12—Cleveland Daily Banner—Wednesday, January 6, 2016
www.clevelandbanner.com
SCOREBOARD
Lady Colts get
win over Westside
From STAFF REPORTS
The Ocoee Middle School Lady
Colts grabbed a 41-27 win over
Westside Tuesday night.
The Lady Colts had built up a
17-9 lead over Westside by halftime
Laney Harris led the team in
scoring with 12 points, where 10
of those came in the second period
as they took the reigns from the
opposing team. Amelia Reuter was
right behind as she dropped eight
in the contest.
Both Kate Ford and Marlee
Montgomery ended up with six
points, while Chloe Williams tallied five and Cambree Mayo
grabbed four.
ON aIr
Brandon Moss, of-1b; Trevor Rosenthal, rhp.
SAN DIEGO (4) — Andrew Cashner, rhp; Derek Norris, c;
Drew Pomeranz, lhp; Tyson Ross, rhp.
SAN FRANCISCO (2) — Brandon Belt, 1b; George Kontos,
rhp.
WASHINGTON (5) — Danny Espinosa, 2b; Wilson Ramos,
c; Anthony Rendon, 2b-3b; Drew Storen, rhp; Stephen
Strasburg, rhp.
Sports on tV
wednesday, Jan. 6
COLLeGe BaSKetBaLL
6:30 p.m.
SEC — Missouri at Georgia
7 p.m.
BTN — Rutgers at Maryland
ESPN2 — Florida at Tennessee
ESPNU — Duke at Wake Forest
ESPNEWS — South Florida at UCF
FS1 — Seton Hall at Villanova
8 p.m.
CBSSN — UMass at Dayton
8:30 p.m.
SEC — Texas A&M at Mississippi St.
9 p.m.
BTN — Ohio St. at Northwestern
ESPN2 — California at Oregon
ESPNU — Texas Tech at Iowa St.
FS1 — Xavier at St. John's
10 p.m.
CBSSN — UNLV at Colorado St.
11 p.m.
ESPNU — Stanford at Oregon St.
GOLF
3 a.m. (thursday)
GOLF — European PGA Tour, BMW South African Open,
first round, at Johannesburg
NBa BaSKetBaLL
7 p.m.
ESPN — New York at Miami
9:30 p.m.
ESPN — Memphis at Oklahoma City
NHL HOCKey
8 p.m.
NBCSN — Pittsburgh at Chicago
wOMeN'S COLLeGe BaSKetBaLL
Noon
NBCSN — Rhode Island at George Washington
ON taP
wednesday, Jan. 6
BaSKetBaLL
Baylor at Walker Valley, 6
BOwLING
District 5 tournament
at Holiday Bowl Brainerd
Bradley Central, Walker Valley participating, finals begin at
1
thursday, Jan. 7
BaSKetBaLL
Cleveland State at Wallace State-Hanceville (Men), 3
Do gwood at Cleveland Christian, 6
Copper Basin at TCPS, 6
Greenback at Polk County, 6
wreStLING
Cleveland at Bradley Central, 7
Soddy-Daisy at Walker Valley, 7
Friday, Jan. 8
BaSKetBaLL
Cleveland at Ooltewah, 6
Soddy-Daisy at Walker Valley, 6
Saturday, Jan. 9
BaSKetBaLL
Cleveland at Model, Ga., 6
Bradley Central at Stone Memorial, 7
Delta State University at Lee University, 2
wreStLING
Soddy Daisy Invitational
Cleveland Participating, TBA
Walker Valley Duals, TBA
Sunday, Jan. 10
BaSKetBaLL
Cleveland State at Martin Methodist College JV (Women), 3
BaSeBaLL
remaining Free agents
NEW YORK (AP) — The 103 remaining free agents (qdid not accept qualifying offer):
aMerICaN LeaGue
BALTMORE (4) — q-Wei-Yin Chen, lhp; q-Chris Davis, 1b;
Gerardo Parra, of; Steve Pearce, of.
BOSTON (1) — Craig Breslow, lhp.
CHICAGO (2) — Matt Albers, rhp; Alexei Ramirez, ss.
CLEVELAND (3) — Gavin Floyd, rhp; Ryan Raburn, dh;
Ryan Webb, rhp.
DETROIT (3) — Joe Nathan, rhp; Alfredo Simon, rhp; Randy
Wolf, lhp.
