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COLLEGEMEN'S BASKETBALL DePaul at Georgetown:9a.m., FS1. Maryland at Wisconsin: 10 a.m., ESPN. Oklahoma State at West Virginia: 10a.m., ESPNU. LSU at Florida: 10:30a.m., CBS. Rice vs. N. Texas: 11a.m., CSNBA. Creighton vs. Seton Hall: 11 a.m., FS1. Baylor vs. Iowa State: noon, ESPN2. Vanderbilt at South Carolina: noon, ESPNU. St. Mary at Pepperdine: 1p.m., CSN. Princeton vs. Pennsylvania: 1:30p.m., FS1. Florida State vs. Miami: 2 p.m., ESPN2. Nebraska at Rutgers: 2p.m., ESPNU. Pacific vs. Loyola M.: 3p.m., CSNBA. Memphis vs. Connecticut: 4 p.m., ESPN2. Texas vs. TCU: 4p.m., ESPNU. North Carolina vs. Syracuse: 5p.m., ESPN. Portland at Gonzaga: 5p.m., CSN. Auburn vs. Mississippi: 6p.m., ESPN2. Kansas vs. Texas Tech: 6p.m., ESPNU. California vs. Oregon State: 6:30p.m., PAC12BA. S. Clara vs. San Diego: 7p.m., CSN. UC-Riverside vs. UC Irvine: 8 p.m., ESPNU. NBA BASKETBALL Golden State Warriors at Sacramento Kings: 7p.m., CSNBA, CSN. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Division I Tournament, Jacksonville State vs. North Dakota State Championship: 9a.m., ESPN2. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL All American Bowl: 10a.m., NBC. NFL FOOTBALL AFC Wild Card, Kansas City Chiefs at Houston Texans: 1:20p.m. ABC. AFC Wild Card, Pittsburgh Steelers at Cincinnati Ben- gals: 5p.m., CBS. PGA GOLF Tournament of Champions Round 3: noon, GOLF. Tournament of Champions Round 3: 1p.m., NBC. EPGA GOLF South Afican Open Final Round: 2a.m., GOLF. NHL HOCKEY Pittsburgh Penguins at Mon- treal Canadiens: 4p.m., NHL. Toronto Maple Leafs at San Jose Sharks: 4p.m., CSN. MOTORCYCLE RACING AMA Supercross: 7p.m., FS1. SKIING FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup Men's Slalom: 4a.m., NBCSN. SOCCER FA Cup Sunderland vs. Arse- nal: 7a.m., FS1. MFL Fútbol Puebla at Ameri- ca: 2:55p.m., (27). FA Cup Swansea vs. Oxford: 3:50a.m., FS1. ATP TENNIS Brisbane International Final: 1 a.m., TENNIS. Ontheair Cardinals with 17 points, Baylie Fryar had 13, Mariah Castle had nine and Whitney Armstrong and Morgan Mason each put up eight. The Cardinals go to 7-6 with the win and were scheduled to face the 6-3 Durham Trojans on Fri- day night. WARRIORS 71, DUNSMUIR 51 The Mercy Warriors boys had a convincing home win Thursday night over the Dunsmuir Tigers, 71-51. "Tonight the Warriors had 17 assists on 29 made shots," coach Steve Shella- barger said following the game. "That means we are passing, sharing the ball and getting the best shot on almost every posses- sion, and trust each other." Jon Ross was named player of the game, with eight points, two rebounds and an assist. "Our bench got some good playing time tonight," Shellabarger said. "Always good for morale." Teddy Ranberg led the Warriors with 18 points, three rebounds, five as- sists and four steals; Nick Ornelas had 15 points, three rebounds, seven as- sists and two steals; Tra- vis Gordon had 11 points, seven rebounds, an assist and a steal; Junior Grace had nine points, two re- bounds, three assists and five steals. Richie Borges had six rebounds, six as- sists and three steals. The Warriors (9-2) were scheduled to play in the ACA Christian Classic at Simpson University on Fri- day and today. LADY WARRIORS 48, DUN- SMUIR 16 The Mercy girls dominated the Dunsmuir Tigers at home Thursday afternoon with a 48-16 win thanks in large part to a 22-point second quarter. Madeline Flynn led the way for the Warriors with 15 points, eight re- bounds, a steal and an as- sist; Cheyanne Johnson had nine points, three re- bounds, four assists and five steals; Selena Dobson