Red Bluff Daily News

July 09, 2016

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AUTORACING IndyCar Series, Iowa Corn Indy 300, Qualifying: noon,NBCSN. NASCAR Sprint Cup Se- ries, Quaker State 400: 4:30p.m., NBCSN. BASEBALL Detroit Tigers at Toronto Blue Jays: 10a.m., MLB. Arizona Diamondbacks at San Francisco Giants: 1 p.m., CSNBA. New York Yankees at Cleveland Indians: 1p.m., FS1. Oakland Athletics at Houston Astros: 1p.m., CSN. San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers: 4p.m., (20). Minnesota Twins at Texas Rangers or Philadelphia Phillies at Colorado Rock- ies: 7p.m., MLB. BASKETBALL NBA Summer League, Philadelphia 76ers vs. Los Angeles Lakers: 5:30 p.m., ESPN2. NBA Summer League, San Antonio Spurs vs. Golden State Warriors: 7:30p.m., ESPN2. BOXING Premier Champions, Mario Barrios vs. Devis Boschiero: 6p.m., ESPN. CYCLING UCI, Tour de France, Stage 9, Vielha Val d'Aran to Andorra-Arcalis: 3:30 a.m., NBCSN. FOOTBALL High School, The Open- ing: 5p.m., ESPNU. GOLF EPGA, Scottish Open, Round 3: 6:30a.m., GOLF. EPGA, Scottish Open, Round 3: 9a.m., (3, 24). Web.com, Health Chal- lenge, Round 3: 10a.m., GOLF. USGA, U.S. Women's Open, Round 3: Noon, (20). PGA Tour Champions, Dick's Sporting Goods Open, Round 2: 1p.m., GOLF. HORSE RACING Belmont Oaks Invita- tional, Breeder's Cup, Challenge Series: 1:30 p.m., (3, 24). MOTORCYCLE RACING AMA, Motocross, South- wick National: 12:30p.m., (3, 24). SOCCER FIFA, Women's Interna- tional Friendly, South Africa vs. United States: 10:30a.m., FS1. MLS, Los Angeles Galaxy at Seattle Sounders: noon, ESPN. TENNIS ITF, Wimbledon, Women's Final: 6a.m., ESPN. TRACK AND FIELD U.S. Olympic Trials, Men's 110-meter Hurdles, 200, 5,000: 8p.m., (3, 24). RADIO Great West League baseball, Chico Heat at Marysville Gold Sox: 6:45 p.m., 101.7FM. Ontheair PeteSamprasandWilliam Renshaw (who played in the 1800s) with seven ti- tles at Wimbledon, most recently in 2012, and was the runner-up to Djokovic the past two years. Maybe this time Federer ran out of steam, forced to play 10 sets in his last two matches, including a quar- terfinal comeback from two sets down against Marin Cilic on Wednesday. Two years ago, Federer got past Raonic in straight sets in the Wimbledon semifinals. This time, Fe- derer flinched the way he seemingly never used to. Serving to get to a tie- breaker at 6-5 in the fourth set,Federerwentup40-love. After a forehand winner by Raonic, the unthinkable: Those back-to-back double- faultstoletRaonicbackinto thegame.Eventually,Raonic took advantage of a soft vol- ley to deliver a down-the- line backhand passing win- ner, breaking for the first timesincethematch'sfourth game — which ended with a double-fault by Federer — andsendingthesemifinalto a fifth set. "I can't believe I served a double-fault twice. Un- explainable for me, re- ally," Federer said. "Very sad about that and angry at myself because never should I allow him to get out of that set that easily." He went up a break at 3-1 in the fifth by winning the game in which Federer tripped — and contributed yet another double-fault. "I hope it's not so bad. I walked it off. I was able to finish," Federer said. "But I don't slip a lot. I don't ever fall down. It was a differ- ent fall for me than I've ever had." Asked how badly he might have been injured, Federer replied: "I don't know yet. I don't even want to know. I just felt not the same afterwards." This has been a difficult season for Federer, who never needed an operation until having his knee's torn cartilage repaired in Feb- ruary. He's also had back is- sues, missed the French Open to end a 65-appear- ance streak at majors, and came to Wimbledon with- out a title in 2016. "You're playing who Roger is today," Raonic said, "not who he's been the past few years." Tennis FROM PAGE 1 Greg Van Avermaet of Bel- gium. The 23-year-old Yates also earned the white jer- sey as the Tour's highest- placed young rider after officials took the finish- ing times three kilometers from the end of the 