO2 Wednesday,June3: Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1 Saturday,June6: Tampa Bay 4, Chicago 3 Monday,June8: Tampa Bay 3, Chicago 2 Wednesday,June10: Chicago 2, Tampa Bay 1 Saturday,June13: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. Monday,June15: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday,June17: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. Soccer MAJORLEAGUESOCCER WESTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 8 4 2 26 20 11 Vancouver 8 6 2 26 18 15 Kansas City 6 2 6 24 22 15 Portland 6 5 4 22 15 14 FC Dallas 6 4 4 22 18 19 Los Angeles 5 5 6 21 15 18 Houston 5 5 5 20 21 19 San Jose 5 5 4 19 14 15 Salt Lake 4 5 6 18 13 18 Colorado 2 4 8 14 11 12 EASTERNCONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 8 4 4 28 20 15 New England 5 4 6 21 20 20 Toronto FC 6 5 1 19 19 16 Orlando City 4 5 5 17 19 19 New York 4 4 5 17 17 17 Columbus 4 6 4 16 20 21 Philadelphia 4 9 3 15 18 25 Montreal 4 4 2 14 13 15 Chicago 4 7 2 14 17 20 N.Y. City FC 2 7 5 11 12 18 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday'sgames N.Y. City FC 2, Philadelphia 1 Toronto FC 2, D.C. United 1 Montreal 2, Columbus 1 Orlando City 3, Chicago 2 Kansas City 1, Seattle 0 Vancouver 1, Los Angeles 0 Portland 2, New England 0 Sunday'sgames Salt Lake 0, Colorado 0, tie San Jose 0, FC Dallas 0, tie Saturday,June13 Montreal at N.Y. City FC, 4 p.m. Chicago at New England, 4:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Seattle, 7 p.m. WOMEN'SWORLDCUP Thursday,June11 Germany 1, Norway1 Canada 0, New Zealand 0 Thailand 3, Ivory Coast 2 China 1, Netherlands 0 Friday,June12 Switzerland vs. Ecuador, 2 p.m. Australia vs. Nigeria, 2 p.m. Japan vs. Cameroon, 5 p.m. United States vs. Sweden, 5 p.m. Golf FEDEXST.JUDECLASSICPAR Thursday At TPC Southwind Memphis, Tenn. Purse: $6 million Yardage: 7,239;Par70(35-35) FirstRound a-denotes amateur Brooks Koepka ........................ 31-33—64 -6 Greg Owen ............................... 33-31—64 -6 Ry an P al mer . ....... .... .......... ...... . 3 3- 31 —6 4 - 6 Scott Brown ............................. 33-32—65 -5 Steven Alker............................. 34-31—65 -5 Brian Davis ............................... 32-33—65 -5 Richard Sterne......................... 33-32—65 -5 Ben Crane.................................34-32—66 -4 Tommy Gainey.........................34-32—66 -4 Tom Gillis..................................33-33—66 -4 Alex Prugh................................33-33—66 -4 Fabian Gomez..........................34-32—66 -4 Vaughn Taylor.......................... 35-32—67 -3 Mark Wilson............................. 34-33—67 -3 Lucas Glover............................ 35-32—67 -3 Boo Weekley .............................36-31—67 -3 John Rollins.............................. 32-35—67 -3 Spencer Levin.......................... 34-33—67 -3 Chris Smith............................... 34-33—67 -3 Stewart Cink............................ 35-33—68 -2 Ken Duke................................... 32-36—68 -2 Phil Mickelson ..........................37-31—68 -2 Max Homa................................ 35-33—68 -2 Austin Cook..............................34-34—68 -2 Zack Sucher ............................. 33-35—68 -2 Heath Slocum ..........................34-34—68 -2 Matt Every................................ 32-36—68 -2 Martin Laird............................. 33-35—68 -2 Brian Stuard.............................34-34—68 -2 Will Wilcox ...............................34-34—68 -2 Carlos Sainz Jr......................... 35-33—68 -2 Bryce Molder ........................... 36-33—69 -1 Kyle Stanley ............................. 34-35—69 -1 Luke Guthrie ............................ 34-35—69 -1 Jason Kokrak ........................... 35-34—69 -1 Steven Bowditch ..................... 35-34—69 -1 John Merrick............................ 35-34—69 -1 Retief Goosen .......................... 35-34—69 -1 Luke Donald ............................. 33-36—69 -1 Jerry Kelly................................. 35-34—69 -1 Chad Campbell.........................32-37—69 -1 Cameron Tringale ................... 36-33—69 -1 Tom Hoge.................................. 35-34—69 -1 Cameron Percy........................ 33-36—69 -1 Oscar Fraustro ........................ 33-36—69 -1 Roberto Castro........................ 34-35—69 -1 Michael Thompson................. 33-36—69 -1 Harris English .......................... 35-34—69 -1 Nick Watney............................. 35-34—69 -1 Webb Simpson......................... 35-34—69 -1 Seung-Yul Noh......................... 35-34—69 -1 Matt Jones................................ 35-34—69 -1 Jim Renner................................ 34-35—69 -1 Zac Blair.................................... 34-35—69 -1 a-Bryson DeChambeau.......... 