had nine points and two rebounds and Tasha Pi- mentel had seven points, three rebounds, an assist and a steal. Annie Feser had eight re- bounds, an assist and four steals and Laura Keene had seven rebounds, three assists and six steals. The Warriors (4-7) are scheduled to face the Amer- ican Christian Academy Eagles (7-2) at 10 a.m. today at the ACA Christian Clas- sic at Simpson University. LOSMOLINOS The Los Mo- linos Bulldogs boys' and girls' basketball teams were scheduled to travel to Portola for games Friday night and to Dunsmuir on Tuesday. Roundup FROM PAGE 1 Gronkowski and kicker Stephen Gostkowski. From Cincinnati, it was DT Geno Atkins and OT Andrew Whitworth. Arizona, in a measure of the strength of its secondary, had corner- back Patrick Peterson and safety Tyrann Mathieu. St. Louis' All-Pros were DT Aaron Donald and punter Johnny Hekker. One rookie, Seattle kick returner Tyler Lockett, was selected. "It means a lot," Lock- ett said. "There are a lot of great players who come in to the NFL and do an ex- ceptional job and have a great career, but they're never able to make it on the All-Pro team. It's noth- ing that they did, just other players may have had a bet- ter season. To be a rookie to be able to come in, it's a crazy experience and a crazy accolade to have." In all, 15 NFC players and 12 from the AFC were chosen. The other All-Pros: Tampa Bay RB Doug Mar- tin, Atlanta WR Julio Jones, Cleveland OT Joe Thomas, Baltimore G Mar- shal Yanda, Denver OLB Von Miller, San Francisco ILB NaVorro Bowman, and Kansas City S Eric Berry. For Berry, 2015 was a particularly special sea- son. He was diagnosed with lymphoma and this time a year ago was under- going chemotherapy. He re- turned in spectacular fash- ion, helping the Chiefs win their final 10 games this season to make the play- offs. "It's an incredible honor. It means a lot to me," said Berry, who also made the 2013 team. "Football's a team game, so I have to give credit to those guys around me as well. We've been hungry from the get- go. I don't know how to explain it, but I think you see it throughout our play. I think our play speaks for itself." Bowman is another player coming off a cou- rageous comeback from a major knee injury sus- tained in the 2013 NFC ti- tle game. He only returned to the field this season af- ter being an All-Pro in 2011, '12 and '13. Newcomers to the team along with Mack and Lock- ett are Newton, Norman and Davis among the Pan- thers, plus Jones, Whit- worth, Martin, DeCastro, Donald and Mathieu. "That's another goal check off my list," Norman said. "It really is. It went from Pro Bowl to All-Pro to hopefully Defensive Player of the Year. Sheesh. "That is all personal goals, though. The Super Bowl is the granddaddy of them all. I'm working so hard toward that right now. All of these other ac- colades will fall into place." All-Pro FROM PAGE 1 the Giants appear to be the team to beat in the Na- tional League West. And Bochy does not ap- pear intimidated by the pressure that comes with that. "I couldn't ask for more. It's been a terrific offsea- son," Bochy said. "Now it's up to us. On paper, we look great. Now we have to go out and do it." Span, who signed a three-year, $31 million con- tract, was the final stroke. Bochy said out of respect to Angel Pagan, whom he has only traded texts to this point, he wouldn't come out and declare Span the starting center fielder and leadoff hitter. But Bochy called Span one of the best center fielders and leadoff hitters in the game, and that "you'll have that an- swer soon." So there you go. Pagan is expected to be the left fielder, if