Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/779841
COLLEGEMEN'S BASKETBALL Maryland at Ohio State:4 p.m., ESPN. Creighton at Butler: 4p.m., FS1. Pittsburgh at North Carolina: 4p.m., ESPN2. Wake Forest at Boston Col- lege: 4p.m., ESPNU. Georgia at Kentucky: 6p.m., ESPN. Georgetown at DePaul: 6 p.m., FS1. West Virginia at Iowa State: 6p.m., ESPN2. Vanderbilt at Texas A&M: 6 p.m., ESPNU. NBA Sacramento Kings at Hous- ton Rockets: 5p.m., CSN. NHL Chicago Blackhawks at San Jose Sharks: 7:30p.m., CSN. SOCCER EPL, Chelsea at Liverpool: 11:55a.m., NBCSN. Ontheair The league's tampering rules prevent Lynch from commenting too far on his plans with Shanahan. But he did explain why he ap- proached the Atlanta Fal- cons offensive coordinator two weeks ago about part- nering as his GM. "Two weeks ago I never thought I'd be doing this. Things change sometimes," Lynch said. "Fortunately I have a wonderful family that's supported me incred- ibly in pursuit of this situa- tionthatarose.I'malsovery thankfultoJedYorkandev- eryone else with the 49ers that found it fit and had enough confidence in me to take on this role." Lynchconsidered joining the Denver Broncos front office a few years ago, and he said a couple other or- ganizations recently ap- proached him about his services. He became enticed by the prospect of working with Shanahan after call- ing the Falcons' playoff- opening win over the Se- ahawks in the divisional round. They talked in the days after the game, and Lynch met with 49ers CEO Jed York last Thursday be- fore flying with him to At- lanta for another meeting with Shanahan, who is not allowed to talk to the 49ers this week and can't be hired until after the Su- per Bowl. "Kyle must have been real fired up to have called Jed and put Jed in touch with me," Lynch said. "I felt it was really impor- tant that I was vetted like any other general manager candidate was. I didn't want to be, just because someone liked me, that I was all of a sudden went to the front of the line." Lynch noted that be- fore even entertaining the 49ers' GM vacancy, he considered Shanahan "the catch of this head-coaching cycle," and Lynch got even more excited once he dis- covered Shanahan's philos- ophies "marry with mine." The 49ers' surprisingly hired Lynch on Sunday af- ter a four-week search in which they announced in- terviews with eight other candidates, including Sat- urday's follow-up sessions with George Payton and Terry McDonough. Lynch, 45, has never worked in a NFL front of- fice. But he played 15 years as a star safety for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Denver Broncos, leading to his possible election Sat- urday to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Since 2008, he has stayed connected to the league as a broadcaster. "I can't tell you I've had 20 years in front offices working my way up," Lynch said. "But what I do know is football. I'll put that up against anybody in this league. And I know people and I know how to lead." "As we learned more and more about John, it became apparent that he was not only one of the best to ever play this game but also a Hall of Fame cal- iber man, one who people are compelled to follow," York said in a statement in which he also praised Lynch's work ethic, com- munication skills, com- petitive spirit, love of the game and "tremendous insight into what it takes to create a culture that breeds sustained success." Lynch finished his play- ing career with the Denver Broncos from 2004-07 un- der coach Mike Shanahan, Kyle's father. At the same time, Kyle was launching his NFL coaching career, first as a Buccaneers offen- sive assistant from 2004- 05 and then with the Hous- ton Texans