Red Bluff Daily News

November 29, 2016

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"He's just got more ex- perience," Kelly said. "It's natural for anybody. It's the first time playing in our system and our first time getting an opportunity to coach him." Kaepernick did not ap- pear on Monday's injury list, Kelly said, despite his legs bending awkwardly and his chin getting hit hard when the Dolphins tackled him on the final play. Kelly said Kaeper- nick is still not at is his playing weight (225 to 230 pounds) from past years, adding: "I'm good with his weight right now. I'm not concerned about his weight." • The 49ers still rank last in run defense (171.8 yards per game) but that unit was a bright spot Sunday, limited Jay Ajayi to 45 yards on 18 carries. "Our run defense played well, holding Ajayi to 45 yards, one of the premier backs coming in," Kelly said. Nick Bellore, DeForest Buckner, Ahmad Brooks, Keith Reaser and Ronald Blair all had a tackle for loss. • Through 11 games, the 49ers cornerbacks are still searching for their first interception. Ryan Tannehill capitalized on soft coverages and threw for 285 yards and three touchdowns for a 130.6 rating. "We have to do a better job just contesting balls," Kelly said. "There were guys there, but we have to make a play when it's in the air." • Linebacker Shayne Skov (right knee) went for an MRI on Monday and Kelly had no update on the results. Skov said in the locker room he did not fear an anterior cruciate ligament tear but rather a potential medial collateral ligament sprain. • Wide receiver Rod Streater had four catches for 46 yards in his most extensive action this sea- son, most of which came in place of Quinton Pat- ton, who left with a con- cussion on the first play after halftime. "Streat did a real nice job," Kelly said. "He does a real good job af- ter the catch and on special teams." • Running back Kelvin Taylor, a 2016 sixth-round draft pick, was released from the practice squad and replaced by Raheem Mostert, who was in the Philadelphia Eagles train- ing camp last year under Kelly. Mostert has spent most of this season on the practice squad of the Bears, the 49ers' next op- ponent. 49ers FROMPAGE1 when deciding whether to turn pro. They had so many meaningful battles, and Woods almost always got the better of him. Els was runner-up to Woods seven times, the most of any player. Els designed the Albany golf course where Woods comes back from the lon- gest layoff of his career. He plans to be in the Ba- hamas, and he is as eager as anyone else to see how a guy who won 79 times on the PGA Tour, including 14 majors, stacks up against a generation that grew up in awe of how Woods played golf. The Hero World Chal- lenge is a holiday tour- nament with an 18-man field and no cut. Even so, it commands as much at- tention as any tournament this year. Woods has been a star attraction his entire career, and the appetite is even stronger after an ab- sence that dates to Aug. 23, 2015. "I can't wait to watch, either, just to see him play," Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III said. "The last time I saw him play, I won. It's hard to believe it's been that long. I've seen his swing. I've seen him on video. He's sent me clips, and I've heard the descrip- tion of how he feels. I'm ex- cited to see him play." "You've got to start somewhere," he added. "And I want to see the start." Woods already has had one false start. He signed up to play