he isn't traded, and Gregor Blanco the fourth outfielder. "I'm thrilled and excited to have such an elite ath- lete like Denard," Bochy said. "Seeing him from the other side, I just love and respect how he plays the game. You're getting one of the best center fielders and a proven leadoff hitter. This ballpark will suit him so well with room to roam out there. He makes great con- tact. There's a lot of room outthereforextra-basehits. He's thrilled to be here and that'sexcitingforus.Itgives us so much depth. It gives me so much flexibility." It doesn't appear Bo- chy will have to spend any time soothing bruised egos when it comes to Span, who smiled broadly as he put on a Giants No.2 jer- sey and called it surreal to attend one of these free- agent pony shows after watching them on televi- sion all his life. The Giants glowed about Span's reputation for class and professionalism and he even showed off his sense of humor, saying it "seems they win the World Series every other year." "I told Boch this morn- ing I'll do whatever it takes to help this team win and I mean that from the bottom of my heart," Span said. "I've been through a lot, and last year was a tough year for me but I'm ready to turn the page. I'm look- ing forward to new chal- lenges and just helping this ballclub win." The 31-year-old from Tampa missed more than 100 games last year and has undergone three sur- geries since December, 2014, for sports hernias and a damaged hip labrum. But he said his rehab from the hip procedure in Sep- tember is ahead of sched- ule and he anticipated be- ing unrestricted when he reports to spring training. "If we had a game today, I could play," he said. Agent Scott Boras called Span's surgeries "one-time fixes. They have it done and they're fine. It's not some- thing that recurs or re-en- gages." Boras said 11 teams wanted to sign Span to a one-year contract, and a pillow contract to rees- tablish his value wouldn't have been inadvisable. But Span made it clear that he wanted to sign a multi- year deal in a winning en- vironment, and the Giants stepped up. Span will receive a $6 million signing bonus (for which he'll avoid paying California state taxes), a $3 million salary next year and $9 million in each of the following two years. A $12 million mutual option for 2019 includes a $4 mil- lion buyout; Span can max- imize an additional $5 mil- lion in bonuses if he plays in 100 games with 525 plate appearances per season. Giants FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFLPLAYOFFSCHEDULE WILD-CARD PLAYOFFS Saturday, Jan. 9 KansasCity(11-5)atHouston(9-7),1:35 p.m. (ABC/ESPN) Pittsburgh (10-6) at Cincinnati (12-4), 5:15 p.m. (CBS) Su nda y, J an . 1 0 Seattle (10-6) at Minnesota (11-6), 10 a.m. (NBC) Green Bay (10-6) at Washington (9-7), 1:30 p.m. (FOX) DIVISIONAL PLAYOFFS Saturday, Jan. 16 Cincinnati, Houston or Kansas City at New England (12-4), 1:35 (CBS) Minnesota, Washington or Green Bay at Arizona (13-3), 5:15 p.m. (NBC) Sunday, Jan. 17 Seattle, Green Bay or Washington at Carolina (15-1), 10:05 a.m. (FOX) Pittsburgh, Kansas City or Houston at Denver (12-4), 1:30 p.m. (CBS) CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC, 12:05 p.m. (CBS) NFC, 3:40 p.m. (FOX) PRO BOWL Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 4 p.m. (ESPN) SUPER BOWL Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara TBD, 3:30 p.m. (CBS) BOWL SCHEDULE Monday, Jan. 11 College Football Championship Game Glendale, Ariz. Clemson (14-0) vs. Alabama (13-1), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Saturday, Jan. 23 East-West Shrine Classic At St. Petersburg, Fla. East