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NBABASKETBALL Atlanta Hawks at New York Knicks:5p.m.,TNT. Dallas Mavericks at Los Ange- les Clippers: 7:30p.m., TNT. COLLEGE FOOTBALL North Carolina at Pittsburgh: 4p.m., ESPN. West Virginia at TCU: 4:30 p.m., FS1. Texas State at Georgia South.: 4:30p.m., ESPNU. Oregon at Arizona State: 7:30 p.m., ESPN. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL North Marion vs. Hoover: 5 p.m., ESPN2. NFL FOOTBALL Miami Dolphins at New England Patriots: 5:25p.m., CBS, NFL. GOLF PGA CIMB Classic Round 2: 7:30p.m., GOLF. EPGA Turkish Airlines Open Round 2: 3a.m., GOLF. SOCCER FIFA U-17World Cup Round of 16: 12:55p.m., FS1. COLLEGE WOMEN'S SOCCER UCLA vs. California: 3:30p.m., PAC12BA. USC vs. Stanford: 7p.m., PAC12BA. WTA TENNIS BNP Paribas Finals Doubles Round Robin: 8:30p.m., TEN- NIS. BNP Paribas Finals Singles Round Robin: 11p.m., TENNIS. BNP Paribas Finals Singles Round Robin: 1a.m., TENNIS. BNP Paribas Finals Doubles Round Robin: 3a.m., TENNIS. Ontheair digsandthreeassists;An- nie Feser with a kill, two aces, a block and three digs; Gillie Coelho with an ace and 11 digs and Daphne Nandino with 12 digs. The Warriors, 13-10 over- all and 3-3 in league play, are scheduled to host Ches- ter at 7 tonight in a confer- ence match. YREKA 3, CORNING 2 The Corning Cardinals fell in five sets Tuesday night to the Yreka Miners in a road conference match 18-25, 20-25, 25-21, 26-24, 15-11. "What a tough, compet- itive match to lose," coach Mike Albee said. "We played amazingly well in games 1 and 2 then bat- tled the leads in the next two games. In the fifth game we were down 10-2 and came back to 11-9 then lost a tough one." Team leaders were soph- omore Mariah Castle with 19 kills, an ace, 12 blocks and 10 digs; Kaylee Shoe- maker with 12 kills, two aces, six blocks and 16 digs; Mikayla Burreson with a kill and 13 blocks and Brenna Johnson with 32 assists, four blocks, an ace and a kill. "I'm so proud of the way we played and fought all night," Albee said. The Cardinals, 10-18 overall and 2-5 in league play, are scheduled to face the 16-9 Lassen Grizzlies at 6:30 tonight in Susanville. Roundup FROM PAGE 1 timing back and all that. It's good for us." Allen tore the MCL in his right knee during a Week 1 loss to Cincinnati. He was placed on injured reserve with a designation to re- turn then spent the next six weeks working his way back after doctors deter- mined the injury didn't re- quire surgery. "That was a big relief because at first I thought I might have to," Allen said. "But after the MRI and everything, I found out I didn't need it. That was a positive." While Allen — who signed with Oakland in the offseason after spend- ing his first years with the Eagles — is cleared to prac- tice, he won't be eligible to play until the Raiders face the Vikings on Nov. 15. Oakland has three weeks to decide whether to add Allen to the 53-man roster or keep him on in- jured reserve. "I'm biting at the bit for sure," Allen said before re- joining his teammates in practice for the first time since Sept. 11. "I'll be ready to go. I'm just glad to be out there practicing now. I'm feeling good. Just gotta be patient." Considering the situa- tion in the defensive sec- ondary, it's almost a given that Allen will be activated. The Raiders own the worst-ranked pass defense in the NFL while giving up more than 303 yards a game through the air. Op- posing quarterbacks have thrown for 335 yards or more three times against Oakland and are