33-36—69 -1 Tyrone Van Aswegen ............. 34-35—69 -1 LPGA-KPMGWOMEN'SPGA CHAMPIONSHIPPAR Thursday At Westchester Country Club, West Course Harrison, N. Y. Purse: $3.5 million Yardage: 6,670;Par: 73 (36-37) FirstRound Jenny Shin ................................ 33-33—66 -7 Brooke Henderson..................33-34—67 -6 Karrie Webb.............................33-35—68 -5 Moriya Jutanugarn .................34-34—68 -5 Charley Hull .............................34-34—68 -5 Karine Icher .............................35-34—69 -4 Simin Feng................................ 32-37—69 -4 Joanna Klatten .........................37-33—70 -3 Chella Choi................................35-35—70 -3 Min Lee ......................................37-33—70 -3 Hyo Joo Kim...............................37-33—70 -3 Sandra Gal................................ 34-36—70 -3 Jane Rah.................................... 34-36—70 -3 Sei Young Kim...........................37-33—70 -3 Jessica Korda............................37-33—70 -3 Cristie Kerr............................... 36-34—70 -3 Brittany Lincicome..................37-33—70 -3 Lexi Thompson.........................35-35—70 -3 Candie Kung..............................37-33—70 -3 Azahara Munoz ....................... 34-36—70 -3 Jennifer Song............................35-35—70 -3 Stacy Lewis.............................. 36-34—70 -3 Brittany Lang............................33-38—71 -2 Jing Yan......................................33-38—71 -2 Gwladys Nocera.......................34-37—71 -2 Paula Reto.................................36-35—71 -2 Inbee Park.................................37-34—71 -2 Christina Kim............................35-36—71 -2 Kris Tamulis ..............................34-37—71 -2 Sophia Popov............................36-35—71 -2 Sydnee Michaels......................34-37—71 -2 Mina Harigae ............................37-34—71 -2 Paula Creamer..........................37-34—71 -2 Anna Nordqvist ........................36-35—71 -2 Perrine Delacour......................36-35—71 -2 Mi Jung Hur ...............................37-34—71 -2 Caroline Hedwall .....................36-35—71 -2 Pernilla Lindberg......................35-36—71 -2 Kelly Shon..................................36-35—71 -2 CONSTELLATIONSENIOR PLAYERSCHAMPIONSHIPPAR Thursday At Belmont Country Club Belmont, Mass. Purse: $2.7 million Yardage: 6,812;Par: 71 (36-35) FirstRound Bernhard Langer..................... 34-31—65 -6 Rocco Mediate.........................34-33—67 -4 Lee Janzen................................ 32-35—67 -4 Guy Boros................................. 35-32—67 -4 Colin Montgomerie................. 35-33—68 -3 Gene Sauers..............................37-31—68 -3 Loren Roberts.......................... 36-33—69 -2 Mark Calcavecchia................. 35-34—69 -2 Marco Dawson......................... 33-36—69 -2 Scott Verplank......................... 34-35—69 -2 Olin Browne ............................. 33-36—69 -2 Esteban Toledo........................ 36-33—69 -2 Russ Cochran........................... 35-34—69 -2 Scott Hoch.................................35-35—70 -1 Tom Pernice Jr. .........................35-35—70 -1 Jesper Parnevik........................34-36—70 -1 Kenny Perry ..............................36-34—70 -1 Billy Andrade ............................37-33—70 -1 Joe Durant.................................33-37—70 -1 David Frost................................33-37—70 -1 Kirk Triplett...............................33-37—70 -1 Jeff Hart.....................................35-35—70 -1 Rick Gibson ...............................36-34—70 -1 Gary Hallberg ............................34-37—71 E Brian Henninger........................37-34—71 E Kevin Sutherland.......................36-35—71 E Jeff Maggert ..............................37-34—71 E Mike Reid....................................35-36—71 E Willie Wood................................35-36—71 E Odds GLANTZ-CULVERLINE For June 12 MajorLeagueBaseball NATIONALLEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at Chicago -120/+110 Cincinnati at Pittsburgh -165/+155 Philadelphia at New York -130/+120 Atlanta at Miami -135/+125 Colorado Washington -115/+105 at Milwaukee Los Angeles -175/+165 at San Diego at San Francisco -190/+180 Arizona AMERICANLEAGUE New York -110/+100 at Baltimore at Detroit -145/+135 Cleveland at Boston -125/+115 Toronto at Tampa Bay -120/+110 Chicago at Texas -130/+120 Minnesota Seattle -170/+160 at Houston at Los Angeles -115/+105 Oakland INTERLEAGUE at St. Louis -120/+110 Kansas City NHL TOMORROW Favorite Line Underdog at Tampa Bay -120/+100 Chicago | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 2 B

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