Red Bluff Daily News

November 18, 2016

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AUTORACING NASCAR Camping World Series, Truck Racing, Ford EcoBoost 200Final Practice: 7:30a.m.,FS1. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Ford EcoBoost 400Practice: 9:30a.m., NBCSN. NASCAR Xfinity Series, Ford EcoBoost 300Practice: 11 a.m., NBCSN. NASCAR Camping World Series, Truck Racing, Ford EcoBoost 200Qualifying: 12:30p.m., FS1. NASCAR Xfinity Series, Ford EcoBoost 300Final Practice: 2p.m., NBCSN. NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Ford EcoBoost 400Qualify- ing: 3p.m., NBCSN. NASCAR Camping World Series, Truck Racing, Ford EcoBoost 200: 5p.m., FS1. FIA, Endurance Racing, World Championship: 5a.m., FS1. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Tire Pros Invitational, Conso- lation Game: 8:30a.m., ESPNU. Charleston Classic, Semifinal: 10:30a.m., ESPN2. Tire Pros Invitational, Semifi- nal: 10:30a.m., ESPNU. 2K Classic: 1:30p.m., ESPN2. Tire Pros Invitational, Conso- lation Game: 2p.m., ESPNU. 2K Classic: 4p.m., ESPN2. Tire Pros Invitational, Semifi- nal: 4p.m., ESPNU. Bryant at Gonzaga: 5:30p.m., CSN. Charleston Classic, Semifinal: 6:30p.m., ESPNU. Women's, Gonzaga vs. Stan- ford: 7p.m., PAC12BA. NBA Golden State Warriors at Boston Celtics: 5p.m., CSNBA, ESPN. Los Angeles Clippers at Sacramento Kings: 7:30p.m., ESPN, CSN (Alternate). COLLEGE FOOTBALL UNLV at Boise State: 6p.m., ESPN2. GOLF PGA, The RSM Classic, Round 2: 10:30a.m., GOLF. APGA, Australian Open, Round 3: 6p.m., GOLF. EPGA, DP World Tour Cham- pionship, Round 3: Midnight, GOLF. SOCCER EPL, Arsenal at Manchester United: 4:25a.m., NBCSN. TENNIS ATP, World Tour Finals, Round Robin: 6a.m., ESPN2. ATP, World Tour Finals, Doubles, Round Robin: 9:30 a.m., TENNIS. ATP, World Tour Finals, Singles, Round Robin: Noon, TENNIS. ATP, World Tour Finals, Doubles, Semifinal: 4a.m., TENNIS. Ontheair Ernie Banks (1958 and 1959), Andre Dawson (1987) and Cal Ripken (1991). "It's an unbelievable feeling," Trout said. "Just trying to get better every year." Bryant hit .292 with 39 homers and 102 RBIs in just his second year in the majors, helping the Cubs to their first World Series title since 1908. The No. 2 overall pick from the 2013 draft becomes just the sixth player to win rookie of the year and MVP in one or consecutive seasons. "Kris is just an impres- sive young man in every aspect," Cubs owner Tom Ricketts said. "(He) is very mature, professional, light- hearted, but serious at the same time. He's just kind of a dream player for any or- ganization." The Las Vegas native is the first NL MVP from the Cubs since Sammy Sosa in 1998 and the sev- enth overall for the once- forlorn franchise enjoying its best run in decades. First baseman Anthony Rizzo and right fielder Ja- son Heyward each won a Gold Glove, and Rizzo fin- ished fourth in the MVP balloting. Manager Joe Maddon and pitchers Kyle Hendricks and Jon Lester also were finalists for ma- jor awards this offseason. Voting by BBWAA mem- bers was completed by the start of the playoffs. Bryant was a runaway winner, grabbing 29 of 30 first-place votes and 415 points. Nationals second baseman Daniel Murphy, who batted .347 for the NL East champions, was the runner-up with the other first-place vote and 245 points. Dodgers shortstop Corey Seager was third af- ter he was the unanimous winner of the NL Rookie of the Year award on Mon- day. Seager will look to fol- low in Bryant's footsteps next year. Bryant was the unan- imous NL Rookie of the Year after he hit .275 with 26 homers and 99 RBIs last season. Bryant joins Dustin Pedroia (2007-08), Ryan