vs. West, 1 p.m. (NFLN) NFLPA Collegiate Bowl At Carson National vs. American, 3 p.m. (ESPN2) Saturday, Jan. 30 Senior Bowl At Mobile, Ala. North vs. South, 11:30 a.m. (NFLN) NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 33 2 .943 — Clippers 23 13 .639 101/2 Sacramento 15 21 .417 181/2 Phoenix 13 25 .342 211/2 Lakers 8 29 .216 26 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 32 6 .842 — Dallas 21 16 .568 101/2 Memphis 20 18 .526 12 Houston 18 19 .486 131/2 New Orleans 11 24 .314 191/2 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 25 11 .694 — Utah 15 20 .429 91/2 Portland 15 23 .395 11 Denver 13 24 .351 121/2 Minnesota 12 25 .324 131/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Toronto 23 15 .605 — Boston 19 17 .528 3 New York 18 20 .474 5 Brooklyn 10 26 .278 12 Philadelphia 4 34 .105 19 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Miami 21 14 .600 — Atlanta 22 15 .595 — Orlando 20 17 .541 2 Charlotte 17 18 .486 4 Washington 15 19 .441 51/2 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 25 9 .735 — Chicago 22 12 .647 3 Indiana 21 15 .583 5 Detroit 20 16 .556 6 Milwaukee 15 23 .395 12 Thursday's games Atlanta 126, Philadelphia 98 Chicago 101, Boston 92 Houston 103, Utah 94 Sacramento 118, Lakers 115 Friday's games Toronto 97, Washington 88 Orlando 83, Brooklyn 77 Cleveland 125, Minnesota 99 Indiana 91, New Orleans 86 Milwaukee 96, Dallas 95 Memphis 91, Denver 84 San Antonio 100, New York 99 Miami at Phoenix, (n.) Golden State at Portland, (n.) Oklahoma City at Lakers, (n.) Saturday's games Charlotte at Clippers, 12:30 p.m. Chicago at Atlanta, 2 p.m. Washington at Orlando, 4 p.m. Toronto at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Miami at Utah, 6 p.m. Golden State at Sacramento, 7 p.m. Sunday's games New Orleans at Clippers, 12:30 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 2 p.m. Boston at Memphis, 3 p.m. Cleveland at Philadelphia, 3 p.m. Indiana at Houston, 4 p.m. Milwaukee at New York, 4:30 p.m. Charlotte at Denver, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Portland, 6 p.m. Utah at Lakers, 6:30 p.m. NBA LEADERS SCORING AVERAGE G FG FT Pts Avg Curry, GOL 33 321 176 968 29.3 Harden, HOU 37 308 330 1046 28.3 Durant, OKC 29 263 177 770 26.6 James, CLE 32 311 168 827 25.8 Cousins, SAC 28 236 203 708 25.3 Westbrook, OKC 36 316 229 907 25.2 George, IND 35 275 203 861 24.6 Lillard, POR 31 254 153 749 24.2 Davis, NOR 31 277 159 728 23.5 Griffin, LAC 30 281 129 697 23.2 DeRozan, TOR 37 279 261 838 22.6 Butler, CHI 34 247 214 747 22.0 Anthony, NYK 35 270 170 759 21.7 McCollum, POR 36 291 85 756 21.0 Thompson, GOL 33 248 83 689 20.9 Thomas, BOS 36 243 192 746 20.7 Leonard, SAN 35 269 118 725 20.7 Lowry, TOR 37 241 181 761 20.6 Bledsoe, PHX 31 223 138 632 20.4 Wiggins, MIN 35 248 190 705 20.1 Lopez, Bro 35 274 148 696 19.9 Jackson, DET 36 259 143 713 19.8 Knight, PHX 38 274 116 744 19.6 Wall, WAS 33 241 115 645 19.5 Walker, CHA 35 240 146 682 19.5 Bosh, MIA 35 233 144 672 19.2 Hayward, UTA 35 211 167 656 18.7 Wade, MIA 34 248 127 630 18.5 Millsap, ATL 37 234 178 676 18.3 Gallinari, DEN 30 153 185 540 18.0 Drummond, DET 36 274 96 645 17.9 Gay, SAC 34 243 86 606 17.8 Paul, LAC 31 194 124 548 17.7 Bryant, LAL 30 180 111 528 17.6 Nowitzki, DAL 34 215 105 589 17.3 Okafor, PHL 34 244 97 585 17.2 Favors, UTA 26 179 80 438 16.8 Vucevic, ORL 33 260 33 554 16.8 Gasol, CHI 33 216 112 550 16.7 Anderson, NOR 32 185 101 531 16.6 Middleton, MIL 37 209 113 613 16.6 Batum, CHA 31 169 99 504 16.3 Barton, DEN 36 216 90 584 16.2 Love, CLE 33 183 101 534 16.2 Redick, LAC 32 175 80 513 16.0 Gasol, MEM 37 219 151 591 