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AUTORACING NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Axalta 400Practice:8a.m., FS1. NASCAR Xfinity Series, Pocono 250Practice: 9:30 a.m., FS1. NASCAR Xfinity Series, Pocono 250Final Practice: noon, FS1. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Axalta 400, Qualifying: 1p.m., FS1. ARCA AnywhereIsPossible 200: 2:30p.m., FS1. COLLEGE BASEBALL Division I Tournament, Re- gional: 9a.m., ESPNU. Division I Tournament, Re- gional: 8:30p.m., ESPN2. COLLEGE SOFTBALL Division I Tournament, World Series: 4p.m., ESPN2. Division I Tournament, World Series: 6:30p.m., ESPN2. MLB BASEBALL Arizona Diamondbacks at Chicago Cubs: 11a.m., MLB. San Francisco Giants at St. Louis Cardinals: 5p.m., CSNBA. Seattle Mariners vs. Texas Rangers: 5p.m., MLB. Oakland Athletics at Houston Astros: 5p.m., CSN. EXTREME SPORTS X Games Austin, Motocross Freestyle Final, Skateboard Big Air Round One: 4p.m., ESPN. GOLF LPGA Tour, ShopRite Classic Round 1: 9a.m., GOLF. PGA Tour, The Memorial Tournament Round 2: 12:30 p.m., GOLF. EPGA Tour, Nordea Masters Round 3: 4:30a.m., GOLF. SOCCER Fútbol Copa America Cente- nario, Colombia vs. Estados Unidos: 6p.m., (27). Copa America Centenario, United States vs. Colombia: 6:30p.m., FS1. TENNIS ITF French Open, Men's Semi- final: 8a.m., NBCSN. Ontheair CowPalacedayswhenthe roof sometimes leaked, a wedding was once staged at intermission and a game was once delayed by almost an hour when the Zamboni dragged a goal peg on the ice by accident. But those years helped build a relationship be- tween hockey and the re- gion that endures to this day. "What I loved about it was the fans were right there," Wilson said. "We were connected to the fans. We didn't have great teams, but we had great people, we had great char- acter. A lot of one-goal games that for us was like going into a gun fight with a water pistol. But we knew we were going to battle. But the fans were there for us through thick and thin, and the guys that played on that team made sure of giving everything they had." Penguins coach Mike Sullivan played on the first Sharks team and remem- bers having to walk up- stairs to the locker room between periods. There even needed to be chairs at the bottom so players who were on the ice for the final shift of the period could catch their breath before going up. Many of those fans who packed the Cow Pal- ace those first two seasons moved to the team's new arena in downtown San Jose in 1993-94 that gave California's third-larg- est city its first major pro sports team. Some have kept their tickets for a quarter cen- tury, watching the team lose its first three trips to the conference finals, get knocked out as the top seed in the first round in 2009, blow a 3-0 series lead to Los Angeles in 2014 and then miss the playoffs en- tirely last season. Those disappointments will be forgotten come Sat- urday night when the Stan- ley Cup finally arrives in Silicon Valley. "They've been through a lot," Sharks center Logan Couture said. "It's been a long time that we've been the favorite. They've had a lot of high hopes and a lot of people have stuck with this franchise and sup- ported over the years. So, a lot of credit to the people that have had season tick- ets and kept them through these last couple of years. They deserve this." Sharks FROM PAGE 1 day that included a brief rain delay. "The rallies were very long and very tough. She is not used to (this) in matches. Usually after four, five shots, the point is over," said Williams' coach, Patrick Mouratoglou, who used to work with Putint- seva. "She had to work much more today." And Williams must put in more work Friday against Bertens, who like Putintseva has a tendency to extend points. There is no rest for the weary at this wet-as-can- be French Open. If Wil- liams gets to Saturday's final, it will be her fourth consecutive day of play. The top-seeded man, No- vak Djokovic, already will reach that total — Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Fri- day — when he meets No. 13 Dominic Thiem in their semifinal. "The way that the sched- ule has been going on in the second week," Djokovic said, "(there) is not much time to really reflect on what you have done." The other men's semifi- nal is Andy Murray against defending champion Stan Wawrinka. Their quarter- finals were Wednesday. Djokovic beat Tomas Berdych 6-3, 7-5, 6-3, while Thiem eliminated David Goffin 4-6, 7-6 (7), 6-4, 6-1. The most noteworthy moment of Djokovic's vic- tory: Angered by missing a shot, he tried to spike his racket, but it flew out of his right hand and sailed not far from where a line judge stood. Djokovic was issued a warning. Williams got so desper- ate at one point that she shifted her racket to her left hand — and whiffed. At the end of the first set, Williams had made 24 un- forced errors to Putintse- va's two, which seems like it might be a typo but isn't. Still, Williams reached her 31st major semifinal. Bertens became the first Dutch woman to get that far at a Slam since 1977, beating Timea Bacsinszky 7-5, 6-2, "Mentally I feel pretty good. But physically, yeah, it was tough today out there," Bertens said, men- tioning a calf problem. Since Williams earned her fourth consecutive ma- jor championship at Wim- bledon a year ago for No. 21 overall, she has been beaten in the semifinals of the U.S. Open by Roberta Vinci and in the final of the Australian Open by An- gelique Kerber. Tennis FROM PAGE 1 just how hard he works with his preparation and in between starts. If he feels adamant about me catch- ing him, I feel I owe him that. "I personally think he'd be fine regardless." Bumgarner's insistence turned into a gift for his catcher: a final memory at Turner Field. Bumgarner, Posey and Joe Panik hit two-run home runs in the fifth, and the big left-hander proved nearly untouchable while striking out 11 in 7 2/3 in- nings as the Giants split the four-game series. The two boys from the South said farewell to base- ball in Fulton County with all the zeal of General Sher- man. "That's the best I felt all year," Bumgarner said. "That was the first day in probably a year and a half it felt like I had it pretty much the way I wanted. I've been working on my delivery every day." Bumgarner works on his swing, too. The Giants' robust, six- run fifth inning followed a pattern: walk, home run, walk, home run, hit bat- ter, home run. Bumgarner parkedthefirstoneoffright- hander Aaron Blair, then Panik and Posey went deep. It was the perfect an- tidote for what ailed the Giants offense in recent weeks. You can't hit into hard outs when you're put- ting 'em in the seats. And the victory was a salve of sorts after the Giants placed Hunter Pence on the disabled list with what is believed to be a signifi- cant hamstring strain. Bumgarner's home run was his second of the sea- son and the 13th of his ca- reer, breaking a tie with Baltimore's Yovani Gal- lardo for the most by an active pitcher. The home run swing came in a situation where 99 percent of pitchers would be sacrificing: score- lessgame,fifthinning,after the leadoff batter (Gregor Blanco) draws a walk. But afterBumgarnertookalong look at third base coach Ro- berto Kelly, he took a rip at Blair's first pitch. Giants FROM PAGE 1 "That's our motto. That's what we believe in," Liv- ingston said. "We pick each other up. We believe in each other and we just fight." James kicked off his sixth straight finals with 23 points, 12 rebounds and nine assists, but cold- shooting Cleveland went 38.1 percent from the floor. Kyrie Irving, lost to a knee injury in Game 1 last year, scored 26 points, 11 on free throws. Iguodala showed he can handle any role — if Kerr decides to start him or bring him off the bench. Iguodala didn't let an ag- gravating, hard hit to the groin by Matthew Dellave- dova derail his focus for the final quarter. Kerr stuck with regular starter Harrison Barnes, and he delivered 13 points. Curry had 11 