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fourth, the bats went si- lent for an inning with just one more run each in the fifth and a couple of runs for the visitors in the sixth and seventh. With the 76er's holding a 9-5 lead it appeared the Bulls would end up with a loss. The Bulls had other plans. Will Nelson started the hit parade with a lead off double, moved to third on a ground ball by John- son. Skjegstad walked fol- lowed by a sharp single to right by Allen, another sharp hit ball by Kinswor- thy scored the second run of the inning. Chavez, who stayed in the game after the sixth to play third base, walked to load the bases, N. Stacy entered the game to run for Chavez. Tris- ten Hobart came to plate and crushed a ball to deep left center scoring Allen and Kinsworthy. N. Stacy moved to third after a passed ball made it to the back stop while Cody Gil- lespie was at the plate. Gil- lespie eventually struck out and Gipson came to the plate with two outs, game tied with a runner on third. Gipson came in for relief of Chavez in the sev- enth inning and was now the pitcher of record. He did not waste any time and lined a base hit past a div- ing first baseman, scoring N. Stacy and capping off the five run rally and com- pleting a Saturday sweep of the visiting 76ers. Sunday's doubleheader against the visiting Corn- ing Braves saw another great day of baseball. Be- hind the great pitching of the Braves' #24 McK- inney, the visitors took the first game by a score of 4-1. The lone Bulls run was scored in the bottom of the first when Johnson lead off with a single and scored on error. Nelson started the game for the Bulls and pitched a solid 5 1/3 innings, giving up three runs with only two earned. D. Stacy, who has seen lim- ited time on the mound this summer, came in to re- lieve Nelson and recorded two strikeouts while giving up a run. Even after the loss, the Bulls came out scoring two early runs and keep- ing the second game close. With Robinson starting on the mound it appeared that he was going to cruise to a win. After he gave up two quick runs in the first he settled down and got two quick ground ball outs in the top of the second. He then gave up a 1-0 single to the Brave's Reeve Ev- ans, who was then gunned down by Austin Keffer be- hind the plate, ending the threat as the top of the order was coming to the plate. When Robinson took the mound in the third he was not the same, hitting three of the first four Braves he faced in the top of the in- ning and giving up a sin- gle, allowing the Braves to take the lead. Coates came in to relieve Robinson and pitched out of the jam in the third, but was not able to keep his momentum go- ing when he allowed four runs in the fourth. After getting the first two bat- ters to ground out to third Coates lost his composure, giving up a sharp single to the Braves' number nine hitter, then a walk, two hit batters and an infield sin- gle. Gipson came in to re- lieve a frustrated Coates and on one pitch got a ground ball out. Coates stayed in the game replacing Gipson in Centerfield, which proved to be a good move. After the Bulls scored two runs on no hits in the fourth, they still trailed 7-4 and in the bottom of the fifth, with Coates leading off, he