East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, April 23, 2015, Image 10

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    Page 2B
SPORTS
East Oregonian
Thursday, April 23, 2015
TENNIS: Hermiston boys, Pendleton girls cruise MLB
M’s hold
Continued from 1B
off the courts (today) than
frowns and being upset.”
$IWHUWKH¿UVWWZRVLQJOHV
matches, The Dalles ap-
peared to be in control. The
Dalles No. 1 singles Robin
Pashele handled Katelyn
Millard 6-2, 6-1, and Marisa
Cianci edged Jaycee Ternes
6-4, 7-6 (8-6).
From there, though,
Hermiston would lose just
one of the next six match-
es, and that one loss was the
No. 1 doubles pair of Briana
Wolfe and Cheyanne Peter-
son against Anna Muller and
Johanna Wilson. After los-
LQJ WKH ¿UVW VHW 0XOOHU
and Wilson went on a tear,
winning the second set 7-5
and winning the tie-breaker
10-4 after starting down 3-1.
The key matches, accord-
ing to Sivey, were the No. 3
and 4 singles players — Hill
and Devyn Wolfe. Hill’s two-
set tie-broken match lasted
until dusk with the Bulldog
just sliding past the River-
hawk, and Wolfe dominated
Julissa Marquez 6-0, 6-2.
———
HERMISTON 5, THE DALLES 3
Singles: Robin Pashele (TDR) def. Kate-
lyn Millard (HHS) 6-2, 6-1; Marisa Cianci
(TDR) def. Jaycee Ternes (HHS) 6-4, 7-6
(8-6); Mackenzie Hill (HHS) def. Kiani Pielli
(TDR) 6-4, 5-7, 10-8; Devyn Wolfe (HHS)
def. Julissa Marquez (TDR) 6-0, 6-2
Doubles: Anna Muller and Johanna
Wilson (TDR) def. Briana Wolfe and
Cheyanne Peterson (HHS) 4-6, 7-5, 10-4;
Kylie Markwick and Whitney McMahon
(HHS) def. Emma Ell-Smith and Abby
Munnick (TDR) 6-2, 6-2; Reed Middleton
and Breena Wadekamper (HHS) def.
Rebekah Kohtfarber and Ellie Trujillo (TDR)
3-6, 6-2, 10-7; Debra Johnson and Athen
Reid (HHS) def. Cassie Vazquez and Tiani
Langston (TDR) 6-4, 6-1.
PENDLETON
7,
HOOD RIVER VALLEY
1 — At Hood River, the
Buckaroos swept all four
doubles matches and took
three of four singles contests
to knock off the league rival
Eagles.
The Buckaroos dropped
just 13 games in four match-
es. Sisters Keren and Keziah
Hampton continued their un-
beaten doubles season win-
ning the top doubles match
in straight 6-0, 6-0 sets.
Christina Thompson and
Kiana Sperl took the No. 2
matches 6-1, 6-0.
Matilde Cittadinis, Mea-
gan Flanagan and Hannah
Flanagan each won singles
matches. Cittadini won hers
via 6-0, 6-0 score.
Brandy Brown took the
only Pendleton loss of the
day in the No. 4 matches.
“The girls played with
energy today,” Pendleton
tennis coach Rocky Dillen-
burg said. “I’m starting to
see the things we practice
occurring more frequently in
our matches.”
BOYS TENNIS
HERMISTON 7, THE
DALLES 1 — At The
Dalles, the Hermiston boys
tennis team had its way with
the Riverhawks in a steady
wind.
In preparation for play-
ing doubles in Boise, Idaho,
usual top singles players Ty-
ler Wadekamper and Jacob
Snell played No. 1 doubles,
winning in straight sets 6-1.
6-3. Filling in the top two
singles spots were Valen-
tino Whitsell and Caleb
Jorgenson. Whitsell ate the
only loss for the Bulldogs, a
6-4, 6-4 loss, and Jorgenson
came through with a 6-6 (5-
7), 6-1, 10-4 tie-break win.
Ayden Pruitt also won a
tie-broken match after losing
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second set 6-2 and took the
tie-breaker 10-7. In the No.
4 match, Skyler Grigg won
easily 6-0, 6-1.