KANSAS CITY (5) — Jonny Gomes, of; q-Alex Gordon, of;
Jeremy Guthrie, rhp; Franklin Morales, lhp; Alex Rios, of.
LOS ANGELES (7) — David DeJesus, of; David Freese, 3b;
Matt Joyce, of; Mat Latos, rhp; David Murphy, of; Shane
Victorino, of; Wesley Wright, lhp.
MINNESOTA (4) — Blaine Boyer, rhp; Neal Cotts, lhp; Brian
Duensing, lhp; Torii Hunter, of.
NEW YORK (2) — Chris Capuano, lhp; Stephen Drew, 2b.
OAKLAND (1) — Barry Zito, lhp.
SEATTLE (1) — Joe Beimel, lhp.
TAMPA BAY (1) — Grady Sizemore, of.
TEXAS (6) — q-Yovani Gallardo, rhp; Colby Lewis, rhp;
Mike Napoli, 1b; Ross Ohlendorf, rhp; Drew Stubbs, of; Will
Venable, of.
TORONTO (5) — Mark Buehrle, lhp; Jeff Francis, lhp;
Maicer Izturis, 2b; LaTroy Hawkins, rhp; Munenori
Kawasaki, inf.
—
NatIONaL LeaGue
ATLANTA (2) — Edwin Jackson, rhp; Peter Moylan, rhp.
CHICAGO (6) — Chris Denorfia, of; q-Dexter Fowler, of;
Dan Haren, rhp; Tommy Hunter, rhp; Austin Jackson, of;
Fernando Rodney, rhp.
CINCINNATI (4) — Burke Badenhop, rhp; Sean Marshall,
lhp; Manny Parra, lhp; Skip Schumaker, inf-of.
COLORADO (2) — Kyle Kendrick, rhp; Justin Morneau, 1b.
LOS ANGELES (5) — Bronson Arroyo, rhp; q-Howie
Kendrick, 2b; Joel Peralta, rhp; Jimmy Rollins, ss.
MIAMI (2) — Don Kelly, 3b; Casey McGehee, 3b.
MILWAUKEE (1) — Kyle Lohse, rhp.
NEW YORK (7) — Yoenis Cespedes, of; Tyler Clippard, rhp;
Kelly Johnson, of; q-Daniel Murphy, 2b; Eric O’Flaherty, lhp;
Bobby Parnell, rhp; Juan Uribe, 3b.
PHILADELPHIA (5) — Chad Billingsley, rhp; Jeff Francoeur,
of; Aaron Harang, rhp; Cliff Lee, lhp; Jerome Williams, rhp.
PITTSBURGH (5) — Antonio Bastardo, lhp; Joe Blanton,
rhp; A.J. Burnett, rhp; Corey Hart, 1b; Aramis Ramirez, 3b.
ST. LOUIS (3) — Matt Belisle, rhp; Randy Choate, lhp;
Carlos Villanueva, rhp.
SAN DIEGO (5) — Clint Barmes, ss; Josh Johnson, rhp; qIan Kennedy, rhp; Brandon Morrow, rhp; q-Justin Upton, of.
SAN FRANCISCO (5) — Jeremy Affeldt, lhp; Marlon Byrd,
of; Tim Hudson, rhp; Tim Lincecum, rhp; Marco Scutaro, 2b.
WASHINGTON (7) — q-Ian Desmond, ss; Doug Fister, rhp;
Casey Janssen, rhp; Nate McLouth, of; Denard Span, of;
Matt Thornton, lhp; Dan Uggla, 2b.
Salary arbitration eligibles List
NatIONaL LeaGue
ARIZONA (7) — Welington Castillo, c; Patrick Corbin, lhp;
Rubby De La Rosa, rhp; Randall Delgado, rhp; Daniel
Hudson, rhp; Shelby Miller, rhp; A.J. Pollock, of.
ATLANTA (2) — Arodys Vizcaino, rhp; Chris Withrow, rhp.
CHICAGO (7) — Jake Arrieta, rhp; Chris Coghlan, of; Justin
Grimm, rhp; Hector Rondon, rhp; Pedro Strop, rhp; Adam
Warren, rhp; Travis Wood, lhp.
CINCINNATI (2) — Zack Cozart, ss; J.J. Hoover, rhp.
COLORADO (3) — Nolan Arenado, 3b; Charlie Blackmon,
of; DJ LeMahieu, 2b.