in 2006-09. Lynch inherits a fran- chise that has at least 10 draft picks, including No. 2 overall, as well as some $100 million in salary cap room to spend on free agents. Lynch expects to sur- round himself with a solid personnel staff, and he in- tends to consult at least ini- tially with assistant general manager Tom Gamble. One external candidate is Adam Peters, the Denver Broncos director of college scouting, according to the NFL Net- work. "We're going to be re- ally aggressive, and the re- sponse has been magnif- icent to the people that really want to be here," Lynch added. Leigh Steinberg, Lynch's initial agent coming out of Stanford in 1993, said Lynch is a "sensational choice" as general man- ager because of his "off- the-charts, high IQ" and drive to succeed. Steinberg also noted how Lynch's charisma will help recruit free agents, whose con- tracts will be structured not by Lynch but the 49ers' long-time salary-cap ace, Paraag Marathe. Steinberg said of Lynch: "He's the person agents will like and want to bring free agents to. He'll open up a lot of doors. With him, you'll see there would be a limited amount of strife." In Baalke's seventh and final year as personnel czar, the 49ers attracted only one starter in free agency last spring, offen- sive lineman Zane Beadles. ESPN analyst Mark Dominik, a former Tampa Bay Buccaneers general manager, gave no indica- tion Monday on "NFL In- siders" that he might join the 49ers front office in some capacity to assist Lynch, who played for the Buccaneers while Dominik was their pro personnel di- rector. Dominik, however, shared insights into the bond Lynch must develop with Kyle Shanahan. 49ers FROM PAGE 1 "I violated my values and it was wrong. I behaved shamefully," he said then. "The whole episode repre- sents the worst thing I've done in my life by far." Astros general manager Jeff Luhnow told reporters in June 2014 the team had been the victim of hackers who accessed servers and published online months of internal trade talks. As- tros general counsel Giles Kibbe said Correa ac- cessed the Astros' system about 60 times over two years. Federal prosecutors said in a sentencing memoran- dum that Correa used the password of Sig Mejdal, Houston's director of di- vision sciences who had been the Cardinals' direc- tor of amateur draft anal- ysis. When he left St. Louis in December 2011, Mejdal was directed to given his computer to Correa along with its password, and Me- jdal later used an almost identical password with his Astros account. Prosecutors said Cor- rea had access to the As- tros' system from January 2012 until June 2014 and entered the team's Ground Control database of confi- dential scouting reports, statistics and contract in- formation 48 times. He also accessed the email of five Houston employees, including that of Mejdal. Hacking FROM PAGE 1 and the Huskies couldn't sink many shots, stretch- ing the Corning lead to 18 at the end of the third. The Huskies put up a big fourth period, with 22 points, but the Cards kept pace. Amidst confusion in- side the final minutes, Sut- ter pulled within 7 at 59-52, but a scoring adjustment took 3 points from the Hus- kies and the Cards hit a se- ries of foul shots to go back up by 14 when time ran out. Castle had 29 points on thenight,Masonhad13,Ca- puto put up 6, Barr had 5 and Kara Beckwith had 4. The Cardinals go to 12-9 overall and 4-1 in league play as they prepare to host the rival Orland Trojans (8- 10overall,2-2league)at7:30 p.m. Thursday. LadySpartans46, PleasantValley88 CHICO The Red Bluff Lady Spartans fell behind early and it was never close Fri- day night when they faced the league leading Pleas- ant Valley Vikings, falling 