Red Bluff Daily News

December 18, 2015

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HIGHSCHOOL BASKETBALL Cypress Lakes vs. Foothills Christian:3;30p.m.,ESPN2. COLLEGE MEN'S BASKETBALL Incarnate Word vs. St. John's: 4p.m., FS1. NBA BASKETBALL Los Angeles Clippers at San Antonio Spurs: 5p.m., ESPN. Sacramento Kings at Min- nesota Timberwolves: 5p.m., CSN. Milwaukee Bucks at Golden State Warriors: 7:30p.m., CSNBA. New Orleans Pelicans at Phoenix Suns: 7:30p.m., ESPN. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Division III Championship: 4 p.m., ESPNU. Division I Tournament Semifi- nal: 5p.m., ESPN2. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL CIF Championship Division II-A Regional Bowl Game: 4 p.m., CSN. CIF Championship Division I-AA Regional Bowl Game: 8 p.m., CSN. NHL HOCKEY San Jose Sharks at Ottawa Senators: 4:30p.m., CSN. New York Rangers at Winni- peg Jets: 6:30p.m., NHL. AHL HOCKEY Bakersfield vs. Stockton: 7:30 p.m., NHL. Ontheair assists and a steal; Kylee Kitchell had six points, two rebounds,anassistandtwo steals; Aurora Carnes had four points, five rebounds, an assist and a steal and Maggie Winning had five points, two rebounds, five assists and two steals. Coach Kathy Brandt said the win was special after the Spartans lost to West Valley 60-51 to open the season Dec. 3. The Spartans (4-3) pre- pare to face the Paradise Bobcats (3-6) at 5:30 p.m. today at Red Bluff Union High School. CORNING 50, PARADISE 22 The Lady Cardinals jumped out early Thurs- day afternoon against the Paradise Bobcats, going up 19-5 in the first and 30- 12 by halftime, but fell flat in the third period and al- most let the Bobcats back in the game. Missed shots and dropped passes were the story of the third period for the Cardinals and the Bobcats scored seven un- answered in the period. Corning wouldn't score un- til the final minute of the third, ending the period up 32-19. "We relaxed in the third and came out overconfi- dent," coach Kol Zuppan said after the game. "Credit to Paradise, though, they fought hard. We just had to take a deep breath and not be spectators." The advice worked, be- cause the Cardinals found their grove again in the fourth, scoring nine unan- swered to go up 41-19 with 4 minutes left to play. The Bobcats wouldn't score again until the final minute and the Cardinals cruised to a 50-22 win. Mariah Castle led the Cardinals with 13 points, followed by Kaylee Shoe- maker with 12, Morgan Mason with eight — includ- ing two late 3-pointers — and Whitney Armstrong with seven. The Cardinals (4-5) are scheduled to go up against the West Valley Eagles (2-5) at 4 p.m. today at Red Bluff Union High School. Girls FROM PAGE 1 us," Autry said Thursday. "We know what we have to do. It was up to us now." Autry is an undrafted free agent who spent part of 2014 on the practice squad and played sparingly as a backup. He went into training camp this year buried on the depth chart but worked himself into the defensive line rotation. Tuck's season-ending pectoral injury created an opening up front and Au- try — who also gets work in at defensive tackle — took over. So far, it's been a good fit. Autry has 22 tackles and two sacks, and has used his size and long arms to knock down a team-lead- ing three passes at the line of scrimmage. The 6-foot- 5-inch defensive lineman also blocked one field goal and one extra point this season. "(He's) consistently play- ing hard, consistently un- derstanding where he's supposed