———
HERMISTON 7, THE DALLES 1
Singles: Will Cog (TDR) def. Valentino
Whitsell (HHS) 6-4, 6-4; Caleb Jorgenson
(HHS) def. Daniel Santillan (TDR) 6-6 (5-7),
6-1, 10-4; Ayden Prewitt (HHS) def. Alex
Lopez (TDR) 3-6, 6-2, 10-7; Skyler Grigg
(HHS) def. Pedro Lopez (TDR) 6-0, 6-1.
Doubles: Tyler Wadekamper and Jacob
Snell (HHS) def. Griffin M. and Ethan S.
(TDR) 6-1. 6-3; Cameron Meade and Race
Latham (HHS) def. Joe Singhurst and
Jesus Barajas 6-0, 6-1; Stefano Peiris and
Koby Grigg (HHS) def. Cody McClinton and
Luis Diaz (TDR) 6-6 (7-5), 7-5; Patrick W
and Jason M (HHS) def. Omar Rodriguez
and Caleb Turner (TDR) 6-0, 6-4
HOOD RIVER VAL-
LEY 7, PENDLETON 0
— At Pendleton, the Buck-
aroo boys tennis team was
unable to earn a win Tues-
day at West Hills, dropping
a league dual sweep to the
Eagles.
Singles players Greth
Haug and Henry Holdman
each challenged their foe,
but ended up taking the loss.
Haug took HRV No.2 player
Cooper Holzman to a third
set before falling 6-1, 3-6,
6-4. Holdman pushed Cole
Shepard to two tight sets, but
fell 6-4, 7-6 in the No. 3 sin-
gles match.
“They’re a very good
team,” Pendleton coach Chris
Holdman said. “They’re the
top team in our conference.
We had two matches that
could’ve gone either way,
but they their way.”
———
HOOD RIVER VALLEY 7, PENDLETON 0
Singles: Scotty Ziegner (HRV) def.
Jeremy Cochrane (PEN) 6-0, 6-0; Cooper
Holzman (HRV) def. Gareth Haugh (PEN)
6-1, 3-6, 6-4; Cole Shepard (HRV) def.
Henry Holdman (PEN) 6-4, 7-5; Alden Silva
(HRV) def. Lincoln Johnson (PEN) 6-3, 6-3.
Doubles: Victor Garibo and Patrick
Humann (HRV) def. Lincoln Johnson and
Daniel Medina (PEN) 6-0, 6-0; Will Ferrick
and Brandon Campos (HRV) def. Peter
Wallace and Silas Johnston (PEN) 6-2, 6-0;
Jorge Calderon and Sawyer Bogard (HRV)
def. Josh Mendoza and Henry Scanlan
(PEN) 6-0, 6-0.
off Astros
Associated Press
SEATTLE — J.A. Happ
HDUQHGKLV¿UVWZLQZLWKWKH
Mariners as the Seattle bull-
pen held off the Houston As-
tros 3-2 Wednesday night.
Acquired from Toronto
in an offseason trade, Happ
(1-1) won in his third start.
He gave up two runs and
eight hits in 7 1-3 innings,
walking none and striking
RXW¿YH
Reliever Yoervis Medi-
na walked the bases loaded
with two outs in the eighth
before striking out Chris
Carter. An inning earlier,
Carter homered.
Fernando Rodney es-
FDSHGD¿UVWDQGWKLUGRQH
out jam in the ninth for his
IRXUWKVDYHLQ¿YHWULHV
Roberto Hernandez (0-2)
allowed three runs in seven
innings.
RODEO: Preston Pederson tied for season lead in boys all-around
Continued from 1B
enzie, who is on a hot streak
with 19 points in his last two
rodeos.
But Currin is coming off a
win at Prineville on April 12,
and with a total of 30 points
available in Hermiston, is
well within striking distance.
Also in the hunt is Herm-
iston junior Preston Ped-
erson, who is sixth and 11
points behind Mackenzie.
Pederson is also on target
for a state all-around title,
although two more dou-
bleheaders stand between
+HUPLVWRQ DQG WKH VWDWH ¿-
nals on June 10-13.
He’s tied with Steven
Duby with 93 points, and al-
though three more cowboys
are within six points of them,
Pederson was high-point
man at each of the last two
doubleheaders.