LOS ANGELES (6) — Luis Avilan, lhp; Yasmani Grandal, c;
Chris Hatcher, rhp; Kenley Jansen, rhp; Justin Turner, inf;
Scott Van Slyke, of.
MIAMI (8) — Carter Capps, rhp; Jose Fernandez, rhp; Dee
Gordon, 2b; Adeiny Hechavarria, ss; Tom Koehler, rhp;
Bryan Morris, rhp; David Phelps, rhp; A.J. Ramos, rhp.
MILWAUKEE (3) — Wily Peralta, rhp; Jean Segura, ss; Will
Smith, lhp.
NEW YORK (9) — Lucas Duda, 1b; Josh Edgin, lhp; Jeurys
Familia, rhp; Matt Harvey, rhp; Jenrry Mejia, rhp; Addison
Reed, rhp; Ruben Tejada, ss; Carlos Torres, rhp; Neil
Walker, 2b.
PHILADELPHIA (3) — Freddy Galvis, ss; Jeanmar Gomez,
rhp; Jeremy Hellickson, rhp.
PITTSBURGH (7) — Francisco Cervelli, c; Jared Hughes,
rhp; Jeff Locke, lhp; Mark Melancon, rhp; Jordy Mercer, ss;
Chris Stewart, c; Tony Watson, lhp.
ST. LOUIS (4) — Matt Adams, 1b; Seth Maness, rhp;
W
3
3
4
4
5
5
5
6
6
6
6
7
7
7
7
7
8
8
L
13
13
12
12
11
11
11
10
10
10
10
9
9
9
9
9
8
8
T
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Pct
.188
.188
.250
.250
.313
.313
.313
.375
.375
.375
.375
.438
.438
.438
.438
.438
.500
.500
W L
126130
136120
135121
136120
121135
130126
138118
120136
124132
128128
140116
129127
130126
131125
135121
137119
123133
128128
NFL Playoff Glance
wild-card Playoffs
Saturday, Jan. 9
Kansas City (11-5) at Houston (9-7), 4:35 p.m.
(ABC/ESPN)
Pittsburgh (10-6) at Cincinnati (12-4), 8:15 p.m. (CBS)
Sunday, Jan. 10
Seattle (10-6) at Minnesota (11-6), 1 p.m. (NBC)
Green Bay (10-6) at Washington (9-7), 4:30 p.m. (FOX)
Divisional Playoffs
Saturday, Jan. 16
Cincinnati, Houston or Kansas City at New England (12-4),
4:35 (CBS)
Minnesota, Washington or Green Bay at Arizona (13-3),
8:15 p.m. (NBC)
Sunday, Jan. 17
Seattle, Green Bay or Washington at Carolina (15-1), 1:05
p.m. (FOX)
Pittsburgh, Kansas City or Houston at Denver (12-4), 4:30
p.m. (CBS)
Conference Championships
Sunday, Jan. 24
AFC, 3:05 p.m. (CBS)
NFC, 6:40 p.m. (FOX)
Pro Bowl
Sunday, Jan. 31
at Honolulu
Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 7 p.m. (ESPN)
Super Bowl
Sunday, Feb. 7
at Santa Clara, Calif.