put a charge into the first pitch he saw and rallied the Bulls with a lead off dou- ble to deep left center. An error by the Braves' short- stop and four more hits, one each by Gipson, Kef- fer, McClellan and Allen, scored five runs and gave the Bulls a 9-7 lead. The Braves scored a run in the sixth to pull within one before the 2-hour time limit put an end to the game and the Bulls notched the come from be- hind win. Or so everyone thought. The umpires called the game, but the teams de- cided, with support from the crowd, to play the final inning with no officials. It was agreed that the play- ers would officiate the rest of the game. With Keffer, now catch- ing and calling balls and strikes, the Braves wasted no time starting off with a lead off single by Noah Miller, another sharp hit single by Trevor Shannon and it appeared the Braves were going to rally. After a walk to Dalton Manning loaded the bases, Spencer McKinney got an infield hit scoring Miller. With bases still loaded, Devin Wunsch lined out to the Bulls' Allen who quickly threw to first doubling off McKinney and holding the other runners. Another walk, this time to Brady Meeds, loaded the bases again. Gipson was able to settle down and get Mike Wold to fly out to McClellan in right field to end the rally with the game tied. In the bottom of the sev- enth, after a fly out to sec- ond base, Nelson drove a deep line drive to the left center gap. With the poten- tial winning run in scor- ing position, the Brave's pitcher threw carefully around McClellan and de- livered four straight balls. Allen stepped to plate and on the first pitch lined a shot to the gap in left scor- ing Nelson and giving the Bulls the win. The Bulls head to Chico on Tuesday, July 12, to play against the Paradise Storm, before leaving on Wednesday to begin play in the All World Baseball World Series to be held in the Carson City and Reno area. The Bulls will finish their season the follow- ing week by hosting Par- adise on Tuesday, July 19, for a twin set beginning at 5 p.m. at Red Bluff High School, then head to either Tahoe or Elk Grove for a year end tournament. Bulls FROMPAGE1 the starter or considered a little more highly." AL manager Ned Yost's batting order has Houston second baseman Jose Al- tuve leading off, followed by Angels center fielder Mike Trout, Baltimore third baseman Manny Machado, Boston desig- nated hitter David Ortiz, Red Sox shortstop Xander Bogaerts, Royals first base- man Eric Hosmer, Red Sox right fielder Mookie Betts, Kansas City catcher Salva- dor Perez and Boston left fielder Jackie Bradley Jr. Collins has Cubs second baseman Ben Zobrist lead- ing off, followed by Wash- ington right fielder Bryce Harper, Cubs third base- man Kris Bryant, San Di- ego's Wil Myers at desig- nated hitter, San Fran- cisco catcher Buster Posey, Cubs first baseman An- thony Rizzo, Miami cen- ter fielder Marcell Ozuna, Colorado left fielder Carlos Gonzalez and Cubs short- stop Addison Russell. Ozuna and Gonzalez are replacements for the Cubs' Dexter Fowler and the Mets' Yoenis Cespedes, who are hurt. Yost said Corey Klu- ber, Cole Hamels, Aaron Sanchez and Jose Quin- tana will follow Sale to the mound. The AL will be the home team for the game at Petco Park because