Pederson’s top event is
Intermountain
HS Rodeo
April 24-26,
Farm-City Arena, Hermiston
Schedule of events
FRIDAY
10 a.m.: Cow cutting state
finals
6:30 p.m.: 1st Performance
SATURDAY
9 a.m.: Slack
1 p.m.: 2nd Performance
(end of Rodeo 1)
6 p.m.: 3rd Performance
SUNDAY
8 a.m.: Slack
Noon: Final Performance
tie-down roping and he’s the
season leader headed into
Hermiston. He’s won the last
three rodeos running.
“My horse is working
pretty good and I’ve been
roping better this year,” he
said during a practice session
on his family’s property east
of Hermiston. “It’s just prac-
tice and dedication to going
out and doing it.
“My biggest goal for the
season is just to make solid
runs and do good in the calf
roping.”
Pederson is also ranked
ninth in steer wrestling —
an event he picked up this
season to aid him in the all-
around — and 13th in team
roping.
He said the roping stock
has been strong all spring,
and that should continue
this weekend with Randy
Thompson’s pen that was
also used at their last double-
header in Klamath Falls on
April 3-5.
“It’s fair and we make
sure everything is real even
pitched,” Pederson said.
Only the team roping
steers will be fresh, but Cur-
tis Pederson said the aim is to
give all riders a good roping
steer that should keep the
times low.
“We try to get steers that
have been roped enough so
they really aren’t running so
wild,” he said. “We try to
make sure they’re as even as
possible so it’s more of a rop-
ing contest and not a drawing
contest.”
Pendleton High sophomore
Calgary Smith, of Adams, is
the team’s highest ranked team
roper in ninth place.
But while the roping
stock can be predictable, the
roughstock is anything but.
Pederson said the goal is to
give these entry-level riders
entry-level stock, “but some-
times the animal decides it’s
not going to tone it down.”
The Intermountain team
doesn’t have many rough-
stock cowboys this season,
but Echo freshman Hayden
Hilliard covered a couple
bulls last fall and is in second
place for the season (He’s
also third in the rookie stand-
ings). Only one bull rider has
scored at the four spring ro-
deos combined, though.
B-D Rodeos out of Cul-
ver, which also supplied
buckers for Klamath Falls
DQG ZLOO VXSSO\ WKH VWDWH ¿-
nals, is the roughstock con-
tractor for Hermiston.
The Intermountain girls
don’t have anybody in the
title hunt just yet, but two
riders will enter Hermiston in
the top 10.
Pendleton
sophomore
Lindsey Taylor is seventh in
goat tying and Hermiston ju-
nior Cheyenne Wolfe is 10th
in barrel racing.
Two-time state pole bend-
ing champion Shandie Britt,
a senior from Hermiston,
has been experiencing some
issues with her horses this
spring and enters the week-
end in 23rd place.
After an injury to her
regular pole bending horse
Bandy during the winter of
her sophomore season, she
switched to his sister Babe
DQGZRQWKHQH[WWZRVWDWH¿-
nals. She’s been using a com-
bination of both this year.
“Babe doesn’t go in the gate
very well, she has a gate issue,”
Britt said. “So at the last rodeo
I just had both of them saddled
and whatever one would go in
the gate I went on.”
Pendleton senior Marlene
Bodmer is the team’s highest
ranked breakaway roper in
16th place.
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the Intermountain double-
header will be Friday at 6
SP 7KH ¿QDO SHUIRUPDQFH
will begin Sunday at noon.
Admission is free for all ses-
sions.
BLAZERS: Shooting struggles continue
zlies shooting so poorly that
they missed a handful of
coach Terry Stotts.
“They’re good shooters,” layups in the quarter, Port-
Stotts said. “They don’t land led only 21-19 at the
look for them a lot. We can’t HQGRIWKH¿UVW
Memphis took control in
leave them open either.”
Portland came into this the second with a 15-2 run,
series with several players turning Portland’s four-point
banged-up, and the list got edge to a 34-25 lead on a
longer with center Chris 3-pointer by Jeff Green. The
Kaman out after spraining Grizzlies outscored Portland
his left ankle Tuesday in 31-18 in the quarter and led
practice. Stotts juggled his 50-39 at halftime.