to be, consis- tently understanding it's a team defense," Raiders defensive coordinator Ken Norton Jr. said. "If they all work hard and work together, there's enough sacks and pressures to go around for everybody." Edwards, Oakland's sec- ond-round draft pick, has been just as effective af- ter moving into the start- ing lineup in early Octo- ber. The rookie defensive end had a breakout game with 11 tackles and a sack against Minnesota on Nov. 15. He's backed that up with four consecutive solid performances including last week's win over Den- ver when Edwards made five tackles and forced a fumble. Oakland nose tackle Dan Williams, who signed with the Raiders as a free agent this offseason after spending his first five sea- sons in Arizona, isn't sur- prised. "We just started to jell better as the season went on," Williams said. "Also, guys have put in a lot of time in studying, identify- ing protections and we've just been playing off of each other. One of the half- sacks I got was coming off of Denico. He was getting pressure and I just came around. Everybody's play- ing off of each other and we're getting more famil- iar, and in the end, we're getting results." Mack is a potential de- fensive player of the year candidate and remains the key to Oakland's de- fense. In the four games since Smith was suspended for a full calendar year by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, Mack has 29 tack- les, nine sacks, four stops behind the line of scrim- mage and a forced fumble. But as Raiders coach Jack Del Rio pointed out earlier in the week, Mack's big day against Denver came as a result of what Oakland's defensive line as a whole was doing. "On a couple of occa- sions it's the pressure that Mario's getting, the pres- sure that Denico's getting that doesn't allow the quar- terback a step-up lane, and now Khalil is able to get the sacks,"DelRiosaid."A lotof goodeffortupfront,andob- viously Khalil ended up fin- ishing with the sack num- bers,butsomegoodproduc- tion out of that group." Raiders FROM PAGE 1 Tomsula said Wednesday his staff will remain un- changed through this fi- nal stretch, resuming Sun- day against the Cincinnati Bengals (10-3). Four offensive coordina- tors have been fired else- where this season: the In- dianapolis Colts, Detroit Lions, Miami Dolphins and St. Louis Rams. Of the 13 teams that changed of- fensive coordinators last offseason, the 49ers and Rams were the last to do so, promoting quarter- backs coaches in Chryst and Frank Cignetti, the lat- ter of whom got fired last week. Since Chryst replaced the fired Greg Roman in January, the offensive huddle has constantly changed. Carlos Hyde got hurt. Colin Kaepernick got benched for Blaine Gab- bert. Tight ends vanished. Nineteen different players have caught a pass, which Chryst proudly pointed out to reflect the vast number of players who've shuffled into his system. Said Chryst: "Any anal- ysis of the offense starts with: Who are the people you have and what do they do best, and then can we put them in a position to execute?" The answer: Not with this group. At 14.5 points per game, the 49ers are on course to finish last in scor- ing, which has happened only once in their history, in 2007 (13.7 ppg.). There'snogreatersymbol for the 49ers' current mal- aise than how they start. Of their 37 possessions that began in the first quarter, 25 ended with in punts. The others: field goals (five), interceptions (three), blocked field goal (one), downs (one), safety (one) and, believe it or not, a touchdown, albeit three plays into the second quar- ter of their 47-7 loss at Ar- izona on Sept. 27. Of those 18 first-quarter points, only 12 were bred from an of- fensive series resulting in a field goal, as the other six points came on Jim- mie Ward's interception return for a touchdown at Chicago. "We look closely at what our openers will be," Chryst said of his script. "Where Blaine has done re- ally well is situational foot- ball — two-minute (drill) and red zone. "What he hasn't done as good as a job as we need is third down," said Chryst. "The other place we've struggled is we've gone three-and-out too often at the start of games." The 49ers' third-down efficiency (31.4-percent) is the league's third-worst. Of their 16 first-quarter series that went three-and-out, 14 have come in the past seven games. Negative plays have can- nibalized their first-quar- ter efforts, by way of sacks, penalties, interceptions or simply runs and comple- tions stopped behind the line of scrimmage. 49ers FROM PAGE 1 ered performances follow- ing the late-July trade to Kansas City? An inevitable adjustment to a new team and catcher, agent Bryce Dixon said. Baer said the front office contacted several of Cue- to's former coaches with the Reds and Royals, and came back with a positive assessment of his personal- ity, passion and clubhouse demeanor. Of course, they said the same things and ignored their share of caution flags when they signed Zito after the 2006 season. So what, exactly, allowed them to move past those ghosts? "It's a fair question," Baer said. "What we re- ally saw was, if you have five strong (in the rota- tion), plus (Chris) Heston … we think it just gives us the best chance to win. It changes the bullpen equa- tion. We don't have to over- tax the bullpen, which is one thing that might have happened last year. "We did a really thor- ough war room analysis and everybody said, Bruce Bochy said, 'Get me another 200-inning quality starter and I'm good. We'll figure out left field.' We may still do something, but that's what everyone was saying. "And the other thing, as Cueto's name was out there, a lot of calls were made and he came through as a huge plus-guy in the clubhouse. A huge plus teammate. Huge plus. That was really important, too. "With Barry Zito, I wouldn't say we were ever spooked. We don't really everlookbackandevaluate. I mean, we won two World Series when he was here. These (huge) contracts, it's justtheworldwe'reinandit comes down to judgments. Are they great people?" Their diligence had its limits, though. "We did not MRI his hair," Evans said. With his flowing dread- locks, easy smile and im- provisational, back-twist- ing delivery (not to men- tion a hilarious Instagram account that includes self- ies in bed and on horse- back), Cueto is a plus char- acter, too. Giants FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NF L AMERICAN CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Denver 10 3 0 .769 281 225 Kansas City 8 5 0 .615 331 243 Oakland 6 7 0 .462 299 326 San Diego 3 10 0 .231 250 334 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA y-New England11 2 0 .846 402 253 N.Y. Jets 8 5 0 .615 325 256 Buffalo 6 7 0 .462 316 301 Miami 5 8 0 .385 264 331 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Indianapolis 6 7 0 .462 275 356 Houston 6 7 0 .462 259 291 Jacksonville 5 8 0 .385 326 357 Tennessee 3 10 0 .231 253 326 