East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, May 30, 2015, Image 15

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    SPORTS
Saturday, May 30, 2015
East Oregonian
MLB
Mariners sizzle behind Walker
Associated Press
6($77/( ² 7DLMXDQ :DONHU
allowed two hits over eight strong
innings, Seth Smith hit a two-run
homer, and the Seattle Mariners beat the
Cleveland Indians 2-1 Friday night.
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April 27 with one of the best starts of
the 22-year-old’s young career. He did
not walk a batter and struck out eight,
matching his career high.
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time this season with Robinson Cano
out sick, hit a 2-1 pitch from Trevor
Bauer (4-2) into the right-center seats in
the sixth inning. It scored Nelson Cruz,
who had singled.
The Mariners have homered in eight
straight games and 13 of their last 14.
Fernando Rodney had trouble in the
ninth, allowing a pinch-hit, run-scoring
single by Ryan Raburn, but still earned
his 14th save in 16 opportunities.
Bauer went seven innings, allowing
two runs, six hits with three walks and
10 strikeouts.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Mariners: LHP James Paxton was
placed on the 15-day DL Friday with
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RHP Dominic Leone was called up to
replace him. ... RHP Hisashi Iwakuma
(strained lat), on the DL since April 24,
threw catch from 90 feet Friday with no
timetable for a return. ... LHP Joe Beimel
was placed on the restricted list to attend
his son’s high school graduation. ...
LHP Lucas Luetge was called up from
Triple-A Tacoma. ... 2B Cano missed
College Baseball
Iowa drops Oregon
SPRINGFIELD, Mo.
$3 ² 7\OHU 3H\WRQ
limited Oregon to one run
in 7 1-3 innings to help
second-seeded Iowa beat
the third-seeded Ducks 3-1
on Friday in their NCAA
regional opener.
Peyton (7-4) struck
RXW ¿YH DQG GLGQ¶W ZDON D
batter to help the Hawkeyes
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time in NCAA tournament
play since the 1972 College
World Series.
Iowa had baserunners in
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Nick Day’s RBI single in
the second inning put the
Hawkeyes in front, and
Nick Roscetti added RBI
groundouts in the third and
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Iowa stranded 13 men
on base and left the bases
loaded in three innings.
Oregon (37-24), making
its fourth consecutive
NCAA appearance, was
limited to a third-inning
RBI single from Austin
Grebeck. Phil Craig-St.
Louis went 2 for 3.
On Saturday, Iowa will
face the Missouri State-
Canisus winner. Oregon
will play the loser.
AP Photo/Elaine Thompson
Seattle Mariners closing pitcher Fernando Rodney points toward the out-
field after the final out of the Mariners’ baseball game against the Cleve-
land Indians on Friday in Seattle. The Mariners won 2-1.
WKHJDPHZLWKÀXOLNHV\PSWRPV
UP NEXT
Mariners: LHP Roenis Elias (2-1,
2.56) started the season at Triple-A
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an integral part of the Mariners inju-
ry-riddled rotation. Elias has won his
past two starts and has not allowed more
than three runs in any start.
Indians: RHP Shawn Marcum (1-0,
6.28) will try to rebound from a poor
start Monday against Texas. He lasted
just 2 2/3 innings, allowing seven runs
and four hits. He gave up two home
runs, had six strikeouts and three walks.
+HLVZLWKD(5$LQ¿YHFDUHHU
starts against Seattle.
STRIKEOUT STREAK
The Mariners are going through a
particularly tough stretch of strikeout
pitchers. It started Wednesday, facing
Tampa’s Chris Archer, second in the AL
with 82 (he had 12). On Thursday, they
faced Cleveland’s Corey Cluber, the
leader with 96 (he had 13). Bauer, who
came in with 55, had 10. On Sunday,
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with 66, is scheduled, and on Monday
the Yankees’ Michael Pineda, fourth
with 67, is expected to start.