16.0 Young, Bro 35 249 53 556 15.9 Towns, MIN 36 236 89 571 15.9 Aldridge, SAN 34 220 97 537 15.8 Gordon, NOR 34 174 94 527 15.5 NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 40 26 12 2 54 107 88 Arizona 40 20 16 4 44 112 125 Vancouver 41 16 16 9 41 100 115 Calgary 40 19 19 2 40 105 124 Anaheim 39 16 16 7 39 73 94 San Jose 38 18 18 2 38 102 108 Edmonton 41 17 21 3 37 102 122 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 43 29 10 4 62 148 114 Chicago 43 26 13 4 56 120 101 St. Louis 43 23 14 6 52 106 107 Minnesota 40 21 11 8 50 108 96 Nashville 40 19 14 7 45 104 106 Colorado 41 20 18 3 43 117 114 Winnipeg 41 19 19 3 41 109 117 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Florida 41 25 12 4 54 114 88 Detroit 41 21 13 7 49 103 107 Montreal 42 23 16 3 49 121 104 Boston 39 21 14 4 46 122 106 Ottawa 41 19 16 6 44 116 123 Tampa Bay 40 19 17 4 42 101 98 Toronto 39 16 16 7 39 104 105 Buffalo 41 15 22 4 34 93 113 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 40 30 7 3 63 128 86 N.Y. Islanders 41 22 14 5 49 114 103 N.Y. Rangers 40 22 14 4 48 118 105 New Jersey 42 20 17 5 45 95 101 Pittsburgh 40 19 16 5 43 94 99 Philadelphia 39 17 15 7 41 87 108 Carolina 42 17 18 7 41 98 115 Columbus 42 15 24 3 33 106 135 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Thursday's games Dallas 2, Winnipeg 1, SO Washington 4, N.Y. Islanders 1 Florida 3, Ottawa 2 Philadelphia 4, Minnesota 3, OT Arizona 2, Calgary 1 Los Angeles 2, Toronto 1 Detroit 2, San Jose 1 Friday's games Boston 4, New Jersey 1 Carolina 4, Columbus 1 Chicago 3, Buffalo 1 Nashville at Colorado, (n.) Tampa Bay at Edmonton, (n.) St. Louis at Anaheim, (n.) Saturday's games Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 10 a.m. N.Y. Islanders at Philadelphia, 10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Montreal, 4 p.m. Boston at Ottawa, 4 p.m. Carolina at Columbus, 4 p.m. Toronto at San Jose, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 5 p.m. Nashville at Arizona, 6 p.m. Tampa Bay at Vancouver, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Sunday's games Buffalo at Winnipeg, noon Ottawa at Washington, 4 p.m. Colorado at Chicago, 4 p.m. New Jersey at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Detroit at Anaheim, 5 p.m. Florida at Edmonton, 6:30 p.m. Golf PGA TOUR-TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS Friday At Kapalua Resort, The Plantation Course Kapalua, Hawaii Purse: $5.9 million Yardage: 7,452; Par 73 Second Round Jordan Spieth............................. 66-64—130 Kevin Kisner............................... 69-65—134 Fabian Gomez............................ 68-66—134 Patrick Reed............................... 65-69—134 Danny Lee....................................67-68—135 Rickie Fowler ..............................69-67—136 Steven Bowditch ........................69-67—136 Peter Malnati..............................71-66—137 Bubba Watson........................... 69-68—137 Brooks Koepka .......................... 69-68—137 Padraig Harrington................... 70-68—138 Matt Every.................................. 70-68—138 Smylie Kaufman........................ 70-69—139 Brandt Snedeker........................67-72—139 Dustin Johnson...........................73-67—140 Bill Haas.......................................71-69—140 Scott Piercy ................................71-69—140 Jimmy Walker ............................. 70-71—141 Chris Kirk..................................... 70-71—141 David Lingmerth..........................71-71—142 Troy Merritt.................................75-68—143 Russell Knox................................ 71-72—143 Jason Day ....................................70-73—143 Justin Thomas ............................70-73—143 J.B. Holmes.................................. 