points, six assists and five rebounds, while Thompson scored nine points. Iguodalahadmovedback into the starting lineup Monday for the Game 7 clincher against Oklahoma City with a primary duty of defending Kevin Durant, shining in that role, and again came off the bench to play 36 minutes Thurs- day. He shook his head in delight after a two-handed slam off a pass from Curry with 5:44 left. Cleveland emerged from halftime with a newfound energy, zipping passes ev- ery which way, going hard to the basket whenever possible and swarming Curry and the others on the defensive end to cre- ate turnovers and poor de- cisions. Kevin Love's basket with 3:57 left in the third put the Cavs ahead before Green's dunk moments later. Love made an impres- sive finals debut with 17 points and 13 rebounds af- ter missing last year's run with a dislocated shoulder that required surgery. With 34.1 seconds left in the third, Iguodala took issue with Dellavedova's swat into his groin that af- ter review was ruled a per- sonal foul and no flagrant. Iguodala knocked down a 3-pointer less than 8 sec- onds later and Golden State took a 74-68 lead into the final 12 minutes and never backed down no matter who played. Livingston, whose re- markable comeback from a potentially career-ending left knee injury nine years ago has so inspired Kerr and many others, made a key follow shot late in the third on the way to his first 20-point performance in the postseason, then Curry pulled off a pretty drive the next time down. James has scored 20 or more points in a career- best 25 straight playoff games, topping his previ- ous mark of 24 in a row from May 12, 2008, to April 25, 2010. Warriors FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Giants 34 22 .607 _ Los Angeles 28 27 .509 51/2 Colorado 24 29 .453 81/2 Arizona 24 32 .429 10 San Diego 21 33 .389 12 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Chicago 37 15 .712 _ Pittsburgh 29 24 .547 81/2 St. Louis 28 26 .519 10 Milwaukee 25 29 .463 13 Cincinnati 19 35 .352 19 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 33 21 .611 _ New York 29 23 .558 3 Miami 29 25 .537 4 Philadelphia 26 28 .481 7 Atlanta 16 37 .302 161/2 Wednesday's games Chicago White Sox 2, N.Y. Mets 1, 13 innings Milwaukee 3, St. Louis 1 Washington 7, Philadelphia 2 Atlanta 5, Giants 4, 11 innings Miami 3, Pittsburgh 2 Chicago Cubs 2, L.A. Dodgers 1 Houston 5, Arizona 4, 11 innings Cincinnati 7, Colorado 2 San Diego 14, Seattle 6 Thursday's games Giants 6, Atlanta 0 Arizona 3, Houston 0 Chicago Cubs 7, L.A. Dodgers 2 Milwaukee 4, Philadelphia 1 Miami 4, Pittsburgh 3, 12 innings Cincinnati 11, Colorado 4 Seattle at San Diego, (n.) Friday's games Arizona (Bradley 2-0) at Chicago Cubs (Lackey 5-2), 11:20 a.m. L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-4) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 4-4), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Nelson 5-3) at Philadelphia (Velasquez 5-2), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 5-2) at Miami (Koehler 3-5), 4:10 p.m. Washington (Gonzalez 3-3) at Cincinnati (Finnegan 1-4), 4:10 p.m. Giants (Cueto 8-1) at St. Louis (Wain- wright 5-3), 5:15 p.m. Atlanta (Teheran 1-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 4-3), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (Rusin 1-3) at San Diego (Pomeranz 4-5), 7:40 p.m. Saturday's games Arizona at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 12:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Pittsburgh, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Miami, 1:10 p.m. Washington at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m. Giants at St. Louis, 4:15 p.m. Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 7:10 p.m. Giants 6, Braves 0 San Fran Atlanta AB R H B AB R H B Span cf 3 1 0 0 Incarte cf 4 0 0 0 Panik 2b 5 1 1 2 C.d'Arn 2b 4 0 2 0 Matt.Df 3b 4 1 0 0 Freeman 1b4 0 1 0 Posey c 4 1 1 2 Frnceur rf 4 0 0 0 Brown c 0 0 0 0 Ad.Grca 3b 4 0 0 0 Belt 1b 3 0 2 0 Flowers c 3 0 0 0 B.Crwfr ss 4 0 2 0 D.Cstro ss 3 0 1 0 Parker rf 4 0 1 0 Blair p 1 0 0 0 G.Blnco lf 3 1 0 0 O'Flhrt p 0 0 0 0 Bm gr n er p 4 1 1 2 K. Jhn sn p h 1 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 Weber p 0 0 0 0 Strtton p 0 0 0 0 Snyder ph 1 0 0 0 A.Ogndo p 0 0 0 0 Przynsk ph1 0 0 0 M.Smith lf 2 0 0 0 Totals 34 6 8 6 32 0 4 0 San Fran 000 060 000 — 6 Atlanta 000 000 000 — 0 E: Inciarte (2), B.Crawford (2); DP: Atlanta 1; LOB: San Francisco 7, Atlanta 8; 2B: Belt 2 (14), Freeman (9); HR: Panik (6), Posey (8), Bumgarner (2); SB: Span (7). IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Bgarner W,7-2 72/3 4 0 0 2 11 Strickland 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Stratton 1 0 0 0 1 1 Atlanta Blair L,0-4 4 5 6 6 4 3 O'Flaherty 1 1 0 0 1 0 Weber 2 2 0 0 0 1 Ogando 2 0 0 0 0 1 Blair pitched to 6 batters in the 5th HBP: by Blair (Duffy); WP: Bumgarner. T: 2:49; A: 15,983 (49,586). AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Texas 31 22 .585 _ Seattle 30 22 .577 1/2 A's 25 29 .463 61/2 Houston 25 30 .455 7 Los Angeles 24 29 .453 7 CEN TR AL D IVI SI ON W L Pct GB Kansas City 30 23 .566 _ Cleveland 28 24 .538 11/2 Chicago 29 25 .537 11/2 Detroit 25 28 .472 5 Minnesota 16 37 .302 14 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Boston 32 22 .593 _ Baltimore 30 22 .577 1 Toronto 29 26 .527 31/2 New York 25 28 .472 61/2 Tampa Bay 22 30 .423 9 Wednesday's games Chicago White Sox 2, N.Y. Mets 1, 13 innings A's 5, Minnesota 1 Cleveland 5, Texas 4, 11 innings Baltimore 13, Boston 9 Detroit 3, L.A. Angels 0 Toronto 7, N.Y. Yankees 0 Houston 5, Arizona 4, 11 innings Kansas City 6, Tampa Bay 3 San Diego 14, Seattle 6 Thursday's games Arizona 3, Houston 0 Baltimore 12, Boston 7 Cleveland 5, Kansas City 4 N.Y. Yankees 5, Detroit 4 Minnesota 6, Tampa Bay 4 Seattle at San Diego, (n.) Friday's games L.A. Angels (Weaver 4-4) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 4-4), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 6-2) at Baltimore (Tillman 7-1), 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Rodon 2-4) at Detroit (Zimmermann 7-2), 4:10 p.m. Kansas City (Volquez 5-4) at Cleveland (Salazar 5-3), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Dickey 2-6) at Boston (Price 7-1), 4:10 p.m. Seattle (Walker 2-5) at Texas (Darvish 1-0), 5:05 p.m. A's (Hahn 2-2) at Houston (Fister 4-3), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 2-3) at Minnesota (Nolasco 2-3), 5:10 p.m. Saturday's games L.A. Angels at Pittsburgh, 1:05 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 1:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 1:10 p.m. A's at Houston, 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m. Kansas City at Cleveland, 4:15 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 4:15 p.m. Seattle at Texas, 6:05 p.m. Basketball NBA PLAYOFF GLANCE NBA FINALS Thursday, June 2: Golden State 104, Cleveland 89, Golden State leads 1-0 Sunday, June 5: Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. Wednesday, June 8: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Friday, June 10: Golden State at Cleve- land, 6 p.m. x-Monday, June 13: Cleveland at Golden State, 6 p.m. x-Thursday, June 16: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Sunday, June 19: Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. Warriors 104, Cavaliers 89 CAVALIERS (89) James 9-21 3-4 23, T.Thompson 5-11 0-0 10, Love 7-17 1-1 17, Irving 7-22 11-12 26, Smith 1-3 0-0 3, Jefferson 1-3 1-1 3, J.Jones 0-0 0-0 0, Frye 0-1 2-2 2, Mozgov 0-0 0-0 0, Dellavedova 1-3 0-0 2, Williams 0-2 0-0 0, Shumpert 1-1 0-0 3, D.Jones 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-84 18-20 89. WARRIORS (104) Barnes 6-10 1-1 13, Green 5-11 4-4 16, Bogut 5-7 0-0 10, Curry 4-15 0-0 11, K.Thompson 4-12 0-1 9, Iguodala 5-9 0-0 12, Ezeli 1-4 0-0 2, Speights 0-2 0-0 0, Varejao 0-1 0-0 0, Livingston 8-10 4-4 20, Barbosa 5-5 0-0 11, Rush 0-1 0-0 0, Clark 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-87 