PUT HIM IN COACH
With two hits Friday, Cruz is batting
.376 with 15 HRs and 30 RBIs when
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batting .286 with three HRs and 8 RBIs.
Tampa Bay beats Rangers, will play for Cup
1(:<25.$3²7KH
only history the Tampa Bay
Lightning were interested in
was what they would create.
Such as handing the New
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Game 7 loss at Madison
Square Garden, which they
did Friday night with their
second straight 2-0 road
victory behind Ben Bishop’s
22 saves.
Such as heading to their
VHFRQG 6WDQOH\ &XS ¿QDO
where they will play Chicago
or Anaheim, which will
decide the Western Confer-
Page 3B
ence title Saturday night.
Such as going 9-0
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postseason, which they did
when Alex Killorn slipped
a backhander under Henrik
Lundqvist early in the third
period.
Bishop, pulled from a
Game 6 loss after allowing
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rest, and Ondrej Palat iced it
with 8:43 to go.
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this building,” said Bishop,
who sure looked it after being
so shaky Tuesday night.
“We’ve done well against
them all year. I was just
looking forward to getting
out there again.”
The Lightning, who won
the Cup in 2004 in a seventh
game over Calgary, allowed
only four goals in as many
games at the Garden.
“For whatever reason that
was probably the most calm
Game 7 I’ve ever been a part
of,” Lightning captain Steven
Stamkos said. “And not just
for me, but on the bench.
Going into the third, we were
just loose.
“We knew we were
playing the game the right
way, we knew were going to
get one.”
New York had the NHL’s
best record this season
and was 15-3 in its last 18
elimination games. The
most recent defeat was in the
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last year at Los Angeles.
But Bishop made sure there
would be another loss for
the Rangers, extending his
shutout string at the Garden
to 145 minutes, 43 seconds.
MAC-HI: Fortune drives in crucial run again
Continued from 1B
The shutout was Robert’s 15th on the
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last six games, as the school extended its
win streak to 18 games to gain entrance
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round.
“Not a lot of people can hit her,”
Mac-Hi coach Nicole Christian. “If
they’ve never seen her it’s hard to
prep for it. You can speed your hands
up as best as possible, but, with her
on the mound I expect to be in every
game.”
Just like the spring heat, Robert
was torrid to open the game, sending
seven of the Trojan (21-6) batters down
YLD SXQFKRXW WKH ¿UVW WLPH WKURXJK
the lineup. She struck out 11 in all,
including Taylor Holcomb looking to
close the game out.
“Her change-up was really good
today,” said third baseman Micha
Fortune.
Trojan pitcher Cidny Dupper was
tough on the Pioneer lineup. She limited
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WZRRIZKLFKOHIWWKHLQ¿HOG²EXWWZR
errors cost her and the Trojans runs in
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DKHDG )RUWXQH DQG -HQQ\ )LHOG ¿QDOO\
broke through with a pair of earned runs
driven in the sixth inning.
A game after displaying surprising
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Fortune gave Mac-Hi a 3-0 lead on
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Richwine.
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since my last game when I hit it over
the fence,” she said. “I’m kind of small
and they think I’m going to bunt, but I
can actually hit it, too. It keeps them off
balance.”
Field drove in Fortune one batter
later with a chopper to short to give the
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“We always want that extra cushion,”
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we want some insurance runs. Micha
had the dagger.”
Mallory Copeland drove in the pair
of unearned runs in the early innings
with two groundouts to third base, each
of which scored Brooke Kralman.
Douglas committed two costly errors
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¿UVW EDVHPDQ 6N\OHU &RDWH GURSSHG D
strong throw from third baseman Ally
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Shannon Carter. Mac-Hi would score
on Copeland’s two-out groundout three
batters later.