The Grizzlies simply
lineup, starting guard Allen
&UDEEH IRU WKH ¿UVW WLPH LQ clamped down tighter and
led 73-60 at the end of
the postseason.
The Blazers looked like the third after leading by
the team that won 51 games as much as 18 late in the
during the regular season quarter.
TIP-INS
early. Crabbe hit a 3 in the
Trail Blazers: Portland’s
opening minutes to give the
%OD]HUVWKHLU¿UVWOHDGLQWKLV shooting woes continued.
series, and they jumped out Aldridge was 4 of 6 in the
to a 10-2 lead with Aldridge opening quarter and went
connecting on four of his 3 of 14 the rest of the way.
Lillard, 5 of 21 overall and
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Yet even with the Griz- 0 of 6 outside the arc in the
Continued from 1B
Staff photo by Kathy Aney
Jordan Ackerman, of Blue Mountain Community College, slides headfirst into sec-
ond base Wednesday as Wenatchee Valley’s Bryan Widener fields the ball in Pendle-
ton. Ackerman was safe.
T-WOLVES: Postseason hopes still alive
Continued from 1B
the minimum in a mercy-rule
shortened seven-inning com-
plete game one-hitter.
The lone Knight (13-15,
7-11 East Region) hit was a
EORRSLQJ VLQJOH WR OHIW ¿HOG
off of the bat of Brett Robins
with one out in the sixth. The
hit and prior walk of Royfel
Granda provided the only oc-
casion in which Wenatchee
placed a runner in scoring
position the entire game.
³, JRW D ORW RI ¿UVWSLWFK
outs that they were swinging
at, putting into play and get-
ting out,” said Boyer, who re-
mains on a pitch count while
dealing with a nagging el-
bow injury. “The last couple
of weeks it’s started to feel
pretty good and I’ve just let
coach put me to work.”
While Boyer was busy
keeping the Knights from
adding baserunners, the
Timberwolves kept on add-
ing their own. Blue Moun-
tain scored a run in all six
frames at the plate, including
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stretched the lead to 12 runs
and helped provide the big-
gest single-game scoring out-
put in more than a year.
“We’ve been watching a
lot of fastballs go by lately
and not being really aggres-
sive up there,” said Blue
0RXQWDLQULJKW¿HOGHU&ROWRQ
Crow. “Today, I felt like any-
thing left over the plate was
smashed. It was a good day.”
Crow was one of six Tim-
berwolf batters to record two
hits in Game 2 — all but one
batter had at least one. They
recored 15 as a team. Crow
and Brennan Serrano carried
KHDY\ EDWV HDFK ¿QLVKLQJ
with two extra base hits. Al-
exander Storaci cleared the
bases with two of his game-
high three RBIs with a shot
WRWKHJDSLQWKH¿IWKLQQLQJ
While the record might
not show it, BMCC is be-
ginning to play its best ball
of the season. After dropping
11 of 12 early in the East
Region league play, the Tim-
berwolves have won three
RI ¿YH JDPHV LQFOXGLQJ WKH
convincing sweep of the
Knights, which had walloped
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Despite sitting 10 back
IURP ¿UVWSODFH 7UHDVXUH
Valley, the Timberwolves re-
main in contention for post-
season play.
“If it’s going to be any
time, it’s now or never and I
think that’s how everyone is
feeling about it,” Boyer said.
“If we want to have a chance,
it’s time to start tightening up
and going for it.”
BMCC has fallen on the
wrong side of 12 games that
have been decided by two
runs or less. Included in the
string of tight losses has
been nine one-run defeats,
four of which have come in
league games.
“Sometimes you start to
lose heart,” Boyer said. “And
then in games like this you
realize it’s not as bad as it
seems.”
³7RGD\ ZH ¿QDOO\ JRW
some of the luck going our
way,” Baker said. “They
made a couple errors, we got
a couple of bleeders to fall
and when they hit the ball
hard it was right at our guys.”
7KH¿YHUXQ¿IWKLQQLQJLQ
*DPHZDVQRWWKH¿UVWWLPH
during the day the T-Wolves
had turned a string of hits into
a big number. They scored
six in the sixth inning of the
opener. Serrano paced the of-
IHQVH LQ WKH ¿UVW JDPH ZLWK
three RBIs on two singles.