9-10 104. Cleveland 24 19 25 21 — 89 Golden State 28 24 22 30 — 104 3-Point Goals: Cleveland 7-21 (James 2-4, Love 2-5, Shumpert 1-1, Smith 1-3, Irving 1-4, Frye 0-1, Dellavedova 0-1, Williams 0-1, Jefferson 0-1), Golden State 9-27 (Curry 3-8, Iguodala 2-4, Green 2-6, Barbosa 1-1, K.Thompson 1-5, Speights 0-1, Barnes 0-2); Fouled out: None; Re- bounds: Cleveland 47 (Love 13), Golden State 41 (Green 11); Assists: Cleveland 17 (James 9), Golden State 29 (Green 7); Total fouls: Cleveland 17, Golden State 16; Technicals: Golden State defensive three second; A: 19,596 (19,596). WNBA WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Minnesota 6 0 1.000 — Sparks 5 0 1.000 1/2 Dallas 3 3 .500 3 Phoenix 2 4 .333 4 San Antonio 1 3 .250 4 Seattle 2 4 .333 4 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Atlanta 5 1 .833 — Indiana 3 3 .500 2 Chicago 3 4 .429 21/2 New York 2 3 .400 21/2 Washington 2 5 .286 31/2 Co nn ec tic ut 1 5 . 16 7 4 Wednesday's games Indiana 85, Seattle 75 Chicago 86, Washington 78 Thursday's game San Antonio at Sparks, (n.) Friday's games Atlanta at Connecticut, 4 p.m. Indiana at New York, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Phoenix at Seattle, 7 p.m. NHL PLAYOFF GLANCE STANLEY CUP FINAL (B est -o f- 7; x -if n ece ssar y) San Jose vs. Pittsburgh Monday, May 30 Pittsburgh 3, San Jose 2, Pittsburgh leads series 1-0 Wednesday, June 1 Pittsburgh 2, San Jose 1 (OT), Pittsburgh leads series 2-0 Saturday, June 4 Pittsburgh at San Jose, 5 p.m. Monday, June 6 Pittsburgh at San Jose, 5 p.m. Thursday, June 9 x-San Jose at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Sunday, June 12 x-Pittsburgh at San Jose, 5 p.m. Wednesday, June 15 x-San Jose at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Soccer MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Colorado 8 2 4 28 17 10 FC Dallas 8 4 3 27 23 21 Salt Lake 7 4 2 23 23 21 Vancouver 6 6 3 21 23 25 Los Angeles 5 2 5 20 27 16 San Jose 5 4 5 20 16 16 Portland 5 6 4 19 23 25 Kansas City 5 8 2 17 14 18 Seattle 5 7 1 16 13 15 Houston 3 7 3 12 19 21 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Philadelphia 6 3 5 23 21 16 New York 6 7 1 19 24 20 Montreal 5 4 4 19 22 20 N.Y. City FC 4 5 6 18 22 29 Toronto FC 4 5 4 16 14 15 D.C. United 4 6 4 16 14 16 Orlando City 3 3 7 16 23 21 New England 3 4 7 16 19 25 Columbus 3 5 5 14 18 21 Chicago 2 5 5 11 10 14 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday's games Philadelphia 3, Columbus 2 Seattle 2, D.C. United 0 Portland 1, San Jose 0 Thursday, June 2 Salt Lake 3, N.Y. City FC 2 Houston at FC Dallas, 6 p.m. Kansas City at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. College softball NCAA WOMEN'S WORLD SERIES At ASA Hall of Fame Stadium Oklahoma City Double Elimination; x-if necessary Thursday, June 2 Georgia 5, Florida State 4 Auburn 10, UCLA 3 Game 3: Alabama (51-12) vs. Oklahoma (52-7), ppd. Game 4: Michigan (51-5) vs. LSU (50-16), ppd. Friday, June 3 Game 5: Georgia (46-18) vs. Auburn (55-10), 4 p.m. Game 6: Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 win- ner, 6:30 p.m. Golf TOURNAMENT PAR Thursday At Muirfield Village Golf Club Dublin, Ohio Purse: $8.5 million Yardage: 7,392; Par 72 (36-36) First Round Dustin Johnson........................ 31-33—64 -8 Brendan Steele.........................31-34—65 -7 Hudson Swafford.................... 29-37—66 -6 Danny Lee.................................34-32—66 -6 Matt Kuchar.............................32-34—66 -6 Jason Day .................................34-32—66 -6 David Hearn ............................. 35-31—66 -6 Jason Bohn...............................33-34—67 -5 Kevin Streelman......................33-34—67 -5 Luke Donald ............................. 31-36—67 -5 Emiliano Grillo ......................... 32-35—67 -5 Ryan Ruffels............................. 