this is the second straight year of at least four in which the NL will host the All-Stars. The AL has a 10-3 advantage since the All-Star Game has determined home-field advantage in the World Se- ries. "It's vitally important," said Yost, whose Royals swept the first two games at Kauffman Stadium last year. "We've got a room full of tremendously talented players and if we win this game it's going to affect somebody or somebodies in that room." Starters FROM PAGE 1 assists in right field. A new generation has taken over, led by Wash- ington's Bryce Harper, the Los Angeles Angels' Mike Trout and Cubs third base- man Kris Bryant — who is happy to see his old friends from University of San Diego days. The Na- tionals' Stephen Strasburg also is having reunion; he played for San Diego State. "He probably did more at San Diego State than I did for USD," Bryant said. Chicago has become a favorite second team, longtime losers trying to win the North Side's first championship in 108 years. "The Cubs are like the Cowboys. Wherever you go in the country, there's fans there," reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Jake Arrieta said about his team. "You go as far as you can west and as far as you can east, there's Cubs fans, and anywhere in-between." Boston also has its sup- porters around the world. The Red Sox, who ended an 86-year title drought in 2004 and have added two more, put six players on the AL team and four of them are starters. Des- ignated hitter David Or- tiz is retiring at the end of the season and will be making his 10th and final All-Star appearance, Ste- ven Wright, a 31-year-old knuckleballer, could fol- low the flame-throwers to the mound in the middle- to-late innings. "I feel like 95 is the new 90," Wright said of their mph velocity. "Every- body is coming in throw- ing 98, 100, and then you got somebody coming in throwing 75, and I'll drop it down to 60." San Francisco's Johnny Cueto starts for the NL, which has lost three in a row and 10 of 13 since the All-Star winner deter- mined home-field advan- tage for the World Series. That served Cueto well last fall, when he pitched a two-hitter for host Kan- sas City in Game 2 for a 2-0 lead of New York Mets, who never recovered. San Diego may not have won the World Series dur- ing its 48-year existence, but the Padres are a team of distinction: The only one not to have thrown a no-hitter, and famous for their golden yellow and brown color scheme in the 1970s under owner Ray Kroc, who also headed Mc- Donald's. Players wore jer- seys in the vintage Padres mustard-and-mud style for Monday's Home Run Derby. Of course, San Diego has been cruel to the Cubs. Back in 1984, they left Wrigley Field to the sound of Van Halen's "Jump" and headed west convinced they would play Detroit or Kansas City for the title. Cubs fans were giddy with a 2-0 lead in the best-of- five NL Championship Se- ries. "There was at least 100 brooms around our bus," recalled Gossage, the fu- ture Hall of Famer who got a six-out save in the Game 5 finale. But current players try to think only about the game in front of them. His- tory is for the fans. "That's something we don't really discuss very often," Arrieta said. Chicago got off to a 25-6 start and was 39-15 in early