Howard (2005-06) and Cal Ripken (1982-83) as the only players to go Rookie of the Year-MVP in consecutive seasons. Ich- iro Suzuki (2001) and Fred Lynn (1975) are the only players to win the awards in the same year. Trout received 19 first- place votes and 356 points. Mookie Betts, who bat- ted .318 with 31 homers, 113 RBIs and 26 steals in 158 games for the Boston Red Sox, was second with 311 points, and AL batting champion Jose Altuve of Houston was third. Retir- ing Red Sox slugger David Ortiz got one first-place vote finished sixth in his final year in the majors. MVP FROM PAGE 1 said she will continue to do so "as he moves to build a much-needed new hotel in downtown Oakland." Alameda County Super- visor Nate Miley said "with the Fisher family having higher ownership interest, I think that bodes well" for keeping the team in Oak- land. At the same time, an investment group led by Ronnie Lott has sent a re- vised term sheet to city and county officials and "we are getting very close to putting something tan- gible forth to the NFL own- ers so the owners see that Oakland is viable." Wherever it's located, a new stadium might pump some much-needed revenue into the A's bank accounts. And they may need it, be- cause they may be about to lose in excess of $30 mil- lion. Because of the shab- biness of the Coliseum and the inability to get a new facility going, Oakland has been grandfathered into a high-level MLB program in which big revenue teams funnel money to smaller market ones to help them be competitive. The new basic agree- ment between owners and the players' association is in the final stages of ne- gotiation and could be an- nounced by the time the current agreement ends on Dec. 1, or possibly could be announced at the win- ter meetings a week later. And the negotiations have included the possibility of stripping all or part of the money the A's have been getting from baseball's structure going forward. Some of the other own- ers have not been im- pressed by the way the A's have spent that money. Many A's fans have felt the same way, using social media to express their dis- pleasure at seeing the A's habitually move players off the roster once they be- come too expensive. In the last few months alone, vet- erans Josh Reddick, Rich Hill, Coco Crisp, Danny Va- lencia and Billy Butler all have found new homes, al- though the A's are still on the hook for $10 million due Butler in 2017. Were that check from MLB no longer to be headed Oakland's way, the A's, who have a long history of finishing the year with a profit, might have difficulty doing so. "I want to thank Lew for his leadership over the last 11 years," Fisher said in a statement issued by the club. "His initiative and love of the game of base- ball brought my family to the A's, and we would not be involved without him. "Lew has given the or- ganization all of his energy and experience for the last 11 years and I look forward to a new chapter in our working relationship and friendship. It is a privilege for me to steward the A's at this important moment for the franchise." Last week Wolff hinted that something was in the works when he said "you may be talking to John be- fore too much longer." In a statement Thurs- day, the 80-year-old Wolff seemed willing to move on. "It has been an honor serving as Managing Part- ner and I thank our fans, staff, and players for the op- portunity I've had to lead this great organization," Wolff's statement read. "John and I have talked in greatlengthaboutthefuture ofthisclubandIamreadyto pass the reins to him." But in the 11 years that the Fisher/Wolff group has been