TBD, 6:30 p.m. (CBS)
NCaa
College Football Championship winners
College Football Championship
Jan. 12, 2015 — Ohio St. 42, Oregon 20
BCS National Championship
Jan. 6, 2014 — Florida St. 34, Auburn 31
Jan. 7, 2013 — Alabama 42, Notre Dame 14
Jan. 9, 2012 — Alabama 21, LSU 0
Jan. 10, 2011 — Auburn 22, Oregon 19
Jan. 7, 2010 — Alabama 37, Texas 21
Jan. 8, 2009 — Florida 24, Oklahoma 14
Jan. 7, 2008 — LSU 38, Ohio State 24
Jan. 8, 2007 — Florida 41, Ohio State 14
BCS Championship
Jan. 4, 2006 Rose Bowl — Texas 41, Southern Cal-x 38
Jan. 1, 2005 Orange Bowl — Southern Cal-x 55, Oklahoma
19
Jan. 4, 2004 Sugar Bowl — LSU 21, Oklahoma 14
Jan. 3, 2003 Fiesta Bowl — Ohio St. 31, Miami 24, 2OT
Jan. 3, 2002 Rose Bowl — Miami 37, Nebraska 14
Jan. 3, 2001 Orange Bowl — Oklahoma 13, Florida St. 2
Jan. 4, 2000 Sugar Bowl — Florida St. 46, Virginia Tech 29
Jan. 4, 1999 Fiesta Bowl — Tennessee 23, Florida St. 16
x-participation vacated
Football Championship Subdivision Playoff
Semifinals
Friday, Dec. 18
North Dakota State 33, Richmond 7
Saturday, Dec. 19
Jacksonville State 62, Sam Houston State 10
Championship
Saturday, Jan. 9
at toyota Stadium
Frisco, texas
North Dakota State (12-2) vs. Jacksonville State (13-1),
Noon
National Basketball association
eaSterN CONFereNCe
atlantic Division
w
L
Pct
GB
Toronto
21
15
.583
—
Boston
19
15
.559
1
New York
17
19
.472
4
Brooklyn
10
24
.294
10
Philadelphia
4
33
.108 17½
Southeast Division
w
L
Pct
GB
Miami
21
13
.618
—
Atlanta
21
15
.583
1
Orlando
19
16
.543
2½
Charlotte
17
17
.500
4
Washington
15
17
.469
5
Central Division
w
L
Pct
GB
Cleveland
23
9
.719
—
Chicago
21
12
.636
2½
Indiana
19
15
.559
5
Detroit
19
16
.543
5½
Milwaukee
14
23
.378 11½
weSterN CONFereNCe
Southwest Division
w
L
Pct
GB
San Antonio
30
6
.833
—
Dallas
20
15
.571
9½
Memphis
19
17
.528
11
Houston
17
19
.472
13
New Orleans
11
22
.333 17½
Northwest Division
w
L
Pct
GB
Oklahoma City
24
11
.686
—
Utah
15
18
.455
8
Portland
15
22
.405
10
Denver
12
23
.343
12
Minnesota
12
23
.343
12
Pacific Division
w
L
Pct
GB
Golden State
33
2
.943
—
L.A. Clippers
22
13
.629
11
Sacramento
14
21
.400
19
Phoenix
12
25
.324
22
L.A. Lakers
8
28
.222 25½
Monday’s Games
Cleveland 122, Toronto 100
Philadelphia 109, Minnesota 99
Miami 103, Indiana 100, OT
Boston 103, Brooklyn 94
Detroit 115, Orlando 89
San Antonio 123, Milwaukee 98
Sacramento 116, Oklahoma City 104
Houston 93, Utah 91
Memphis 91, Portland 78
Golden State 111, Charlotte 101
tuesday’s Games
Chicago 117, Milwaukee 106
New York 107, Atlanta 101
Dallas 117, Sacramento 116,2OT
Golden State 109, L.A. Lakers 88
wednesday’s Games
New York at Miami, 7 p.m.
Indiana at Orlando, 7 p.m.
Cleveland at Washington, 7 p.m.
Toronto at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Denver at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Dallas at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Utah at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
Charlotte at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Memphis at Oklahoma City, 9:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Portland, 10 p.m.
thursday’s Games
Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Boston at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Utah at Houston, 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
top 25 Fared
tuesday
1. Kansas (13-1) did not play. Next: at Texas Tech, Saturday.
2. Oklahoma (12-1) did not play. Next: vs. Kansas State,
Saturday.
3. Maryland (13-1) did not play. Next: vs. Rutgers,
Wednesday.
4. Virginia (12-2) did not play. Next: at Georgia Tech,
Saturday.
5. Michigan State (14-1) did not play. Next: vs. Illinois,
Thursday.
6. North Carolina (14-2) did not play. Next: at Syracuse,
Saturday.
7. Arizona (13-1) did not play. Next: at UCLA, Thursday.
8. Providence (14-2) lost to Marquette 65-64. Next: at
Creighton, Tuesday.
9. Kentucky (11-2) at LSU. Next: at Alabama, Saturday.
10. Xavier (13-1) did not play. Next: at St. John’s,
Wednesday.
11. Villanova (12-2) did not play. Next: vs. Seton Hall,
Wednesday.
12. Miami (12-1) did not play. Next: vs. Florida State,
Saturday.
13. Iowa State (11-2) did not play. Next: vs. Texas Tech,
Wednesday.
14. Duke (12-2) did not play. Next: at Wake Forest,
Wednesday.
15. SMU (13-0) did not play. Next: vs. Cincinnati, Thursday.
16. Louisville (12-2) did not play. Next: at N.C. State,
Thursday.