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 10 3 0 .769 354 229 Pittsburgh 8 5 0 .615 344 260 Baltimore 4 9 0 .308 278 326 Cleveland 3 10 0 .231 240 357 NATIONAL CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA x-Arizona 11 2 0 .846 405 252 Seattle 8 5 0 .615 340 235 St. Louis 6 8 0 .429 241 294 San Francisco4 9 0 .308 188 315 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Washington 6 7 0 .462 281 307 Philadelphia 6 7 0 .462 301 322 N.Y. Giants 6 7 0 .462 338 320 Dallas 4 9 0 .308 230 305 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA y-Carolina 13 0 01.000 411 243 Atlanta 6 7 0 .462 279 295 Tampa Bay 6 8 0 .429 311 353 New Orleans 5 8 0 .385 323 397 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 9 4 0 .692 317 245 Minnesota 8 5 0 .615 258 255 Chicago 5 8 0 .385 272 314 Detroit 4 9 0 .308 267 336 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division Thursday's game St. Louis 31, Tampa Bay 23 Saturday, Dec. 19 N.Y. Jets at Dallas, 5:25 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 20 Chicago at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Atlanta at Jacksonville, 10 a.m. Houston at Indianapolis, 10 a.m. Carolina at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. Tennessee at New England, 10 a.m. Buffalo at Washington, 10 a.m. Kansas City at Baltimore, 10 a.m. Cleveland at Seattle, 1:05 p.m. Green Bay at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Miami at San Diego, 1:25 p.m. Cincinnati at San Francisco, 1:25 p.m. Denver at Pittsburgh, 1:25 p.m. Arizona at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 21 Detroit at New Orleans, 5:30 p.m. Rams 31, Buccaneers 23 Tampa Bay 3 0 3 17 — 23 St. Louis 14 7 7 3 — 31 First quarter StL — Austin 17 pass from Keenum (Zuerlein kick), 11:54. TB — FG Barth 53, 4:52. StL — Britt 60 pass from Keenum (Zuer- lein kick), 3:15. Second quarter StL — Gurley 3 run (Zuerlein kick), 2:09. Third quarter TB — FG Barth 32, 9:16. StL — Austin 21 run (Zuerlein kick), 5:35. Fourth quarter TB — Stocker 3 pass from Winston (Barth kick), 13:05. StL — FG Zuerlein 19, 10:39. TB — FG Barth 24, 7:31. TB — Seferian-Jenkins 9 pass from Winston (Barth kick), 1:34. A — 51,295. TB StL First downs 30 16 Total net yards 509 319 Rushes yds 27-146 33-98 Passing 363 221 Punt returns 0-0 0-0 Kickoff returns 2-38 5-188 Int ret 0-0 1-9 Comp-att-int 29-50-1 14-17-0 Sacked yds lost 0-0 2-13 Punts 3-40.7 5-44.0 Fumbles lost 2-1 0-0 Penalties yds 9-56 5-35 Time of poss. 31:20 28:40 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — Tampa Bay, Martin 18-91, Sims 7-50, Winston 2-5. St. Louis, Gurley 21-48, Austin 4-32, Mason 3-13, Cunning- ham 2-8, Keenum 3-(minus 3). Passing — Tampa Bay, Winston 29-50-1- 363. St. Louis, Keenum 14-17-0-234. Receiving — Tampa Bay, Evans 9-157, Humphries 6-60, Seferian-Jenkins 3-29, Stocker 3-25, Sims 3-22, Brate 3-20, Dye 1-44, Martin 1-6. St. Louis, Cook 4-64, Austin 3-41, Kendricks 3-27, Britt 2-71, Gurley 2-31. Missed field goals — None. NFL LEADERS WEEK 14 SCORERS Nonkickers TD Rus Rec Ret X2 Pts Beckham Jr., NYG 12 0 12 0 0 72 Eifert, CIN 12 0 12 0 0 72 A. Robinson, JAX 12 0 12 0 0 72 Baldwin, SEA 11 0 11 0 0 66 D. Freeman, ATL 11 9 2 0 0 66 B. Marshall, NYJ 11 0 11 0 0 66 De. Hopkins, HOU 10 0 10 0 1 62 PASS RECEIVERS Receptions No Yds AvgLong TD Ju. Jones, ATL 109 1426 13.1 54 6 An. Brown, PIT 100 1397 14.0 59 7 Fitzgerald, ARI 96 1088 11.3 44 7 De. Hopkins, HOU 89 1221 13.7 61t 10 B. Marshall, NYJ 89 1187 13.3 69t 11 Landry, MIA 89 920 