the Safeway Open, only to pull out three days later because he said he felt "vulnerable." That followed a week as assis- tant captain at the Ryder Cup, and cramming in practice the week before with results that made him want to wait. Love won the Wyndham Championship last year in August at age 51, and it could easily have served as a model for Woods — a power player no longer in his prime, not among the biggest hitters anymore, but with enough experi- ence and talent to find a way to score and to win. "It has to motivate him that Vijay Singh is last- ing until 53, that Ernie is still competitive, that Da- vis is still competitive," Love said. "He knows Jack Nicklaus won the Masters in 1986 playing part-time. He knows what everybody has done. I know he's work- ing hard not to come back and be average. He wants to come back and win again." That might be expecting too much, way too soon. Woods hasn't won a tournament since his seven-shot victory in the Bridgestone Invitational in 2013, the year he won five times and was PGA Tour player of the year. He hasn't had a serious chance at winning since his tour- nament three years ago when it was at Sherwood Country Club. Zach John- son holed a wedge from the drop zone to force a play- off, and won when Woods missed a 5-foot putt in the playoff. No other player has ever faced so much scrutiny, es- pecially now. "I won't be able to turn the TV on, or the radio on, or look at my phone without knowing what he shot," Jim Furyk said. "The expectations are so high. ... Every pitch shot, every putt, every 3-footer, it's not under public scru- tiny like he has. I guess you live by the sword, die by the sword. That's why he's Ti- ger Woods. It's a tough sit- uation." Woods said his health had nothing to do with pulling out of the Safeway Open, and Els believes him. He says Woods is in better shape than some players in their 20s. Then again, he has accumulated plenty of emotional baggage over the last several years, on and off the golf course. "They physical side is not an issue. It's the other side that's an is- sue, whatever is block- ing him," Els said. "But you've got to get on the horse. You can't be standing on the side- lines. You've got to get out there. ... Hopefully, he plays well, really, for his own goodness, his own sake, his own mental sake. If he plays well, it would be great. He'll have hope and start a good schedule. If it goes the other way, he's be- hind the 8-ball again." Woods FROM PAGE 1 COLLEGEMEN'S BASKETBALL North Dakota State at Xavier: 3:30p.m.,FS1. ACC/Big-10Challenge, Pitts- burgh at Maryland: 4p.m., ESPN2. ACC Big-10Challenge, Geor- gia Tech vs. Penn State: 4 p.m., ESPNU. ACC/Big-10Challenge, Syra- cuse at Wisconsin: 4:30p.m., ESPN. Buffalo vs. Creighton: 5:30 p.m., FS1. ACC/Big-10Challenge, Iowa at Notre Dame: 6p.m., ESPN2. ACC/Big-10Challenge, N.C. State at Illinois: 6p.m., ESPNU. ACC/Big-10Challenge, Michi- gan State at Duke: 6:30p.m., ESPN. NHL Toronto Maple Leafs at Ed- monton Oilers: 7p.m., NBCSN. Arizona Coyotes at San Jose Sharks: 7p.m., CSN. On the air bounds for Sacramento, which also committed its most turnovers of the sea- son with 20. Rudy Gay added 18 points, including the only 3 in overtime for the Kings, who were looking for their first back-to- back game sweep of the season. Instead, Washington won its sixth of the year and fourth in its last six. Cousins scored all but two of the Kings' points during a 12-4 run to close regulation, his last