101- mile leg from L'Isle-Jour- dain to Lac de Payolle. "It won't make a big dif- ference because there was a downhill and flat portion before the finish," said Thi- erry Gouvenou, the Tour technical director. "It was a major incident, but we have the means to deal with it." Van Avermaet, who was in a breakaway with Cum- mings, held on to the over- all leader's yellow jersey he claimed two days ear- lier. Overall favorites Chris Froome and Nairo Quin- tana finished in the main pack. Froome, Quintana, and other riders had to lift the crumpled arch — known as the "flamme rouge" for the red flag it holds — off the ground and slip their bikes underneath it. Julian Alaphilippe is third in the overall stand- ings, 5:51 behind, with Ale- jandro Valverde fourth, 5:53 back. "I did not plan to be in a breakaway," Van Aver- maet said. "I'm not a good climber, I'm a classic rider, and the big favorites did not see me as a threat." Thibaut Pinot, consid- ered one of the top French contenders, was dropped on the Aspin. All 198 riders started the stage, marking the first time the entire peloton was still racing this late in the Tour in 103 editions. Cycling FROM PAGE 1 Given the 2014 champi- on's consistency this sea- son, Harvick seems likely to figure it out. Harvick hasn't won since the fourth race at Phoenix, but has posted 13 top-10 finishes in 17 starts. He has led the points after the past eight races but has generated less buzz com- pared to counterparts such as Keselowski or defending champion Kyle Busch, who are tied with a series-best three wins. Harvick thinks his steady results will trans- late into victories. "We are cleaning a lot of things up as we go from week to week," he said, "and hopefully we are ready as we get into the Chase and have every- thing hitting on all cylin- ders. I feel good about the performance and good about the progress that we have made with adjust- ing and adapting and the things that we have been able to achieve have been OK. Hopefully we can keep making them better." The rest of the top 10: Kurt Busch (Chevy); Joey Logano (Ford); Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Carl Edwards and Kyle Busch in Toyotas; Martin Truex Jr. (Toyota); rookie Chase El- liott (Chevy); Jimmie John- son (Chevy) and Denny Hamlin (Toyota). SECOND FIDDLE John- son and Kurt Busch will race in backup Chevys af- ter wrecking their primary cars. Johnson's No. 48 got loose in turn 4 in the morn- ing session and smacked the outside wall, sustain- ing heavy damage after posting the second-fast- est speed of 188.121 mph. Busch hit the wall in the final evening practice and went to his backup No. 41 Chevy. Both drivers will move to the back of the field per NASCAR rules. MAKER'S MARK Toyota and Chevy each has four spots in the top 10 with seven drivers coming from three teams. Harvick is joined by Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kurt Busch, while Johnson has company in Hendrick Mo- torsports stablemate El- liott. Hamlin, Edwards and Kyle Busch will represent Joe Gibbs Racing. ONTHEVERGE Keselowski is tied with Kyle Busch for the most Kentucky wins with two each. NASCAR FROM PAGE 1 my season was going so well. But this stuff hap- pens." Allyson Felix took to the track well before the rain hit, and coasted through her 200-meter qualifying heat in 22.93 seconds. It was her first race in nearly a year at her favorite dis- tance. She said "nothing's really changed" with her aching right ankle, despite four days of rest. "Just trying to see how it does on the curve, and all that," she said. Shortly after her race, the sky opened, and all the math changed. The dis- cus and pole vault compe- titions were delayed. The 100-meter hurdle semifi- nals turned into even more of an adventure than they usually are. "I couldn't see through my race," said Nia Ali, who got safely through the semifinal, then finished third in the final, too, to make the Olympics. Also going is Tavis Bai- ley, who finished second in discus — one of the most competitive