Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/536643
group-stage opener, has managed to score against the Americans. "It's a spectacular stat, to be honest with you. I al- ways tell the team, we just need one more than our op- ponent if we keep a clean sheet," coach Jill Ellis said. "And it's not just our goal- keeper and our back four. I think this team has em- braced the accountability and responsibility of de- fending on every line. It's something we ask of them, but they deliver. They un- derstand that it's impor- tant." Klingenberg pulled off a big save in the highly antic- ipated group stage match against No. 5 Sweden, led by former U.S. coach Pia Sundhage. The diminu- tive defender leaped to head away a shot by Car- oline Seger. The ball hit the crossbar and caromed away from the goal. Goal- line technology was used to confirm the ball never crossed the line. The save in the 77th min- ute preserved the 0-0 draw and the United States went on to finish atop the group stage heading into the knockout round. Solo, who won the Golden Glove award for the 2011 World Cup, leads all goalkeepers in the tourna- ment with 12 saves to one goal against. She has not spoken to re- porters covering the event since brief remarks fol- lowing the opener against the Matildas. Just before the World Cup got under way, ESPN revealed new details about Solo's arrest last June for domestic vi- olence assault. The misde- meanor charges stemmed from an altercation with her half-sister and 17-year- old nephew at a party in Washington. The charges against Solo were dropped earlier this year. Solo has talked about her play via videos released by U.S. Soccer. "I've said it all along, that you have a young player like Julie Johnston, who was ready for the big stage. She was ready for this type of tournament, she's come a long way in the last year. You put her besides somebody as calm as Becky Sauerbrunn and it makes the perfect mix," Solo said. "Obviously our wingers are incredible." Soccer FROMPAGE1 Washington 84/70 New York 82/65 Miami 92/80 Atlanta 84/70 Detroit 76/54 Houston 93/75 Chicago 70/57 Minneapolis 80/60 Kansas City 75/62 El Paso 101/75 Denver 82/59 Billings 86/62 Los Angeles 82/65 San Francisco 73/60 Seattle 93/63 AIRQUALITYFORECAST Whatitmeans: 0-50:Good; 51-100:Moderate; 101-150:Unhealthyforsensitivepeople; 151+:Unhealthyforall. Source: Airnow.gov City Today'sairquality City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W CALIFORNIA CITIES National and world forecast s-sunny,pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy,sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain,sf-snow flurries,sn-snow,i-ice City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Summary National Extremes World Extremes North and South America Asia, Australia Africa CarsonCity Hawthorne Reno Herlong Lovelock Sacramento Yuba City Napa Ukiah Chico Corning Lakeview Alturas Susanville Redding Red Bluff Laytonville Fort Bragg Point Arena Eureka Redway Mount Shasta Yreka Crescent City Ashland Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Shown are today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ALMANAC Precipitation Temperatures ALLERGY REPORT Pollenlevels Source: National Allergy Bureau TODAY'S UV INDEX (The higher the number, the faster skin damage will occur.) Extreme Very high High Moderate Low SUN SETTINGS, MOON PHASES Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Hoursofsunlight River Levels SacramentoRiver Flood 7a.m. 24-hr Stage yest. chg. Lake Levels Elevation Yesterday Storage (acre-feet) Percent Capacity Q: A: FRIDAY 103° 72° SATURDAY 99° 73° Mostly sunn y and ho t Mostly sunn y and ho t SUNDAY 99° 69° Mostly sunn y and wa rm MONDAY 99° 66° Wa rm with plenty of sunshine TODAY 105° 74° Partly sunny and very hot. A thunderstorm in spots early; partly cloudy, warm tonight. High ..................................................................... 