Then Dupper made matters hard on
herself, tossing a slow roller off of Kral-
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Mac-Hi didn’t capitalize on the
Trojan errors as much as they might
KDYHOLNHG7KH\OHIWHDFKWKH¿UVWDQG
third innings with two runners on base,
ERWKWLPHVRQ$EL%LJJVÀ\RXWV
“We were all there ready to play,
but we were struggling a little bit at the
plate,” said Robert, who was 2-for-2 on
the day with two singles. “We got people
on, but we weren’t able to execute when
we needed to.
“We’ve all been ripping it all over the
place (all season), now we come up and
QRUHDOO\PDGHLWWRWKHRXW¿HOG´
Robert was the only Pioneer player
with more than one hit.
7KH ZLQ VHWV XS D VHPL¿QDO FRQWHVW
with Yamhill-Carlton for Tuesday in
Milton-Freewater.
Yamhill-Carlton ousted the other half
of last year’s Class 4A championship
game with a 4-1 in over Henley Friday.
7KLV LV QRW WKH ¿UVW WLPH VFKRRO¶V
have met this season. Mac-Hi defeated
the Tigers 6-2 on April 4.
No time has been set for Tuesday’s
game.
²²²
MAC-HI 4, DOUGLAS 0
R H E
DOUG
000 000
0 — 0 2 2
MAC
101 002
x — 4 5 1
C. Dupper and S. Johnson. C. Robert and M. Copeland.
W — C. Robert. L — C. Dupper
3B — M. Fortune (MAC).
Sam Barbee photo
The Pilot Rock softball team celebrates after a walk-
off 1-0 quarterfinal win over Knappa Friday in Pilot
PILOT ROCK:
Road game at Central
Linn next for Rockets
Continued from Page B1
For six innings, Cameron
and Ostrom traded barbs. A
couple times Knappa got
some runners on, including
that bases loaded jam in the
fourth, but both pitchers
found ways to get outs.
“You have to clear
your mind,” Ostrom said
of being in a jam. “It’s
scary and you get nerved
XS,WDNHIRXUWR¿YHGHHS
breaths before I even pitch,
and close my eyes and say,
‘Relax. All you need is a
strike. Your defense will
help you out.’”
And the Rockets did.
They committed zero errors
behind Ostrom, keeping her
and the team in the game.
It wasn’t until the
seventh that Pilot Rock
really got going.
Before, though, Fitz-
patrick pulled his team
together and gave them one
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“I said, ‘This is it. This
LV RXU ¿HOG :H¶UH KHUH
to defend it,’” Fitzpatrick
said. “Let’s get tough. Let’s
win this game right now.
Whatever it takes.’”
After an out to start the
inning, Wilson singled on
a blooper up the third base
line that Cameron tried to
snag with a dive, but she
was just late and the ball
bounced off her glove into
foul territory, providing
ample time for Wilson to
VFDPSHU WR ¿UVW .D\OD
Deist then reached on a
perfect bunt single. Deist
can run, and there was no
SOD\DW¿UVW5K\DQQH2DWHV
then reached on an error to
load the bases with the two
outs, bringing the senior
Weikne to the plate.
“I was just focusing on
getting my bat on that ball,”
she said. “I knew I was not
going to strike out. I was
not going to let my team
down, and I was either
going to go up there and hit
that ball or I was going to
help myself into a walk. I
just knew I had to get Jayce
home, and so I was going to
do anything I could to get
her to home plate.”
Weinke didn’t need
to swing the bat, though.
Cameron found the strike
]RQH RQ WKH ¿UVW SLWFK RI
at-bat, but the next four
pitches rose out of the zone.
Ball four wasn’t close.
“We had some great
at-bats in that last inning,”
Fitzpatrick said. “Some
tough at-bats. The kids
were real disciplined, and
that’s what it takes.”
7KH ZLQ JLYHV D FRQ¿-
dent Pilot Rock team even
PRUH FRQ¿GHQFH KHDGLQJ
LQWRWKHVHPL¿QDOV
“Going on, it just really
puts in our minds that we
really were meant to go
on,” Ostrom said. “Some-
thing like that just doesn’t
happen to be. You just
really have to work at it.
