Red Bluff Daily News

May 20, 2016

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AUTORACING NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Showdown Final Practice: 10:30a.m.,FS1. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, All-Star Final Practice: noon, FS1. NASCAR Camping World Se- ries Truck Racing, North Caro- lina Education Lottery 200, Qualifying: 2:30p.m., FS1. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, All-Star Showdown: 4p.m., FS1. NASCAR Camping World Series Truck Racing, North Carolina Education Lottery 200: 5:30p.m., FS1. COLLEGE SOFTBALL Division I Tournament Region- al: 1:30p.m., ESPN2, ESPNU. Division I Tournament Re- gional: 4p.m., ESPN, ESPN2. Division I Tournament Re- gional: 6p.m., ESPN. Division I Tournament Re- gional: 8:30p.m., ESPN2. MLB BASEBALL Cleveland Indians vs. Boston Red Sox or Tampa Bay Rays vs. Detroit Tigers: 4p.m., MLB. New York Yankees at Oakland Athletics: 6:30p.m., CSN. Chicago Cubs at San Fran- cisco Giants: 7p.m., (22). CYCLING UCI Tour of California, Stage 6, Folsom: 2p.m., NBCSN. GOLF Champions Tour, Regions Tra- dition Round 2: 10a.m., GOLF. PGA Tour, Byron Nelson Round 2: 1p.m., GOLF. EPGA Tour, Irish Open Round 3: 5a.m., GOLF. HOCKEY NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs, Pittsburgh Penguins at Tampa Bay Lightning, Eastern Conference Final, Game 4: 5 p.m., NBCSN. CHL Memorial Cup, OHL vs. Red Deer Round Robin: 5p.m., NHL. HORSE RACING Black Eyed Susan Stakes: noon, NBCSN. RUGBY Australian Rules Football, West Coast vs. Pt. Adelaide: 11:30p.m., FS1. Ontheair endorsementsorwhatever. In many ways he's the per- fect kind of second star on a team because of that. So Steph and Draymond get most of the attention. Klay enjoys being in the back- ground, living his life qui- etly." His demeanor certainly isn't like that of his for- mer power forward father, Mychal, a No. 1 overall pick by Portland in 1978 who played 12 NBA seasons. Thompson prefers to praise his teammates at any chance rather than dis- cuss himself. "We're kind of different because he loves to talk. He loves to talk trash, he loves the camera and the limelight," the two-time All-Star son said of his dad. "That might be from playing with the Show- time (Lakers) for a while or growing up in the Baha- mas. I didn't get that gene from him. But I'm getting better at it." After five games de- fending James Harden and five more chasing Da- mian Lillard, there was no getting around the at- tention for superb outing after outing. Thunder star Russell Westbrook is his current assignment, with the best-of-seven se- ries shifting to Oklahoma City for Sunday night's Game 3. The 26-year-old Thomp- son is known to be funny in team meetings or else- where behind the scenes. "Klay is who he is. That's the beauty of him," Kerr said. "It's important because every team has kind of a pecking order, totem pole, however you want to put it, and guys need to slide into roles. There are teams where maybe you have two guys who want the attention and want the ball and maybe it doesn't click. The personalities have to fit, just like the skills have to fit. I think that's one of the strengths of our team. People enjoy being around one another and they are comfortable in their roles, and I think Klay is a huge part of that." Thompson logged 2.61 miles per game — at 4.34 miles per hour, no less — in the first two rounds while playing 36.1 minutes and taking on the scoring load in Curry's absence. Green has told Thomp- son at times this postsea- son to keep looking for his shot, even when the de- fense changes up on him or the ball doesn't drop for the All-Star 3-point contest champion. Thompson did just that in the Portland series, fol- lowing up a playoff career- high 37-point performance in the opener with 27 points and five 3-pointers in Game 2. In fact, he had scored at least 20 points in eight straight playoff games before Wednesday. Thompson expects the Warriors to build off Game 2, when he scored 15 points but played just less than 30 minutes, and to learn from the lack of poise they exhib- ited in losing the opener. "We know what it takes to win," he said. "It's ex- tremely hard." Thompson FROM PAGE 1 MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant, center, is guarded by Golden State Warriors guard Klay Thompson, rear, and forward Andre Iguodala (9) during