35-32—67 -5 Scott Pinckney ........................34-34—68 -4 Robert Streb ............................33-35—68 -4 Russell Henley.........................33-35—68 -4 K.J. Choi....................................32-36—68 -4 Keegan Bradley.......................35-33—68 -4 Patrick Reed.............................34-34—68 -4 Jason Dufner............................36-32—68 -4 Patrick Rodgers.......................34-34—68 -4 Harold Varner III .....................34-34—68 -4 Brian Harman ..........................33-35—68 -4 Charl Schwartzel ....................35-33—68 -4 Phil Mickelson .........................33-35—68 -4 Geoff Ogilvy.............................33-35—68 -4 David Lingmerth......................33-35—68 -4 Gary Woodland........................34-34—68 -4 Jon Curran................................34-34—68 -4 Daniel Berger........................... 33-36—69 -3 Zac Blair....................................35-34—69 -3 Rafa Cabrera Bello.................. 36-33—69 -3 John Huh................................... 34-35—69 -3 John Senden............................. 34-35—69 -3 Ben Martin ............................... 33-36—69 -3 Scott Brown ............................. 33-36—69 -3 Bud Cauley ............................... 35-34—69 -3 Jamie Lovemark ...................... 34-35—69 -3 Morgan Hoffmann ...................37-32—69 -3 Brian Stuard............................. 33-36—69 -3 Camilo Villegas ....................... 34-35—69 -3 Webb Simpson......................... 33-36—69 -3 Jim Furyk .................................. 34-35—69 -3 Marc Leishman........................ 33-36—69 -3 Lucas Glover.............................33-37—70 -2 Anirban Lahiri...........................35-35—70 -2 Tony Finau.................................33-37—70 -2 Alex Cejka..................................35-35—70 -2 Stuart Appleby .........................37-33—70 -2 Scott Piercy ..............................34-36—70 -2 Ryan Moore...............................33-37—70 -2 Jordan Spieth............................35-35—70 -2 Bill Haas.....................................34-36—70 -2 William McGirt .........................35-35—70 -2 Roberto Castro.........................36-34—70 -2 Shawn Stefani...........................34-36—70 -2 Paul Casey.................................32-38—70 -2 Adam Hadwin ...........................37-33—70 -2 Jonas Blixt.................................34-37—71 -1 Kevin Na.....................................34-37—71 -1 Francesco Molinari..................34-37—71 -1 George McNeill.........................34-37—71 -1 Byeong Hun An.........................35-36—71 -1 Johnson Wagner.......................36-35—71 -1 Soren Kjeldsen .........................35-36—71 -1 Smylie Kaufman.......................36-35—71 -1 Vaughn Taylor...........................35-36—71 -1 Rory McIlroy .............................34-37—71 -1 Ethan Tracy...............................33-38—71 -1 Si Woo Kim ................................37-34—71 -1 Ricky Barnes.............................35-36—71 -1 Matt Jones.................................35-36—71 -1 J.B. Holmes................................34-37—71 -1 Kyle Reifers...............................36-35—71 -1 Aaron Baddeley........................36-35—71 -1 Cameron Tringale ....................35-36—71 -1 Kevin Chappell..........................37-34—71 -1 Scott Langley............................35-36—71 -1 George Coetzee........................34-37—71 -1 Nathan Holman ........................35-36—71 -1 Daniel Summerhays .................34-38—72 E Peter Malnati.............................35-37—72 E Bubba Watson...........................36-36—72 E Rod Pampling.............................35-37—72 E Ken Duke.....................................36-36—72 E Jason Gore..................................35-37—72 E Thomas Aiken............................37-35—72 E Bryson DeChambeau ...............34-38—72 E Charles Howell III......................34-38—72 E Chez Reavie................................36-36—72 E Jason Kokrak .............................36-36—72 E Jim Herman................................35-37—72 E Kevin Kisner...............................34-38—72 E Brendon Todd ............................33-39—72 E Freddie Jacobson......................36-36—72 E Thorbjorn Olesen......................35-37—72 E Fabian Gomez..........................36-37—73 +1 Brendon de Jonge .................. 