June. But the Cubs skidded into the break by losing 15 of their last 21 games. "We've got to play better than we have recently," Zo- brist said. With Rizzo, Zobrist, shortstop Addison Rus- sell and Bryant, the Cubs joined the 1963 St. Louis Cardinals as the only teams to start all four infielders in an All-Star Game — a fifth Chicago player, Dexter Fowler, was voted to the starting lineup but will miss out due to a hamstring injury. Rizzo led NL players with 3.2 million votes. "It's crazy to me, just be- cause of all the superstars in this game, and I do not classify myself as one of them," he said. "When that first voting came out, I was like, 'Is this a fluke? Was there a glitch?"' All-Star FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard MLB NATIONALLEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Giants 57 33 .633 _ Los Angeles 51 40 .560 61/2 Colorado 40 48 .455 16 San Diego 38 51 .427 181/2 Ar iz ona 3 8 52 . 42 2 19 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Chicago 53 35 .602 _ St. Louis 46 42 .523 7 Pittsburgh 46 43 .517 71/2 Milwaukee 38 49 .437 141/2 Cincinnati 32 57 .360 211/2 EAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Washington 54 36 .600 _ New York 47 41 .534 6 Miami 47 41 .534 6 Philadelphia 42 48 .467 12 Atlanta 31 58 .348 221/2 Sunday's games Miami 7, Cincinnati 3 Wa sh in gt on 3 , N .Y. M et s 2 Chicago Cubs 6, Pittsburgh 5 Atlanta 2, Chicago White Sox 0 St. Louis 5, Milwaukee 1 Philadelphia 10, Colorado 3 L.A. Dodgers 3, San Diego 1 Giants 4, Arizona 0 Monday Home Run Derby Tuesday All-Star Game, 4:30 p.m. Friday's games Texas at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Colorado at Atlanta, 4:35 p.m. Mi am i a t S t. L ou is , 5 :1 5 p .m . L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. Giants at San Diego, 7:40 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Texas 54 36 .600 _ Houston 48 41 .539 51/2 Seattle 45 44 .506 81/2 A's 38 51 .427 151/2 Los Angeles 37 52 .416 161/2 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 52 36 .591 _ Detroit 46 43 .517 61/2 Kansas City 45 43 .511 7 Chicago 45 43 .511 7 Minnesota 32 56 .364 20 EAS T D IVI SI ON W L Pct GB Baltimore 51 36 .586 _ Boston 49 38 .563 2 Toronto 51 40 .560 2 New York 44 44 .500 71/2 Tampa Bay 34 54 .386 171/2 Sunday's games Toronto 6, Detroit 1 N.Y. Yankees 11, Cleveland 7 Baltimore 4, L.A. Angels 2 Boston 4, Tampa Bay 0 Atlanta 2, Chicago White Sox 0 Houston 2, A's 1, 10 innings Seattle 8, Kansas City 5 Minnesota 15, Texas 5 Monday Home Run Derby Tuesday All-Star Game, 4:30 p.m. Friday's games Texas at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Kansas City at Detroit, 4:10 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Toronto at A's, 7:05 p.m. Houston at Seattle, 7:10 p.m. HOME RUN DERBY WINNERS 2016 — Giancarlo Stanton, Miami (Petco Park) 2015 — Todd Frazier, Cincinnati (Great American Ball Park) 2014 — Yoenis Cespedes, Oakland (Target Field) 2013 — Yoenis Cespedes, Oakland (Citi Field) 2012 — Prince Fielder, Detroit Tigers (Kauffman Stadium) 2011 — Robinson Cano, N.Y. Yankees (Chase Field) 2010 — David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox (Angel Stadium) 2009 — Prince Fielder, Milwaukee Brew- ers (Busch Stadium) 2008 — Justin Morneau, Minnesota Twins (Yankee Stadium) 2007 — Vladimir Guerrero, Los Angeles Angels (AT&T Park) 2006 — Ryan Howard, Philadelphia Phillies (PNC Park) 2005 — Bobby Abreu, Philadelphia Phillies (Comerica Park) ALL-STAR GAME LINEUPS Tuesday At P et co P ar k, S an D ie go National League Ben Zobrist, Chicago, 2B, .283, 13 HR, 47 RBI Bryce Harper, Washington, RF, .256, 19 HR, 52 RBI Kris Bryant, Chicago, 3B, .286, 25 HR, 65 RBI Wil Myers, San Diego, DH, .286, 19 HR, 60 RBI Buster Posey, San Francisco, C, .292, 11 HR, 42 RBI Anthony Rizzo, Chicago, 1B, .299, 21 HR, 63 RBI Marcell Ozuna, Miami, CF, .307, 17 HR, 47 RBI Carlos Gonzalez, Colorado, LF, .318, 19 HR, 54 RBI Addison Russell, Chicago, SS, .237, 11 HR, 51 RBI Jonny Cueto, San Francisco, P, 13-1, 2.47 ERA, 115 K American League Jose Altuve, Houston, 2B, .341, 14 HR, 51 RBI Mike Trout, L.A. Angels, CF, .322, 18 HR, 58 RBI Manny Machado, Baltimore, 3B, .318, 19 HR, 53 RBI David Ortiz, Boston, DH, .332, 22 HR, 72 RBI Xander Bogaerts, Boston, SS, .329, 10 HR, 56 RBI Eric Hosmer, Kansas City, 1B, .299, 13 HR, 49 RBI Mookie Betts, Boston, RF, .304, 18 HR, 59 RBI Salvador Perez, Kansas City, C, .283, 14 HR, 41 RBI Jackie Bradley, Jr., Boston, , LF, .296, 14 HR, 55 RBI Chris Sale, Chicago, P, 14-3, 3.38 ERA, 123 K Leaders NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting Murphy, Washington, .348; LeMahieu, Colorado, .334; Ramos, Washington, .330; Prado, Miami, .324; Gonzalez, Colo- rado, .318; Yelich, Miami, .317; Realmuto, Miami, .317; Marte, Pittsburgh, .316; Diaz, St. Louis, .315; Braun, Milwaukee, .312. Runs Bryant, Chicago, 73; Myers, San Diego, 61; Seager, Los Angeles, 60; Arenado, Colorado, 60; Zobrist, Chicago, 59; Gon- zalez, Colorado, 58; Diaz, St. Louis, 57; Carpenter, St. Louis, 56; Rizzo, Chicago, 54; Rendon, Washington, 54. RBI Arenado, Colorado, 70; Murphy, Washington, 66; Bryant, Chicago, 65; Bruce, Cincinnati, 63; Rizzo, Chicago, 63; Crawford, San Francisco, 61; Lamb, Ari- zona, 61; Duvall, Cincinnati, 61; Myers, San Diego, 60; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 58; Kemp, San Diego, 58. Hits Murphy, Washington, 117; Segura, Arizona, 110; Gonzalez, Colorado, 107; Prado, Miami, 106; Seager, Los Angeles, 105; LeMahieu, Colorado, 99; Ozuna, Mi- ami, 99; Marte, Pittsburgh, 99; Arenado, Colorado, 98; Myers, San Diego, 97; Herrera, Philadelphia, 97. Doubles Belt, San Francisco, 27; Murphy, Wash- ington, 25; Carpenter, St. Louis, 25; Jay, San Diego, 24; Polanco, Pittsburgh, 24; Arenado, Colorado, 24; Yelich, Miami, 23; Rizzo, Chicago, 23; Markakis, Atlanta, 22; Seager, Los Angeles, 22; Cozart, Cin- cinnati, 22; Diaz, St. Louis, 22; Piscotty, St. Louis, 22. Triples Lamb, Arizona, 7; Bruce, Cincinnati, 6; Hernandez, Philadelphia, 6; Hechavarria, Miami, 5; Panik, San Francisco, 5; Belt, San Francisco, 5; LeMahieu, Colorado, 5; Segura, Arizona, 5; Ozuna, Miami, 5; Revere, Washington, 5; Carpenter, St. Louis, 5. Home runs Bryant, Chicago, 25; Arenado, Colorado, 23; Duvall, Cincinnati, 23; Carter, Mil- waukee, 22; Rizzo, Chicago, 21; Story, Colorado, 21; Cespedes, New York, 21; Stanton, Miami, 20; Lamb, Arizona, 20; Gonzalez, Colorado, 19; Myers, San Diego, 19; Harper, Washington, 19. Stolen bases Villar, Milwaukee, 