on a tough runner over Marcin Gortat to tie it at 92 with 10.1 seconds left. Wall missed a fadeaway jumper at the buzzer, but hit a runner early in over- time to give Washington the lead. Then Beal hit his seventh and final 3 with 1:57 left in overtime to make it 97-92, after Mar- kieff Morris rebounded Beal's initial attempt and kicked it back to him on the left wing. Wall hit all four of his free throws to seal the win. Technicallyspeaking Wall, Gortat and and Washington coach Scott Brooks all picked up tech- nicals before halftime. It was Wall's fourth of the season, moving him within one of Cousins, who entered Monday tied for the league lead. Tip-ins Kings: Coach Da- vid Joerger started the same lineup for a second straight, ending a stretch four games with at least one change. ... Sacramento fell to 1-4 in the second game of a back-to-back set. ,,, The Kings were just 3 for 21 on 3-pointers. Wizards: After making his season debut Satur- day following preseason surgery on his left knee, C Ian Mahinmi missed Mon- day with a sore right knee, coach Scott Brooks said. ... Washington had nine of its turnovers in the sec- ond quarter. ... Kelly Ou- bre's 10 points and 10 re- bounds marked his first career double-double . Up next Kings: At Philadelphia on Wednesday night in the third game of a six-game road trip. Wizards: Begin a three- game road swing at Okla- homa City on Wednesday night. Kings FROM PAGE 1 come by seven points or fewer and Carr has led five fourth-quarter comebacks already this season. The latest came Sunday when he came back from the in- jury to tie the game mid- way through the fourth quarter with a TD pass to Clive Walford and a 2-point conversion to Seth Roberts and then won it with an 82- yard drive to set up Sebas- tian Janikowski's game- winning field goal. "One of the things I re- ally love about the NFL is the extreme highs and lows and we got a good dose of those yester- day," Del Rio said. "Al- ways best when you fin- ish with a win." It's just the latest clutch performance from Carr, who has thrived un- der pressure this season. He has completed 80 of 118 passes (67.8 percent) for 1,109 yards (9.4 yards per attempt), 10 TDs, one interception and a 122.5 passer rating when tied or trailing in the fourth quarter or overtime. The latest comeback might have been most impressive because of the pain he dealt with after jamming his finger on a fumbled snap. He managed to come back in after missing one se- ries with a glove on his right hand and taking all snaps from the shot- gun and there seemed to be no long-term effects from the injury. Raiders FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Oakland 9 2 0 .818 307 275 Kansas City 8 3 0 .727 252 214 Denver 7 4 0 .636 266 219 San Diego 5 6 0 .455 313 291 EAST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA New England 9 2 0 .818 293 197 Miami 7 4 0 .636 249 240 Buffalo 6 5 0 .545 281 236 N.Y. Jets 3 8 0 .273 196 266 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Houston 6 5 0 .545 194 236 Tennessee 6 6 0 .500 308 296 Indianapolis 5 6 0 .455 270 301 Ja ck so nv ill e 2 9 0 .1 82 2 14 2 93 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Baltimore 6 5 0 .545 218 201 Pittsburgh 6 5 0 .545 266 222 Cincinnati 3 7 1 .318 213 245 Cleveland 0 12 0 .000 197 352 NATIONAL CONFERENCE WEST DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 7 3 1 .682 224 187 Arizona 4 6 1 .409 245 228 Los Angeles 4 7 0 .364 170 236 San Francisco1 10 