107° Low ........................................................................ 75° Normal high ......................................................... 95° Normal low ........................................................... 65° Record high ........................................... 115° in 1942 Record low .............................................. 55° in 1975 Humidity noon today ........................................ 23% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 0.00" Month to date ................................................... 0.00" Normal month to date .................................... Trace Season to date .................................................. 0.00" Normal season to date ................................... Trace Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .......................................................... Moderate Napa ........................................................... Moderate Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................... Not available Yuba City ............................................. Not available Allergy, dust and dander today: Neutral Grass ............. Moderate Mold .........................Low Trees ....................... Low Weeds ........... Moderate 8 Highest at 1 p.m. Today 5:44 a.m. 8:42 p.m. 9:09 p.m. 6:35 a.m. Friday 5:44 a.m. 8:42 p.m. 9:55 p.m. 7:40 a.m. 14 hr., 58 min. Jul8 Last Jul15 New First Jul23 Full Jul31 aboveBendBridge......................27 ...........2.40 .......none atHamiltonCity.........................148 ......128.83 ....... -0.01 atOrdFerry................................114 ........96.38 ....... -0.01 atRedBluffDiversionDam.......253 ......238.50 .......none atTehamaBridge ......................213 ......201.20 .......none atVinaWoodsonBridge............183 ......166.98 ....... -0.04 BlackButte ....................457.02..............73,963 .....51.5% LakeOroville..................717.78.........1,395,386 .....37.3% LakeShasta ...................968.48.........2,198,180 .....48.3% LakeTrinity..................2247.08............930,209 .....35.1% Whiskeytown...............1209.19............238,503 .....98.9% Weather Trivia ™ What is the record high temperature for the United States in July? 134(F) at Death Valley, Calif., on July 10, 1913. Today Friday Anaheim 84/64/pc 80/64/pc Bakersfield 104/76/pc 101/76/s Chula Vista 77/65/pc 74/64/pc Crescent City 62/56/c 63/55/pc Death Valley 111/83/pc 115/85/pc Eureka 65/56/pc 66/57/pc Fremont 82/62/pc 81/62/pc Fresno 102/75/pc 102/74/s Glendale 85/64/pc 82/63/pc Huntington Beach 75/65/pc 72/64/pc Irvine 80/64/pc 76/64/pc Lake Tahoe 82/55/t 83/55/t Long Beach 81/67/pc 76/65/pc Los Angeles 82/65/pc 79/64/pc Mammoth Mountain 84/50/pc 84/49/t Modesto 99/71/pc 98/70/s Monterey 71/59/pc 71/57/pc Moreno Valley 91/62/t 88/61/pc Napa 77/59/c 77/56/pc Needles 111/90/pc 112/92/pc Oakland 74/61/pc 72/60/pc Oxnard 73/63/pc 71/61/pc Redding 107/76/pc 105/75/s Riverside 92/64/t 89/60/pc Sacramento 92/63/pc 93/62/s San Bernardino 92/61/t 91/59/pc San Diego 76/68/pc 73/67/pc San Francisco 73/60/pc 73/59/pc San Jose 81/63/pc 81/62/pc San Luis Obispo 76/57/pc 76/53/pc Santa Ana 79/65/pc 74/64/pc Santa Barbara 74/61/pc 73/58/pc Santa Clarita 90/63/pc 89/62/pc Stockton 96/66/pc 96/64/s Ventura 74/63/pc 72/63/pc Yosemite Valley 90/60/t 93/67/t Today Friday Albuquerque 93/68/pc 87/67/t Atlanta 84/70/t 85/70/c Baltimore 82/66/c 80/65/c Boston 79/62/pc 74/59/pc Buffalo 72/53/pc 76/57/s Chicago 70/57/s 77/59/pc Cincinnati 77/62/t 80/61/t Dallas 94/77/pc 92/76/pc Denver 82/59/t 84/60/t Detroit 76/54/pc 