31; Marte, Pittsburgh, 30; Hamilton, Cincinnati, 22; Upton Jr., San Diego, 20; Segura, Arizona, 15; Myers, San Diego, 15; Smith, Atlanta, 14; Harrison, Pittsburgh, 14; Jankowski, San Diego, 14; Harper, Washington, 13. Pitching Cueto, San Francisco, 13-1; Arrieta, Chicago, 12-4; Strasburg, Washington, 12-0; Fernandez, Miami, 11-4; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 11-2; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 10-4; Scherzer, Washington, 10-6; Greinke, Arizona, 10-3; Samardzija, San Francisco, 9-5; Lester, Chicago, 9-4; Syndergaard, New York, 9-4. ERA Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.79; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 1.94; Pomeranz, San Diego, 2.47; Cueto, San Francisco, 2.47; Fernandez, Miami, 2.52; Hendricks, Chicago, 2.55; Syndergaard, New York, 2.56; deGrom, New York, 2.61; Strasburg, Washington, 2.62; Arrieta, Chicago, 2.68. Strikeouts Scherzer, Washington, 164; Fernandez, Miami, 154; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 146; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 145; Stras- burg, Washington, 132; Syndergaard, New York, 128; Arrieta, Chicago, 121; Lackey, Chicago, 120; Ray, Arizona, 115; Pomeranz, San Diego, 115; Cueto, San Francisco, 115. Saves Familia, New York, 31; Jansen, Los Angeles, 27; Melancon, Pittsburgh, 27; Ramos, Miami, 27; Gomez, Philadelphia, 24; Jeffress, Milwaukee, 23; Casilla, San Francisco, 21; Papelbon, Washington, 19; Rodney, Miami, 17; McGee, Colorado, 15. AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting Altuve, Houston, .341; Ortiz, Boston, .332; Bogaerts, Boston, .329; Trout, Ana- heim, .322; Desmond, Texas, .322; Nunez, Minnesota, .321; Machado, Baltimore, .318; Escobar, Anaheim, .317; Cano, Seattle, .313; Lindor, Cleveland, .306. Runs Donaldson, Toronto, 80; Betts, Boston, 75; Kinsler, Detroit, 71; Trout, Anaheim, 68; Altuve, Houston, 67; Desmond, Texas, 65; Bogaerts, Boston, 65; Cano, Seattle, 64; Davis, Baltimore, 64; Springer, Houston, 63. RBI Encarnacion, Toronto, 80; Ortiz, Boston, 72; Trumbo, Baltimore, 68; Donaldson, Toronto, 63; Seager, Seattle, 61; Napoli, Cleveland, 61; Pujols, Anaheim, 60; Betts, Boston, 59; Cruz, Seattle, 58; Cano, Seattle, 58; Davis, Baltimore, 58; Trout, Anaheim, 58. Hits Altuve, Houston, 119; Betts, Boston, 117; Bogaerts, Boston, 117; Cano, Seattle, 114; Desmond, Texas, 113; Machado, Baltimore, 109; Pedroia, Boston, 106; Trout, Anaheim, 104; Kinsler, Detroit, 103; Lindor, Cleveland, 103. Doubles Ortiz, Boston, 34; Machado, Baltimore, 29; Seager, Seattle, 26; Shaw, Boston, 26; Saunders, Toronto, 25; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 24; Altuve, Houston, 24; Schoop, Baltimore, 23; Betts, Boston, 23; Cano, Seattle, 23. Triples Eaton, Chicago, 7; Bradley Jr., Boston, 6; Andrus, Texas, 5; Donaldson, Toronto, 5; Naquin, Cleveland, 5; Ellsbury, New York, 5; Burns, Oakland, 4; Betts, Boston, 4; Miller, Tampa Bay, 4; Buxton, Minnesota, 4; Chisenhall, Cleveland, 4; Kipnis, Cleveland, 4. Home runs Trumbo, Baltimore, 28; Frazier, Chicago, 25; Encarnacion, Toronto, 23; Cruz, Seattle, 23; Donaldson, Toronto, 23; Davis, Baltimore, 22; Ortiz, Boston, 22; Cano, Seattle, 21; Santana, Cleveland, 20; Machado, Baltimore, 19; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 19; Semien, Oakland, 19; Springer, Houston, 19; Davis, Oakland, 19; Beltran, New York, 19. Stolen bases Davis, Cleveland, 24; Altuve, Houston, 23; Nunez, Minnesota, 22; Ellsbury, New York, 16; Betts, Boston, 15; Desmond, Texas, 15; Trout, Anaheim, 15; Burns, Oakland, 14; Lindor, Cleveland, 13; Andrus, Texas, 13. Pitching Sale, Chicago, 14-3; Happ, Toronto, 12-3; Tillman, Baltimore, 12-2; Porcello, Boston, 11-2; Wright, Boston, 10-5; Salazar, Cleveland, 10-3; Zimmermann, Detroit, 9-4; Fulmer, Detroit, 9-2; Kluber, Cleveland, 9-8; Price, Boston, 9-6. ERA Wright, Boston, 2.68; Salazar, Cleveland, 2.75; Estrada, Toronto, 2.93; Sanchez, Toronto, 2.97; Hamels, Texas, 3.21; Lewis, Texas, 3.21; Quintana, Chicago, 3.21; Tanaka, New York, 3.23; Bauer, Cleveland, 3.30; Happ, Toronto, 3.36. Strikeouts Price, Boston, 140; Archer, Tampa Bay, 130; Sale, Chicago, 123; Kluber, Cleve- land, 122; Verlander, Detroit, 120; Sala- zar, Cleveland, 118; Pineda, New York, 113; Hamels, Texas, 109; Smyly, Tampa Bay, 108; Quintana, Chicago, 105. Saves Britton, Baltimore, 27; Rodriguez, Detroit, 24; Robertson, Chicago, 23; Cishek, Seattle, 21; Colome, Tampa Bay, 19; Davis, Kansas City, 19; Dyson, Texas, 18; Allen, Cleveland, 18; Osuna, Toronto, 18; Ziegler, Boston, 18. Basketball WNBA WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Sparks 18 1 .947 — Minnesota 16 4 .800 21/2 Dallas 9 12 .429 10 Phoenix 8 13 .381 11 Seattle 7 13 .350 111/2 San Antonio 5 15 .250 131/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB New York 15 6 .714 — Atlanta 11 9 .550 31/2 Indiana 9 11 .450 51/2 Washington 9 11 .450 51/2 Chicago 8 11 .421 6 Connecticut 5 14 .263 9 Monday's games No games scheduled Tuesday's games Minnesota at San Antonio, 9:30 a.m. Wednesday's games Atlanta at New York, 8 a.m. Connecticut at Indiana, 9 a.m. Sparks at Chicago, 9:30 a.m. Washington at Phoenix, 12:30 p.m. Soccer MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T PtsGF GA FC Dallas 11 5 4 37 31 24 Colorado 9 2 7 34 21 13 Salt Lake 8 5 5 29 29 28 Los Angeles 7 3 8 29 31 18 Kansas City 8 8 4 28 24 23 Vancouver 7 8 4 25 29 33 Portland 6 6 7 25 28 29 San Jose 5 6 7 22 19 21 Houston 4 8 6 18 23 25 Seattle 5 10 2 17 14 21 EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T PtsGF GA N.Y. City FC 8 6 6 30 31 34 Philadelphia 8 6 5 29 32 26 Montreal 6 4 7 25 28 25 New York 7 9 3 24 28 25 Toronto FC 6 6 5 23 19 19 New England 5 7 7 22 26 33 D.C. United 5 7 6 21 17 20 Orlando City 4 4 9 21 28 29 Columbus 3 7 7 16 22 28 Chicago 3 8 5 14 15 21 No te : T hr ee p oi nt s f or v ic to ry , o ne p oi nt for tie. Sunday's games Portland 0, New York 0, tie Kansas City 3, N.Y. City FC 1 Wednesday, July 13 Toronto FC at Columbus, 4 p.m. Orlando City at New York, 4:30 p.m. Kansas City at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Seattle, 7:30 p.m. Montreal at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Salt Lake at Vancouver, 7:30 p.m. Golf WORLD GOLF RANKING 1. Jason Day AUS 13.29 2. Dustin Johnson USA 11.05 3. Jordan Spieth USA 10.96 4. Rory McIlroy NIR 9.13 5. Bubba Watson USA 7.16 6. Henrik Stenson SWE 6.97 7. Rickie Fowler USA 6.64 8. Adam Scott AUS 6.44 9. Danny Willett ENG 6.28 10. Branden Grace SAF 5.38 11. Justin