the second half of Game 2of the Western Conference finals in Oakland on Wednesday. from a long breakaway last year, was only part of an 18-rider group that broke free from the peloton early in the race. Skujins tried to attack the breakaway once, only to get reeled back, but then made a second at- tack succeed when he was joined by two other riders. In the end, De Vos and Zandio couldn't match him in the sprint at picturesque Lake Tahoe. Earlier in the day, American rider Megan Guarnier won the open- ing stage of the women's race with a solo attack of her. The world bronze medalist out-raced Emma Johansson to the line by 4 seconds to take the yellow jersey into the second of four stages. Kristin Armstrong fin- ished third in another im- pressive performance as she tries to earn a spot on the U.S. team for the Rio Olympics. The two-time and reigning time trial gold medalist retired after the London Games but de- cided to try to qualify for one more Summer Olym- pics. The sixth stage Friday is an individual time trial for the men and a team time trial for the women over the same 12.5-mile course that begins and ends in downtown Folsom. The race against the clock is not Alaphilippe's forte, so he will be trying to hold onto his overall race lead. He led on the penulti- mate day a year ago before falling to second on the fi- nal day. The Tour of California concludes Sunday in Sac- ramento. Cycling FROM PAGE 1 the second time this post- season. Overcoming this deficit may be tougher than coming back last round after losing the opener to Dallas. While the Stars were leaky on defense and ro- tated between two mostly ineffective goalies, the Sharks have done a stellar job defending in front of Jones, who has been sharp in his first postseason as a starter. After allowing the soft goal to Lehtera that led to the Game 1 loss, Jones has been perfect the past two games. He has stopped 58 straight shots and has posted the first back-to- back playoff shutouts in Sharks history. That kind of goaltending and another dominant per- formance from Joe Thorn- ton's line was more than enough for San Jose. That line scored twice, with the first coming off a St. Louis turnover late in the first. Colton Parayko's break- out pass to Lehtera was broken up in the neu- tral zone by Brent Burns. Thornton quickly sent the loose puck ahead to Joe Pavelski, who found Hertl for a big slap shot that beat Elliott high to the glove side to make it 1-0 late in the period. Hertl scored again early in the third off a perfect pass from Thornton, end- ing Elliott's night. St. Louis coach Ken Hitchcock juggled his lineup after watching his team get outplayed the first two games. Centers Alex- ander Steen and Lehtera switched lines and Mag- nus Paajarvi and Dmitrij Jaskin suited up on the fourth line in place of Steve Ott and Scottie Upshall. On defense, Robert Bor- tuzzo got the nod in place of Joel Edmundson and Pa- rayko moved up to the sec- ond pair with Kevin Shat- tenkirk. The Blues looked faster early and had the better of the play at the start, hold- ing the Sharks without a shot on goal for more than eight minutes. But St. Louis seemed to lose some steam after Hertl's first goal. Matters only got worse in the second period. Donskoi broke up a pass from Robby Fabbri midway through the second to start an odd-man rush. Logan Couture skated into the offensive zone on a 3-on-2 chance and fed the trailing Donskoi for the wrist shot from the slot that made it 2-0. NOTES: Jones has three shutouts in the past four games, also doing it in Game 7 in the second round against Nashville. Sharks FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Giants 24 18 .571 _ Los Angeles 21 20 .512 21/2 Colorado 20 20 .500 3 Arizona 19 24 .442 51/2 Sa n D ie go 1 7 24 .4 15 6 1 / 2 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Chicago 28 11 .718 _ Pittsburgh 22 18 .550 61/2 St. Louis 22 19 .537 7 Milwaukee 18 23 .439 11 Cincinnati 15 26 .366 14 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 25 16 .610 _ Philadelphia 24 17 .585 1 New York 22 18 .550 21/2 Miami 21 19 .525 31/2 Atlanta 10 30 .250 141/2 Wednesday's games Philadelphia 4, Miami 2 Atlanta 3, Pittsburgh 1 Cleveland 8, Cincinnati 7, 12 innings Washington 7, N.Y. Mets 1 Chicago Cubs 2, Milwaukee 1, 13 innings St. Louis 2, Colorado 0 N.Y. Yankees 4, Arizona 2 L.A. Angels 