88-46. Carissa Twitchell led the scoring for the Lady Spar- tans with 11 points and 4 rebounds, Jesse Miller had a double-double with 10 points and 12 rebounds, Maggie Winning had 8 points and 4 rebounds, Kylee Kitchell had 8 points and 3 rebounds and Megan Boonehad5pointsand2re- bounds. The Spartans (11-7 over- all,1-4league)arescheduled to host the Chico Panthers (9-12 overall, 1-4 league) at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Thursday's games will be the annual Pink Out fun- draiser for breast cancer and fans are encouraged to wear pink and purchase raffle tickets an other spe- cial items starting with the freshman game at 4:30 p.m. Warriors33,Liberty Christian62 REDDING The Mercy War- riors boys team fell Friday nightontheroadtotheLib- erty Christian Patriots 62- 33. The Warriors fell behind early, finishing the first down 28-2 before running out the clock for the loss. Marcus Kuechle led the Warriors with 21 points and 15reboundsandDartagnan Kingwell had 6 points and 11 points. The Warriors (1-17 over- all, 0-4 league) are sched- uled to visit the Redding Christian Lions (14-5 over- all, 3-0 league) at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Bulldogs71,Burney66 BURNEY Abigfourthquar- terledtheLosMolinosBull- dogs boys team to a come from behind win Friday night over the Burney Raid- ers, 71-66. Playing even through the first half, the Raiders went up by 2 after the third pe- riod. The Bulldogs rallied for 23 points in the final frame to take the win. Freshman Ty Isaksen and sophomore Aaron Hardy led the Bulldogs with 18 points each, Alex Russell had 14, Kyle wood had 8, freshman Devin Henderson had 7 and fresh- man Hunter Landingham had 6. The Bulldogs go to 14-4 overall, 2-1 in league play and will host the Liberty Christian Patriots (4-11 overall, 2-2 league) at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Also this week The Red Bluff Spartans boys team (8-11 overall, 1-4 league) is scheduled to visit Chico to take on the Panthers (9-10 overall, 1-4 league) at 7:30 p.m. Friday. The Corning Cardinals boys team (20-0 overall, 5-0 league) is scheduled to host the Willows Honkers (6-14 overall, 1-2 league) in a non-conference game at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. The Los Molinos Lady Bulldogs (11-5 overall, 1-1 league) are scheduled to host the Mercy Lady War- riors (2-15 overall, 0-2 league) at 6 p.m. Friday. The Mercy Lady War- riors (2-15 overall, 0-2 league) are scheduled to visit Palo Cedro to take on the Redding Christian Lions (13-4 overall, 3-0 league) at 6 p.m. Tuesday. Basketball FROM PAGE 1 Scoreboard Football NFL WILD-CARD PLAYOFFS Saturday, Jan. 7 Houston27,Oakland14 Seattle 26, Detroit 6 Sunday, Jan. 8 Pittsburgh 30, Miami 12 Green Bay 38, N.Y. Giants 13 DIVISIONAL PLAYOFFS Saturday, Jan. 14 Atlanta 36, Seattle 20 New England 34, Houston 16 Sunday, Jan. 15 Green Bay 34, Dallas 31 Pittsburgh 18, Kansas City 16 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS Sunday, Jan. 22 NFC Atlanta 44, Green Bay 21 AF C New England 36, Pittsburgh 17 PRO BOWL Sunday, Jan. 29 At Orlando, Fla. AFC 20, NFC 13 SUPER BOWL Sunday, Feb. 5 At Houston Atlanta vs. New England, 3:30 p.m. (FOX) NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Golden State 41 7 .854 — Clippers 30 18 .625 11 Sacramento 19 29 .396 22 Phoenix 15 32 .319 251/2 Lakers 16 34 .320 26 SOUTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB San Antonio 36 11 .766 — Houston 35 16 .686 3 Memphis 28 21 .571 9 New Orleans 19 29 .396 171/2 Dallas 18 30 .375 181/2 NORTHWEST DIVISION W L Pct GB Utah 30 19 .612 — Oklahoma City 28 20 .583 11/2 Denver 21 25 .457 71/2 Portland 21 28 .429 9 Minnesota 19 29 .396 