12A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2016 CONTACT US FOLLOW US facebook.com/ DailyAstorianSports Gary Henley | Sports Reporter ghenley@dailyastorian.com SCOREBOARD PREP SCHEDULE TODAY Boys Soccer — Class 4A State Play- off: Seaside at La Grande, 1 p.m. VOLLEYBALL Northwest All-League Player of the Year: Charity Hall, Gas- ton Coach of the Year: Melody McCaster, Gaston First Team Charity Hall, Jr., Gaston Taylor Bassel, Jr., Gaston Lexi Delgado, Jr., Delphian Sami Howard, Sr., Columbia C. Kaitlyn Landwehr, Sr., Knappa Jahzel Sanchez, So., Faith Bible Payton Wolf, Sr., Vernonia Second Team Julia Clark, Jr., Gaston Jennifer Cruz-Rodriguez, Jr., City Christian Joyce Everett, So., Vernonia Alleggra Poetter, Jr., Faith Bible Lauren Siler, So., Nestucca Luella Taufer, Fr., Delphian Cat Veliz, Jr., Delphian Cassidy Whitton, Sr., Vernonia Honorable Mention Fernanda Careaga, Sr., Delphian Delilah Carter, Jr., Columbia C. Katie Clifford, Sr., Neah-Kah-Nie Morgan Harral, Jr., Vernonia Brooke Jordan, So., Gaston Olivia Leslie, Fr., Nestucca Jaden Miethe, Jr., Knappa Alisha Murphy, Sr., Knappa Kelsey Richardson, Fr., Gaston Paris Vanderburg, Jr., Knappa Jordan Walters, Fr., Vernonia Sportsmanship: Neah-Kah-Nie Senior caps season with all-league award The Daily Astorian League champion Gaston had five players named all-league, and swept the Player and Coach of the Year awards in Northwest League volleyball. The NWL’s all-league team was announced at the league’s tournament. Knappa vol- leyball coach Jeff Kaul stands with his all-league players, from left to right: Jaden Miethe, Alisha Mur- phy, Kaitlyn Landwehr and Paris Vanderburg. Knappa senior Kaitlyn Landwehr was a first-team selection, while Log- ger teammates Jaden Miethe, Alisha Murphy and Paris Vanderburg were named honorable mention. Gaston junior Charity Hall was selected as the Player of the Year, and Gaston’s Melody McCaster was Coach of the Year for the league champion Greyhounds. Submitted Photo WORLD SERIES: GAME 7 ‘This is what you want’ SPORTS IN BRIEF Warriors 127, Trail Blazers 104 Associated PRESS PORTLAND — Stephen Curry had just five points in the first half against the Portland Trail Blazers. He knew the second half was going to be different from his first shot. “You see one go in and that’s all you really need confidence-wise,” he said. That first shot? It was a 3-pointer. Curry finished with 28 points, 23 in the third quarter alone, and the Golden State Warriors beat the Trail Blazers 127-104 on Tuesday night to extend their early season winning streak to three games. Ian Clark came off the bench with a career-high 22 points for the Warriors, who have rebounded after a season-opening loss to San Antonio. Kevin Durant added 20 points and Golden State rested its starters down the stretch after leading by as many as 35 points. Damian Lillard had 31 points for the Blazers, who fell in five games to the Warriors in the West- ern Conference semifinals last season. Playing the first of a back- to-back, Portland coach Terry Stotts also went to his reserves with eight minutes left. The Blazers beat the Warriors 137-105 in Portland last Febru- ary, with Oakland native Lillard scoring a career-high 51 points against his hometown team. It was one of just nine losses for the War- riors. Lillard averaged 36.5 points against the Warriors last season. Lillard scored with 0.3 seconds left to give the Blazers a 115-113 win at Denver on Saturday. He fin- ished with 37 points. UP NEXT Trail Blazers: Open a three- game trip against the Suns on Wednesday night. Nguyen wins $8M at World Series of Poker Associated Press Former nail salon owner and failed professional baccarat player Qui Nguyen has won the World Series of Poker Main Event after the longest heads-up matchup in tournament history. The 39-year-old in a raccoon baseball cap took the top prize of $8,005,310 and the gold bracelet on Tuesday night in Las Vegas. He eliminated San Francisco poker pro Gordon Vayo on the 364th hand of the final table. The native of Vietnam emerged from a field of 6,737 in the $10,000 No-Limit Hold ‘Em Main Event, the final and most prestigious in a series of 69 World Series of Poker tournaments. Vayo earned $4,661,228. AP Photo/Matt Slocum Chicago Cubs’ Addison Russell celebrates after his grand slam against the Cleveland Indians during the third inning of Game 6 of the Major League Baseball World Series Tuesday in Cleveland. But which team will reverse their curse? By RONALD BLUM AP Baseball Writer LEVELAND — Most fans around the country can sit back and savor Game 7. Not so easy for anyone who has spent a lifetime rooting for the Cubs or Indians. All those years of hope and heartbreak collide Wednesday night when Chicago and Cleveland meet one last time this season to decide the World Series. With the Cubs seeking their first champion- ship since 1908 and the Indians trying to stop a drought that dates to 1948, the stakes could hardly be higher. “No one says Game 3 or 5. This is what you want,” said shortstop Francisco Lindor, who leads the Indians with a .364 Series average. Cleveland ace Corey Kluber pitches against Kyle Hendricks, the major league ERA leader. Kluber has a chance to become the first pitcher to win three World Series starts since Detroit’s Mickey Lolich in 1968. “The game has changed,” the 76-year-old Lolich said Tuesday. “It’s a totally different game than what we played back in our days. It just doesn’t happen.” C Addison Russell hit a grand slam and