Rose ENG 5.36 12. Sergio Garcia ESP 5.22 13. Patrick Reed USA 4.95 14. Louis Oosthuizen SAF 4.63 15. Matt Kuchar USA 4.31 16. Brooks Koepka USA 4.20 17. Hideki Matsuyama JPN 4.20 18. Zach Johnson USA 3.95 19. Phil Mickelson USA 3.83 20. Jim Furyk USA 3.81 21. Charl Schwartzel SAF 3.75 22. Chris Wood ENG 3.68 23. Brandt Snedeker USA 3.68 24. J.B. Holmes USA 3.68 25. Scott Piercy USA 3.49 26. Russell Knox SCO 3.46 27. Shane Lowry IRL 3.45 28. Rafa Cabrera Bello ESP 3.39 29. Paul Casey ENG 3.36 30. Kevin Kisner USA 3.32 31. Byeong-Hun An KOR 3.29 32. Kevin Chappell USA 3.20 33. Kevin Na USA 3.15 34. Daniel Berger USA 3.03 35. Bill Haas USA 3.03 36. Andy Sullivan ENG 3.02 37. Justin Thomas USA 3.02 38. Thongchai Jaidee THA 2.95 39. Lee Westwood ENG 2.94 40. Danny Lee NZL 2.93 41. K.T. Kim KOR 2.90 42. Charley Hoffman USA 2.90 43. Matthew Fitzpatrick ENG 2.84 44. Emiliano Grillo ARG 2.83 45. Marc Leishman AUS 2.80 46. William McGirt USA 2.79 47. Jimmy Walker USA 2.73 48. David Lingmerth SWE 2.67 49. Alex Noren SWE 2.65 PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS MONEY LEADERS Through July 10 Trn Money 1. Bernhard Langer 11 $1,559,050 2. Billy Andrade 14 $865,191 3. Woody Austin 12 $834,085 4. Duffy Waldorf 14 $791,058 5. Joe Durant 13 $773,705 6. Kirk Triplett 14 $769,665 7. Wes Short, Jr. 14 $735,818 8. Miguel A. Jimenez 5 $724,950 9. Scott McCarron 12 $663,973 10. Colin Montgomerie 11 $647,403 LPGA MONEY LEADERS Through July 10 Trn Money 1. Lydia Ko 14 $2,030,376 2. Brooke M. Henderson19 $1,296,125 3. Ariya Jutanugarn 17 $1,207,281 4. Anna Nordqvist 16 $1,098,299 5. Brittany Lang 17 $1,064,582 6. Sei Young Kim 16 $1,004,416 7. Haru Nomura 17 $969,861 8. Amy Yang 14 $812,895 9. Lexi Thompson 14 $737,219 10. Gerina Piller 16 $696,903 Motor sports NASCAR SPRINT CUP LAPS LED LEADERS Through July 9 1. Martin Truex Jr, 866 2. Kevin Harvick, 829 3. Kyle Busch, 700 4. Carl Edwards, 685 5. Matt Kenseth, 431 6. Brad Keselowski, 329 7. Joey Logano, 275 8. Kurt Busch, 231 9. Jimmie Johnson, 228 10. Denny Hamlin, 168 11. Chase Elliott, 118 12. Kyle Larson, 103 13. Dale Earnhardt Jr, 53 14. Tony Stewart, 35 15. Trevor Bayne, 34 16. AJ Allmendinger, 23 17. Paul Menard, 20 18. Landon Cassill, 20 19. Danica Patrick, 10 20. David Ragan, 8 21. Greg Biffle, 7 22. Austin Dillon, 4 22. Ty Dillon, 4 23. Ryan Newman, 3 23. Regan Smith, 3 23. Bobby Labonte, 3 23. Michael Waltrip, 3 27. Casey Mears, 2 27. Cole Whitt, 2 29. Aric Almirola, 1 29. Clint Bowyer, 1 29. Brian Scott, 1 29. Matt DiBenedetto, 1 29. Michael Annett, 1 Odds PREGAME.COM LINE Tuesday MLB All-Star Game Favorite Line Underdog N.L. -114/+104 A.L. Transactions BASEBALL American League Boston Red Sox: Optioned RHP Noe Ramirez to Pawtucket (IL). Chicago White Sox: Optioned RHP Chris Beck to Charlotte (IL). Cleveland Indians: Released RHP Joba Chamberlain. Detroit Tigers: Sent RHP Warwick Saupold to Lakeland (FSL) for a rehab assignment. National League Arizona Diamondbacks: Agreed to terms with RHP Markus Solbach on a minor league contract. Chicago Cubs: Optioned INF Munenori Kawasaki to Iowa (PCL). Agreed to terms with RHP Chad Hockin and LHP Wyatt Short on minor league contracts. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, JULY 12, 2016 2 B