0 .091 228 344 EAS T D IVI SI ON W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 10 1 0 .909 316 213 N.Y. Giants 8 3 0 .727 231 213 Washington 6 4 1 .591 280 264 Philadelphia 5 5 0 .500 241 186 SOUTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 7 4 0 .636 358 302 Tampa Bay 6 5 0 .545 249 264 New Orleans 5 6 0 .455 334 307 Carolina 4 7 0 .364 276 281 NORTH DIVISION W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 7 4 0 .636 247 238 Minnesota 6 5 0 .545 218 192 Green Bay 4 6 0 .400 247 276 Chicago 2 9 0 .182 178 264 Thursday's games Detroit 16, Minnesota 13 Dallas 31, Washington 26 Pittsburgh 28, Indianapolis 7 Sunday's games Atlanta 38, Arizona 19 San Diego 21, Houston 13 Baltimore 19, Cincinnati 14 Buffalo 28, Jacksonville 21 Tennessee 27, Chicago 21 New Orleans 49, Los Angeles 21 N.Y. Giants 27, Cleveland 13 Miami 31, San Francisco 24 Tampa Bay 14, Seattle 5 New England 22, N.Y. Jets 17 Oakland 35, Carolina 32 Kansas City 30, Denver 27, OT Monday's games Green Bay at Philadelphia (n) Thursday, Dec. 1 Dallas at Minnesota, 5:25 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4 Kansas City at Atlanta, 10 a.m. Los Angeles at New England, 10 a.m. Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 10 a.m. Miami at Baltimore, 10 a.m. Denver at Jacksonville, 10 a.m. Detroit at New Orleans, 10 a.m. San Francisco at Chicago, 10 a.m. Houston at Green Bay, 10 a.m. Buffalo at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Washington at Arizona, 1:25 p.m. Tampa Bay at San Diego, 1:25 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Pittsburgh, 1:25 p.m. Carolina at Seattle, 5:30 p.m. Open: Tennessee, Cleveland Monday, Dec. 5 Indianapolis at N.Y. Jets, 5:30 p.m. Raiders 35, Panthers 32 Sunday's box Carolina 7 0 18 7 — 32 Oakland 7 17 0 11 — 35 First quarter Oak — Roberts 2 pass from Carr (Jan- ikowski kick), 4:48. Car — Newton 3 run (Gano kick), 3:10. Second quarter Oak — Murray 4 run (Janikowski kick), 12:48. Oak — FG Janikowski 23, 6:49. Oak — Mack 6 interception return (Jan- ikowski kick), :59. Third quarter Car — Stewart 1 run (kick blocked), 10:33. Car — Ginn 88 pass from Newton (pass failed), 7:43. Car — Stewart 3 run (pass failed), 1:46. Fourth quarter Car — Benjamin 44 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 13:26. Oak — Walford 12 pass from Carr (Rob- erts pass from Carr), 8:37. Oak — FG Janikowski 23, 1:45. A — 54,909. Car Oak First downs 19 22 Total net yards 358 365 Rushes yds 25-129 30-55 Passing 229 310 Punt returns 1-0 5-34 Kickoff returns 2-29 2-46 Int ret 1-31 1-6 Comp-att-int 14-28-1 26-39-1 Sacked yds lost 2-17 2-5 Punts 6-46.7 5-48.0 Fumbles lost 1-1 2-1 Penalties yds 7-67 7-46 Time of poss. 26:23 33:37 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — Carolina, Stewart 17-96, Whittaker 4-14, Ginn 1-13, Newton 3-6. Oakland, Murray 19-45, Richard 7-23, Carr 4-(minus 13). Passing — Carolina, Newton 14-28-1-246. Oakland, Carr 26-38-1-315, McGloin 0-1-0-0. Receiving — Carolina, Ginn 4-115, Olsen 4-45, Benjamin 2-53, Funchess 2-19, Tolbert 2-14. Oakland, Crabtree 8-110, Cooper 4-22, Murray 3-43, Walford 3-43, Roberts 3-31, Rivera 2-13, Holton 1-30, T.Jones 1-15, Olawale 1-8. Missed field goals — None. Dolphins 31, 49ers 24 Sunday's box San Fran 7 0 7 10 — 24 Miami 0 14 10 7 — 31 First quarter SF — Hyde 11 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 9:46. Second quarter Mia — Ajayi 2 run (Franks kick), 12:22. Mia — Sims 16 pass from Tannehill (Franks kick), 