contests on the card. "When rain drops are hitting the discus in your hand, that will get to you," Bailey said. Not so fortunate was de- fending national champion Jared Schuurmans, who finished fifth. Others with decent chances who didn't make the team included high jumpers Jesse Williams, the 2011 world champion, and Randall Cunningham, who was hoping to join his sister, Vashti, on the trip to Brazil. "When you landed on the mat, you landed in pud- dles," said Cunningham, who does the bulk of his training in bone-dry Las Vegas. "Your whole body was soaked." Such is life in track and field, but this is the no-ex- cuses world of U.S. Olym- pic qualifying, where the top three finishers make it and no exceptions are made for injuries, past performances — or weather. Nobody felt worse than Harper-Nelson, who burst onto the scene eight years ago at the Bird's Nest in Beijing, crossing the line first after her more-bal- lyhooed teammate, Lolo Jones, tripped on the sec- ond-to-last barrier. Track FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Giants 54 33 .621 _ Los Angeles 48 40 .545 61/2 Colorado 39 46 .459 14 San Diego 38 48 .442 151/2 Arizona 38 49 .437 16 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Chicago 52 34 .605 _ Pittsburgh 45 42 .517 71/2 St. Louis 44 42 .512 8 Milwaukee 38 47 .447 131/2 Cincinnati 32 55 .368 201/2 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 52 36 .591 _ New York 47 39 .547 4 Miami 45 41 .523 6 Philadelphia 40 47 .460 111/2 Atlanta 30 57 .345 211/2 Th ur s da y' s g ames St. Louis 5, Pittsburgh 1 N.Y. Mets 9, Washington 7 Atlanta 4, Chicago Cubs 3, 11 innings Colorado 11, Philadelphia 2 San Diego 6, L.A. Dodgers 0 Friday's games Pittsburgh 8, Chicago Cubs 4 Miami 3, Cincinnati 1 Washington 3, N.Y. Mets 1 Atlanta 11, Chicago White Sox 8 Milwaukee 4, St. Louis 3 San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, (n.) Arizona at Giants, (n.) Saturday's games Atlanta (De La Cruz 0-2) at Chicago Wh it e S ox ( Qu in ta na 6 -8 ), 1 1: 10 a .m . St. Louis (Martinez 7-6) at Milwaukee (Anderson 4-9), 11:10 a.m. Arizona (Ray 4-7) at Giants (Peavy 5-7), 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Lamb 1-5) at Miami (Conley 5-5), 1:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Lester 9-4) at Pittsburgh (Kuhl 1-0), 4:15 p.m. San Diego (Perdomo 3-3) at L.A. Dodgers (McCarthy 1-0), 4:15 p.m. Washington (Scherzer 9-6) at N.Y. Mets (Verrett 3-5), 4:15 p.m. Philadelphia (Eickhoff 6-9) at Colorado (Anderson 0-3), 5:40 p.m. Sunday's games Cin ci nna ti a t M ia mi , 1 0: 10 a .m . Washington at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m. Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, 10:35 a.m. Atlanta at Chicago White Sox, 11:10 a.m. St. Louis at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m. Philadelphia at Colorado, 1:10 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 1:10 p.m. Arizona at Giants, 5:00 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Texas 54 34 .614 _ Houston 47 40 .540 61/2 Seattle 44 43 .506 91/2 Los Angeles 37 50 .425 161/2 A's 37 50 .425 161/2 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 52 34 .605 _ Detroit 45 42 .517 71/2 Kansas City 44 42 .512 8 Chicago 44 42 .512 8 Minnesota 30 56 .349 22 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Baltimore 49 36 .576 _ Toronto 50 39 .562 1 Boston 47 38 .553 2 New York 42 44 .488 71/2 Tampa Bay 34 52 .395 151/2 Thursday's games L.A. Angels 5, Tampa Bay 1 Toronto 5, Detroit 4 N.Y. Yankees 5, Cleveland 4 Minnesota 10, Texas 1 A's 3, Houston 1 Kansas City 4, Seattle 3 Friday's games L.A. Angels 9, Baltimore 5 Toronto 6, Detroit 0 Boston 6, Tampa Bay 5 Cleveland 10, N.Y. Yankees 2 Texas 6, Minnesota 5 Atlanta 11, Chicago White Sox 8 Houston 10, A's 9 Seattle 3, Kansas City 2 Saturday's games Detroit (Boyd 0-2) at Toronto (Sanchez 9-1), 10:07 a.m. Atlanta (De La Cruz 0-2) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 6-8), 11:10 a.m. L.A. Angels (Tropeano 3-2) at Baltimore (Gallardo 3-1), 1:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Moore 5-5) at Boston (Por- cello 10-2), 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 5-6) at Cleveland (Salazar 10-3), 1:10 p.m. A's (Graveman 4-6) at Houston (McCull- ers 4-2), 1:10 p.m. Seattle (Miley 6-5) at Kansas City (Volquez 7-8), 1:15 p.m. Minnesota (Nolasco 3-7) at Texas (Mar- tinez 1-2), 6:05 p.m. Sunday's games Detroit at Toronto, 10:07 a.m. N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 10:10 a.m. L.A. Angels at Baltimore, 10:35 a.