in place, the A's have won the American League West title three times and made the playoffs four times. The last two sea- sons have seen the A's fin- ish dead last in the Amer- ican League West. In 2016 the club had a payroll of $85.8 million. A's FROM PAGE 1 tried to even the game. The Sharks' power play is now 1-for-17 over the last six games. The last member of the first power play unit to score with the man advantage was Brent Burns on Nov. 3 against the Calgary Flames. Marc- Edouard Vlasic scored a power play goal last Satur- day against the Tampa Bay Lightning. The Sharks fell behind 3-2 after a back-and-forth second period. Just 19 seconds after Schwartz gave the Blues a 2-1 lead, Labanc scored the first of his career, collect- ing a loose puck in the slot and fired it past Allen to tie the game with 10:56 to go in the second. Mikkel Boedker was off for interference at the time of Perron's goal, a call that left Boedker be- wildered and coach Pete DeBoer in disbelief. It was one of four minor penalties the Sharks took against the Blues, who im- proved to 7-1-2 at home. Couture's goal was his first, and the first for any Sharks center, at even strength this season. Moving in on a 3-on-2, Couture took a pass from Joonas Donskoi and beat Allen with a wrist shot for his fourth of the sea- son 6:16 into the second period. The Blues tied the game thanks to a Sharks turn- over inside their own zone. Labanc, playing along- side Joe Thornton and Joe Pavelski, had the puck stripped from him along the boards by Alex Pietran- gelo. The puck came to Schwartz in the middle of the ice, and his wrist shot beat Jones for his fifth of the season. Sharks FROM PAGE 1 Newton. But after instant replay officials overturned the ruling and gave Ginn a 40-yard touchdown catch. UNDER PRESSURE New- ton was under heavy pressure for most of the first half, taking a sack on third down that took his team out of field goal range — the second time he has done that in as many weeks. A COOL BREES Brees eclipsed 3,000 yards pass- ing for the 13th consecutive season, tying Peyton Man- ning for the second-longest streak in NFL history. GETTING YOUR KICKS The Panthers lost punt Andy Lee to a hamstring in- jury and easily could have lost Gano on Thurs- day night after Kenny Vaccaro came crashing into Gano's legs on a 30- yard field goal attempt. Vaccaro was flagged for roughing the kicker, giv- ing the Panthers an auto- matic first down. But Car- olina couldn't find the end zone and Gano wound up coming back out to kick a 32-yard field goal giving Carolina a 3-0 lead. Panthers FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA KansasCity 7 2 0 .778 205 168 Oakland 7 2 0 .778 245 223 Denver 7 3 0 .700 239 189 San Diego 4 6 0 .400 292 278 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New England 7 2 0 .778 241 163 Miami 5 4 0 .556 204 206 Buffalo 4 5 0 .444 237 203 N.Y. Jets 3 7 0 .300 179 244 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Houston 6 3 0 .667 161 188 Tennessee 5 5 0 .500 264 251 Indianapolis 4 5 0 .444 239 256 Jacksonville 2 7 0 .222 174 239 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Baltimore 5 4 0 .556 182 160 Pittsburgh 4 5 0 .444 214 206 Cincinnati 3 5 1 .389 187 210 Cleveland 0 10 0 .000 175 301 NATIONAL CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Se at tle 6 2 1 . 