17. West Virginia (13-1) did not play. Next: vs. Oklahoma
State, Saturday.
18. Butler (11-3) at DePaul. Next: vs. No. 11 Villanova,
Sunday.
19. Iowa (11-3) vs. Nebraska. Next: at No. 5 Michigan State,
Thursday.
20. Purdue (13-2) did not play. Next: vs. Michigan,
Thursday.
21. Texas A&M (11-2) did not play. Next: at Mississippi
State, Wednesday.
22. South Carolina (14-0) beat Auburn 81-69. Next: vs.
Vanderbilt, Saturday.
23. UConn (10-3) vs. Temple. Next: vs. Memphis, Saturday.
24. Pittsburgh (12-1) did not play. Next: vs. Georgia Tech,
Wednesday.
25. Dayton (11-2) did not play. Next: vs. UMass,
Wednesday.
women’s top 25 Fared
tuesday
1. UConn (11-0) did not play. Next: vs. Tulsa, Wednesday.
2. South Carolina (13-0) did not play. Next: at Vanderbilt,
Thursday.
3. Notre Dame (13-1) did not play. Next: at Virginia,
Thursday.
4. Texas (13-0) did not play. Next: vs. Iowa State,
Wednesday.
5. Ohio State (10-3) did not play. Next: vs. Indiana,
Thursday.
6. Baylor (14-1) did not play. Next: at Kansas, Wednesday.
7. Mississippi State (14-1) did not play. Next: vs. Auburn,
Thursday.
8. Maryland (12-2) did not play. Next: vs. Nebraska,
Thursday.
9. Stanford (11-3) did not play. Next: vs. Utah, Friday.
10. Kentucky (11-1) did not play. Next: vs. Alabama,
Thursday.
11. Oregon State (10-3) did not play. Next: vs. Oregon,
Friday.
12. Tennessee (10-3) did not play. Next: vs. Florida,
Thursday.
13. Texas A&M (11-3) did not play. Next: at Arkansas,
Thursday.
14. Arizona State (10-3) did not play. Next: at Washington,
Friday.
15. UCLA (11-3) did not play. Next: at Southern Cal, Sunday.
16. Northwestern (12-2) did not play. Next: vs. Purdue,
Thursday.
17. Oklahoma (10-3) did not play. Next: at TCU,
Wednesday.
18. Duke (11-4) did not play. Next: vs. Wake Forest,
Thursday.
19. Florida State (9-4) did not play. Next: vs. Boston College,
Thursday.
at Chicago
april 28-30
First round
Opponents
1. Tennessee Titans
2. Cleveland Browns
3. San Diego Chargers
4. Dallas Cowboys
5. Jacksonville Jaguars
6. Baltimore Ravens
7. San Francisco 49ers
8. Miami Dolphins
9. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
10. New York Giants
11. Chicago Bears
12. New Orleans Saints
13. Philadelphia Eagles
14. Oakland Raiders
15. St. Louis Rams
16. Detroit Lions
17. Atlanta Falcons
18. Indianapolis Colts
FOOtB aLL
BaSKetBaLL
2016 NFL DraFt OrDer
T
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Pct
.492
.531
.527
.531
.473
.508
.539
.469
.484
.500
.547
.504
.508
.512
.527
.535
.480
.500
19. Buffalo Bills
20. New York Jets
21. Washington Redskins-x
22. Houston Texans-x
23. Pittsburgh Steelers-x
24. Seattle Seahawks-x
25. Green Bay Packers-x
26. Kansas City Chiefs-x
27. Minnesota Vikings-x
28. New England Patriots-x
29. Cincinnati Bengals-x
30. Denver Broncos-x
31. Arizona Cardinals-x
32. Carolina Panthers-x
20. Missouri (13-1) did not play. Next: at Georgia, Thursday.
21. California (9-4) did not play. Next: vs. Colorado, Friday.
22. South Florida (9-3) beat UCF 108-63. Next: vs. SMU,
Thursday.
23. Michigan State (10-3) did not play. Next: at Penn State,
Thursday.
24. DePaul (11-5) beat No. 25 Seton Hall 86-74. Next: vs.
Georgetown, Friday.
25. Seton Hall (13-2) lost to No. 24 DePaul 85-7. Next: at St.
John’s, Saturday.
