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Page 2B SPORTS East Oregonian Tuesday, June 27, 2017 HODGEN: Naughton Russell Westbrook wins NBA MVP blasts solo home run NBA By BRIAN MAHONEY AP Basketball Writer NEW YORK — Russell Westbrook moved past Oscar Robertson and kept right on going to the top of the NBA. Westbrook was voted MVP on Monday night after setting a record with 42 triple-doubles during his historic season. He led the league with 31.6 points and added 10.7 rebounds and 10.4 assists per game, joining Robertson as the only players to average a triple-double for the season and breaking Robertson’s single- season record of 41 triple-doubles in 1961-62. “I remember growing up just being home, playing the video games and stuff with my pops, and my mom sitting there and my brother and just talking about maybe one day I could be the MVP. Obviously I was joking at the time,” Westbrook said. “But now to be standing here with this trophy next to me is a true blessing, man, and it’s an unbe- lievable feeling, something that I can never imagine.” He received 69 first-place votes and 888 points from a panel Westbrook of 100 media members and a fan vote to easily beat Houston’s James Harden, who had 22 first-place votes and 753 points. Kawhi Leonard was third with nine first-place votes and 500 points. Westbrook succeeded Stephen Curry, who had won the past two MVP awards. The point guard who plays with defiance on the court got choked up during an acceptance speech in which he brought some teammates onto the stage with him. “Oscar, guys like him, Magic Johnson, those guys, obviously I wasn’t able to see those guys play, but just to look back at history and see the things that they did, it’s something that I looked up to as a kid,” Westbrook said. “I never thought I would be able to say that I broke Oscar Robertson’s record, and that’s just a true blessing.” Earlier, Milwaukee’s Malcolm Brogdon became the first player not picked in the first round to win NBA Rookie of the Year in the common draft era, beating out Philadelphia’s Dario Saric and Joel Embiid. Brogdon was the No. 36 overall selection out of Virginia. The common draft era began in 1966. Teammate Giannis Antetokounmpo won the Most Improved Player award, Houston coach Mike D’Antoni won his second Coach of the Year award, the Rockets’ Eric Gordon was Sixth Man of the Year, and Golden State’s Draymond Green won the Defensive Player of the Year, ending Leonard’s two-year run. LINE: Reports to EOU’s fall camp on August 8 Continued from 1B lines to allow a small break from the heat. “It made it difficult,” Line recalled of the heat. “I felt pretty dehydrated after the game.” Aside from the game, players also were involved in several activities throughout the week, including a team trip to a movie and a wing eating contest at Buffalo Wild Wings. Line participated in the wing-eating contest, which featured players from either team going head-to-head in the restaurant’s Blazin Challenge. Line’s turn featured some contro- versy, he said. “They said the other guy won and I had finished two seconds after him,” Line said, “but I had swallowed all of mine and he just had this big ball of chicken he was still chewing in his mouth. Of course they changed the rules after I went, but oh well.” Overall, Line, who reports to Eastern Oregon University for training camp on Aug. 8, said that his experi- ence over the course of the week was a memorable one. “It was pretty fun and nice to meet and play with a bunch of good players,” he said. Continued from 1B Russell then hit an RBI double in the sixth to give Hodgen a big insurance run for the 10-7 final. Russell reached base all four times at the plate in the game, going 2 for 2 with two walks, two runs and an RBI. Chris Large got the win after throwing six innings and allowing six earned runs. Later in the day Hodgen and Yakima traded momentum early in the game, with Hodgen taking an 8-0 lead in the second inning, only to have Yakima tie it with an eight-run bottom frame to tie the game at 8-8. Hodgen then re-took the lead in the third inning and added on in the fourth with a six-run outburst, headlined by a solo home run from Daniel Naughton which made it a 14-8 game. Naughton had a big day at the plate, going 4 for 5 with his home run, three runs scored, two RBI and a double. Avery Deutz was close behind with a three-hit game. Yakima made a comeback in the seventh, pushing three runs across to cut the deficit to two runs, but Justin Duso came on to pitch for Hodgen with two outs and threw one pitch to get the final out and close out the win. In the Sunday finale against Bellingham, Hodgen led 7-5 until a seven-run outburst in the top of the fourth inning blew the game open to a 14-5 lead and it cruised to the finish line. Ryan Stahl got the win on the mound throwing three innings and allowing one earned run, and then led the team with four hits while scoring two runs and driving in a run. Brett Swanson also had four hits, adding one run, a triple and 3 RBI. Naughton, Duso and Large each had two hits apiece as well. UP NEXT Hodgen will participate in a Fourth of July Tournament in Spokane, Washington starting on Friday. ———— Saturday 1 R H E PSC 230 110 0 — 7 9 4 HDG 042 031 X — 10 5 1 W — C. Large. 