67-76—143 Zach Johnson..............................75-69—144 Alex Cejka....................................72-72—144 Emiliano Grillo ............................71-73—144 Graeme McDowell .....................75-70—145 Davis Love III...............................75-72—147 J.J. Henry ..................................... 77-74—151 James Hahn.................................76-76—152 Tennis ATP WORLD TOUR QATAR EXXONMOBIL OPEN RESULTS Friday At The Khalifa International Tennis & Squash Complex Doha, Qatar Purse: $1.190 million (WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, def. Illya March- enko, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-4. Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Tomas Berdych (3), Czech Republic, 6-3, 7-6 (3). Doubles Championship Feliciano Lopez and Marc Lopez (3), Spain, def. Philipp Petzschner, Germany, and Alexander Peya (4), Austria, 6-4, 6-3. ATP WORLD TOUR AIRCEL CHENNAI OPEN RESULTS Friday At SDAT Tennis Stadium Chennai, India Purse: $458,400 (WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Stan Wawrinka (1), Switzerland, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez (5), Spain, 6-4, 6-4. Benoit Paire (3), France, def. Thomas Fabbiano, Italy, 6-4, 7-5. Borna Coric (8), Croatia, def. Roberto Bautista Agut (4), Spain, 3-6, 6-4, 7-6 (1). Aljaz Bedene, Britain, def. Ramkumar Ramanathan, India, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-3. Doubles Quarterfinals Somdev Devvarman and Jeevan Nedun- chezhiyan, India, def. N. Sriram Balaji and Ramkumar Ramanathan, India, 6-4, 1-6, 10-6. Semifinals Oliver Marach, Austria, and Fabrice Martin (3), France, def. Raven Klaasen, South Africa, and Rajeev Ram (1), United States, 4-6, 7-5, 10-5. BRISBANE INTERNATIONAL RESULTS Friday At Queensland Tennis Centre Brisbane, Australia Purse: Men, $404,780 (WT250); Women, $885,500 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles MEN Quarterfinals Roger Federer (1), Switzerland, def. Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, 6-4, 6-7 (4), 6-4. Bernard Tomic (7), Australia, def. Kei Nishikori (2), Japan, 6-3, 1-6, 6-3. Dominic Thiem (8), Austria, def. Marin Cilic (3), Croatia, 2-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4. Milos Raonic (4), Canada, def. Lucas Pouille, France, 6-4, 6-4. WOMEN Semifinals Angelique Kerber (4), Germany, def. Carla Suarez Navarro (6), Spain, 6-2, 6-3. Victoria Azarenka, Belarus, def. Saman- tha Crawford, United States, 6-0, 6-3. Doubles WOMEN Semifinals Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Sania Mirza (1), India, def. Andreja Klepac, Slovenia, and Alla Kudryavtseva (4), Russia, 6-3, 7-5. Angelique Kerber and Andrea Petkovic, Germany, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues and Arantxa Parra Santonja, Spain, 2-6, 6-3, 10-2. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Saturday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Clippers 61/2 (OFF) Charlotte at Atlanta 21/2 (208) Chicago at Orlando 11/2 (201) Washington at Detroit 11 (196) Brooklyn Toronto 9 (2031/2) at Philadelphia at U ta h OFF ( OFF ) Mia mi Golden State 71/2 (222) at Sacramento NHL Saturday Favorite Line Underdog Washington -108/-102 at NY Rangers NY Islanders -120/+110 at PHIL. at Ottawa OFF Boston at Montreal -115/+105 Pittsburgh at San Jose -135/+125 Toronto at Columbus -120/+110 Carolina at Dallas -150/+140 Minnesota at Arizona OFF Nashville at Va nc ou ve r OFF T am pa B ay