72 2 193 1 58 Arizona 4 4 1 .500 202 160 Los Angeles 4 5 0 .444 139 173 San Francisco1 8 0 .111 187 283 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 8 1 0 .889 258 170 N.Y. Giants 6 3 0 .667 182 184 Washington 5 3 1 .611 212 209 Philadelphia 5 4 0 .556 226 160 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 6 4 0 .600 320 283 Tampa Bay 4 5 0 .444 216 242 New Orleans 4 6 0 .400 285 286 Carolina 4 6 0 .400 244 246 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 5 4 0 .556 205 206 Minnesota 5 4 0 .556 175 152 Green Bay 4 5 0 .444 223 234 Chicago 2 7 0 .222 141 215 Thursday's games Carolina 23, New Orleans 20 Sunday's games Baltimore at Dallas, 10 a.m. Chicago at N.Y. Giants, 10 a.m. Jacksonville at Detroit, 10 a.m. Tennessee at Indianapolis, 10 a.m. Arizona at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Buffalo at Cincinnati, 10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 10 a.m. Miami at Los Angeles, 1:05 p.m. New England at San Francisco, 1:25 p.m. Philadelphia at Seattle, 1:25 p.m. Green Bay at Washington, 5:30 p.m. Open: San Diego, Atlanta, Denver, N.Y. Jets Monday's games Houston at Oakland, 5:30 p.m. Panthers 23, Saints 20 New Orleans 3 0 0 17 — 20 Carolina 3 17 3 0 — 23 First quarter Car — FG Gano 32, 8:29. NO — FG Lutz 27, :36. Second quarter Car — Stewart 1 run (Gano kick), 5:40. Car — FG Gano 49, 2:50. Car — Ginn 40 pass from Newton (Gano kick), :16. Third quarter Car — FG Gano 42, 8:17. Fourth quarter NO — FG Lutz 30, 14:56. NO — B.Coleman 9 pass from Brees (Lutz kick), 11:22. NO — Fleener 8 pass from Brees (Lutz kick), 2:52. A — 73,288. NO Car First downs 28 17 Total net yards 371 223 Rushes yds 25-107 27-50 Passing 264 173 Punt returns 4-46 2-10 Kickoff returns 2-19 3-56 Int ret 0-0 1-12 Comp-att-int 35-44-1 14-33-0 Sacked yds lost 3-21 2-19 Punts 3-47.0 6-46.7 Fumbles lost 2-1 1-0 Penalties yds 6-48 6-45 Time of poss. 32:15 27:45 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — New Orleans, Hightower 12-69, Ingram 7-28, Cooks 2-7, Kuhn 2-3, Br ee s 2- 0. C aro li na , S te wa rt 1 8- 31 , G in n 1-13, Newton 5-7, Whittaker 1-0, Tolbert 2-(minus 1). Passing — New Orleans, Brees 35-44-1- 285. Carolina, Newton 14-33-0-192. Receiving — New Orleans, Hightower 8-57, Cooks 7-42, Thomas 5-68, Snead 4-33, Ingram 3-47, Fleener 3-17, Kuhn 2-9, B.Coleman 1-9, Murphy 1-3, Phillips 1-0. Carolina, Olsen 4-33, Benjamin 3-56, Ginn 3-46, Funchess 2-32, Tolbert 1-17, Stewart 1-8. Missed field goals — None. COLLEGE TOP 25 SCHEDULE Thursday Houston 36, No. 3 Louisville 10 No. 25 Troy vs. Arkansas State, (n.) Friday No. 22 Boise State vs. UNLV, 6 p.m. Saturday No. 1 Alabama vs. Chattanoga, 4 p.m. No. 2 Ohio State at Michigan State, 9 a.m. No. 4 Michigan vs. Indiana, 12:30 p.m. No. 5 Clemson at Wake Forest, 4 p.m. No. 6 Wisconsin at Purdue, 9 a.m. No. 7 Washington vs. Arizona St., 4:30 p.m. No. 8 Oklahoma at No. 10 W. Virginia, 5 p.m. No. 9 Penn State at Rutgers, 5 p.m. No. 11 Utah vs. Oregon, 11 a.m. No. 12 Colorado vs. No. 20 WSU, 12:30 p.m. No. 13 Oklahoma State at TCU, 9 a.m. No. 14 Western Michigan vs. Buffalo, 12:30 p.m. No. 15 USC at UCLA, 7:30 p.m. No. 16 LSU vs. No. 21 Florida, 10 a.m. No. 17 Florida State at Syracuse, 12:30 p.m. No. 18 Auburn vs. Alabama A&M, 4:30 p.m. No. 19 Nebraska vs. Maryland, 9 a.m. No. 23 Texas A&M vs. UTSA, 9 a.m. No. 24 San Diego State at Wyoming, 12:30 p.m. NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Clippers 10 2 .833 — Golden State 9 2 .818 1/2 Lakers 7 5 .583 3 Sacramento 4 8 .333 6 Phoenix 3 9 .250 7 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 9 3 .750 — Houston 7 5 .583 2 Memphis 6 5 .545 21/2 Dallas 2 8 .200 6 New Orleans 2 10 .167 7 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 7 5 .583 — Utah 7 5 .583 — Portland 7 6 .538 1/2 Denver 4 7 .364 21/2 Minnesota 4 7 .364 21/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Toronto 7 4 .636 — Boston 6 5 .545 