So we’re going all the way
now. We’ve come this far.
We can’t let up.”
²²²
PILOT ROCK 1, KNAPPA 0
KHS
000 000 0 — 0 8 3
PRP
000 000 1 — 1 3 0
K. Cameron and K. Truax; T. Ostrom and
B. Weinke.
WP — T. Ostrom. LP: — K. Cameron.
SCOREOBOARD
Local Slate
PREP BASEBALL
Tuesday
Pendleton at Hood River Valley (5A semifi-
nals), 4:30 p.m.
PREP SOFTBALL
Tuesday
Silverton at Pendleton (5A semifinals),
4:30 p.m.
Yamhill-Carlton at Mac-Hi (4A semifinals),
4 p.m.
Weston-McEwen at Union (2A/1A semi-
finals), TBD
Pilot Rock at Cenral Linn (2A/1A semifi-
nals), 4:30 p.m.
Basketball
NBA
Playoffs
FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Golden State vs. Cleveland
Thursday, June 4: Cleveland at Golden
State/Houston, 6 p.m.
Sunday, June 7: Cleveland at Golden
State/Houston, 5 p.m.
Tuesday, June 9: Golden State/Houston at
Cleveland, 6 p.m.
Thursday, June 11: Golden State/Houston
at Cleveland, 6 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 14: Cleveland at Golden
State/Houston, 5 p.m.
x-Tuesday, June 16: Golden State/Houston
at Cleveland, 6 p.m.
x-Friday, June 19: Cleveland at Golden
State/Houston, 6 p.m.
Baseball
MLB
East Division
New York
Tampa Bay
Baltimore
Toronto
Boston
Central Division
Kansas City
Minnesota
W
25
24
23
23
22
L
24
25
24
27
27
Pct GB
.510 —
.490
1
.489
1
.460 2½
.449
3
W
29
28
L Pct GB
18 .617 —
19 .596
1
Detroit
Chicago
Cleveland
West Division
Houston
Los Angeles
Seattle
Texas
Oakland
²²²
28
22
22
22 .560 2½
25 .468
7
26 .458 7½
W
30
25
24
24
19
L
19
24
24
25
32
Pct GB
.612 —
.510
5
.500 5½
.490
6
.373 12
Friday’s Games
Kansas City 8, Chicago Cubs 4
Baltimore 2, Tampa Bay 1
Texas 7, Boston 4
Chicago White Sox 6, Houston 3, 11
innings
Toronto 6, Minnesota 4
L.A. Angels 2, Detroit 0
Oakland 6, N.Y. Yankees 2
Seattle 2, Cleveland 1
Saturday’s Games
Toronto (Aa.Sanchez 4-4) at Minnesota
(Gibson 4-3), 11:10 a.m.
Tampa Bay (E.Ramirez 2-2) at Baltimore
(W.Chen 1-3), 1:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Quintana 2-5) at
Houston (Keuchel 6-1), 1:10 p.m.
Boston (Miley 4-4) at Texas (Ch.Gonzalez
0-0), 4:15 p.m.
Kansas City (Ventura 3-4) at Chicago Cubs
(Wada 0-0), 4:15 p.m.
Detroit (Greene 4-3) at L.A. Angels (Weav-
er 3-4), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 4-1) at Oakland
(Hahn 2-4), 7:05 p.m.
Cleveland (Marcum 1-0) at Seattle (Elias
2-1), 7:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 10:35 a.m.
Chicago White Sox at Houston, 11:10 a.m.
Toronto at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m.
Kansas City at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m.
Boston at Texas, 12:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Oakland, 1:05 p.m.
Cleveland at Seattle, 1:10 p.m.
Detroit at L.A. Angels, 5:05 p.m.
Monday’s Games
Toronto at Washington, 4:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Boston, 4:10 p.m.