2:17. Third quarter Mia — FG Franks 24, 12:31. SF — Celek 4 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 7:34. Mia — Stills 43 pass from Tannehill (Franks kick), 1:33. Fourth quarter Mia — Carroo 15 pass from Tannehill (Franks kick), 11:31. SF — Smith 1 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 7:42. SF — FG Dawson 36, 2:15. A — 65,856. SF Mia First downs 25 19 Total net yards 475 358 Rushes yds 25-193 26-95 Passing 282 263 Punt returns 1-2 3-6 Kickoff returns 3-50 5-134 Int ret 0-0 1-10 Comp-att-int 29-46-1 20-30-0 Sacked yds lost 2-14 2-22 Punts 4-47.3 5-41.8 Fumbles lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties yds 7-65 4-42 Time of poss. 29:28 30:32 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — San Francisco, Kaepernick 10-113, Hyde 13-65, D.Harris 2-15. Miami, Ajayi 18-45, Tannehill 6-34, Drake 1-9, D.Williams 1-7. Passing — San Francisco, Kaepernick 29- 46-1-296. Miami, Tannehill 20-30-0-285. Receiving — San Francisco, Draughn 6-49, Hyde 5-30, McDonald 4-60, Streater 4-46, Smith 3-24, Harper 2-32, Kerley 2-24, Celek 2-19, Patton 1-12. Miami, Sims 4-53, Landry 4-47, Stills 3-72, Parker 3-64, Gray 2-12, D.Williams 2-11, Carroo 1-15, Ajayi 1-11. Missed field goals — None. College football TOP 25 SCHEDULE Friday No. 4 Washington vs. No. 9 Colorado, Pac-12 championship at Santa Clara, Calif., 6 p.m. No. 13 Western Michigan vs. Ohio, MAC championship at Detroit, 4 p.m. Saturday No . 1 A la ba ma v s. N o. 1 5 F lo ri da , S EC championship at Atlanta, 1 p.m. No. 3 Clemson vs. No. 19 Virginia Tech, AC C c ha mp io ns hi p a t O rl an do , F la ., 5 p.m. No. 6 Wisconsin vs. No. 8 Penn State, Big Ten championship at Indianapolis, 5:17 p.m. No. 7 Oklahoma vs. No. 11 Oklahoma State, 9:20 a.m. No. 14 West Virginia vs. Baylor, 12:30 p.m. No. 20 Navy vs. Temple, AAC champion- ship, 9 a.m. Basketball NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 15 2 .882 — Clippers 14 4 .778 11/2 Lakers 9 9 .500 61/2 Sacramento 7 11 .389 81/2 Phoenix 5 13 .278 101/2 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 14 3 .824 — Houston 11 6 .647 3 Memphis 11 7 .611 31/2 New Orleans 6 12 .333 81/2 Dallas 3 13 .188 101/2 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 11 8 .579 — Utah 10 8 .556 1/2 Portland 9 10 .474 2 Denver 7 10 .412 3 Minnesota 5 12 .294 5 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Toronto 11 6 .647 — Boston 10 7 .588 1 New York 8 9 .471 3 Brooklyn 4 12 .250 61/2 Philadelphia 4 14 .222 71/2 SOUTHEAST DIVISION W L Pct GB Charlotte 10 7 .588 — Atlanta 10 7 .588 — Washington 6 10 .375 31/2 Orlando 6 11 .353 4 Miami 5 12 .294 5 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 13 2 .867 — Chicago 10 6 .625 31/2 Indiana 9 9 .500 51/2 Milwaukee 7 8 .467 6 Detroit 8 10 .444 61/2 Sunday's games Cleveland 112, Philadelphia 108 Denver 120, Phoenix 114 Indiana 91, Clippers 70 Milwaukee 104, Orlando 96 Sacramento 122, Brooklyn 105 Dallas 91, New Orleans 81 Houston 130, Portland 114 Lakers 109, Atlanta 94 Monday's games Washington 101, Sacramento 95, OT Boston 112, Miami 104 Oklahoma City 112, New York 103 Toronto 122, Philadelphia 95 Charlotte 104, Memphis 85 Utah 112, Minnesota 103 Atlanta at Golden State (n) Tuesday's games Detroit at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Clippers at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Cleveland at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. Lakers at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Orlando