at Los Angeles -155/+145 St. Louis College Football Monday Championship Game At Glendale Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog Alabama 61/2 (501/2) Clemson NFL Saturday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog Kansas City 3 (40) at Houston Pittsburgh 3 (45) at Cincinnati Sunday Seattle 5 (391/2) at Minnesota at Washington 1 (45) Green Bay Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball Office OF THE Commissioner OF Baseball: Suspended Cleveland RHP Joseph Colon (Columbus-Il) and Chicago Cubs RHP P.J. Francescon (Iowa-Pcl) 50 games apiece under the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program following second positive tests for a drug of abuse. American League Baltimore Orioles: Claimed INF-OF Joey Terdoslavich off waivers from Atlanta. Cleveland Indians: Agreed to terms with RHP Zach McAllister on a one-year contract. Los Angeles Angels: Agreed to terms with LHP Hector Santiago on a one-year contract. New York Yankees: Acquired RHP Kirby Yates from the Cleveland Indians for cash. National League Atlanta Braves: Agreed to terms with INF-OF Kelly Johnson on a one-year contract. Miami Marlins: Named Gary Cathcart minor league field coordinator, Joe Dillon minor league hitting coordina- tor, Mike Cather minor league pitching coordinator and Tommy Thompson senior advisor of player development. Promoted Joe Coleman to senior advisor of pitching development, Joe Lisewski to minor league video coordinator. Washington Nationals: Named Dan Jen- nings special assistant to president of baseball operations. Eastern League Reading Fightin Phils: Promoted Jon Nally to director of groups. American Association Texas AIR Hogs: Signed RHP Tony Riz- zotti, 1B Devon Rodriguez and 1B Austin Gallagher. Winnipeg Goldeyes: Released LHP Nick Hernandez, RHP Matt Jackson and RHP Brad Mincey. Can-Am League Sussex County Miners: Signed INF Tyler Urps. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association Memphis Grizzlies: Signed G Elliot Wil- liams to a 10-day contract. Recalled Fs James Ennis and Jarell Martin from Iowa (NBADL). Phoenix Suns: Signed Glorenzo Brown to a 10-day contract. FOOTBALL National Football League Detroit Lions: Named Bob Quinn general manager. Miami Dolphins: Signed DB Damarr Ault- man to a reserve/future contract. San Diego Chargers: Signed coach Mike McCoy a one-year contract extension through 2017. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL: Suspended Washington Capitals F Marcus Johansson for two games, with- out pay, for an illegal check to the head of New York Islanders D Thomas Hickey. Dallas Stars: Signed general manager Jim Nill to a five-year contract extension through the 2022-23 season. New Jersey Devils: Assigned F Mike Sislo to Albany (AHL). Placed F Tuomo Ruutu on injured reserve, retroactive to Jan. 6. Recalled D Marc-Andre Gragnani, F Jim O'brien and F Paul Thompson from Albany. New York Rangers: Acquired F Nicklas Jensen and a 2017 sixth-round draft pick from Vancouver for RW Emerson Etem. Washington Capitals: Recalled F Paul Carey from Hershey (AHL). Reassigned D Ryan Stanton to Hershey. American Hockey League Grand Rapids Griffins: Recalled D Scott Czarnowczan from Toledo (ECHL). SOCCER Major League Soccer New York Red Bulls: Agreed to terms with M Dax McCarty and Felipe on mul- tiyear contract extensions. Re-signed D Damien Perrinelle. Real Salt Lake: Re-signed D Demar Phil- lips and D Phanuel Kavita. San Jose Earthquakes: Signed F Quincy Amarikwa and D Jordan Stewart. Signed M Simon Dawkins as a designated player. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 2016 2 B