Baltimore at Houston, 5:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.
National League
East Division
Washington
New York
Atlanta
Miami
Philadelphia
Central Division
St. Louis
Chicago
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Milwaukee
West Division
San Francisco
Los Angeles
San Diego
Arizona
Colorado
²²²
W
28
27
23
19
19
L
20
22
25
30
31
Pct GB
.583 —
.551 1½
.479
5
.388 9½
.380 10
W
32
25
25
20
16
L
16
22
23
27
33
Pct
.667
.532
.521
.426
.327
W
30
28
24
22
20
L
20
19
26
25
26
Pct GB
.600 —
.596 ½
.480
6
.468 6½
.435
8
GB
—
6½
7
11½
16½
Friday’s Games
Kansas City 8, Chicago Cubs 4
Colorado 4, Philadelphia 1
Miami 4, N.Y. Mets 3
Cincinnati 5, Washington 2
Arizona 7, Milwaukee 5
St. Louis 3, L.A. Dodgers 0
San Diego 6, Pittsburgh 2
San Francisco 4, Atlanta 2
Saturday’s Games
Colorado (J.De La Rosa 1-2) at Philadel-
phia (Harang 4-4), 12:05 p.m.
Arizona (Hellickson 2-3) at Milwaukee
(Lohse 3-5), 1:10 p.m.
Miami (Koehler 3-3) at N.Y. Mets (Niese
3-5), 1:10 p.m.
Washington (G.Gonzalez 4-2) at Cincinnati
(R.Iglesias 1-1), 1:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Ventura 3-4) at Chicago Cubs
(Wada 0-0), 4:15 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Frias 3-2) at St. Louis
(Wacha 7-0), 4:15 p.m.
Atlanta (W.Perez 0-0) at San Francisco
(Lincecum 5-2), 7:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Morton 1-0) at San Diego
(T.Ross 2-4), 7:10 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Miami at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m.
Washington at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m.
Colorado at Philadelphia, 10:35 a.m.
Arizona at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m.
L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis, 11:15 a.m.
Kansas City at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m.
Atlanta at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh at San Diego, 6:10 p.m.
Monday’s Games
Toronto at Washington, 4:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Miami, 4:10 p.m.
Milwaukee at St. Louis, 5:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 5:40 p.m.
Atlanta at Arizona, 6:40 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at San Diego, 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m.
Golf
PGA
AT&T Byron Nelson
Friday’s Leaders
At TPC Four Seasons Resort
Irving, Texas
Purse: $7.1 million
Yardage: 7,166; Par 70 (35-35)
Second Round
Jon Curran
67-63—130
Jimmy Walker 64-66—130
Steven Bowditch 62-68—130
Cameron Percy 67-64—131
Ryan Palmer
65-66—131
Nick Watney
67-65—132
Jerry Kelly
68-64—132
Jonathan Randolph 69-63—132
Hunter Mahan 68-64—132
Jordan Spieth 69-64—133
Zac Blair
69-64—133
Scott Pinckney 69-64—133
John Merrick
66-67—133
Zach Johnson 69-64—133
Rory Sabbatini 69-64—133
Jeff Overton
69-65—134
Luke Guthrie
69-65—134
John Senden
67-67—134
Andrew Loupe 69-65—134
Derek Ernst
67-67—134
Michael Thompson 68-66—134
Charley Hoffman 69-65—134
Hockey
NHL
Playoffs
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tampa Bay 4, N.Y. Rangers 3
-9
-9
-9
-8
-8
-7
-7
-7
-7
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-6
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
-5
Saturday, May 16: N.Y. Rangers 2, Tampa
Bay 1
Monday, May 18: Tampa Bay 6, N.Y.
Rangers 2
Wednesday, May 20: Tampa Bay 6, N.Y.
Rangers 5, OT
Friday, May 22: N.Y. Rangers 5, Tampa
Bay 1
Sunday, May 24: Tampa Bay 2, N.Y.