Eric Purcell was strong
on the mound in Game 1 for
the Timberwolves. Despite
struggling to command his
pitches — which resulted in
¿YH ZDONV ² KH VWUXFN RXW
seven and allowed just one
run in seven innings of work
to pick up win number three
on the season.
The Timberwolves travel
to Columbia Basin on Sat-
urday before returning to
Pendleton on Wednesday for
DWZLQELOODJDLQVW¿UVWSODFH
Treasure Valley.
———
BLUE MOUNTAIN 7,
WENTACHEE VALLEY 3
Game 1
R H E
WVC
000 100 002 — 3 6 3
BMCC
000 106 00x — 7 6 1
C. Gettman, J. Charlo (6) and K. Dehaas.
E. Purcell, T. Oldham (8) and J. Urbach. W
— E. Purcell. L — C. Gettman.
BLUE MOUNTAIN 13,
WENATCHEE VALLEY 0 (7 innings)
Game 2
R H E
WVC
000 000
0 — 0 1 3
BMCC
212 251
x — 13 15 1
B. Ludeman, M. Churape (3), D.
Scademan (5), K. Blankenship (6) and H.
Stockton. J. Boyer and J. Urbach. W — J.
Boyer. L – B. Ludeman.
2B — C. Crow (BMCC) 2; B. Serrano
(BMCC). 3B — A. Storai (BMCC); B.
Serrano (BMCC)
Local Slate
PREP BASEBALL
Today
Riverside at Mac-Hi, 4:30 p.m.
PREP SOFTBALL
Friday
Enterprise at Riverside (DH), 1/3 p.m.
Echo at Vale (DH), 1/3 p.m.
Pilot Rock at Culver (DH), 2/4 p.m.
PREP TRACK & FIELD
Today
Heppner, Weston-McEwen, Irrigon, Pilot
Rock, Helix at Heppner Invitational, 3 p.m.
PREP BOYS TENNIS
Today
Sherman at Ione, 4 p.m.
Stanfield at Helix, 4 p.m.
Mac-Hi at Weston-McEwen, 4 p.m.
PREP GIRLS TENNIS
Today
Sherman at Ione, 4 p.m.
Stanfield at Helix, 4 p.m.
Mac-Hi at Weston-McEwen, 4 p.m.
PREP BOYS GOLF
Friday
Heppner, Echo, Nixyaawii at Big River
(Umatilla, 10 a.m.
Pendleton, Hermiston at Meadow Lakes
GC (Prineville), 11 a.m.
PREP GIRLS GOLF
Friday
Hermiston at Wandemere GC (Spokane,
Wash.), 9 a.m.
Heppner, Echo at Big River (Umatilla,
10 a.m.
PREP RODEO
Friday
Intermountain Rodeo 1 (Hermiston),
6:30 p.m.
PREP LACROSSE
Friday
Nadzitsaga at Hermiston, 5 p.m.
PREP RUGBY
Saturday
East Oregon at Eastside (Portland),
1:30 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Saturday
Blue Mountain at Columbia Basin (DH),
1/4 p.m.
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Friday
Blue Mountain at Spokane (DH), 2/4
p.m.
COLLEGE TRACK & FIELD
Today
Eastern Oregon at CCC Multi-Event
Championships (Hermiston HS), 10 a.m.
Basketball
NBA Playoffs
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
SCOREBOARD
Wednesday, April 22
Atlanta 96, Brooklyn 91, Atlanta leads
series 2-0
Memphis 97, Portland 82, Memphis
leads series 2-0
San Antonio 111, L.A. Clippers 107, OT,
serties tied 1-1
Thursday, April 23
Cleveland at Boston, 4 p.m.
Chicago at Milwaukee, 5 p.m.
Golden State at New Orleans, 6:30 p.m.
Hockey
NHL Playoffs
FIRST ROUND
(Best-of-7)
Wednesday, April 22
Ottawa 1, Montreal 0, Montreal leads
series 3-1
N.Y. Rangers 2, Pittsburgh 1, OT, N.Y.
Rangers leads series 3-1
St. Louis 6, Minnesota 1, series tied 2-2
Anaheim 5, Winnipeg 2, Anaheim wins
series 4-0
Thursday, April 23
Tampa Bay at Detroit, 4 p.m.