8, L.A. Dodgers 1 Giants 2, San Diego 1 Thursday's games Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 3 Pittsburgh 8, Atlanta 2 Cleveland 7, Cincinnati 2 Washington 9, N.Y. Mets 1 St. Louis 13, Colorado 7) Giants at San Diego, (n.) L. A. D od ger s a t L .A. A ng els , ( n. ) Friday's games Atlanta (Wisler 1-3) at Philadelphia (Nola 3-2), 4:05 p.m. Colorado (Butler 2-1) at Pittsburgh (Cole 4-3), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Peralta 2-4) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 5-1), 4:10 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 1-4) at Cincinnati (Straily 2-1), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Roark 2-3) at Miami (Nico- lino 2-1), 4:10 p.m. Arizona (Corbin 1-3) at St. Louis (Marti- nez 4-3), 5:15 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 7-0) at Giants (Peavy 1-4), 7:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kazmir 3-3) at San Diego (Friedrich 0-1), 7:40 p.m. Saturday's games Atlanta at Philadelphia, 12:05 p.m. Arizona at St. Louis, 1:05 p.m. Colorado at Pittsburgh, 1:05 p.m. Milwaukee at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m. Seattle at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Giants, 4:15 p.m. Washington at Miami, 4:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Diego, 7:10 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Seattle 23 17 .575 _ Texas 22 19 .537 11/2 A's 19 22 .463 41/2 Los Angeles 18 22 .450 5 Houston 17 25 .405 7 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Chicago 25 16 .610 _ Cleveland 21 17 .553 21/2 Kansas City 20 20 .500 41/2 Detroit 19 21 .475 51/2 Minnesota 10 30 .250 141/2 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Baltimore 24 15 .615 _ Boston 25 16 .610 _ Tampa Bay 19 19 .500 41/2 Toronto 20 23 .465 6 New York 17 22 .436 7 Wednesday's games Detroit 6, Minnesota 3 Kansas City 3, Boston 2 A's 8, Texas 1 Baltimore 5, Seattle 2 Tampa Bay 6, Toronto 3 Cleveland 8, Cincinnati 7, 12 innings Houston 5, Chicago White Sox 3 Boston 5, Kansas City 2 N.Y. Yankees 4, Arizona 2 L.A. Angels 8, L.A. Dodgers 1 Thursday's games Seattle 7, Baltimore 2 Cleveland 7, Cincinnati 2 Chicago White Sox 2, Houston 1 Toronto 3, Minnesota 2, 11 innings L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, (n.) N.Y. Yankees at A's, (n.) Friday's games Cleveland (Kluber 2-5) at Boston (Buch- holz 2-3), 4:10 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 1-4) at Cincinnati (Straily 2-1), 4:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Andriese 2-0) at Detroit (Sanchez 3-4), 4:10 p.m. Kansas City (Gee 0-1) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 5-2), 5:10 p.m. Te xa s ( Le wis 2- 0) a t H ou st on ( Mc Cu ll er s 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Toronto (Sanchez 3-1) at Minnesota (Duffey 1-2), 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 2-2) at A's (Gray 3-4), 6:35 p.m. Baltimore (Wright 2-3) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 3-2), 7:05 p.m. Saturday's games Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 11:10 a.m. Toronto at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m. Cleveland at Boston, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at A's, 1:05 p.m. Seattle at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 1:10 p.m. Texas at Houston, 4:15 p.m. Baltimore at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Basketball NBA PLAYOFF GLANCE CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Monday, May 16 Oklahoma City 108, Golden State 102 Tuesday, May 17 Cleveland 115, Toronto 84 Wednesday, May 18 Golden State 118, Oklahoma City 91, series tied 1-1 Thursday, May 19 Cleveland 108, Toronto 89, Cleveland leads series 2-0 Saturday, May 21 Cleveland at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, May 22 Golden State at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Monday, May 23 Cleveland at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 24 Golden State at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Wednesday, May 25 x-Cleveland at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, May 26 Oklahoma City at Golden State, 6 p.m. Friday, May 27 x-Cleveland at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Saturday, May 28 x-Golden State at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Sunday, May 29 x-Toronto