HOCKey
National Hockey League
eaSterN CONFereNCe
atlantic Division
GP W
L
OT Pts GF GA
Florida
40 24 12
4 52 111 86
Detroit
40 20 13
7 47 101 106
Montreal
41 22 16
3 47 119 103
Boston
38 20 14
4 44 118 105
Ottawa
40 19 15
6 44 114 120
Tampa Bay
40 19 17
4 42 101 98
Toronto
37 15 15
7 37 99 103
Buffalo
40 15 21
4 34 92 110
Metropolitan Division
GP W
L
OT Pts GF GA
Washington
39 29
7
3 61 124 85
N.Y. Islanders
40 22 13
5 49 113 99
N.Y. Rangers
40 22 14
4 48 118 105
New Jersey
40 20 15
5 45 93 95
Pittsburgh
39 19 15
5 43 93 96
Philadelphia
38 16 15
7 39 83 105
Carolina
40 16 17
7 39 92 111
Columbus
41 15 23
3 33 105 131
weSterN CONFereNCe
Central Division
GP W
L
OT Pts GF GA
Dallas
42 28 10
4 60 146 113
Chicago
41 24 13
4 52 114 99
St. Louis
42 23 14
5 51 103 103
Minnesota
39 21 11
7 49 105 92
Nashville
40 19 14
7 45 104 106
Colorado
40 19 18
3 41 113 111
Winnipeg
40 19 19
2 40 108 115
Pacific Division
GP W
L
OT Pts GF GA
Los Angeles
39 25 12
2 52 105 87
Arizona
39 19 16
4 42 110 124
Calgary
39 19 18
2 40 104 122
Anaheim
38 16 15
7 39 73 90
Vancouver
40 15 16
9 39 97 113
San Jose
37 18 17
2 38 101 106
Edmonton
41 17 21
3 37 102 122
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.
Monday’s Games
Detroit 1, New Jersey 0
Ottawa 3, St. Louis 2, OT
Colorado 4, Los Angeles 1
Edmonton 1, Carolina 0, OT
Arizona 3, Vancouver 2
tuesday’s Games
Washington 3, Boston 2
Florida 5, Buffalo 1
N.Y. Rangers 6, Dallas 2
Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT
Minnesota 4, Columbus 2
Philadelphia 4, Montreal 3
Winnipeg 4, Nashville 1
Calgary 3, Tampa Bay 1
wednesday’s Games
New Jersey at Montreal, 7 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Chicago, 8 p.m.
St. Louis at Colorado, 10 p.m.
Carolina at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Toronto at Anaheim, 10 p.m.
thursday’s Games
Washington at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
Florida at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m.
Philadelphia at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Winnipeg at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Arizona at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Toronto at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Detroit at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
LOCaL NOteS
BaSeBaLL
BaSeBaLL INStruCtION
Cleveland State Community College assistant baseball
coach Ryne Foster will be offering baseball instruction and
lessons for individuals or small groups. Lessons will be
offered on weeknights and weekends for hitting, catching,
infield play, outfield play and pitching. For times and pricing,
contact coach Foster at (317)650-1064 or email [email protected].
HIttING/PItCHING CaMP
The 2016 Walker Valley High School Hitting & Pitching
Camp will take place at the WVHS Hitting Facility on Jan.
10, 17, 24, 31 and Feb. 7 Registration will be held Jan. 3,
2016. The cost for the camp is $100 per camp or $150 for
both. Each camper will receive a camp T-shirt. For more
information, contact Mike Turner at 595-2640 or Joe
Shamblin at 364-6951.
BaSKetBaLL
KILBy INDIVIDuaL INStruCtION
Individual basketball instruction for male and female
elementary, middle school, high school and post graduate
athletes is being offered by former Junior College and
Universtiy coach L.J. Kilby. Coach Kilby brings 10 years of
head coaching experience as well as 30 years experience
in junior college, NAIA and NCAA Division I basketball. For
more information, contact Coach Kilby at (423)596-2515.
FISHING
CLeVeLaND BaSSMaSterS
The Cleveland Bassmasters meet the first Thursday of
each month at South Cleveland United Methodist Church at
7 p.m. Cleveland Bassmasters includes boaters and nonboaters and are associated with FLW. The club fishes and
holds tournament on Chickamauga Lake, Nickajack Lake,
Lake Guntersville, Lake Weiss, Watts Bar and Neely Henry.
Dues for the Bassmasters are $35 quarterly. Other fees
include $35 FLW joining fee, $8 insurance, $20 per year for
biggest largemouth or smallmouth bass and $15 for tournament largemouth or smallmouth prize. For more information, contact Dewayne Lowe at 423-715-5772.