101/2 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION W L Pct GB Boston 30 18 .625 — Toronto 29 19 .604 1 New York 21 28 .429 91/2 Philadelphia 18 29 .383 111/2 Brooklyn 9 39 .188 21 SOUT HE AS T D IVI SI ON W L Pct GB Atlanta 28 20 .583 — Washington 27 20 .574 1/2 Charlotte 23 25 .479 5 Miami 19 30 .388 91/2 Orlando 19 31 .380 10 CENTRAL DIVISION W L Pct GB Cleveland 32 15 .681 — Indiana 25 22 .532 7 Chicago 24 25 .490 9 Milwaukee 21 26 .447 11 Detroit 21 27 .438 111/2 Sunday's games Atlanta 142, New York 139, 4OT Cleveland 107, Oklahoma City 91 Indiana 120, Houston 101 Orlando 114, Toronto 113 Washington 107, New Orleans 94 Chicago 121, Philadelphia 108 Dallas 105, San Antonio 101 Golden State 113, Portland 111 Monday's games Philadelphia 122, Sacramento 119 Miami 104, Brooklyn 96 Boston 113, Detroit 109 Minnesota 111, Orlando 105, OT Dallas 104, Cleveland 97 Memphis at Phoenix, n Tuesday's games New Orleans at Toronto, 4 p.m. New York at Washington, 4 p.m. Sacramento at Houston, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Charlotte at Portland, 7 p.m. Denver at Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday's games Indiana at Orlando, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 4:30 p.m. New Orleans at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. New York at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Clippers at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Memphis at Denver, 6 p.m. Milwaukee at Utah, 6 p.m. Chicago at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. LEADERS Through Sunday SCORING G FG FT Pts Avg Westbrook, OKC48 481 415 1478 30.8 Thomas, BOS 43 397 325 1252 29.1 Harden, HOU 51 424 464 1469 28.8 Cousins, SAC 46 433 346 1291 28.1 Davis, NOR 44 450 311 1233 28.0 DeRozan, TOR 45 448 338 1250 27.8 Durant, GOL 48 449 270 1262 26.3 Lillard, POR 44 375 290 1151 26.2 James, CLE 43 409 217 1105 25.7 Leonard, SAN 43 358 285 1091 25.4 Curry, GOL 47 392 204 1176 25.0 Irving, CLE 41 374 160 1008 24.6 Butler, CHI 47 353 388 1151 24.5 McCollum, POR 49 429 167 1150 23.5 Akounmpo, MIL 46 393 255 1075 23.4 Walker, CHA 47 390 182 1094 23.3 Anthony, NYK 48 399 210 1108 23.1 Towns, MIN 47 419 186 1079 23.0 George, IND 40 318 188 918 23.0 Wall, WAS 45 381 222 1031 22.9 College basketball AP TOP 25 MEN'S FARED Monday 1. Gonzaga (22-0) did not play. 2. Baylor (20-1) did not play. 3. Kansas (19-2) did not play. 4. Villanova (20-2) did not play. 5. Arizona (20-2) did not play. 6. Louisville (18-4) did not play. 7. West Virginia (17-4) did not play. 8. Kentucky (17-4) did not play. 9. Virginia (16-4) did not play. 10. Wisconsin (18-3) did not play. 11. UCLA (19-3) did not play. 12. North Carolina (19-4) did not play. 13. Oregon (19-3) did not play. 14. Cincinnati (19-2) did not play. 15. Florida State (18-4) did not play. 16. Butler (18-4) did not play. 17. Maryland (19-2) did not play. 18. Saint Mary's (19-2) did not play. 19. South Carolina (17-4) did not play. 20. Notre Dame (17-6) lost to No. 21 Duke 84-74. 21. Duke (17-5) beat No. 20 Notre Dame 84-74. 22. Creighton (19-3) did not play. 23. Purdue (17-5) did not play. 24. Florida (16-5) did not play. 25. Northwestern (18-4) did not play. AP TOP 25 WOMEN'S FARED Monday 1. UConn (20-0) did not play. 2. Baylor (21-1) did not play. 3. Maryland (21-1) did not play. 4. South Carolina (18-2) lost to Tennes- see 76-74. 