at Cleveland, 5:30 p.m. Monday, May 30 x-Oklahoma City at Golden State, 6 p.m. WNBA WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Minnesota 2 0 1.000 — Dallas 2 1 .667 1/2 Sparks 1 0 1.000 1/2 Seattle 0 1 .000 11/2 Phoenix 0 2 .000 2 San Antonio 0 2 .000 2 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB New York 2 0 1.000 — Atlanta 1 0 1.000 1/2 Chicago 1 1 .500 1 Connecticut 1 1 .500 1 Indiana 1 1 .500 1 Washington 0 2 .000 2 Wednesday's games Minnesota 97, Chicago 80 Dallas 87, Washington 77 Indiana 97, Phoenix 93 Thursday's games Connecticut 72, San Antonio 68 Friday's games Sparks at Washington, 4 p.m. At la nt a a t I nd ia na , 4 p .m . Seattle at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Saturday's games Sparks at New York, 3 p.m. Washington at Connecticut, 4 p.m. San Antonio at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. NHL PLAYOFF GLANCE CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Friday, May 13 Tampa Bay 3, Pittsburgh 1 Sunday, May 15 St. Louis 2, San Jose 1 Monday, May 16 Pittsburgh 3, Tampa Bay 2, OT Tuesday, May 17 San Jose 4, St. Louis 0 Wednesday, May 18 Pittsburgh 4, Tampa Bay 2, Pittsburgh leads series 2-1 Thursday, May 19 San Jose 3, St. Louis 0, San Jose leads series 2-1 Friday, May 20 Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay 5 p.m. Saturday, May 21 St. Louis at San Jose, 4:15 p.m. Sunday, May 22 Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Monday, May 23 San Jose at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Tuesday, May 24 x-Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 25 x-St. Louis at San Jose, 6 p.m. Thursday, May 26 x-Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Friday, May 27 x-San Jose at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Sharks 3, Blues 0 St. Louis 0 0 0 — 0 San Jose 111 — 3 First Period: 1, San Jose, Hertl 4 (Pavel- ski, Thornton), 15:53. Second Period: 2, San Jose, Donskoi 4 (Couture), 11:44. Third Period: 3, San Jose, Hertl 5 (Thorn- ton, Pavelski), 6:09. Shots on Goal: St. Louis 9-6-5=20. San Jose 7-6-3=16. Goalies: St. Louis, Elliott, Allen. San Jose, Jones; A: 17,562 (17,562). So cce r MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Colorado 7 2 3 24 15 9 FC Dallas 7 4 2 23 19 19 Vancouver 6 5 2 20 20 20 Los Angeles 5 1 4 19 24 12 San Jose 5 3 3 18 15 14 Salt Lake 5 3 2 17 14 14 KC 5 6 2 17 13 14 Seattle 4 5 1 13 10 12 Portland 3 6 3 12 17 22 Houston 3 6 2 11 18 19 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA N.Y. City FC 4 3 5 17 18 17 Montreal 4 3 4 16 18 16 Philadelphia 4 3 3 15 14 11 Toronto FC 4 4 3 15 14 12 New York 4 7 1 13 14 20 D.C. United 3 4 4 13 13 13 New England 2 3 7 13 15 20 Orlando City 2 3 5 11 17 16 Columbus 2 4 4 10 12 15 Chicago 1 5 4 7 8 13 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday's games N.Y. City FC 1, Toronto FC 1 New York 1, Chicago 0 Friday's games Philadelphia at D.C. United, 4 p.m. Saturday's games New York at N.Y. City FC, noon Houston at Chicago, 2 p.m. Columbus at Toronto FC, 4:30 p.m. Montreal at Orlando, 4:30 p.m. FC Dallas at New England, 4:30 p.m. Salt Lake at KC, 5:30 p.m. Colorado at Seattle, 7 p.m. Sunday's games Vancouver at Portland, 1:30 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 4 p.m. Golf PGA-BYRON NELSON PAR Thursday At TPC Four Seasons Resort Irving, Texas Purse: $7.3 million Yardage: 7,166; Par: 70 (35-35) First Round (a-amateur) Sergio Garcia...........................29-34—63 -7 Danny Lee..................................32-31—63 -7 Johnson Wagner.......................32-31—63 -7 Dustin Johnson........................ 32-32—64 -6 Jordan Spieth........................... 32-32—64 -6 Freddie Jacobson.................... 32-32—64 -6 Ben Crane................................. 32-33—65 -5 James Hahn.............................. 34-31—65 -5 Matt Kuchar............................. 34-31—65 -5 Scott Piercy ............................. 34-31—65 -5 Robert Garrigus ...................... 33-32—65 -5 Martin Flores ........................... 33-32—65 -5 Charles Howell III.................... 31-34—65 -5 Brooks Koepka ........................ 33-32—65 -5 Chad Campbell........................33-33—66 -4 Jon Curran................................33-33—66 -4 Adam Hadwin .......................... 35-31—66 -4 Hudson Swafford....................32-34—66 -4 Cameron Percy........................ 