10.3 50t 4 Dem. Thomas, DEN 88 1067 12.1 48t 3 Beckham Jr., NYG 85 1320 15.5 87t 12 A. Green, CIN 76 1169 15.4 80t 8 RUSHERS Att Yds AvgLong TD A. Peterson, MIN 268 1251 4.7 80t 9 D. Martin, TAM 238 1214 5.1 84 5 J. Stewart, CAR 242 989 4.1 44 6 Gurley, STL 189 975 5.2 71t 8 Ivory, NYJ 217 914 4.2 54 7 L. Murray, OAK 215 878 4.1 54 5 L. McCoy, BUF 193 866 4.5 48t 3 D. Freeman, ATL 193 851 4.4 39 9 Rawls, SEA 147 830 5.6 69t 4 COLLEGE BOWL SCHEDULE Saturday, Dec. 19 Celebration Bowl Atlanta NC A&T (9-2) vs. Alcorn State (9-3), 9 a.m. New Mexico Bowl Albuquerque Arizona (6-6) vs. New Mexico (7-5), 11 a.m. (ESPN) Las Vegas Bowl BYU (9-3) vs. Utah (9-3), 12:30 p.m. (ABC) Camelia Bowl Montgomery, Ala. Ohio (8-4) vs. Appalachian State (10-2), 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Cure Bowl Orlando, Fla. San Jose State (5-7) vs. Georgia State (6-6), 4 p.m. (CBSSN) New Orleans Bowl Louisiana Tech (8-4) vs. Arkansas State (9-3), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Basketball NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 25 1 .962 — Clippers 16 10 .615 9 Phoenix 11 16 .407 141/2 Sacramento 10 15 .400 141/2 Lakers 4 21 .160 201/2 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 22 5 .815 — Dallas 14 12 .538 71/2 Memphis 14 13 .519 8 Houston 12 14 .462 91/2 New Orleans 7 18 .280 14 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 17 9 .654 — Denver 11 14 .440 51/2 Utah 10 14 .417 6 Portland 11 16 .407 61/2 Minnesota 9 16 .360 71/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Toronto 16 11 .593 — Boston 14 12 .538 11/2 New York 12 14 .462 31/2 Brooklyn 7 18 .280 8 Philadelphia 1 26 .037 15 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Miami 15 9 .625 — Charlotte 15 10 .600 1/2 Orlando 14 11 .560 11/2 Atlanta 15 12 .556 11/2 Washington 10 14 .417 5 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 17 7 .708 — Chicago 15 8 .652 11/2 Indiana 15 9 .625 2 Detroit 15 12 .556 31/2 Milwaukee 10 17 .370 81/2 Wednesday's games Indiana 107, Dallas 81 Orlando 113, Charlotte 98 Miami 104, Brooklyn 98 Detroit 119, Boston 116 New York 107, Minnesota 102 Chicago 98, Memphis 85 Oklahoma City 106, Portland 90 Atlanta 127, Philadelphia 106 San Antonio 114, Washington 95 New Orleans 104, Utah 94 Golden State 128, Phoenix 103 Clippers 103, Milwaukee 90 Thursday's games Charlotte 109, Toronto 99, OT Cleveland 104, Oklahoma City 100 Houston at Lakers, (n.) Friday's games Brooklyn at Indiana, 4 p.m. New York at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Portland at Orlando, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 5 p.m. Sacramento at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Clippers at San Antonio, 5 p.m. Toronto at Miami, 5 p.m. Memphis at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Denver at Utah, 6 p.m. Milwaukee at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. New Orleans at Phoenix, 7:30 p.m. Saturday's games Lakers at Oklahoma City, 2 p.m. Charlotte at Washington, 4 p.m. Chicago at New York, 4:30 p.m. Indiana at Memphis, 5 p.m. Clippers at Houston, 5 p.m. NBA LEADERS SCORING AVERAGE G FG FT Pts Avg Curry, GOL 25 266 148 807 32.3 Harden, HOU 25 209 235 722 28.9 Durant, OKC 18 170 108 495 27.5 George, IND 23 196 144 610 26.5 James, CLE 21 209 114 555 26.4 Westbrook, OKC 24 216 158 626 26.1 Lillard, POR 26 223 122 641 24.7 Griffin, LAC 25 244 115 607 24.3 Davis, NOR 21 183 117 496 23.6 Bledsoe, PHX 25 196 121 558 22.3 Anthony, NYK 24 180 123 523 