complet- ing nearly 66 percent of their pass attempts Oakland has seven in- terceptions in six games this season, all but one of which have come by defen- sive backs. A year ago, the Raiders had just nine in- terceptions, eight from the cornerbacks and safeties. Defensive coordinator Ken Norton Jr. also made the decision to move cor- nerback T.J. Carrie to safety shortly after Allen was injured. Carrie has started the past four games at safety and is second on the team with five passes defended. "That's a new sight for him being back there at safety," Allen said. "He's doing a great job. I've just been giving him tips here and there on things, things for his eyes and things he's seeing." Raiders FROM PAGE 1 constant criticism of Kae- pernick just comes with the territory for a team that is 2-5 with a strug- gling offense, but "any of that stuff's counterpro- ductive." FOX Sports NFL insider Jay Glazer reported Sunday that Kaepernick is "just alone, on an island in that locker room. There's not a lot of people he connects with. Confidence-wise he's just buried right now." "First of all, our locker room is straight ... Kap isn't on a damn island," wideout Torrey Smith responded. Kaepernick's latest for- gettable performance came in a 20-3 loss to the rival Seahawks last Thurs- day night at Levi's Sta- dium, and San Francisco now heads to St. Louis this weekend. Kaepernick went 13 of 24 for 124 yards with a 68.8 passer rating against Seattle while tak- ing six more sacks. He had X-rays after the game for a swollen thumb. "My relationship with my teammates is great. That's all I'm worried about," Kaepernick said. "What the perspective is outside the locker room really has nothing to do with me or this team. ... To me that's a situation that I don't know what the agenda is saying that or what the credibility of that source is." Tomsula has stressed better communication from everybody, including his quarterback. "That was one of the things we talked about as a team, communicating, ev- erybody, not just him, all of us in the communica- tion side of things," Tom- sula said of a team meet- ing earlier this month. "If something's on your mind there's a way to talk about things and go." Tomsula hasn't observed any problems in the locker room. "I think I'm a guy that's in the locker room more than most coaches. ... We're 2-5, here it comes, here comes all the stuff. That's the business, that's where we're at. But I don't see it." San Francisco managed just 55 yards in the first half and finished with 142, fewer than the 164 the Nin- ers managed in last year's Thanksgiving night loss to Seattle and their worst to- tal since 133 yards against the Vikings on Nov. 5, 2006. Kaepernick was seen interacting with fellow quarterbacks Blaine Gab- bert and Dylan Thomp- son — two people he reg- ularly eats lunch with along with offensive line- men Alex Boone and Joe Staley — in the locker room Wednesday before hitting the showers. "This whole team sees Kap on an everyday ba- sis, we see him 15 hours a day in meetings," Gab- bert said. "Unless those stories are coming from in here they're false. They don't have any reason to be spread. I think people are just trying to find some- thing that's causing tur- moil within this team, but the rumors don't need to be spread, they're not true. That's really all there is to say about it." Tomsula is most con- cerned about getting his entire team on track. He spent time during the ex- tended weekend break evaluating his roster. One strategy