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, 10:35 a.m. Atlanta at Chicago White Sox, 11:10 a.m. A's at Houston, 11:10 a.m. Seattle at Kansas City, 11:15 a.m. Minnesota at Texas, 12:05 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE LEADERS Batting Murphy, Washington, .346; LeMahieu, Colorado, .336; Ramos, Washington, .333; Braun, Milwaukee, .322; Realmuto, Miami, .320; Diaz, St. Louis, .319; Marte, Pittsburgh, .318; Gonzalez, Colorado, .318; Segura, Arizona, .317; Prado, Miami, .314. Runs Bryant, Chicago, 69; Myers, San Diego, 61; Seager, Los Angeles, 59; Arenado, Colorado, 59; Zobrist, Chicago, 57; Gonzalez, Colorado, 56; Carpenter, St. Louis, 56; Diaz, St. Louis, 55; Rendon, Washington, 54; Ozuna, Miami, 52. RBI Arenado, Colorado, 70; Bryant, Chicago, 64; Bruce, Cincinnati, 62; Rizzo, Chicago, 61; Lamb, Arizona, 61; Duvall, Cincin- nati, 59; Myers, San Diego, 59; Murphy, Washington, 59; Kemp, San Diego, 58; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 58. Home runs Bryant, Chicago, 25; Arenado, Colorado, 23; Duvall, Cincinnati, 22; Story, Colo- rado, 21; Cespedes, New York, 21; Carter, Milwaukee, 20; Lamb, Arizona, 20; Rizzo, Chicago, 20; Myers, San Diego, 19; Stan- ton, Miami, 19; Harper, Washington, 19. Stolen bases Villar, Milwaukee, 28; Marte, Pittsburgh, 25; Hamilton, Cincinnati, 22; Upton Jr., San Diego, 19; Segura, Arizona, 15; My- ers, San Diego, 14; Harrison, Pittsburgh, 14; Smith, Atlanta, 14; Jankowski, San Diego, 13; Herrera, Philadelphia, 12. Pitching Cueto, San Francisco, 13-1; Arrieta, Chicago, 12-3; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 11- 2; Strasburg, Washington, 11-0; Greinke, Arizona, 10-3; Fernandez, Miami, 10-4; Lester, Chicago, 9-4; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 9-4; Scherzer, Washington, 9-6; Syndergaard, New York, 9-3. ERA Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.79; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 2.09; Arrieta, Chicago, 2.33; Syndergaard, New York, 2.41; Cueto, San Francisco, 2.47; Pomeranz, San Diego, 2.47; Hendricks, Chicago, 2.55; deGrom, New York, 2.61; Lester, Chicago, 2.67; Fernandez, Miami, 2.69. Strikeouts Scherzer, Washington, 155; Fernandez, Miami, 146; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 145; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 132; Syndergaard, New York, 123; Strasburg, Washington, 123; Pomeranz, San Diego, 115; Cueto, San Francisco, 115; Arrieta, Chicago, 115; Lackey, Chicago, 111. Saves Familia, New York, 31; Melancon, Pitts- burgh, 26; Ramos, Miami, 25; Jansen, Los Angeles, 25; Gomez, Philadelphia, 23; Jeffress, Milwaukee, 23; Casilla, San Francisco, 20; Ziegler, Arizona, 18; Papelbon, Washington, 17; Rodney, Miami, 17. AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS Batting Altuve, Houston, .346; Ortiz, Boston, .337; Bogaerts, Boston, .332; Escobar, Anaheim, .327; Trout, Anaheim, .321; Nunez, Minnesota, .321; Machado, Baltimore, .321; Desmond, Texas, .319; Martinez, Detroit, .313; Cano, Seattle, .311. Runs Donaldson, Toronto, 79; Betts, Boston, 72; Kinsler, Detroit, 71; Trout, Anaheim, 64; Bogaerts, Boston, 64; Altuve, Hous- ton, 64; Desmond, Texas, 63; Davis, Bal- timore, 62; Springer, Houston, 62; Cano, Seattle, 60; Machado, Baltimore, 60. RBI Encarnacion, Toronto, 77; Ortiz, Boston, 69 ; T ru mb o, B alt im or e, 6 4; D onal ds on , Toronto, 60; Betts, Boston, 58; Pujols, Anaheim, 58; Cruz, Seattle, 58; Napoli, Cleveland, 57; Cano, Seattle, 56; Seager, Seattle, 