31-35—66 -4 Jeff Overton .............................33-33—66 -4 Jason Dufner............................ 35-31—66 -4 Will MacKenzie........................ 35-31—66 -4 Greg Owen ............................... 34-33—67 -3 Chez Reavie.............................. 32-35—67 -3 Tim Wilkinson.......................... 33-34—67 -3 John Huh................................... 33-34—67 -3 Charley Hoffman..................... 32-35—67 -3 Scott Stallings..........................31-36—67 -3 Erik Compton........................... 33-34—67 -3 Sung Kang ................................ 35-32—67 -3 Rhein Gibson............................ 32-35—67 -3 Ian Poulter................................ 32-35—67 -3 Patrick Rodgers....................... 34-33—67 -3 John Senden............................. 33-34—67 -3 Robert Allenby..........................36-31—67 -3 Zac Blair.................................... 33-35—68 -2 Dicky Pride............................... 33-35—68 -2 Whee Kim ................................. 35-33—68 -2 Ernie Els.................................... 35-33—68 -2 Harris English .......................... 33-35—68 -2 Charl Schwartzel .................... 35-33—68 -2 Billy Mayfair............................. 35-33—68 -2 Derek Ernst ..............................34-34—68 -2 Sam Saunders ......................... 33-35—68 -2 Abraham Ancer.......................34-34—68 -2 Lance Lopez.............................34-34—68 -2 Kyle Reifers.............................. 35-33—68 -2 Jhonattan Vegas ..................... 35-33—68 -2 Spencer Levin.......................... 33-35—68 -2 Scott Pinckney ........................34-34—68 -2 Tony Finau.................................37-31—68 -2 Zach Johnson........................... 35-33—68 -2 Steven Bowditch .....................34-34—68 -2 J.J. Henry ..................................34-34—68 -2 Aaron Baddeley.......................34-34—68 -2 Scott Langley...........................34-34—68 -2 Darron Stiles............................ 36-32—68 -2 LPGA-KINGSMILL CHAMPIONSHIP PAR Thursday At Kingsmill Resort (River Course) Kingsmill, Va. Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,430; Par: 71 (36-35) First Round (a-amateur) Mika Miyazato.........................35-30—65 -6 Minjee Lee................................ 32-34—66 -5 Brittany Lincicome................. 34-32—66 -5 Gerina Piller .............................34-33—67 -4 Moriya Jutanugarn .................34-33—67 -4 Pornanong Phatlum................33-34—67 -4 Caroline Masson..................... 32-35—67 -4 Jennifer Song...........................33-34—67 -4 Laetitia Beck............................33-34—67 -4 Sandra Gal................................ 32-35—67 -4 Sei Young Kim..........................34-33—67 -4 Austin Ernst .............................35-33—68 -3 Felicity Johnson ......................38-30—68 -3 Chella Choi............................... 35-33—68 -3 Cristie Kerr................................31-37—68 -3 Vicky Hurst ..............................33-35—68 -3 Meena Lee................................ 35-33—68 -3 Tiffany Joh................................34-34—68 -3 Megan Khang........................... 34-35—69 -2 Ariya Jutanugarn .................... 35-34—69 -2 Brittany Lang............................32-37—69 -2 Ryann O'Toole.......................... 34-35—69 -2 Ayako Uehara .......................... 35-34—69 -2 Azahara Munoz ....................... 33-36—69 -2 Lizette Salas ............................ 35-34—69 -2 Mi Jung Hur .............................. 34-35—69 -2 Jessica Korda........................... 34-35—69 -2 Amy Yang ................................. 34-35—69 -2 Su Oh......................................... 35-34—69 -2 Amelia Lewis.............................32-37—69 -2 PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS-REGIONS TRADITION PAR Thursday At Greystone Golf and Country Club Birmingham, Ala. Purse: $2.3 million Yardage: 7,299; Par 72 Fi rs t R oun d Kenny Perry ............................. 31-33—64 -8 Gene Sauers.............................34-32—66 -6 Bernhard Langer.....................33-33—66 -6 Billy Andrade ...........................33-34—67 -5 Jeff Sluman ..............................35-33—68 -4 Kevin Sutherland.....................35-33—68 -4 Scott Dunlap............................35-33—68 -4 Jeff Maggert ............................36-32—68 -4 Duffy Waldorf..........................34-34—68 -4 Craig Parry...............................34-34—68 -4 Esteban Toledo........................35-33—68 -4 Scott Hoch................................ 36-33—69 -3 Tom Pernice Jr. ........................ 