Tomsula has gone to in order to im- prove communication is to turn off the music during some practice periods to force players and coaches to speak to one another rather than rely on hand signals. "What happens, the frus- tration thing. I felt a frus- tration there. We all do, I'm not going to lie about it," Tomsula said. 49ers FROM PAGE 1 its swings, according to STATS. The Dodgers and Cubs swung and missed 58 times in his first three postseason outings, but he got just three swings and misses against the Royals — his career low. Of his 94 pitches, 23 were fouled off by the Royals. Cueto has struggled on the road, where opposing fans taunt him by repeat- ing his name in a sing-song voice. But since the Royals acquired the free-agent-to- be from Cincinnati in July, he's been Johnny on the spot at Kauffman Stadium. He pitched two-hit ball over eight innings to win Game 5 of the Division Se- ries against Houston, and Kansas City lined up its Se- ries rotation to have Cueto starting Games 2 and 6 at home. Cueto struck out four and walked three. Both hits off him were soft sin- gles by Lucas Duda, an in- field hit to third that took advantage of the shift in the second inning and an opposite-field RBI single to left in the fourth. Cueto let loose some emotion at the end of the eighth inning, when Alcides Escobar made a nifty play to retire Juan Lagares for the final out. As Escobar sprinted past him, Cueto exchanged a flamboyant high five with the shortstop. After Yoenis Cespedes flied to center for the final out, Cueto pointed to the sky and was congratulated by catcher Salvador Perez. Cueto pitched the first Se- ries complete game by an AL pitcher since Minneso- ta's Jack Morris won Game 7 against Atlanta in 1991. DeGrom, 3-0 in the post- season coming in, allowed four runs, six hits and three walks over five in- nings in a hairy matchup of pitchers with contrast- ing long locks. Pitching with seven days' rest, de- Grom held Kansas City to one hit through four in- nings but got in trouble in the fifth, when he walked Alex Gordon on a 3-2 slider leading off. Alex Rios followed with a single and Escobar fouled off a pair of bunt attempts before driving and 0-2 slider up the middle for a tying single. Ben Zobrist's grounder advanced the runners, and Lorenzo Cain fouled off four pitches before a fly- out to short center. Hosmer singled off the mound into center field for a 3-1 lead, and Kendrys Morales' sin- gled in another run. Gordon added an RBI double in the eighth off Jon Niese, a ball off the glove of shortstop Wilmer Flores. Paulo Orlando, the first Brazil-born player to appear in a Series, followed with a sacrifice fly against Addison Reed, and Escobar tripled in a run. Series FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB Postseason WORLDSERIES (Best-of-7;x-ifnecessary) KANSAS CITY 2, NEW YORK 0 Tuesday, Oct. 27: Kansas City 5, N.Y. Mets 4, 14 innings Wednesday, Oct. 28: Kansas City 7, N.Y. Mets 1 Friday, Oct. 30: Kansas City (Ventura 13-8) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 9-7), 5:07 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 31: Kansas City (Young 11-6) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 4-0), 5:07 p.m. x-Sunday, Nov. 1: Kansas City (Volquez 13-9) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 13-8), 5:15 p.m. x-Tuesday, Nov. 3: N.Y. Mets at Kansas City, 5:07 p.m. x-Wednesday, Nov. 4: N.Y. Mets at Kan- sas City, 5:07 p.m. Royals 7, Mets 1 New York Kansas City AB R H B AB R H B Grndrs rf 3 0 0 