1 New York 5 7 .417 21/2 Brooklyn 4 7 .364 3 Philadelphia 2 10 .167 51/2 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Atlanta 9 2 .818 — Charlotte 7 3 .700 11/2 Orlando 5 7 .417 41/2 Miami 3 8 .273 6 Washington 3 8 .273 6 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 9 2 .818 — Chicago 7 4 .636 2 Detroit 6 6 .500 31/2 Indiana 6 6 .500 31/2 Mi lw au ke e 5 6 .4 55 4 Wednesday's games Indiana 103, Cleveland 93 Orlando 89, New Orleans 82 Philadelphia 109, Washington 102 Atlanta 107, Milwaukee 100 Boston 90, Dallas 83 New York 105, Detroit 102 Golden State 127, Toronto 121 Oklahoma City 105, Houston 103 Denver 120, Phoenix 104 Memphis 111, Clippers 107 San Antonio 110, Sacramento 105 Thursday's games Washington 119, New York 112 Miami 96, Milwaukee 73 Houston 126, Portland 109 Minnesota 110, Philadelphia 86 Chicago at Utah, (n.) Friday's games Atlanta at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Phoenix at Indiana, 4 p.m. Detroit at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Golden State at Boston, 5 p.m. Portland at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Memphis at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Toronto at Denver, 6 p.m. Clippers at Sacramento, 7:30 p.m. San Antonio at Lakers, 7:30 p.m. LEADERS Through NOVEMBER 16 SCORING G FG FT Pts Avg DeRozan, TOR 11 133 94 366 33.3 Westbrook, OKC 12 123 113 382 31.8 Davis, NOR 11 115 103 336 30.5 Lillard, POR 12 110 105 357 29.8 Harden, HOU 11 99 85 316 28.7 Durant, GOL 11 111 63 307 27.9 Curry, GOL 11 100 56 307 27.9 Thomas, BOS 11 90 96 299 27.2 Cousins, SAC 12 103 101 319 26.6 Wiggins, MIN 10 90 66 266 26.6 Walker, CHA 10 86 53 258 25.8 Leonard, SAN 12 96 83 300 25.0 Butler, CHI 11 81 91 270 24.5 Irving, CLE 11 101 34 263 23.9 James, CLE 10 85 48 234 23.4 Wall, WAS 8 66 45 183 22.9 Barnes, DAL 10 90 39 229 22.9 COLLEGE MEN'S TOP 25 FARED Thursday 1. Duke (2-1) did not play. 2. Kentucky (3-0) did not play. 3. Villanova (3-0) beat Western Michigan 76-65. 4. Oregon (2-1) beat Valparaiso 76-54. 5. North Carolina (3-0) at Hawaii. 6. Indiana (2-0) did not play. 7. Kansas (1-1) did not play. 8. Virginia (2-0) did not play. 9. Wisconsin (2-1) beat Chicago State 69-51. 10. Arizona (2-0) did not play. 11. Xavier (3-0) beat Missouri 83-82, OT. 12. Louisville (3-0) beat Long Beach State 88-56. 13. Michigan State (0-2) did not play. 14. Gonzaga (2-0) did not play. 15. Purdue (1-1) did not play. 16. UCLA (2-0) vs. San Diego. 17. Saint Mary's (Cal) (2-0) did not play. 18. Syracuse (2-0) did not play. 19. West Virginia (2-0) did not play. 20. Iowa State (2-0) did not play. 21. Rhode Island (3-0) did not play. 22. Creighton (2-0) did not play. 23. Texas (3-0) beat Eastern Washington 85-52. 24. Cincinnati (2-0) did not play. 25. California (2-0) did not play. FAR WEST BYU 96, Coppin St. 59 Colorado 89, Louisiana-Monroe 70 N. Arizona 91, Benedictine 63 Oregon 76, Valparaiso 54 COLLEGE WOMEN'S TOP 25 FARED Thursday 1. Notre Dame (3-0) beat Green Bay 71-67. 2. Baylor (2-1) lost to No. 3 UConn 72-61. 3. UConn (2-0) beat No. 2 Baylor 72-61. 4. South Carolina (1-0) did not play. 5. Louisville (3-0) did not play. 6. Maryland (2-0) did not play. 7. Ohio State (2-1) did not play. 8. Texas (1-1) did not play. 9. UCLA (1-1) did not play. 10. Mississippi State (3-0) did not play. 11. Stanford (2-0) did not play. 12. Florida State (2-1) beat Jacksonville 90-47. 13. Tennessee (3-0) did not play. 14. Syracuse (2-0) did not play. 15. Kentucky (3-0) beat New Hampshire 92-43. 16. Oklahoma (2-0) did not play. 17. Washington (3-0) beat No. 25 Mis- souri 79-66. 