8
10
9
9
10
10
10
11
11
12
12
12
13
15
8
6
7
7
6
6
6
5
5
4
4
4
3
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.500
.625
.563
.563
.625
.625
.625
.688
.688
.750
.750
.750
.813
.938
130126
113143
119137
127129
129127
133123
136120
127129
129127
121135
122134
128128
122134
113143
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.508
.441
.465
.496
.504
.520
.531
.496
.504
.473
.477
.500
.477
.441
x-Subject to to playoffs
The draft order for playoff teams is determined by the following procedures:
A — The winner of the Super Bowl will select last and the other Super Bowl participant next-to-last, regardless of their regular-season record.
B — The Championship Game participants not advancing to the Super Bowl will
select 29th and 30th, according to the reverse order of their standing.
C — The Divisional Playoff participants not advancing to the Championship
Games will select 25th through 28th, according to the reverse order of their standing.
D — The Wild Card participants not advancing to the Divisional Playoffs will select
21st through 24th, according to the reverse order of their standing.
aP photo
KeNtuCKy FOrwarD Alex Poythress (22) and LSU guard Jalyn Patterson (15) get tangled while
going for a rebound as LSU guard Tim Quarterman (55) watches in the second half Tuesday, in Baton
Rouge, La.
Quarterman, Victor lead
LSU over No. 9 Kentucky
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — It
looks like Ben Simmons won’t
always have to dominate for
LSU to bea t some of college
basketball’s best.
Tim Quarterman had 21
points, 10 rebounds and seven
assists, Craig Victor added 15
points and 12 rebounds, and
LSU defeated No. 9 Kentucky
85-67 on Tuesday night.
Simmons, the heralded
freshman, added 14 points and
10 rebounds for the Tigers (9-5,
2-0 Southeastern Conference),
who seem to be figuring things
out after a disappointing 7-5
start in non-conference play.
LSU has begun its SEC slate by
beating the preseason picks to
finish first and second in the
league, starting with last
Saturday’s
triumph
at
Vanderbilt.
“We have come together as a
team,”
Simmons
said.
“Everyone got sick of what was
happening and we laid it all
out. We put our goals down and
everyone has really stepped up
and contributed.”
LSU never trailed after tying
the game at 2 and kept their
lead at or near double digits for
much of the game to the delight
of a packed and energized Pete
Maravich assembly Center.
Tyler Ulis had 23 points and
Jamal Murray added 21 for
Kentucky, (11-3, 1-1), which
lost for the third time in seven
games and had their 22-game
SEC winning streak snapped.
“Guys came out and didn’t
really want to play, didn’t play
that
hard,”
Ulis
said.
“Basically, it seems like no one
played to win.”
The Wildcats struggled with
their shooting early and later
were hampered by foul trouble.
Starting forwards Marcus Lee
and Alex Poythress both fouled
out by the time 7:29 remained
in the game.
“What a great environment.
We weren’t up for the challenge,” Kentucky coach John
Calipari said. “We weren’t ready
to compete at the level they
competed at, especially our
inside people. We didn’t get
very much from anybody in
there except a lot of fouls.”
LSU led by 14 points with
15:20 left after an 8-2 run that
began with Quarterman’s halfcourt alley-oop lob to Simmons.
Quarterman added a jumper
and tip-in during the spurt.
Quarteman said he was being
aggressive but also benefited
from his teammates making
smart, unselfish plays.
“All of the losses we took earlier this season helped us as a
team and humbled us,”
Quarterman said. “Everyone is
making sacrifices for the wins.
We have a lot of scorers on our
team, but it’s all about making
the right play.”
Murray, who made his first
five shots of the second half,
briefly stemmed the tide by hitting a 3 and then a mid-range
jumper as he was fouled on
successive possessions to make
it 49-41.
Lee fouled out with 13 minutes left, yet the Wildcats were
as close as 58-54 on Poythress’
layup with 9:36 left.
Quarterman responded with
a 3, sparking another Tigers
surge that included two layups
by Victor as he was fouled.
Poythress fouled out with
7:29 to go, and 2 minutes later,
LSU was still up double digits
when Jalyn Patterson’s baseline layup off a deep offensive
rebound made it 70-59.