5. Mississippi State (21-1) did not play. 6. Florida State (20-2) did not play. 7. Notre Dame (20-3) did not play. 8. Stanford (19-3) did not play. 9. Louisville (20-4) did not play. 10. Washington (20-3) did not play. 11. Oregon State (20-2) did not play. 12. Texas (16-4) did not play. 13. UCLA (17-4) did not play. 14. Ohio State (19-5) did not play. 15. Duke (18-4) did not play. 16. Miami (16-5) did not play. 17. DePaul (18-5) did not play. 18. Oklahoma (16-6) did not play. 19. N.C. State (16-6) did not play. 20. South Florida (17-3) did not play. 21. Green Bay (19-2) did not play. 22. West Virginia (16-6) did not play. 23. Arizona State (14-7) did not play. 24. Syracuse (15-7) did not play. 25. Kentucky (15-7) lost to Missouri 73-67. NHL WESTERN CONFERENCE PACIFIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 50 31 17 2 64 135 116 Edmonton 51 28 15 8 64 152 132 Anaheim 51 27 15 9 63 133 129 Calgary 52 25 24 3 53 134 149 Los Angeles 49 24 21 4 52 123 121 Vancouver 50 23 21 6 52 119 140 Arizona 48 16 26 6 38 108 152 CENTRAL DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Minnesota 48 32 11 5 69 160 109 Chicago 51 30 16 5 65 142 132 Nashville 49 24 17 8 56 138 130 St. Louis 49 24 20 5 53 138 152 Dallas 50 20 20 10 50 135 157 Winnipeg 52 23 25 4 50 150 161 Colorado 46 13 31 2 28 93 156 EASTERN CONFERENCE ATLANTIC DIVISION GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 50 29 14 7 65 150 125 Ottawa 47 26 15 6 58 127 123 Boston 52 25 21 6 56 131 135 Toronto 47 23 15 9 55 145 133 Florida 50 21 19 10 52 116 137 Tampa Bay 50 22 22 6 50 136 146 Buffalo 48 20 19 9 49 118 136 Detroit 49 20 20 9 49 123 144 ME TR OP OL IT AN D IVI SI ON GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 49 33 10 6 72 160 106 Columbus 48 32 12 4 68 160 114 Pittsburgh 48 30 13 5 65 172 141 N.Y. Rangers 49 31 17 1 63 167 129 Philadelphia 50 25 19 6 56 140 155 N.Y. Islanders 47 21 17 9 51 136 136 Carolina 48 21 20 7 49 126 140 New Jersey 50 20 21 9 49 113 144 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday's games All-Star game: Central 3, Pacific 10 All-Star game: Atlantic 6, Metropolitan 10 All-Star game Final: Metropolitan 4, Pacific 3 Tuesday's games Columbus at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at Carolina, 4 p.m. Nashville at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Boston at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Buffalo at Montreal, 4:30 p.m. Ottawa at Florida, 4:30 p.m. New Jersey at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Winnipeg at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Toronto at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Edmonton, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Arizona, 6 p.m. Colorado at Anaheim, 7 p.m. Chicago at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday's games Boston at Washington, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Calgary, 7 p.m. Colorado at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Thursday's games Montreal at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo, 4:30 p.m. Ottawa at Tampa Bay, 4:30 p.m. Edmonton at Nashville, 5 p.m. Winnipeg at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Chicago at Arizona, 6 p.m. Toronto at St. Louis, 6 p.m. San Jose at Vancouver, 7 p.m. LEADERS Through Sunday GP G A Pts Connor McDavid, EDM 51 17 42 59 Sidney Crosby, PIT 42 28 27 55 Evgeni Malkin, PIT 47 22 32 54 Brent Burns, SJ 50 21 30 51 Brad Marchand, BOS 52 21 28 49 Patrick Kane, CHI 51 15 34 49 Mark Scheifele, WPG 49 22 26 48 Vlad Tarasenko, STL 49 21 26 47 Tyler Seguin, DAL 50 18 29 47 Nick Backstrom, WAS 49 13 34 47 Cam Atkinson, CLS 48 24 22 46 Leon Draisaitl, EDM 51 19 27 46 Phil Kessel, PIT 48 15 31 46 Alex Ovechkin, WAS 49 23 22 45 4 tied with 44 pts. Golf WORLD GOLF RANKING 1. Jason Day AUS 10.38 2. Rory McIlroy NIR 9.63 3. Dustin Johnson USA 9.36 4. Henrik Stenson SWE 8.44 5. Jordan Spieth USA 8.00 6. Hideki Matsuyama JPN 7.87 7. Adam Scott AUS 6.18 8. Justin Thomas USA 5.73 9. Patrick Reed