35-34—69 -3 Fred Funk...................................37-32—69 -3 Doug Garwood......................... 35-34—69 -3 Peter Senior..............................35-35—70 -2 Wes Short, Jr.............................34-36—70 -2 Jesper Parnevik........................33-37—70 -2 John Daly ...................................35-35—70 -2 Scott McCarron........................36-34—70 -2 Glen Day.....................................38-32—70 -2 Joe Daley....................................36-34—70 -2 Steve Lowery ............................34-36—70 -2 Larry Mize .................................35-35—70 -2 Mark O'Meara...........................35-35—70 -2 Colin Montgomerie..................33-37—70 -2 Rocco Mediate..........................34-36—70 -2 Tennis ATP WORLD TOUR OPEN DE NICE COTE D'AZUR RESULTS Thursday At The Nice Lawn Tennis Club Nice, France Purse: $525,700 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Joao Sousa (5), Portugal, def. Kevin Anderson (3), South Africa, 7-5, 7-5. Alexander Zverev (8), Germany, def. Gilles Simon (2), France, 6-3, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (1). Adrian Mannarino, France, def. Guido Pella, Argentina, 5-7, 7-6 (4), 6-1. Dominic Thiem (1), Austria, def. Andreas Seppi (7), Italy, 6-3, 6-3. ATP WORLD TOUR BANQUE ERIC STURDZA GENEVA OPEN RESULTS Thursday At Tennis Club de Geneve Eaux-Vives Geneva Purse: $566,700 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Marin Cilic (3), Croatia, def. Federico Delbonis (6), Argentina, 6-4, 6-3. David Ferrer (2), Spain, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, 6-2, 6-2. Stan Wawrinka (1), Switzerland, def. Pablo Carreno Busta, Spain, 6-3, 6-1. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, def. An- drey Kuznetsov, Russia, 2-6, 6-1, 6-0. WTA NUERNBERGER VERSICHERUNGSCUP RESULTS Thursday At Tennis-Club 1.FC Nuernberg Nuremberg, Germany Purse: $226,750 (Intl). Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, def. Irina Falconi, United States, 6-1, 0-1, retired. Julia Goerges, Germany, def. Lesia Tsurenko (4), Ukraine, wakover. Annika Beck (3), Germany, def. Anna- Lena Friedsam (7), Germany, 7-6 (6), 2-6, 6-2. WTA INTERNATIONAUX DE STRASBOURG RESULTS Thursday At Centre Sportif de Hautepierre Strasbourg, France Purse: $226,750 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Virginie Razzano, France, def. Elena Vesnina (7), Russia, 6-1, 3-6, 6-1. Caroline Garcia (10), France, def. Sam Stosur (3), Australia, walkover. Kristina Mladenovic (4), France, def. Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, 6-4, 6-2. Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, def. Pau- line Parmentier, France, 6-0, 6-1. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE Friday MLB NATIONAL LEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at Pittsburgh -200/+180 Colorado at Philadelphia -150/+140 Atlanta Washington -117/+107 at Miami at New York -190/+175 Milwaukee at St. Louis -160/+150 Arizona Chicago -190/+175 at SFrancisco Los Angeles -140/+130 at San Diego Friday AMERICAN LEAGUE Tampa Bay -107/-103 at Detroit Cleveland -115/+105 at Boston at Houston -142/+132 Texas at Chicago -162/+152 Kansas City Toronto -115/+105 at Minnesota at Oakland -128/+118 New York at Los Angeles -130/+120 Baltimore INTERLEAGUE Seattle -128/+118 at Cincinnati NBA Sunday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog Golden State 21/2 (220) at Okla. City NHL Friday Favorite Line Underdog Pittsburgh -143/+133 at Tampa Bay Preakness Stakes The field for Saturday's 141st Preakness Stakes, with post position, horse's name, jockey's name and odds: PP Horse Jockey Odds 1. Cherry Wine Lanerie 20-1 2. Uncle Lino Perez 20-1 3. Nyquist Gutierrez 3-5 4. Awesome Speed Toledo 30-1 5. Exaggerator Desormeaux 3-1 6. Lani Take 30-1 7. Collected Castellano 10-1 8. Laoban Geroux 30-1 9. Abiding Star Acosta 30-1 10. Fellowship Lezcano 30-1 11. Stradivari Velazquez 8-1 | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, MAY 20, 2016 2 B

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