0 AEscor ss 5 1 2 2 DWrght 3b 4 0 0 0 Zobrist 2b 5 0 0 0 DnMrp 2b 2 1 0 0 L.Cain cf 4 0 0 0 Cespds lf 4 0 0 0 Hosmer 1b 4 1 2 2 Duda 1b 3 0 2 1 KMorls dh 4 0 1 0 TdArnd c 3 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 3 1 2 1 Confort dh 3 0 0 0 S.Perez c 4 1 1 0 WFlors ss 3 0 0 0 AGordn lf 2 2 1 1 Lagars cf 3 0 0 0 Rios rf 3 1 1 0 Orland rf 0 0 0 1 Totals 28 1 2 1 34 7 10 7 New York 000 100 000 — 1 Kansas City 000 040 03x — 7 E: Duda (1); DP: Kansas City 1; LOB: New York 3, Kansas City 8; 2B: S.Perez (1), A.Gordon (1); 3B: A.Escobar (1); SF: Orlando. IP H R ER BB SO New York deGrom L,0-1 5 6 4 4 3 2 Robles 1 0 0 0 0 0 Niese 1 3 3 3 1 1 A.Reed 1/3 1 0 0 0 0 Gilmartin 2/3 0 0 0 0 0 Kansas City Cueto W,1-0 9 2 1 1 3 4 Niese pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. Umpires: Home, Mark Carlson, First, Mike Winters. Second, Jim Wolf. Third, Alfonso Marquez. Left, Gary Ceder- strom. Right, Bill Welke. T: 2:54; A: 40,410 (37,903). Football AMERICAN CONFERENCE WE ST D IVI SI ON W L T Pct PF PA Denver 6 0 01.000 139 102 Oakland 3 3 0 .500 144 153 Kansas City 2 5 0 .286 150 172 San Diego 2 5 0 .286 165 198 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New England 6 0 01.000 213 126 N.Y. Jets 4 2 0 .667 152 105 Miami 3 3 0 .500 147 137 Buffalo 3 4 0 .429 176 173 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 3 4 0 .429 147 174 Houston 2 5 0 .286 154 199 Jacksonville 2 5 0 .286 147 207 Tennessee 1 5 0 .167 119 139 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 6 0 01.000 182 122 Pittsburgh 4 3 0 .571 158 131 Cleveland 2 5 0 .286 147 182 Baltimore 1 6 0 .143 161 188 NATIONAL CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 5 2 0 .714 229 133 St. Louis 3 3 0 .500 108 119 Seattle 3 4 0 .429 154 128 San Francisco2 5 0 .286 103 180 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 4 3 0 .571 166 156 Washington 3 4 0 .429 148 168 Philadelphia 3 4 0 .429 160 137 Dallas 2 4 0 .333 121 158 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 6 0 01.000 162 110 Atlanta 6 1 0 .857 193 150 New Orleans 3 4 0 .429 161 185 Tampa Bay 2 4 0 .333 140 179 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 6 0 01.000 164 101 Minnesota 4 2 0 .667 124 102 Chicago 2 4 0 .333 120 179 Detroit 1 6 0 .143 139 200 Thursday, Oct. 29 Miami at New England, 5:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1 Detroit vs. Kansas City at London, 6:30 a.m. San Francisco at St. Louis, 10 a.m. N.Y. Giants at New Orleans, 10 a.m. Minnesota at Chicago, 10 a.m. Tennessee at Houston, 10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 10 a.m. Arizona at Cleveland, 10 a.m. San Diego at Baltimore, 10 a.m. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 10 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Seattle at Dallas, 1:25 p.m. Green Bay at Denver, 5:30 p.m. Open: Buffalo, Jacksonville, Philadel- phia, Washington Monday, Nov. 2 Indianapolis at Carolina, 5:30 p.m. AP COLLEGE TOP 25 SCHEDULE Thursday No. 5 TCU vs. West Virginia, 4:30 p.m. No. 23 Pittsburgh vs. North Carolina, 4 p.m. Saturday No. 3 Clemson at N.C. State, 12:30 p.m. No. 8 Stanford at Washington State, 7:30 p.m. No. 9 Notre Dame at No. 21 Temple, 5 p.m. No. 10 Iowa vs. Maryland, 3;30 p.m. No. 11 Florida vs. Georgia at Jackson- ville, Fla., 12:30 p.m. No. 12 Oklahoma State at Texas Tech, 12:30 p.m. No. 13 Utah vs. Oregon State, 4 p.m. No. 14 Oklahoma at Kansas, 12:30 p.m. No. 15 Michigan at Minnesota, 4 p.m. No. 16 Memphis vs. Tulane, 4 p.m. No. 17 Florida State vs. Syracuse, 