USA 5.40 10. Alex Noren SWE 5.29 11. Bubba Watson USA 4.90 12. Danny Willett ENG 4.81 13. Justin Rose ENG 4.75 14. Rickie Fowler USA 4.68 15. Sergio Garcia ESP 4.44 16. Paul Casey ENG 4.36 17. Branden Grace SAF 4.25 18. Russell Knox SCO 4.17 19. Brooks Koepka USA 4.11 20. Matt Kuchar USA 3.90 21. Jimmy Walker USA 3.88 22. Phil Mickelson USA 3.84 23. Tyrrell Hatton ENG 3.63 24. Charl Schwartzel SAF 3.57 25. Emiliano Grillo ARG 3.45 26. Rafael Cabrera Bello ESP 3.41 27. Louis Oosthuizen SAF 3.38 28. Brandt Snedeker USA 3.36 29. J.B. Holmes USA 3.29 30. Ryan Moore USA 3.28 31. Matthew Fitzpatrick ENG 3.25 32. Francesco Molinari ITA 3.17 33. Daniel Berger USA 3.10 34. Yuta Ikeda JPN 3.08 35. Kevin Chappell USA 3.03 36. Scott Piercy USA 2.96 37. Bernd Wiesberger AUT 2.85 38. Zach Johnson USA 2.81 39. Jim Furyk USA 2.76 40. Bill Haas USA 2.62 41. Gary Woodland USA 2.61 42. Kevin Kisner USA 2.60 43. Lee Westwood ENG 2.60 44. Chris Wood ENG 2.56 45. William McGirt USA 2.53 46. Byeong Hun An KOR 2.52 47. Martin Kaymer GER 2.50 48. Andy Sullivan ENG 2.49 49. Kevin Na USA 2.47 50. Shane Lowry IRL 2.46 PGA TOUR STATISTICS Through Jan. 29 FedExCup Season Points 1, Justin Thomas, 1,614.478. 2, Hideki Matsuyama, 1,197.139. 3, Pat Perez, 857.616. 4, Brendan Steele, 781.142. 5, Mackenzie Hughes, 648.011. 6, Jon Rahm, 624.500. 7, Hudson Swafford, 610.343. 8, Charles Howell III, 584.125. 9, Rod Pampling, 559.822. 10, Cody Gribble, 480.800. Scoring Average 1, Justin Rose, 68.201. 2, Justin Thomas, 68.785. 3, Hideki Matsuyama, 69.132. 4, Bill Haas, 69.149. 5, Jordan Spieth, 69.282. 6, Francesco Molinari, 69.340. 7, Marc Leishman, 69.555. 8, Jim Furyk, 69.681. 9, Andres Romero, 69.702. 10, Luke List, 69.716. Driving Distance 1, Dustin Johnson, 318.7. 2, Luke List, 316.6. 3, Smylie Kaufman, 315.4. 4, Grayson Murray, 314.6. 5, Justin Rose, 314.0. 6, Brandon Hagy, 312.7. 7, Hideto Tanihara, 312.6. 8, Trey Mullinax, 310.4. 9 (tie), Ryan Brehm and Justin Thomas, 308.5. Driving Accuracy Percentage 1, Y ou ng -h an S ong , 8 3. 93 %. 2 , J im Fu ry k, 78.57%. 3, Francesco Molinari, 76.34%. 4, Brian Stuard, 76.01%. 5, William McGirt, 75.62%. 6, Scott Langley, 75.00%. 7 , Jason Dufner, 74.31%. 8, Soren Kjeldsen, 73.38%. 9, Colt Knost, 72.73%. 10, Jim Herman, 72.54%. Greens in Regulation Percentage 1, Jordan Spieth, 84.72%. 2, Rafa Cabrera Bello, 80.56%. 3, Jason Day, 79.63%. 4, Sergio Garcia, 78.47%. 5, Jim Herman, 78.06%. 6, John Merrick, 77.78%. 7, Kyle Stanley, 77.27%. 8, William McGirt, 77.12%. 9, Justin Rose, 77.08%. 10, Rus- sell Knox, 76.94%. Total Driving 1, Davis Love III, 52. 2, Kyle Stanley, 67. 3, Billy Horschel, 85. 4, Hudson Swafford, 87. 5, Greg Owen, 92. 6, Brendan Steele, 98. 7 (tie), Lucas Glover and James Hahn, 99. 9, Hideki Matsuyama, 100. 10, Bubba Watson, 103. SG: Putting 1, Luke Donald, 2.724. 2, Patton Kizzire, 1.387. 3, Brian Harman, 1.377. 4, Cody Gribble, 1.267. 5, J.B. Holmes, 1.256. 6, Michael Thompson, 1.233. 7, Patrick Reed, 1.179. 8, Michael Kim, 1.174. 9, An- dres Romero, 1.173. 10, Brian Gay, 1.170. Birdie Average 1, Jordan Spieth, 6.25. 2, Justin Thomas, 6.00. 3, Anirban Lahiri, 5.39. 4, Adam Scott, 5.38. 5, Hideki Matsuyama, 5.35. 6, Russell Knox, 5.10. 7 (tie), Justin Rose and Scott Piercy, 5.00. 9, Jon Rahm, 4.85. 2 Tied With Greg Owen, 4.83. Eagles (Holes per) 1, Scott Hend, 48.0. 2, Josh Teater, 54.0. 3, Martin Laird, 57.0. 4 (tie), Brooks Ko- epka and Aaron Wise, 60.0. 6 Tied With Ernie Els, 72.0. Sand Save Percentage 1, Louis Oosthuizen, 87.50%. 2, Luke Don- ald, 80.00%. 3, Adam Hadwin, 78.38%. 4, Adam Scott, 76.92%. 5, Gary Woodland, 76.19%. 6 (tie), Brendan Steele and Hideki Matsuyama, 76.00%. 8, Rickie Fowler, 75.00%. 