34-39—73 +1 Spencer Levin..........................36-37—73 +1 Mark Hubbard .........................36-37—73 +1 Patton Kizzire..........................36-37—73 +1 Chris Kirk..................................36-37—73 +1 Russell Knox............................ 34-39—73 +1 Wes Homan............................. 38-35—73 +1 John Hahn................................ 34-39—73 +1 Carlos Ortiz............................. 36-38—74 +2 Hideki Matsuyama................. 34-40—74 +2 Tennis FRENCH OPEN RESULTS Thursday At Stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $35.9 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles MEN Qu ar te rfi na ls Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Tomas Berdych (7), Czech Republic, 6-3, 7-5, 6-3. Dominic Thiem (13), Austria, def. David Go ff in ( 12 ), B el gi um , 4 -6 , 7 -6 ( 7) , 6 -4 , 6 -1 . WOMEN Quarterfinals Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, def. Timea Bacsinszky (8), Switzerland, 7-5, 6-2. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE Friday MLB NATIONAL LEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog at Chicago -225/+205 Arizona at Philadelphia -115/+105 Milwaukee New York -170/+158 at Miami Washington -152/+142 at Cincinnati San Francisco -113/+103 at St. Louis at Los Angeles -215/+195 Atlanta at San Diego -135/+125 Colorado Friday AMERICAN LEAGUE at Baltimore -113/+103 New York at Detroit -140/+130 Chicago at Cleveland -153/+143 Kansas City at Boston -177/+165 Toronto at Texas -138/+128 Seattle at Houston -165/+155 Oakland Tampa Bay -120/+110 at Minnesota INTERLEAGUE at Pittsburgh -172/+160 LA Angels NHL Saturday Favorite Line Underdog at San Jose -140/+130 Pittsburgh Transactions BASEBALL American League Baltimore Orioles: Selected the contract of LHP Brian Duensing from Norfolk (IL). Optioned RHP Mike Wright to Norfolk. Boston Red Sox: Recalled RHP Noe Ramirez from Pawtucket (IL). Optioned RHP Joe Kelly to Pawtucket. Cleveland Indians: Activated RHP Carlos Carrasco from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Mike Clevinger to Columbus (IL). Oakland Athletics: Optioned LHP Eric Surkamp to Nashville (PCL). Seattle Mariners: Recalled RHP Cody Martin from Tacoma (PCL). Designated RHP Joel Peralta for assignment. National League Atlanta Braves: Placed INF Gordon Beckham on the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Brandon Snyder from Gwinnett (IL). San Diego Padres: Recalled RHP Colin Rea from El Paso (PCL). Optioned RHP Leonel Campos to El Paso. San Francisco Giants: Placed OF Hunter Pence on the 15-day DL. Recalled OF Mac Williamson from Sacramento (PCL). American Association Gary Southshore Railcats: Released LHP Jake Eaton. Joplin Blasters: Signed INF Cory Morales. Lincoln Saltdogs: Signed RHPs Casey Collins and Taylor Elman. Frontier League Schaumburg Boomers: Signed RHP A.J. Quintero. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA: Announced Toronto C Bismack Biyombo will be suspended without pay for the opener of the 2016-17 season for accumulation of flagrant foul points in the playoffs. New York Knicks: Named Jeff Hornacek coach. FOOTBALL National Football League Arizona Cardinals: Signed G Jake Bern- stein and WR Marquis Bundy. Re-signed S Tyrequek Zimmerman. Detroit Lions: Signed K Devon Bell. Waived P Kyle Christy. Jacksonville Jaguars: Signed G Patrick Omameh. Released OL Patrick Miller. New York Jets: Signed G Mike Liedtke. Waived OT Luke Marquardt. Seattle Seahawks: Waived CB Jamal Marshall. Signed LB Kyle Coleman. HOCKEY National Hockey League New York Islanders: Agreed to terms with Casey Cizikas on a five-year con- tract extension. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 2016 2 B