9 a.m. No. 18 Houston vs. Vanderbilt, 4 p.m. No. 19 Mississippi at Auburn, 9 a.m. No. 22 Duke vs. Miami, 4 p.m. No. 24 UCLA vs. Colorado, noon Basketball WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 1 0 1.000 — Clippers 0 0 .000 1/2 Lakers 0 0 .000 1/2 Phoenix 0 0 .000 1/2 Sacramento 0 0 .000 1/2 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Dallas 0 0 .000 — Memphis 0 1 .000 1/2 Houston 0 1 .000 1/2 New Orleans 0 1 .000 1/2 San Antonio 0 1 .000 1/2 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Denver 1 0 1.000 — Oklahoma City 1 0 1.000 — Minnesota 0 0 .000 1/2 Portland 0 0 .000 1/2 Utah 0 1 .000 1 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Boston 1 0 1.000 — New York 1 0 1.000 — Toronto 1 0 1.000 — Brooklyn 0 1 .000 1 Philadelphia 0 1 .000 1 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Miami 1 0 1.000 — Washington 1 0 1.000 — Atlanta 0 1 .000 1 Charlotte 0 1 .000 1 Orlando 0 1 .000 1 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Chicago 2 0 1.000 — Detroit 2 0 1.000 — Cleveland 1 1 .500 1 Indiana 0 1 .000 11/2 Milwaukee 0 1 .000 11/2 Tuesday's games Chicago 97, Cleveland 95 Detroit 106, Atlanta 94 Golden State 111, New Orleans 95 Wednesday's games Washington 88, Orlando 87 Toronto 106, Indiana 99 Chicago 115, Brooklyn 100 Detroit 92, Utah 87 Boston 112, Philadelphia 95 Miami 104, Charlotte 94 New York 122, Milwaukee 97 Cleveland 106, Memphis 76 Denver 105, Houston 85 Oklahoma City 112, San Antonio 106 Clippers at Sacramento, (n.) Dallas at Phoenix, (n.) New Orleans at Portland, (n.) Minnesota at Lakers, (n.) Thursday's games Memphis at Indiana, 4 p.m. Atlanta at New York, 5 p.m. Dallas at Clippers, 7:30 p.m. NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 9 6 3 0 12 20 18 Vancouver 9 4 2 3 11 25 18 Arizona 10 5 4 1 11 27 28 San Jose 8 5 3 0 10 23 18 Edmonton 10 3 7 0 6 24 31 Calgary 10 2 7 1 5 20 40 Anaheim 9 1 6 2 4 9 25 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 9 7 2 0 14 31 24 Nashville 8 6 1 1 13 25 16 St. Louis 9 6 2 1 13 25 20 Minnesota 9 6 2 1 13 28 25 Chicago 9 6 3 0 12 19 16 Winnipeg 9 5 3 1 11 29 25 Colorado 8 2 5 1 5 20 25 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 10 9 1 0 18 36 17 Tampa Bay 10 5 3 2 12 27 26 Florida 9 5 3 1 11 30 18 Ottawa 9 4 3 2 10 29 30 Boston 8 4 3 1 9 33 29 Detroit 9 4 4 1 9 22 24 Buffalo 9 3 6 0 6 20 29 Toronto 8 1 5 2 4 19 28 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Rangers 10 6 2 2 14 28 20 N.Y. Islanders 9 6 2 1 13 31 22 Washington 8 6 2 0 12 30 21 Philadelphia 8 4 2 2 10 19 22 Pittsburgh 9 5 4 0 10 16 17 New Jersey 9 4 4 1 9 21 26 Carolina 9 3 6 0 6 17 26 Columbus 10 2 8 0 4 22 41 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Tuesday's games Boston 6, Arizona 0 Columbus 3, New Jersey 1 Buffalo 4, Philadelphia 3, OT Carolina 3, Detroit 1 Florida 4, Colorado 1 St. Louis 2, Tampa Bay 0 Minnesota 4, Edmonton 3 Los Angeles 4, Winnipeg 1 Dallas 4, Anaheim 3 Vancouver 5, Montreal 1 Wednesday's games Ottawa 5, Calgary 4, SO Pittsburgh 3, Washington 1 Nashville at San Jose, (n.) Thursday's games Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. New Jersey at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Colorado at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Anaheim at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Chicago at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Vancouver at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Montreal at Edmonton, 6 p.m. Soccer MLS PLAYOFFS Knockout round