Kentucky looked spent in the
final 4 minutes as LSU closed
the game on a 14-4 run, with
Simmons scoring six points in
that spurt on a short jumper,
layup and one-handed putback jam that seemed to punctuate the victory as the crowd
went wild.
Kentucky visits Alabama on
Saturday. LSU travels to
Florida also on Saturday.
Bell scores 26 in Arkansas
win over Vanderbilt in OT
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) —
Anthlon Bell scored a seasonhigh 26 points, and Moses
Kingsley added 25 to lead
Arkansas to a 90-85 overtime
victory against Vanderbilt on
Tuesday night.
Bell was 9 of 18 from the
floor, including 6-of-10 shooting from 3-point range.
Kingsley was one point shy of
his career best, and had eight
rebounds as the Razorbacks (77, 1-1 SEC) snapped a twogame losing skid.
Guard Jabril Durham’s steal
and free throws in the closing
seconds of overtime helped the
Razorbacks secure the win and
bounce back from a 23-point
loss in its SEC opener at Texas
A&M on Jan 2. Durham finished with 11 points, six
assists and four steals.
Damian Jones equaled
career highs with 24 points and
15 rebounds to lead Vanderbilt
(8-6, 0-2 in SEC), which opened
its season 5-0 but has lost six
of its past nine games. Matthew
Fisher-Davis added a careerbest 20 points on 6-of-12
shooting.
Vanderbilt guard Wade
Baldwin IV made a driving
layup with 12.8 seconds left to
give the Commodores a 75-74
lead. After an Arkansas timeout, Bell answered by knocking
down a 3-pointer to make it 7775 with two seconds left.
The 7-foot Jones caught a
full-court pass over 6-foot
Arkansas guard Anton Beard
and drove to the basket for a
dunk at the buzzer to force
overtime.
Arkansas struggled in the
opening minutes, but managed
to build a 40-32 halftime lead
behind Kingsley’s 10 points
and Bell’s nine.
The duo also helped
Arkansas stretch its lead to 13
points early in the second half
when Kingsley made a layup
and Bell added a 3-pointer. But
the Razorbacks went nearly five
minutes without a field goal,
while the Commodores used a
20-4 run to take a 52-49 lead.
Arkansas was able to turn
back to its leading scorers to
end the drought after coach
Mike Anderson called a timeout. Kingsley and Bell combined to score Arkansas’ next
16 points, setting up a backand-forth finish in regulation.
Jones and the Commodores
couldn’t finish off Arkansas in
overtime. Vanderbilt’s final
opportunity to force double
overtime ended when Durham
swiped the ball from Baldwin
and then made a pair of free
throws.
Thornwell, No. 25 South
Carolina hold off Auburn
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) —
Sindarius Thornwell scored a
season-high 22 points and No.
22 South Carolina fought off a
second-half challenge to beat
Auburn 81-69 on Tuesday
night in the Gamecocks’
Southeastern Conference opener.
Sporting their highest AP
ranking in 18 years, the
Gamecocks (14-0, 1-0) lost
most of an 18-point first-half
lead before building it back
with inside baskets and foul
shots.
Thornwell made 5 of 8 3point attempts and produced
his season-high point total for
the second straight game after
scoring 18 against Memphis.
Laimonas
Chatkevicius
added 12 points and 10
rebounds for South Carolina.
Duane Notice and Michael
Carrera both scored 12 and
Marcus Stroman had 10.
The Tigers (7-6, 1-1) kept it
close largely with Tyler Harris’
inside play and Kareem Canty’s
five 3-pointers. Harris was 10
of 13 from the field for 22
points and Canty scored 21
points and had five assists.
The Gamecocks shot 50 percent from the field and harried
Auburn into 21 turnovers
(while committing 19) that led
to 28 points.
South Carolina hasn’t been
ranked this high since rising to
No. 5 in 1998. The Gamecocks
are enjoying their longest winning streak since the 1979-80
team won 17 straight.
This one didn’t come without
a second-half threat. Auburn
wiped out most of the
Gamecocks’ 18-point first-half
lead with Harris’ inside baskets
and a 3-point barrage.
Auburn scored nine straight
points, six from Harris and a 3pointer by Brown, to close within 59-54 midway through the
second half. The Gamecocks
were still nursing a single-digit
lead in the final 5 minutes
before pounding it inside either
for baskets or free throws most
of the rest of the way.
The Tigers made 12 of 30 3point attempts, including four
quick ones coming out of halftime.