tied a Series record with six RBIs in Chicago’s 9-3 win Tuesday night that forced this captivating matchup to the limit. Chicago is trying to become the first club to overcome a 3-1 Series deficit since the 1985 Kansas City Royals and the first to do it by winning Games 6 and 7 on the road since the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates. Now it’s one night, winner take all. “It’s a kid’s dream,” Russell said. Confidence Even after losing two straight, the Indians remain confident. Kluber is 4-1 with a 0.89 ERA in four postseason starts, starting with 16 consecutive scoreless innings against Boston in the Divi- sion Series and Toronto in the AL Champion- ship Series. “That’s our guy. That’s our stud,” Cleve- land second baseman Jason Kipnis said. A 30-year-old right-hander, Kluber started on three days’ rest for the first time in his big league career in Game 4 against the Blue Jays. He left after five innings with the Indians trail- ing 2-1 in a 5-1 defeat, then threw 88 pitches over six innings as Cleveland beat the Cubs 6-0 last Tuesday in the Series opener. He came back on three days’ rest in Game 4, needing 81 pitches for six innings of one-run, five-hit ball in a 7-2 win that gave WORLD SERIES: GAME 7 • Chicago Cubs at Cleveland • Today, 5 p.m. TV: Fox • Series tied 3-3 Cleveland a 3-1 lead. “Obviously, he’s a special guy,” Hendricks said. “You can just see it, the way he takes to the mound. He’s always locked in.” Nine pitchers have won three starts in a single Series, none since Lolich went 3-0 with a 1.67 ERA and 21 strikeouts while tossing three complete games against the St. Louis Cardinals. “Good players, good pitchers, can do spe- cial things. He’s in that category,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “It was kind of an easy decision after talking to him.” Home-field advantage The 2014 AL Cy Young Award winner, Kluber was 18-9 with a 3.14 ERA this sea- son as Cleveland won the AL Central for the first time since 2007. His win in the All-Star Game at San Diego in July gave the American League home-field advantage in the Series. “I never connected those dots at that point in time,” he said. Already, he is the first pitcher to win Games 1 and 4 in the Series since Cincinna- ti’s Jose Rijo in 1990. Pac-12 coaches: Let’s all get on same page schedule-wise By ANNE M. PETERSON AP Sports Writer It’s that time of year — the final stretch — when the Pac-12’s nine- game conference schedule comes up. Washington is undefeated, at No. 4 in the AP Top 25 , and at No. 5 in the first College Football Playoff rankings. The Huskies appear to have a good shot at one of the four play- off spots — if all the pieces fall into place. Last season, Stanford, with one loss on the road in the opener against Northwestern, looked like a possible contender for one of the four playoff spots, if only the Cardinal could fin- ish strong. The Ducks proved to be spoilers, upsetting the Cardinal 38-36 at Stanford Stadium on Nov. 14. That sparked discussion about the league’s nine-game schedule. In the Power Five conferences, the South- eastern Conference and the Atlantic Coast Conference play eight-game slates. The Big Ten went to nine games this season. The nine-game schedule has been criticized because it’s obviously more difficult, and there’s less like- lihood that a team will finish unde- feated — which therefore lowers the odds of getting coveted playoff berths. That challenges a conference where some key matchups are played late, impacting visibility. On the other side, there are those who say the tougher schedule, paired with a conference championship, cre- ates better teams. “We discuss it every couple of years, it comes up,” Pac-12 Commis- sioner Larry Scott said this weekend. “I think with the new college foot- ball playoff we were thinking, ‘Is this the best model? Is there a differ- ent model?’ But I think we all believe strength of schedule will be rewarded by the selection committee if there are teams with similar records.” That said, Scott said he’d like to see the other conferences rise to the nine-game level. Across the league, coaches said they’d just like it to be equal — at either eight or nine games — across all conferences. “If I just give you my own opin- ion of it, it’s pretty simple for me: All Power 5 teams should do the exact same thing. If they don’t, it’s not fair. That being said, they all don’t. Because it’s very, very difficult when you say you’re going to play nine games within your schedule and then you’re going to go beat each other up. But if everybody else is beating each other up, then I think it’s fine,” Ore- gon State coach Gary Andersen said. Utah Coach Kyle Whittingham agreed: “I don’t lobby for it, but in my opinion all the Power 5 confer- ences should play the same amount of conference games and make it a level playing field and some stan- dardization there. Because when you play a ninth game that gives every- one in the conference a chance to get another loss.” Whittingham took it a step further, saying that he’d like to see the play- offs expanded so that all the confer- ence champions get in. “To me it doesn’t make any sense to not have a level playing field and then not have every champion get in. It doesn’t make sense to me at all,” he said. “If we’re all feeding into a play- off system let’s just play by the same rules,” said Stanford coach David Shaw, who also suggested across- the-board consistency in non-con- ference scheduling against lower-tier teams.