78/58/s El Paso 101/75/s 94/72/pc Fargo 81/59/pc 83/60/pc Honolulu 89/75/s 89/75/pc Houston 93/75/s 93/77/pc Indianapolis 78/61/sh 79/62/pc Kansas City 75/62/pc 79/64/pc Las Vegas 108/85/pc 108/87/pc Louisville 80/68/t 81/65/t Miami 92/80/pc 91/80/pc Minneapolis 80/60/pc 82/64/pc New Orleans 93/76/pc 93/78/pc New York City 82/65/pc 80/65/pc Oklahoma City 92/70/pc 87/68/t A zone of drenching showers and thunderstorms will extend from the middle Mississippi, Ten- nessee and southern Ohio valleys to the lower mid-Atlantic coast today. Some of the storms will bring flooding downpours and damaging winds. The rainfall can aggravate existing flooding. Typical warmth and humidity will stretch across the South with very spotty storms. A wedge of dry air is forecast to expand eastward from the Upper Midwest to the Northeast. Another zone of showers and thunderstorms will affect the central and northern Plains. High ........................... 110° in Redding, CA Low ......................... 33° in Tomahawk, WI High ............ 117° in Cagyl, Turkmenistan Low ..... -1° in Summit Station, Greenland Bogota 69/47/c 69/49/c Buenos Aires 60/45/pc 53/38/c Caracas 86/75/s 87/76/t Ensenada 82/63/pc 80/61/pc Mexico City 69/53/t 69/54/t Montreal 72/50/s 77/57/s Rio de Janeiro 75/67/c 79/69/c Tijuana 79/65/pc 75/63/pc Toronto 71/50/s 73/55/s Vancouver 80/60/s 79/59/s Orlando 94/74/t 94/75/t Philadelphia 84/68/pc 84/67/pc Phoenix 108/85/pc 108/89/pc Pittsburgh 78/59/pc 79/65/pc Portland, ME 77/55/pc 76/54/s Portland, OR 97/65/s 95/62/s St. Louis 79/66/t 80/67/pc Salt Lake City 99/71/s 100/74/s Seattle 93/63/s 90/62/s Tucson 100/77/pc 100/78/pc Washington, DC 84/70/t 82/69/t Cairo 92/70/s 93/71/s Casablanca 80/65/s 84/66/s Johannesburg 65/44/pc 66/43/pc Kinshasa 86/69/s 85/68/s Lagos 82/75/t 80/74/r Nairobi 72/57/c 71/54/c Tripoli 93/68/s 88/67/s Baghdad 114/86/s 116/86/s Beijing 90/64/pc 89/66/s Hong Kong 94/84/pc 95/82/pc Jerusalem 87/64/s 84/63/s Kabul 93/64/s 96/65/s Manila 90/79/t 90/80/t Melbourne 51/41/sh 53/41/pc New Delhi 96/80/t 98/82/t Seoul 82/62/s 82/62/pc Singapore 89/80/t 89/80/t Sydney 62/43/s 59/41/s Tehran 102/81/s 102/78/s Tokyo 77/71/sh 76/70/r Amsterdam 87/65/t 82/67/s Athens 85/71/s 85/70/s Belgrade 85/60/pc 84/60/s Berlin 84/66/s 89/70/s Budapest 83/60/pc 84/60/s Dublin 69/53/pc 68/59/pc London 79/60/t 85/67/pc Madrid 96/70/t 102/70/pc Moscow 76/54/pc 72/61/c Paris 93/67/t 97/73/s Rome 85/68/s 89/69/s Stockholm 82/63/s 82/62/s Vienna 87/64/s 86/63/s Zurich 92/65/s 91/65/t 94/60 97/66 99/71 101/66 102/70 92/63 96/67 77/59 101/62 98/71 100/73 99/64 102/62 99/64 107/76 105/74 93/65 68/58 71/56 65/56 87/59 100/63 106/72 62/56 105/70 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 day's action seem tame next summer. Chandler will get his in Phoenix, taking $52 mil- lion over four years to leave Dallas, while Atlanta's De- Marre Carroll agreed to a deal with Toronto for $60 million over four years. Deals can only be agreed to during the first week of free agency. They can't be signed until July 9, after next season's salary cap is set. Aldridge was busy meet- ing with teams for a sec- ond straight day while he decides whether to leave Portland. His representa- tives wrote on Twitter on Wednesday afternoon that he had made no decisions, even following reports that the Lakers had been elim- inated. The Spurs were among the teams hoping to land him and were making moves to entice him. They dealt Tiago Splitter to At- lanta to clear cap space and re-signed guard Danny Green, who got $45 million for four years. Aldridge was among the top big men available when the market opened early Wednesday morning, con- sidered by many the best one who might consider moving. The Clippers' De- Andre Jordan was another top