at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Houston at Utah, 6 p.m. Wizards 101, Kings 95 KINGS (95) Gay 7-16 3-3 18, Koufos 1-3 2-2 4, Cousins 16-34 3-10 36, Collison 2-6 2-2 6, Afflalo 1-6 1-1 3, Casspi 1-4 0-0 2, Barnes 1-6 1-2 3, Cauley-Stein 3-4 2-3 8, Lawson 5-9 2-2 12, Temple 1-5 0-1 3. Totals 38-93 16-26 95. WIZARDS (101) Porter 6-9 1-2 15, Morris 2-12 4-4 8, Gortat 4-6 2-4 10, Wall 6-16 6-6 19, Beal 12-24 0-2 31, Oubre 2-3 6-6 10, Nicholson 0-0 2-2 2, Smith 2-8 0-0 4, Burke 1-5 0-0 2, Satoransky 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 35-85 21-26 101. Sacramento 19 34 19 20 3 — 95 Washington 25 25 24 18 9 — 101 3-Point Goals: Sacramento 3-21 (Temple 1-3, Gay 1-4, Cousins 1-6, Collison 0-1, Casspi 0-1, Afflalo 0-3, Barnes 0-3), Washington 10-25 (Beal 7-13, Porter 2-4, Wall 1-3, Oubre 0-1, Satoransky 0-1, Burke 0-1, Morris 0-2); Fouled out: None; Rebounds: Sacramento 44 (Cousins 20), Washington 49 (Oubre 10); Assists: Sacramento 20 (Cousins 4), Washington 22 (Wall 11); Total fouls: Sacramento 24, Washington 23; Technicals: Wall, Gortat, Washington coach Scott Brooks; A: 12,571 (20,356). MEN'S COLLEGE TOP 25 FARED 1. Kentucky (7-0) beat Arizona State 115-69. 2. Villanova (6-0) did not play. 3. North Carolina (7-0) did not play. 4. Kansas (5-1) did not play. 5. Duke (6-1) did not play. 6. Virginia (6-0) did not play. 7. Xavier (6-0) did not play. 8. Gonzaga (6-0) did not play. 9. Baylor (6-0) did not play. 10. Creighton (6-0) did not play. 11. UCLA (7-0) did not play. 12. Saint Mary's (Cal) (5-0) did not play. 13. Indiana (4-1) did not play. 14. Louisville (5-1) did not play. 15. Purdue (5-1) did not play. 16. Arizona (5-1) did not play. 17. Wisconsin (5-2) did not play. 18. Butler (7-0) beat Utah 68-59. 19. Iowa State (5-1) did not play. 20. South Carolina (6-0) did not play. 21. Rhode Island (5-1) did not play. 22. Syracuse (4-1) did not play. 23. Oregon (4-2) vs. Boise State. 24. Florida (6-1) did not play. 25. West Virginia (5-1) beat Manhattan 108-61. WOMEN'S TOP 25 POLL The top 25 teams in The Associated Press' women's college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Nov. 27, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Notre Dame (16) 6-0 803 1 2. UConn (14) 4-0 797 2 3. South Carolina (3) 5-0 766 3 4. Baylor 7-1 725 5 5. Maryland 6-0 694 6 6. Mississippi St. 7-0 636 7 7. Louisville 6-1 634 4 8. Florida St. 6-1 551 10 9. Ohio St. 5-2 546 8 10. UCLA 5-1 541 9 11. Stanford 6-1 479 11 12. Oklahoma 5-0 445 13 13. Washington 6-1 423 15 14. Texas 2-2 400 14 15. DePaul 5-1 318 18 16. West Virginia 7-0 303 19 17. Kentucky 5-1 276 20 18. Miami 5-1 245 21 19. Florida 4-1 192 16 20. Syracuse 4-3 146 11 21. Colorado 6-0 116 — 22. Tennessee 3-2 99 17 23. Auburn 6-1 70 — 24. Oregon St. 3-1 69 22 25. Texas A&M 5-0 68 — Others receiving votes: South Florida 51, Oregon 49, Arizona St. 45, Michigan St. 36, Virginia Tech 33, Georgia Tech 30, Marquette 26, Michigan 22, California 20, Northwestern 18, Green Bay 10, Gonzaga 7, Oklahoma St. 7. NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Edmonton 23 12 9 2 26 68 59 Los Angeles 22 12 9 1 25 57 54 San Jose 22 12 9 1 25 52 48 Anaheim 22 10 8 4 24 57 54 Calgary 25 10 13 2 22 57 77 Vancouver 22 9 11 2 20 49 66 Arizona 20 8 10 2 18 50 63 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 23 14 6 3 31 66 59 St. Louis 23 13 7 3 29 62 63 Minnesota 21 11 7 3 25 58 42 Dallas 23 9 8 6 24 60 76 Nashville 21 10 8 