21.8 DeRozan, TOR 26 187 182 565 21.7 Lowry, TOR 26 172 135 555 21.3 Thomas, BOS 24 171 105 500 20.8 Leonard, SAN 24 187 80 499 20.8 Butler, CHI 22 146 137 455 20.7 MEN'S TOP 25 FARED Thursday 1. Michigan State (11-0) did not play. 2. Kansas (8-1) did not play. 3. Oklahoma (7-0) did not play. 4. Kentucky (9-1) did not play. 5. Iowa State (9-0) did not play. 6. Maryland (9-1) did not play. 7. Duke (9-1) did not play. 8. Virginia (8-1) did not play. 9. Purdue (11-0) did not play. 10. Xavier (10-0) did not play. 11. North Carolina (8-2) did not play. 12. Villanova (8-1) did not play. 13. Arizona (10-1) did not play. 14. Providence (10-1) did not play. 15. Miami (8-1) did not play. 16. Baylor (8-1) did not play. 17. Butler (8-1) did not play. 18. SMU (9-0) beat Hampton 105-72. 19. Louisville (8-1) did not play. 20. West Virginia (9-1) beat Marshall 86-68. 21. George Washington (9-1) did not play. 22. UCLA (8-3) did not play. 23. Cincinnati (9-2) did not play. 24. Texas A&M (8-2) did not play. 25. UConn (6-3) did not play. WOMEN'S TOP 25 FARED Thursday 1. UConn (8-0) did not play. 2. South Carolina (10-0) did not play. 3. Notre Dame (9-1) did not play. 4. Baylor (11-0) beat Oral Roberts 97-39. 5. Texas (9-0) did not play. 6. Maryland (10-0) did not play. 7. Oregon State (8-0) did not play. 8. Kentucky (9-0) did not play. 9. Mississippi State (8-1) did not play. 10. Ohio State (6-3) did not play. 11. Florida State (8-2) did not play. 12. Northwestern (10-0) did not play. 13. Duke (9-2) beat Liberty 79-41. 14. Tennessee (7-3) did not play. 15. Stanford (7-2) did not play. 16. DePaul (7-4) did not play. 17. Oklahoma (9-1) did not play. 18. Texas A&M (7-3) did not play. 19. UCLA (6-2) did not play. 20. South Florida (6-2) did not play. 21. Arizona State (6-3) did not play. 21. California (7-2) did not play. 23. Miami (10-0) did not play. 24. Michigan State (7-2) did not play. 25. St. John's (8-1) did not play. WOMEN'S FAR WEST Oregon 122, Portland St. 59 NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 31 20 9 2 42 81 66 San Jose 31 16 14 1 33 83 83 Calgary 31 15 14 2 32 83 105 Arizona 31 14 15 2 30 86 102 Edmonton 33 14 17 2 30 87 100 Vancouver 33 11 14 8 30 81 94 Anaheim 30 11 14 5 27 56 76 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 32 23 7 2 48 108 83 St. Louis 33 19 10 4 42 84 79 Minnesota 30 17 7 6 40 84 70 Chicago 33 18 11 4 40 89 78 Nashville 32 15 11 6 36 82 83 Colorado 33 16 16 1 33 90 89 Winnipeg 31 14 15 2 30 85 95 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 33 20 10 3 43 101 76 Boston 30 17 9 4 38 96 80 Detroit 31 16 9 6 38 79 79 Ottawa 32 16 11 5 37 98 95 Florida 32 16 12 4 36 86 76 Tampa Bay 32 16 13 3 35 78 73 Buffalo 33 14 16 3 31 77 86 Toronto 30 10 13 7 27 72 86 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 30 22 6 2 46 91 64 N.Y. Rangers 33 19 10 4 42 96 79 N.Y. Islanders 33 18 10 5 41 91 79 New Jersey 32 16 12 4 36 77 80 Philadelphia 32 14 12 6 34 68 86 Pittsburgh 30 15 12 3 33 68 74 Carolina 31 12 14 5 29 77 96 Columbus 34 12 19 3 27 83 105 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Wednesday's games Washington 2, Ottawa 1 Boston 3, Pittsburgh 0 Thursday's games Buffalo 3, Anaheim 0 Florida 5, New Jersey 1 Philadelphia 2, Vancouver 0 San Jose 5, Toronto 4, OT Los Angeles 3, Montreal 0 St. Louis 2, Nashville 1 Minnesota 5, N.Y. Rangers 2 Chicago 4, Edmonton 0 Calgary 3, Dallas 1 Colorado 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 Columbus 7, Arizona 5 Friday's