56; Davis, Baltimore, 56; Trout, Anaheim, 56. Home runs Trumbo, Baltimore, 26; Frazier, Chi- cago, 23; Cruz, Seattle, 23; Donaldson, Toronto, 22; Encarnacion, Toronto, 22; Davis, Baltimore, 21; Ortiz, Boston, 20; Cano, Seattle, 20; Santana, Cleveland, 19; Springer, Houston, 19; Beltran, New York, 19; Machado, Baltimore, 19; Davis, Oakland, 19. Stolen bases Davis, Cleveland, 22; Altuve, Houston, 22; Nunez, Minnesota, 20; Ellsbury, New York, 16; Desmond, Texas, 15; Trout, Anaheim, 15; Burns, Oakland, 14; Lindor, Cleveland, 13; Betts, Boston, 13; Gard- ner, New York, 12; Dyson, Kansas City, 12; Andrus, Texas, 12. Pitching Sale, Chicago, 14-2; Tillman, Baltimore, 11-2; Happ, Toronto, 11-3; Salazar, Cleveland, 10-3; Porcello, Boston, 10-2; Wright, Boston, 10-5; Zimmermann, Detroit, 9-4; Sanchez, Toronto, 9-1; Tomlin, Cleveland, 9-2; Fulmer, Detroit, 9-2; Hamels, Texas, 9-2. ERA Salazar, Cleveland, 2.36; Wright, Boston, 2.68; Hamels, Texas, 2.93; Estrada, To- ronto, 2.93; Sale, Chicago, 2.93; Sanchez, Toronto, 2.94; Quintana, Chicago, 3.06; Tanaka, New York, 3.12; Lewis, Texas, 3.21; Bauer, Cleveland, 3.30. Strikeouts Price, Boston, 130; Archer, Tampa Bay, 127; Verlander, Detroit, 120; Sale, Chica- go, 118; Kluber, Cleveland, 114; Salazar, Cle ve la nd , 1 13 ; P in ed a, N ew Y or k, 1 13 ; Smyly, Tampa Bay, 108; Hamels, Texas, 105; Kennedy, Kansas City, 103. Saves Britton, Baltimore, 25; Robertson, Chi- cago, 23; Rodriguez, Detroit, 23; Cishek, Seattle, 20; Davis, Kansas City, 19; Colome, Tampa Bay, 19; Osuna, Toronto, 18; Allen, Cleveland, 18; Chapman, New York, 17; Dyson, Texas, 17; Kimbrel, Boston, 17; Madson, Oakland, 17. Basketball WNBA WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Sparks 17 1 .944 — Minnesota 15 4 .789 21/2 Dallas 9 11 .450 9 Phoenix 8 11 .421 91/2 Seattle 7 12 .368 101/2 San Antonio 5 14 .263 121/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB New York 14 6 .700 — Atlanta 10 9 .526 31/2 Washington 9 10 .474 41/2 Chicago 7 11 .389 6 Indiana 7 11 .389 6 Connecticut 5 13 .278 8 Thursday's games Connecticut 93, Minnesota 89, OT Friday's games Atlanta 95, Dallas 90, OT New York 88, Chicago 85 Seattle 78, San Antonio 68 Indiana at Phoenix, (n.) Saturday's games Dallas at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Soccer MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T PtsGF GA FC Dallas 10 5 4 34 30 24 Colorado 9 2 6 33 19 11 Salt Lake 8 5 4 28 28 27 Los Angeles 6 3 8 26 30 18 Kansas City 7 8 4 25 21 22 Vancouver 7 8 3 24 27 31 Portland 6 6 6 24 28 29 San Jose 5 5 7 22 19 20 Houston 4 8 6 18 23 25 Seattle 5 9 2 17 14 20 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T PtsGF GA N.Y. City FC 8 5 6 30 30 31 Philadelphia 7 6 5 26 29 26 Montreal 6 4 6 24 27 24 New York 7 9 2 23 28 25 D.C. United 5 6 6 21 17 17 Orlando City 4 4 9 21 28 29 Toronto FC 5 6 5 20 18 19 New England 4 7 7 19 23 32 Columbus 3 6 7 16 21 25 Chicago 3 7 5 14 15 20 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday's games N.Y. City FC 1, New England 0 Friday, July 8 Houston 0, Orlando City 0 FC Dallas at San Jose, (n.) Saturday, July 9 Los Angeles at Seattle, noon D.C. United at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Chicago at Toronto FC, 4:30 p.m. Columbus at New England, 4:30 p.m. Colorado at Vancouver, 7 p.m. Montreal at Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Sunday, July 10 Portland at New York, 3 p.m. N.Y. City FC at Kansas City, 5 p.m. Golf CHAMPIONS TOUR-DICK'S SPORTING GOODS Friday At En-Joie Golf Club Endicott, N.Y. Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,957; Par 72 First Round Scott Dunlap............................34-30—64 -8 Glen Day....................................33-33—66 -6 Bart Bryant ..............................32-34—66 -6 John Riegger ............................33-33—66 -6 Gibby Gilbert III.......................34-33—67 -5 Kevin Sutherland.....................34-33—67 -5 Paul Goydos ............................. 35-32—67 -5 Joe Durant................................ 