NY Islanders at Washington, 4 p.m.
Chicago at Nashville, 6:30 p.m.
Calgary at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
WHL Playoffs
SECOND ROUND
(Best-of-7)
Friday, Apr. 24
Calgary at Brandon, 4:30 p.m. (Series
tied 0-0)
Portland at Kelowna, 6:05 p.m. (Series
tied 0-0)
Baseball
MLB
American League
East Division
W
Boston
9
New York
8
Toronto
8
Baltimore
7
Tampa Bay
7
Central Division
W
Detroit
11
Kansas City
11
Chicago
6
Minnesota
6
Cleveland
5
West Division
W
Houston
8
Oakland
8
Los Angeles
6
Seattle
6
Texas
6
L
6
7
7
8
8
Pct GB
.600 —
.533
1
.533
1
.467
2
.467
2
L
4
4
8
9
9
Pct GB
.733 —
.733 —
.429 4½
.400
5
.357 5½
L
7
8
9
9
9
Pct GB
.533 —
.500
½
.400
2
.400
2
.400
2
opener, was 5 of 16 and hit
1 of 5 outside the arc. ... The
Trail Blazers turned it over
14 times, which Memphis
converted into 16 points.
Grizzlies: Memphis had
29 second-chance points
on just 12 rebounds, a fran-
chise record in the playoffs,
topping the mark of 26 set
in triple-overtime against
Oklahoma City in 2011. ...
Lee made two 3-pointers,
and Memphis now is 23-3
this season when he makes
at least two in a game. ...
Memphis had six turnovers.
SSSH TONY
Grizzlies guard Tony Al-
OHQVWDUWHGWKH¿UVWJDPHV
he played this season, then
RQO\ ¿YH PRUH WKH UHVW RI
the season. He said he was
told Wednesday morning
he would start again. “And
they told me not to tell
y’all,” Allen said.
———
Wednesday’s Games
Chicago White Sox 6, Cleveland 0
Toronto 4, Baltimore 2
N.Y. Yankees 13, Detroit 4
Tampa Bay 7, Boston 5
Minnesota 3, Kansas City 0
Arizona 8, Texas 5
Oakland 9, L.A. Angels 2
Seattle 3, Houston 2
Today’s Games
N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 2-1) at Detroit (An.
Sanchez 1-2), 10:08 a.m.
Oakland (Chavez 0-0) at L.A. Angels
(Tropeano 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Tillman 2-1) at Toronto
(Hutchison 1-0), 4:07 p.m.
Boston (Buchholz 1-2) at Tampa Bay
(Odorizzi 2-1), 4:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Ventura 2-1) at Chicago
White Sox (Sale 2-0), 5:10 p.m.
National League
East Division
W
New York
12
Atlanta
8
Washington
7
Philadelphia
5
Miami
4
Central Division
W
St. Louis
9
Chicago
8
Cincinnati
8
Pittsburgh
7
Milwaukee
2
West Division
W
Los Angeles
9
San Diego
10
Arizona
8
Colorado
8
San Francisco
6
———
L
3
6
8
10
11
Pct GB
.800 —
.571 3½
.467
5
.333
7
.267
8
L
4
6
7
8
13
Pct GB
.692 —
.571 1½
.533
2
.467
3
.133
8
L
5
6
7
7
10
Pct GB
.643 —
.625 —
.533 1½
.533 1½
.375
4
Wednesday’s Games
Pittsburgh 4, Chicago Cubs 3
Miami 6, Philadelphia 1
St. Louis 7, Washington 5
N.Y. Mets 3, Atlanta 2
Cincinnati 2, Milwaukee 1
Colorado 5, San Diego 4
Arizona 8, Texas 5
San Francisco 3, L.A. Dodgers 2
Today’s Games
Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 0-0) at Pitts-
burgh (Locke 2-0), 9:35 a.m.
Miami (Phelps 0-0) at Philadelphia
(McGowan 1-0), 10:05 a.m.
Atlanta (Teheran 2-0) at N.Y. Mets (B.Co-
lon 3-0), 10:10 a.m.
Cincinnati (Bailey 0-1) at Milwaukee
(Lohse 0-3), 10:40 a.m.
San Diego (T.Ross 1-0) at Colorado (Lyles
1-1), 12:10 p.m.