games Boston at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at Washington, 4 p.m. Florida at Carolina, 4 p.m. San Jose at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m. Vancouver at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Saturday's games Chicago at Buffalo, 10 a.m. Calgary at St. Louis, noon Los Angeles at Toronto, 4 p.m. Anaheim at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Carolina at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Columbus, 4 p.m. Montreal at Dallas, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Nashville, 5 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Arizona, 6 p.m. Edmonton at Colorado, 7 p.m. Golf WORLD GOLF RANKING 1. Jordan Spieth USA 11.85 2. Jason Day AUS 11.29 3. Rory McIlroy NIR 11.19 4. Bubba Watson USA 8.26 5. Henrik Stenson SWE 7.57 6. Rickie Fowler USA 7.38 7. Justin Rose ENG 7.24 8. Dustin Johnson USA 6.34 9. Jim Furyk USA 5.87 10. Patrick Reed USA 4.76 11. Sergio Garcia ESP 4.67 12. Adam Scott AUS 4.61 13. Zach Johnson USA 4.50 14. Branden Grace SAF 4.23 15. Hideki Matsuyama JPN 4.16 Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Friday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Orlando 5 (199) Portland at Indiana 101/2 (2041/2) Brooklyn New York 61/2 (196) at Philadelphia at Boston 41/2 (2041/2) Atlanta at Miami 4 (1871/2) Toronto at Chicago 4 (195) Detroit Sacramento 21/2 (2121/2) at Minnesota at San Antonio 71/2 (1941/2) Clippers at Dallas 21/2 (1961/2) Memphis at Utah 5 (1951/2) Denver at Phoenix 31/2 (214) New Orleans at Golden State 181/2 (211) Milwaukee College Basketball Friday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog So. Carolina 11/2 at Clemson at Memphis 31/2 Mississippi at BYU 111/2 Cent. Michigan at Wash. St 8 Texas State at Oregon 13 Long Beach St at Pepperdine 4 Louisiana-Lafayette at Nevada 8 Santa Clara Weber State 21/2 at Portland at Oregon St 11 Cal St.-Fullerton NHL Friday Favorite Line Underdog Boston -120/+110 at Pittsburgh at Carolina OFF Florida at Washington -155/+145 Tampa Bay at Detroit -170/+158 Vancouver at Ottawa OFF San Jose at Winnipeg OFF NY Rangers College Football Saturday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog New Mexico Bowl At Albuquerque Arizona 8 (65) New Mexico Las Vegas Bowl At Las Vegas Utah 21/2 (511/2) BYU Camellia Bowl At Montgomery Appalachian St 71/2 (55) Ohio Cure Bowl At Orlando San Jose St 21/2 (56) Georgia St New Orleans Bowl At New Orleans Louisiana Tech 2 (681/2) Arkansas St More Bowls Miami Beach Bowl At Miami W Kentucky 21/2 (661/2) So. Florida Famous Idaho Potato Bowl At Boise Utah State 61/2 (48) Akron Boca Raton Bowl At Boca Raton Temple 1 (51) Toledo Poinsettia Bowl At San Diego Boise St 81/2 (56) N Illinois GoDaddy.com Bowl At Mobile Bowling Green 8 (661/2) Ga. Southern NFL Saturday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog NY Jets 31/2 (411/2) at Dallas Sunday at Minnesota 51/2 (421/2) Chicago at Jacksonville 3 (49) Atlanta at Indianapolis 1 (411/2) Houston Kansas City 7 (41) at Baltimore Buffalo 1 (44) at Washington at New England 14 (47) Tennessee Arizona 3 (51) at Philadelphia Carolina 5 (48) at NY Giants at Seattle 15 (43) Cleveland Green Bay 3 (471/2) at Oakland at San Diego 2 (451/2) Miami at Pittsburgh 61/2 (441/2) Denver Cincinnati 5 (401/2)at San Francisco Monday at New Orleans 3 (501/2) Detroit | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2015 2 B

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