big man on that list. There had been specula- tion Love might bolt after one season in Cleveland, though he had said repeat- edly he planned to stay. NBA FROM PAGE 1 over his last six starts after giving up one run on four hits. He walked two and struck out six. "Everything felt pretty good," Hahn said. "The first couple of innings I was up in the zone. Then I got into a groove." Tyler Clippard retired the final four hitters for his 14th save. Butler, Josh Reddick, Mark Canha and Eric Sog- ard drove in runs as the A's won the series. Billy Burns added two hits and scored twice. Chad Bettis (4-3) allowed three runs on seven hits and four walks in 5 2-3 in- nings. Nolan Arenado went 0-for-4, ending his 17-game hitting streak. Carlos Gon- zalez recorded his 14th mul- tiple hit game. "It wasn't the start that I wanted to have and I need to be a lot more efficient with my pitches," Bettis said. "I feel like stuff was flattening out in the mid- dle innings." Butler led off the third with a shot into left field. Rafael Ynoa slammed into the wall and was shaken up as Charlie Blackmon had to chase down the ball, al- lowing Butler to chug into third, his first three-bagger since August 2012. Butler scored on Sog- ard's sacrifice fly, and hit an RBI single in the fifth. Burns tripled leading off third and scored on Red- dick's double. "I'm not going to lie, I was a little worried," Hahn said. "But he put his head down and gave it every- thing he had. The guy made a bad throw. It was funny but awesome." The Rockies scored in the fourth on doubles by Ben Paulsen and Nick Hundley. A's FROM PAGE 1 despite being out-hit 14-8. They squandered a 3-1 lead and committed a season- high three errors, which led to two unearned runs. "We were a little sloppy defensively, which is un- characteristic for this ball- club," Jennings said. "But you can throw it out the window." The comeback cost Flor- ida native Chris Heston his ninth victory. Heston, pitching before more than 20 friends and relatives, went six innings for the Giants and allowed three runs, all in the third. San Francisco's five dou- ble plays matched the team record for a nine-inning game, achieved six other times. Shortstop Brandon Crawford homered and had a hand in all five DPs. "We played great, did a lot of good things, come back to take the lead, and unfortunately, it's baseball," manager Bruce Bochy said. "The closer was off tonight, and that's the difference in the game." Miami starter Dan Haren allowed 10 hits and four runs, three earned, in 5 2/3 innings. He fared better at the plate, crossing up the Gi- ants in the Marlins' three- run third inning when he faked a bunt on a 2-2 pitch and instead swung and sin- gled past the first baseman to drive in a run. With the defense charg- ing, Haren made the deci- sion to swing rather than bunt, Jennings said. Miami's Dee Gordon, who hit a three-run inside- the-park homer Tuesday, this time stopped at third with an RBI triple. He ex- tended his hitting streak to 12 games. Trainer'sRoom Giants: C Buster Posey left the game in the sixth inning after he took a foul ball off the mask in the fourth. He passed a concus- sion test and said he hoped to play Thursday. ... RHP Tim Hudson left the team to deal with a personal is- sue. He is bothered by a sore shoulder and might go on the DL. Giants FROM PAGE 1 DENTALOFFICE. FULL TIME OPENING FOR STERILIZATION CALL530-527-6777 235So.MainSt.,RedBluff 527-1657 FurnitureDepot MON.-FRI.9:00-6:00 SAT. 9:00-5:00 • SUN. 11:00-5:00 48 MONTHS 0 % Financing up to 50 % OFF oac Locallyowned business offering high value, low cost energy for decades. Call Liam at 526-1551 or visit www.sacriversolar.com Lic# 996900 | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM THURSDAY, JULY 2, 2015 6 B