Rangers 0
Tuesday, May 26: N.Y. Rangers 7, Tampa
Bay 3
Friday: Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Rangers 0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Anaheim 3, Chicago 3
Sunday, May 17: Anaheim 4, Chicago 1
Tuesday, May 19: Chicago 3, Anaheim
2, 3OT
Thursday, May 21: Anaheim 2, Chicago 1
Saturday, May 23: Chicago 5, Anaheim
4, 2OT
Monday, May 25: Anaheim 5, Chicago
4, OT
Wednesday, May 27: Chicago 5, Anaheim
2
Saturday, May 30: Chicago at Anaheim
5 p.m.
Soccer
Friday’s Games
Sporting Kansas City 4, FC Dallas 0
Saturday, May 30
San Jose at Toronto FC, 2 p.m.
Real Salt Lake at Vancouver, 3 p.m.
Houston at New York City FC, 4 p.m.
Philadelphia at D.C. United, 4 p.m.
Columbus at Orlando City, 4:30 p.m.
Montreal at Chicago, 5:30 p.m.
Portland at Colorado, 6 p.m.
Sunday, May 31
New York at Seattle, 2 p.m.
Los Angeles at New England, 4 p.m.
Tennis
French Open
Friday
At Stade Roland Garros
Paris
Purse: $30.86 million (Grand Slam)
Surface: Clay-Outdoor
Singles
Men
Second Round
Richard Gasquet (20), France, def. Carlos
Berlocq, Argentina, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1, 4-6, 6-1.
Third Round
Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, def. Lukas
Rosol, Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4.
Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, def.
Damir Dzumhur, Bosnia-Herzegovina, 6-4,
6-3, 6-2.
Stan Wawrinka (8), Switzerland, def. Steve
Johnson, United States, 6-4, 6-3, 6-2.
Gilles Simon (12), France, def. Nicolas Ma-
hut, France, 6-2, 6-7 (6), 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-1.
Tomas Berdych (4), Czech Republic, def.
Benoit Paire, France, 6-1, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-4.
Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (14), France, def. Pablo
Andujar, Spain, 7-6 (3), 6-4, 6-3.
Gael Monfils (13), France, def. Pablo Cue-
vas (21), Uruguay, 4-6, 7-6 (1), 3-6, 6-4, 6-3.
Women
Third Round
Alize Cornet (29), France, def. Mirjana
Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5.
Ana Ivanovic (7), Serbia, def. Donna Vekic,
Croatia, 6-0, 6-3.
Elina Svitolina (19), Ukraine, def. Annika
Beck, Germany, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4.
Ekaterina Makarova (9), Russia, def. Elena
Vesnina, Russia, 6-2, 6-4.
Lucie Safarova (13), Czech Republic, def.
Sabine Lisicki (20), Germany, 6-3, 7-6 (2).
Garbine Muguruza (21), Spain, def. Angeli-
que Kerber (11), Germany, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2.
Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, def. Sam
Stosur (26), Australia, 6-3, 6-4.
Flavia Pennetta (28), Italy, def. Carla
Suarez Navarro (8), Spain, 6-3, 6-4.
Doubles
Men
Second Round
Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States,
def. Thanasi Kokkinakis, Australia, and
Lucas Pouille, France, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (3).
Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Peers
(11), Australia, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colom-
bia, and Dusan Lajovic, Serbia, 6-1, 6-2.
Simone Bolelli and Fabio Fognini (6), Italy,
def. Frantisek Cermak and Jiri Vesely, Czech
Republic, 5-1 (15-40), retired.
Maximo Gonzalez, Argentina, and Andre
Sa, Brazil, def. Marin Draganja, Croatia, and
Henri Kontinen (13), Finland, 6-3, 6-3.
Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Leander Paes
(10), India, def. Andre Begemann, Germany,
and Julian Knowle, Austria, 7-6 (3), 6-2.