9 (tie), Geoff Ogilvy and Shane Lowry, 73.33%. All-Around Ranking 1, Hideki Matsuyama, 190. 2, Justin Thomas, 224. 3, Russell Knox, 311. 4, Francesco Molinari, 321. 5, Keegan Bradley, 342. 6, Pat Perez, 355. 7, Jordan Spieth, 412. 8, Luke List, 413. 9, Zach Johnson, 426. 10, Sean O'Hair, 439. Odds PREGAME.COM LINE NBA Tuesday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog at Washington 8 (2151/2) New York at Toronto 71/2 (215) New Orleans at Houston 111/2 (2241/2)Sacramento at San Antonio 9 (211) Oklahoma City at Portland 3 (214) Charlotte at Lakers OFF (OFF) Denver College Basketball Tuesday Favorite Line (O/U) Underdog Ohio 31/2 at W. Michigan at Ball St 31/2 Toledo at Butler 6 Creighton at Buffalo 51/2 Cent. Michigan at Mississippi 41/2 Mississippi St at E. Michigan 7 Kent St at B. Green 5 Miami (Ohio) at N. Carolina 18 Pittsburgh Wake Forest 51/2 at Boston College at Ohio State 21/2 Maryland at Rhode Island 111/2George Washington Temple 8 at Tulane at Missouri St 21/2 Loyola of Chicago Davidson 2 at St. Joseph's Akron 3 at N. Illinois at Kentucky 161/2 Georgia at Auburn 11/2 Tennessee Dayton 10 at Fordham West Virginia 21/2 at Iowa St Wisconsin 61/2 at Illinois Georgetown 7 at DePaul at Colorado St 2 Boise St at San Diego St 9 Wyoming NHL Tuesday Favorite Line Underdog at NY Rangers OFF Columbus at Pittsburgh OFF Nashville at NY Islanders OFF Washington at Carolina -133/+123 Philadelphia at Detroit -129/+119 New Jersey at Tampa Bay OFF Boston at Montreal OFF Buffalo at Florida -105/-105 Ottawa at St. Louis -139/+129 Winnipeg at Dallas -111/+101 Toronto at Edmonton OFF Minnesota at Arizona OFF Los Angeles at Anaheim -275/+245 Colorado at San Jose OFF Chicago NFL Super Bowl — Sunday Favorite Today (O/U) Underdog Ne w E ng la nd 3 ( 581 / 2 ) At la nt a Transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball MLB: Announced St. Louis will forfeit its second-round (No. 56) and compensa- tion round B (No. 75) draft picks to Houston and pay Houston $2 million for hacking Astros. Placed former St. Louis director of baseball development Christopher Correa on the permanently ineligible list. American League Boston Red Sox: Named Spencer Bingol baseball research & development analyst, Fred Hubert senior baseball systems developer, Patrick McLaughlin minor league video/Florida baseball operations assistant, and J.T. Watkins advance scouting assistant. Cleveland Indians: Acquired RHP Carlos Frias from the Los Angeles Dodgers for cash considerations. Designated 1B-3B Richie Shaffer for assignment. Tampa Bay Rays: Agreed to terms with OF Colby Rasmus on a one-year con- tract. Released OF Jason Coats. National League Atlanta Braves: Agreed to terms with C Kurt Suzuki on a one-year contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association Memphis Grizzlies: Signed G Toney Douglas to a 10-day contract. Waived F Troy Williams. Women's National Basketball Association New York Liberty: Acquired C Kia Vaughn and G Bria Hartley from Wash- ington and traded C Carolyn Swords to Seattle. Seattle received Washington's first-round (No. 6) draft pick and traded second-round picks in the three-team trade. HOCKEY National Hockey League Colorado Avalanche: Recalled G Spencer Martin from San Antonio (AHL). New Jersey Devils: Recalled D Seth Helgeson, D Steven Santini and D Karl Stollery from Albany (AHL). Tampa Bay Lightning: Recalled D Jake Dotchin from Syracuse (AHL). Washington Capitals: Recalled D Chris- tian Djoos and F Chandler Stephenson from Hershey (AHL). SOCCER Major League Soccer Philadelphia Union: Signed D Oguchi Onyewu. Sporting Kansas City: Signed F Soony Saad. | SPORTS | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 2017 2 B