35-32—67 -5 Miguel Angel Martin...............36-32—68 -4 Gary Hallberg ..........................35-33—68 -4 Stephen Ames .........................35-33—68 -4 Steve Lowery ...........................36-32—68 -4 Jim Carter.................................35-33—68 -4 Carlos Franco ..........................36-32—68 -4 Jay Haas....................................35-33—68 -4 Craig Parry...............................33-35—68 -4 John Daly ..................................34-34—68 -4 Gene Sauers..............................37-32—69 -3 Scott Verplank......................... 34-35—69 -3 Neal Lancaster........................34-35—69 -3 Jose Coceres............................ 36-33—69 -3 Wes Short, Jr............................35-34—69 -3 Tom Pernice Jr. ........................ 35-34—69 -3 Olin Browne .............................35-34—69 -3 Vijay Singh ................................37-32—69 -3 Mike Small.................................35-35—70 -2 Loren Roberts...........................35-35—70 -2 Dan Forsman.............................35-35—70 -2 John Inman................................34-36—70 -2 Steve Pate .................................35-35—70 -2 Brian Henninger.......................37-33—70 -2 John Huston ..............................35-35—70 -2 Lee Janzen.................................35-35—70 -2 David Frost................................36-34—70 -2 Fred Funk...................................36-34—70 -2 Michael Allen............................36-34—70 -2 Billy Andrade ............................35-35—70 -2 Cycling TOUR DE FRANCE RESULTS Friday At Lac de Payolle, France Seventh Stage 1. Stephen Cummings, Britain, Dimen- sion Data, 3:51:58. 2. Daryl Impey, South Africa, Orica- BikeExchange, 1:05 behind. 3. Daniel Navarro, Spain, Cofidis, Solu- tions Credits, same time. 4. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana Pro Team, 2:14. 5. Greg Van Avermaet, Belgium, BMC Racing Team, 3:04. Also 24. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing, same time. 41. Alex Howes, United States, Cannon- dale-Drapac, same time. 67. Lawson Craddock, United States, Cannondale-Drapac, 7:15. 72. Peter Stetina, United States, Trek- Segafredo, 7:55. 132. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC Racing Team, 18:15. OVERALL STANDINGS (After seven stages) 1. Greg Van Avermaet, Belgium, BMC Racing, 34:13:40. 2. Julian Alaphilippe, France, Etixx- QuickStep, 6:36. 3. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar, 6:38. 4. Joaqim Rodriguez, Spain, Katusha, 6:39. 5. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, 6:42. Also 49. Lawson Craddock, United States, Cannondale-Drapac, 18:23. 58. Peter Stetina, United States, Trek- Segafredo, 20:26. 81. Alex Howes, United States, Cannon- dale-Drapac, 32:59. Motorsports NASCAR-SPRINT CUP-QUAKER STATE 400 LINEUP Race Saturday At Kentucky Speedway Sp ar ta , K y. Lap length:1.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) NOTE:LINEUP 1. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet 2. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford 3. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet 4. (22) Joey Logano, Ford 5. (19) Carl Edwards, Toyota 6. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota 7. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota 8. (24) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet 9. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet 10. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota 11. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota 12. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet 13. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet 14. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet 15. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford 16. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet 17. (6) Trevor Bayne, Ford 18. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet 19. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet 20. (42) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet 21. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford 22. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet 23. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford 24. (27) Paul Menard, Chev- rolet 25. (15) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet 26. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford 27. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet 28. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet 29. (38) Landon Cassill, Ford 30. (95) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet 31. (23) David Ragan, Toyota 32. (44) Brian Scott, Ford 33. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet 34. (34) Chris Buescher, Ford 35. (83) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota 36. (98) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet 37. (46) Mi- chael Annett, Chevrolet 38. (32) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Ford 39. (55) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet 40. (30) Josh Wise, Chevrolet Tennis WIMBLEDON RESULTS Friday At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club London Purse: $38.4 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles MEN Semifinals Milos Raonic (6), Canada, def. Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 4-6, 7-5, 6-3. Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Tomas Berdych (10), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-3, 6-3. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE Saturday MLB NATIONAL LEAGUE Favorite Line Underdog St. Louis -153/+143 at Milwaukee at SFrancisco -150/+140 Arizona at Miami -187/+172 Cincinnati Chicago -154/+144 at Pittsburgh Washington -170/+158 at New York at Los Angeles -220/+200 San Diego at Colorado -138/+128 Philadelphia AMERICAN LEAGUE at Toronto OFF Detroit at Baltimore -130/+120 Los Angeles at Boston -160/+150 Tampa Bay at Cleveland -157/+147 New York at Houston -185/+170 Oakland at Kansas City -120/+110 Seattle at Texas -115/+105 Minnesota INTERLEAGUE at Chicago WS -157/+147 Atlanta Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball MLB: Named Ileana Pena as senior director, business communications. Suspended Oakland OF Coco Crisp one game for intentionally throwing his bat in the direction of home plate umpire D.J. Reyburn, which struck Reyburn on the foot, during a July 7 game at Houston. National League Boston Red Sox: Acquired INF-OF Mi- chael Martinez frome Cleveland for cash considerations. Designated INF Sean Coyle for assignment. Chicago Cubs: Signed RHP Thomas Hatch to a minor league contract. Pittsburgh Pirates: Recalled 1B Josh Bell from Indianapolis (IL). Optioned RHP Tyler Glasnow to Indianapolis. Washington Nationals: Recalled OF Michael A. Taylor and INF-OF Trea Turner from Syracuse (IL). Placed 1B Ryan Zim- merman on the 15-day Dl, retroactive to July 7. Optioned RHP Lucas Giolito to Syracuse. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA: Suspended Oklahoma City F Mitch McGary five games for violating the terms of the Nba/Nbpa Anti-Drug Program. Boston Celtics: Signed C Al Horford to a four-year contract. Chicago Bulls: Named Chip Schaefer as director of sports performance and Dr. Wendy Borlabi high performance coach. Promoted Shaun Hickombottom to senior manager of player development and team services. Detroit Pistons: Signed F Jon Leuer and G Ish Smith to multiyear contracts. Los Angeles Lakers: Signed C Timofey Mozgov to a multiyear contract. Memphis Grizzlies: Signed F Chandler Parsons to a multiyear contract. Milwaukee Bucks: Signed F Mirza Tele- tovic to a multiyear contract. Minnesota Timberwolves: Signed G Brandon Rush to a one-year contract. New York Knicks: Signed F Joakim Noah and G Courtney Lee to four-year contracts and G Brandon Jennings, C Marshall Plumlee and C Guillermo Her- nangomez to one-year contracts. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM SATURDAY, JULY 9, 2016 2 B

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