3 23 60 54 Winnipeg 24 10 12 2 22 63 70 Colorado 20 9 10 1 19 44 58 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 22 16 4 2 34 67 48 Ottawa 22 14 7 1 29 51 51 Tampa Bay 23 13 9 1 27 70 60 Boston 22 12 10 0 24 53 50 Florida 22 11 10 1 23 57 58 Toronto 21 9 8 4 22 66 69 Detroit 22 10 10 2 22 54 58 Buffalo 21 7 9 5 19 39 53 METROPOLITAN DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Rangers 23 15 7 1 31 85 57 Pittsburgh 22 13 6 3 29 66 65 Washington 21 13 6 2 28 57 48 Columbus 20 11 5 4 26 62 47 New Jersey 21 10 6 5 25 53 55 Philadelphia 23 10 10 3 23 74 78 Carolina 21 9 8 4 22 52 56 N.Y. Islanders 21 7 10 4 18 51 64 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday's games Boston 4, Tampa Bay 1 Winnipeg 3, Nashville 0 Arizona 2, Edmonton 1 Carolina 3, Florida 2 Ottawa 2, N.Y. Rangers 0 Philadelphia 5, Calgary 3 Monday's games N.Y. Islanders 2, Calgary 1, OT St. Louis 4, Dallas 3, OT Tuesday's games Carolina at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at Columbus, 4 p.m. Boston at Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Buffalo at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m. Dallas at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. New Jersey at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Florida at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Nashville at Colorado, 6 p.m. Toronto at Edmonton, 6 p.m. Arizona at San Jose, 7 p.m. Montreal at Anaheim, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Vancouver, 7 p.m. MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP Tuesday, Nov. 22: Montreal 3, Toronto FC 2 Wednesday, Nov. 30: Montreal at To- ronto FC, 4 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP Tuesday, Nov. 22: Seattle 2, Colorado 1 Sunday, Nov. 27: Seattle 1, Colorado 0, Seattle advances. 3-1: on aggregate MLS CUP Saturday, Dec. 10: Eastern champion vs. Seattle, 5 p.m. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Tuesday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Charlotte 3 (198) Detroit Clippers 121/2 (2171/2) at Brooklyn Cleveland 61/2 (212) at Milwaukee at New Orleans 5 (217) Lakers at San Antonio 14 (197) Orlando Houston 2 (2021/2) at Utah College Football Friday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog W Michigan 191/2 (57) Ohio Washington 7 (571/2) Colorado Saturday at West Virginia 17 (66) Baylor at TCU 41/2 (OFF) Kansas St at So. Alabama 12 (571/2) New Mexico St Troy 7 (551/2) at Ga. Southern La-Lafayette 61/2 (60) at La-monroe at Oklahoma 11 (78) Oklahoma St Arkansas St 23 (531/2) at Texas State at Idaho 61/2 (53) Georgia St at W Kentucky 10 (79) Louisiana Tech at Navy 21/2 (611/2) Temple Alabama 24 (40) Florida San Diego St 7 (621/2) at Wyoming Clemson 101/2 (571/2) Virginia Tech Wisconsin 11/2 (47) Penn St NFL Thursday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog Dallas 31/2 (43) at Minnesota Sunday Denver 41/2 (42) at Jacksonville at Atlanta 4 (49) Kansas City at Green Bay 41/2 (461/2) Houston Philadelphia 21/2 (411/2) at Cincinnati at New Orleans 51/2 (531/2) Detroit at Chicago 21/2 (431/2) San Francisco at New England 13 (441/2) Los Angeles at Baltimore 3 (41) Miami at Oakland 3 (50) Buffalo at San Diego 31/2 (47) Tampa Bay at Arizona 3 (49) Washington at Pittsburgh 51/2 (491/2) NY Giants at Seattle 7 (44) Carolina Monday Indianapolis 1 (491/2) at NY Jets | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2016 2 B

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