18. Arizona State (2-0) did not play. 19. Florida (2-0) did not play. 20. DePaul (2-0) did not play. 21. West Virginia (2-0) did not play. 22. Miami (2-1) did not play. 23. Indiana (3-0) beat Chattanooga 79-76. 24. Oregon State (2-0) did not play. 25. Missouri (2-1) lost to No. 17 Washing- ton 79-66. NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Edmonton 17 9 7 1 19 47 45 Anaheim 17 8 6 3 19 45 41 San Jose 16 9 7 0 18 37 36 Los Angeles 17 7 9 1 15 40 45 Calgary 18 7 10 1 15 42 60 Vancouver 17 6 10 1 13 35 55 Arizona 15 5 9 1 11 39 51 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 17 11 4 2 24 54 43 Winnipeg 18 9 7 2 20 54 50 St. Louis 17 8 6 3 19 41 48 Minnesota 15 8 6 1 17 41 29 Dallas 17 6 6 5 17 45 57 Nashville 15 6 6 3 15 41 43 Colorado 15 7 8 0 14 31 42 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Edmonton 17 9 7 1 19 47 45 Anaheim 17 8 6 3 19 45 41 San Jose 17 9 8 0 18 39 39 Los Angeles 17 7 9 1 15 40 45 Calgary 18 7 10 1 15 42 60 Vancouver 17 6 10 1 13 35 55 Arizona 15 5 9 1 11 39 51 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 17 11 4 2 24 54 43 St. Louis 18 9 6 3 21 44 50 Winnipeg 19 9 8 2 20 56 55 Minnesota 16 9 6 1 19 42 29 Dallas 18 7 6 5 19 48 59 Nashville 16 7 6 3 17 46 44 Colorado 16 7 9 0 14 33 45 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 17 13 2 2 28 56 38 Tampa Bay 18 11 6 1 23 58 46 Ottawa 17 10 6 1 21 39 42 Boston 17 10 7 0 20 41 39 Toronto 17 8 6 3 19 56 58 Detroit 17 8 8 1 17 44 47 Florida 17 8 8 1 17 45 48 Buffalo 17 5 8 4 14 31 45 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Rangers 17 13 4 0 26 72 38 Washington 16 10 4 2 22 45 37 Pittsburgh 16 10 4 2 22 48 46 New Jersey 15 9 3 3 21 37 31 Philadelphia 18 8 7 3 19 62 64 Columbus 14 8 4 2 18 47 33 Carolina 15 5 6 4 14 39 46 N.Y. Islanders 16 5 8 3 13 40 51 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Wednesday's games Washington 7, Pittsburgh 1 Calgary 2, Arizona 1, OT Thursday's games Tampa Bay 4, Buffalo 1 Philadelphia 5, Winnipeg 2 Toronto 6, Florida 1 Nashville 5, Ottawa 1 St. Louis 3, San Jose 2 Minnesota 1, Boston 0 Dallas 3, Colorado 2 New Jersey at Anaheim, (n.) Arizona at Vancouver, (n.). Edmonton at Los Angeles, (n.) Blues 3, Sharks 2 San Jose 1 1 0 — 2 St. Louis 1 2 0 — 3 First Period: 1, San Jose, Couture 4 (Ward, Donskoi), 6:16. 2, St. Louis, Schwartz 5 (Pietrangelo), 10:38; Penal- ties: Perron, STL, (hooking), 2:02, Jaskin, STL, (holding stick), 14:42. Second Period: 3, St. Louis, Schwartz 6, 8:45. 4, San Jose, Labanc 1 (Thornton, Braun), 9:04. 5, St. Louis, Perron 5 (Fabbri, Stastny), 15:56 (pp); Penalties: Schlemko, SJ, (cross checking), 3:23, Bouwmeester, STL, (hooking), 11:52, Brodziak, STL, (high sticking), 13:29, Boedker, SJ, (interference), 14:57, Vlasic, SJ, (holding), 20:00. Third Period: None; Penalties: Fabbri, STL, (tripping), 6:07, Labanc, SJ, (inter- ference), 11:16, Brodziak, STL, served by Fabbri, (delay of game), 19:04. Shots on Goal: San Jose 7-11-13=31. St. Louis 4-9-12=25. Goalies: San Jose, Jones 8-7-0 (25 shots-22 saves). St. Louis, Allen 7-3-3 (31-29). Golf CME GROUP TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP Thursday At Tiburon Golf Course Naples, Fla. Purse: $2 million Yardage: 6,551; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round Shanshan Feng........................34-32—66 -6 So Yeon Ryu .............................33-34—67 -5 Charley Hull ............................. 