EASTERN CONFERENCE Wednesday, Oct. 28: D.C. United (4), 2, New England (5),1 Thursday, Oct. 29: Toronto (6) at Mon- treal (3), 4 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE Wednesday, Oct 28: LA Galaxy (5) at Seattle (4), (n.) Thursday, Oct. 29: Sporting Kansas City (6) at Portland (3), 7 p.m. Conference semifinals EASTERN CONFERENCE New York Red Bulls (1) vs. lowest-seeded KO round winner Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: New York Red Bulls at TBD, TBA Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: TBD at New York Red Bulls, TBA Columbus (2) vs. other KO round winner Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: Columbus at TBD, TBA Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: TBD at Colum- bus, TBA WESTERN CONFERENCE FC Dallas (1) vs. lowest-seeded KO round winner Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: FC Dallas at TBD, TBA Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: TBD at FC Dallas, TBA Vancouver (2) vs. other KO round winner Leg 1 — Sunday, Nov. 1: Vancouver at TBD, TBA Leg 2 — Sunday, Nov. 8: TBD at Vancou- ver, TBA Tennis ATP WORLD TOUR SWISS INDOORS BASEL RESULTS Wednesday At St. Jakobshalle Basel, Switzerland Purse: $1.73 million (WT500) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round Jack Sock, United States, def. Denis Kudla, United States, 6-4, 6-2. Marin Cilic (7), Croatia, def. Marco Chiu- dinelli, Switzerland, 6-3, 7-6 (3). Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, def. Leon- ardo Mayer, Argentina, 7-5, 4-6, 6-4. Kevin Anderson (4), South Africa, def. Borna Coric, Croatia, 6-3, 6-2. Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, def. Stan Wawrinka (2), Switzerland, 3-6, 7-6 (2), 6-4. Second Round David Goffin (8), Belgium, def. Adrian Mannarino, France, 6-4, 6-3. Rafael Nadal (3), Spain, def. Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3. Doubles First Round Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, def. John Isner and Jack Sock, United States, 3-6, 6-4, 10-7. Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Peers (3), Australia, def. Treat Huey, Philip- pines, and Henri Kontinen, Finland, 7-6 (1), 4-6, 11-9. BNP PARIBAS WTA CH AM PI ONS HIP S R ES UL TS Wednesday At Singapore Indoor Stadium Singapore Purse: $7 million (Tour Championship) Surface: Hard-Indoor Round Robin Singles White Group Petra Kvitova (4), Czech Republic, def. Lucie Safarova (8), Czech Republic, 7-5, 7-5. Garbine Muguruza (2), Spain, def. An- gelique Kerber (6), Germany, 6-4, 6-4. Standings White Group: Garbine Muguruza 2-0 (sets 4-0), Angelique Kerber 1-1 (2-2), Petra Kvitova 1-1 (2-2), Lucie Safarova 0-2 (0-4). Red Group: Maria Sharapova 2-0 (4-1), Simona Halep 1-1 (2-2), Flavia Pennetta 1-1 (2-2), Agnieszka Radwanska 0-2 (1-4). Doubles Red Group Timea Babos, Hungary, and Kristina Mladenovic (4), France, def. Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears (6), United States, 7-6 (5), 6-2. Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Sania Mirza (1), India, def. Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka (7), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4. Standings Red Group: Hingis-Mirza 2-0 (4-0), Babos-Mladenovic 1-1 (2-2), Hlavackova- Hradecka 1-1 (2-2), Kops-Jones-Spears 0-2 (0-4). White Group: Chan-Chan 2-0 (4-0), Mattek-Sands-Safarova 1-1 (2-2), Muguruza-Suarez Navarro 1-1 (2-2), Garcia-Srebotnik 0-2 (0-4). Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Thursday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog Memphis 21/2 (187) at Indiana Atlanta 5 (196) at New York at La Clippers 101/2 (211) Dallas NHL Thursday Favorite Line Underdog at Ny Islanders -190/+175 Carolina at Pittsburgh OFF Buffalo at Philadelphia -145/+135 New Jersey at Tampa Bay -190/+175 Colorado at Winnipeg -110/+100 Chicago at St. Louis -165/+155 Anaheim at Dallas -145/+135 Vancouver Montreal -145/+135 at Edmonton College Football Thursday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog North Carolina 3 (551/2) at Pittsburgh W Michigan 201/2 (64) at E Michigan Buffalo 7 (491/2) at Miami (OHIO) at Ga. Southern 21 (68) Texas State at TCU 141/2 (751/2) W. Virginia at Arizona St 21/2 (661/2) Oregon Friday Louisville 12 (411/2) at Wake Forest E. Carolina 7 (501/2) at UConn Louisiana Tech 13 (611/2) at Rice at Utah State 28 (481/2) Wyoming NFL Thursday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog at New England 8 (51) Miami Sunday Kansas City 51/2 (46) Detroit Minnesota 1 (42) at Chicago at Atlanta 7 (491/2) Tampa Bay at New Orleans 3 (481/2) NY Giants at St. Louis 81/2 (39) San Francisco Arizona 41/2 (461/2) at Cleveland Cincinnati PK (48) at Pittsburgh at Baltimore 3 (501/2) San Diego at Houston 4 (OFF) Tennessee NY Jets 2 (45) at Oakland Seattle 6 (41) at Dallas Green Bay 3 (45) at Denver Monday at Carolina 7 (46) Indianapolis Transactions BASEBALL American League Chicago White Sox: Claimed RHP Jacob Turner off waivers from the Chicago Cubs. National League Arizona Diamondbacks: Named Mike Butcher pitching coach. FOOTBALL National Football League Carolina Panthers: Released C Eric Kush from the practice squad. Signed G Reese Dismukes and LB Nate Askew to the practice squad. Cleveland Browns: Signed DB Chance Casey to the practice squad. Denver Broncos: Released DT Marvin Austin. Houston Texans: Waived-injured TE Mike McFarland. Signed QB T.J. Yates. Signed S Kurtis Drummond from the practice squad and RB Daryl Richardson to the practice squad. Jacksonville Jaguars: Signed LB Hayes Pullard from Cleveland's practice squad. Waived LB James-Michael Johnson. Released WR Jordan Leslie from the practice squad. New England Patriots: Placed LB Rufus Johnson on the reserve/non-football illness list. Claimed S Dewey McDonald off waivers fromIndianapolis. New Orleans Saints: Signed LB Henry Coley to the practice squad. New York Jets: Released P Steve Weath- erford. Signed OL Wesley Johnson from the practice squad and LB Quanterus Smith to the practice squad. Oakland Raiders: Signed S Tevin McDon- ald to the practice squad. St. Louis Rams: Signed DB Christian Bryant. San Diego Chargers: Released C J.D. Walton. Signed LB Joe Mays. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Signed WR Adam Humphries from the practice squad and WR Andre Davis, OL Ryan Groy, DT Derrick Lott and LB Julian Stanford to the practice squad. Tennessee Titans: Signed TE Chase Coffman. HOCKEY National Hockey League Arizona Coyotes: Assigned G Marek Langhamer fromi Springfield (AHL) to Rapid City (ECHL). Chicago Blackhawks: Recalled D Erik Gustafsson from Rockford (AHL). Detroit Red Wings: Assigned F Zach Nastasiuk from Grand Rapids (AHL) to Toledo (ECHL). Montreal Canadiens: Recalled F Mark MacMillan from to St. John's (AHL) from Brampton (ECHL). COLLEGE Miami: Suspended DT Michael Wyche indefinitely. Minnesota: Announced the retirement of football coach Jerry Kill. Named de- fensive coordinator Tracy Claeys interim football coach. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015 2 B