32-35—67 -5 Ha Na Jang................................35-33—68 -4 Sei Young Kim..........................34-34—68 -4 In Gee Chun..............................35-33—68 -4 Amy Yang .................................36-32—68 -4 Lizette Salas ............................35-33—68 -4 Beatriz Recari..........................36-32—68 -4 Ryann O'Toole..........................34-34—68 -4 Mo Martin.................................34-34—68 -4 Haru Nomura ............................37-32—69 -3 Paula Reto................................ 36-33—69 -3 Brittany Lincicome................. 34-35—69 -3 Alena Sharp.............................. 36-33—69 -3 Lydia Ko .....................................37-33—70 -2 Eun-Hee Ji..................................34-36—70 -2 Mi Hyang Lee ............................35-35—70 -2 RSM CLASSIC Thursday At Sea Island (Ga.) Resort Purse: $6 million s-Seaside Host Course; Yardage: 7,005; Par: 70 (35-35) p-Plantation Course; Yardage: 7,058; Par: 72 (36-36) First Round Mackenzie Hughes ................30-31—61s -9 Stewart Cink...........................31-31—62s -8 Jonathan Byrd........................ 30-32—62s -8 Cameron Tringale .................32-33—65p -7 Kyle Stanley ........................... 31-34—65p -7 Hiroshi Iwata ......................... 31-34—65p -7 Blayne Barber.........................31-32—63s -7 Will MacKenzie......................34-32—66p -6 Michael Kim ........................... 32-32—64s -6 Andres Romero ..................... 33-31—64s -6 Chad Campbell......................32-34—66p -6 Josh Teater.............................32-34—66p -6 Brandt Snedeker...................33-33—66p -6 Steven Alker........................... 32-32—64s -6 Cheng Tsung Pan ..................33-33—66p -6 Kevin Tway .............................34-32—66p -6 Hudson Swafford.................. 32-32—64s -6 Jim Furyk ................................ 33-31—64s -6 Camilo Villegas .....................35-31—66p -6 Johnson Wagner....................34-32—66p -6 Kevin Chappell....................... 32-32—64s -6 Tyler Aldridge........................33-33—66p -6 Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Friday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Indiana 71/2 (219) Phoenix at Charlotte OFF (OFF) Atlanta at Cleveland 9 (205) Detroit at Okla City 91/2 (219) Brooklyn Golden State 61/2 (226) at Boston at New Orleans OFF (OFF) Portland at Dallas OFF (OFF) Memphis Toronto 4 (216) at Denver Clippers 7 (2051/2) at Sacramento San Antonio 61/2 (208) at Lakers NFL Sunday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog at Indianapolis 3 (53) Tennessee at Detroit 61/2 (471/2) Jacksonville at Kansas City 71/2 (441/2) Tampa Bay at NY Giants 71/2 (441/2) Chicago at Minnesota 21/2 (40) Arizona at Cincinnati 21/2 (471/2) Buffalo at Dallas 7 (441/2) Baltimore Pittsburgh 8 (46) at Cleveland Miami 11/2 (391/2)at Los Angeles New England 13 (51) at San Francisco at Seattle 6 (421/2) Philadelphia at Washington 3 (50) Green Bay Monday Oakland 6 (46) Houston Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball Office OF THE Commissioner OF Base- ball: Designated John Fisher as the con- trol person of the Oakland Athletics and John Middleton as the control person of the Philadelphia Phillies. American League Texas Rangers: Named Jack Hill senior vice president, project development. National League Arizona Diamondbacks: Named Ron Gar- denhire bench coach, Tony Perezchica third base coach, Mike Fetters bullpen coach and Robby Hammock quality control and catching coach. Retained hitting coach Dave Magadan, pitching coach Mike Butcher, first base coach Dave McKay and coach/interpreter Ariel Prieto. Atlanta Braves: Signed RHP Bartolo Colon to a one-year contract. Agreed to terms with RHP R.A. Dickey. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2016 2 B

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