2B — A. Deutz, D. Naughton, R. Russell (HDG). Saturday 2 R H E HDG 441 600 0 — 15 13 3 YKM o80 020 3 — 13 10 6 (H) T. Chichester, T. Morris (2), C. Hen- derson (5), A. Fell (6), J. Duso (7). W — T. Morris. 2B — D. Naughton, R. Russell (HDG). 3B — C. Large (HDG). HR — D. Naughton (HDG). Sunday R H E HDG 340 700 0 — 14 16 4 BEL 410 001 1 — 7 7 6 (H) R. Stahl, R. Russell (4). W — Stahl. 3B — B. Swanson (HDG). MLS: Seattle leads all-time series 9-5-5 BEAVERS: Fehmel should anchor staff Continued from 1B Continued from 1B half. Seattle is winless in three straight games. Heat in Portland moved the game to the evening, but temperatures were still in the 90s at the start of the game. The game was stopped for a hydration break in the first half. The two teams and the Vancouver Whitecaps play in the unique three-way Cascadia Cup, decided each season on points. The rivalry dates to 1975 when the teams were with the old North American Soccer League, but fans of the three teams christened the Cascadia Cup in 2004. Vancouver is the defending cup champion. “Feels like a loss. Very disappointing,” Timbers coach Celeb Porter said. “Didn’t think we managed the second half well. This has now become a pattern. Again, we’re in a winning position and don’t show a strong enough mentality, a strong enough urgency. When I look at how we played after we gave up the goal, that’s the way we should play every game, for 90 minutes.” The Timbers tied it at 1 in the 44th minute on Adi’s penalty kick. Evans got the red card for bringing down Darlington Nagbe in the box and was sent off. Adi is the first Timbers Preston Jones. Junior third baseman Michael Gretler, drafted in the 39th round (1,168th overall), has the option of returning to school. Gretler hit .301 with five homers and 33 RBIs. Sophomore Zak Taylor and freshman Tyler Malone are candidates to replace Harrison at first. Also fighting for playing time next year will be freshman infielders Andy Armstrong and George Mendazona. On the pitching side, redshirt sophomore Drew Rasmussen (31st overall, Tampa Bay Rays) and redshirt junior Jake Thompson (131st overall, Boston Red Sox) were high picks and are likely candi- dates to sign. Rasmussen, who returned from Tommy John surgery in April, finished 3-0 with a 1.00 earned-run average in 27 innings. He started four games and made four relief appearances, including a save in the Beavers’ CWS opener against Cal State Fullerton. Thompson went 14-1 with a 1.96 ERA in 20 appearances (19 starts), striking out 119 in 128 innings. Other than redshirt senior reliever Max Engelbrekt, a 40th-round pick (1,213th overall) by the Washington Pete Christopher/The Oregonian via AP Portland Timbers Dairon Asprilla celebrates his first half goal during an MLS soccer game against Seattle Sounders FC, Sunday, June 25, 2017, in Portland, Ore. player to reach 50 goals over all eras of the team. He upped his total this season to nine goals. Adi has eight goals in 10 career games against the Sounders, making him Portland’s all-time leading scorer against Seattle. Portland, which had dropped its previous two matches, went ahead 2-1 in first-half stoppage time on Asprilla’s header off a corner kick, which he cele- brated with backflips. Dempsey came in as a sub in the 56th minute. The national team star headed in a pass from Roman Torres in the 94th for his fifth overall goal of the season. Sounders coach Brian Schmetzer didn’t start Dempsey because of the heat. “We just said, ‘Look, it’s going to be hot, let’s take some sting out of the game, and I’m going to use you as I see the game fit,’” Schmetzer said. “And he said, ‘Yeah, anything. Whatever for the team.’ And he came on and really did a good job.” The coach also noted: “He loves scoring against Portland.” Told of his coach’s comments, Dempsey smiled. “I like scoring against everybody,” he said. “Any goal is a great goal.” Seattle leads the series in MLS 9-5-5, and the all-time series 50-35-13. It was the 98th all-time meeting between the two teams. It was Portland’s 116th consecutive sellout. AP Photo/Nati Harnik Oregon State pitcher Bryce Fehmel (26) works against LSU during a College World Series baseball game in Omaha, Neb., Monday, June 19, 2017. Fehmel is one of many Beavers returning in 2018. Nationals, OSU should return the rest of its pitching staff that led Division I with a 1.93 ERA. Sophomore Bryce Fehmel (6-3, 3.87), redshirt sophomore Sam Tweedt (3-0, 2.50), sophomore Jordan Britton (2-0, 2.45) and freshman Jake Mulhol- land (7-1, 1.20) could all be battling for spots in the rotation. Freshmen Brandon Eisert (5-0, 2.31), Mitchell Verburg (1-0, 0.93) and Grant Gambrell (1-0, 2.93) all showed flashes of bril- liance out of the pen, as did junior Mitch Hickey (0-0, 4.91). Add in the potential return of junior ace Luke Heimlich (11-1, 0.76 ERA), the Pac-12 pitcher of the year who removed himself from competition following a report detailing his juvenile record in The Oregonian, OSU could be just as strong on the mound in 2018. Yeskie praised the veterans for mentoring the talented crop of freshmen and sophomores. “What (Rasmussen) was able to give to us at times when he wasn’t between the white lines was huge,” Yeskie said. “The growth and development of Thompson, Heimlich and what they passed on down to the younger guys is great. I can’t speak enough of Max Engelbrekt. I’m extremely happy that he chose to come back for that fifth year and he was rewarded accordingly.” SCOREBOARD Baseball MLB AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB New York 41 33 .554 — Boston 42 34 .553 — Tampa Bay 40 38 .513 3 Baltimore 37 38 .493 4½ Toronto 36 39 .480 5½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 40 35 .533 — Minnesota 39 35 .527 ½ Kansas City 37 37 .500 2½ Detroit 33 42 .440 7 Chicago 32 43 .426 8 West Division W L Pct GB Houston 52 25 .675 — Los Angeles 41 39 .512 12½ Seattle 39 39 .500 13½ Texas 38 38 .500 13½ Oakland 34 42 .447 17½ ——— Monday’s Games Boston 4, Minnesota 1 Cleveland 15, Texas 9 N.Y. Yankees 6, Chicago White Sox 5 L.A. Angels 4, L.A. Dodgers 0 Tuesday’s Games Tampa Bay (Cobb 6-5) at Pittsburgh (Williams 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Baltimore (Gausman 3-7) at Toronto (Biagini 2-6), 4:07 p.m. Kansas City (Strahm 2-4) at Detroit (Ver- lander 4-4), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Santiago 4-6) at Boston (Pomeranz 6-4), 4:10 p.m. Texas (Ross 1-1) at Cleveland (Clevinger 3-3), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Severino 5-3) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 4-8), 5:10 p.m. Oakland (Manaea 6-4) at Houston (Fiers 5-2), 5:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Chavez 5-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 5-3), 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Nola 4-5) at Seattle (Paxton 5-2), 7:10 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W Washington 45 Atlanta 36 Miami 34 New York 34 Philadelphia 24 Central Division W Milwaukee 41 Chicago 39 St. Louis 35 Pittsburgh 35 Cincinnati 31 West Division W Los Angeles 51 Arizona 49 L 31 39 40 41 51 Pct GB .592 — .480 8½ .459 10 .453 10½ .320 20½ L 37 37 40 41 44 Pct GB .526 — .513 1 .467 4½ .461 5 .413 8½ L Pct GB 27 .654 — 28 .636 1½ Colorado 47 32 .595 4½ San Diego 31 45 .408 19 San Francisco 28 51 .354 23½ ——— Monday’s Games Arizona 6, Philadelphia 1 St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 2 Chicago Cubs 5, Washington 4 San Francisco 9, Colorado 2 L.A. Angels 4, L.A. Dodgers 0 Tuesday’s Games Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 7-5) at Washington (Scherzer 8-5), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Cobb 6-5) at Pittsburgh (Williams 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Guerra 1-1) at Cincinnati (Adleman 4-4), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Gsellman 5-5) at Miami (Straily 5-4), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Martinez 6-6) at Arizona (Walker 6-3), 6:40 p.m. Atlanta (Newcomb 0-2) at San Diego (Chacin 6-6), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Chavez 5-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 5-3), 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Nola 4-5) at Seattle (Paxton 5-2), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (Hoffman 4-1) at San Francisco (Cain 3-7), 7:15 p.m. ALL-STAR FAN VOTING Released June 26 AMERICAN LEAGUE Catchers 1. Salvador Perez, Royals, 2,150,223 2. Gary Sanchez, Yankees, 1,337,651 3. Brian McCann, Astros, 1,330,042 4. Welington Castillo, Orioles, 1,050,023 5. Yan Gomes, Indians, 895,482 First Basemen 1. Eric Hosmer, Royals, 1,419,887 2. Justin Smoak, Blue Jays, 1,348,233 3. Yonder Alonso, A’s, 1,076,984 4. Miguel Cabrera, Tigers, 1,011,382 5. Carlos Santana, Indians, 966,199 Second Basemen 1. Jose Altuve, Astros, 2,925,041 2. Starlin Castro, Yankees, 1,737,446 3. Jason Kipnis, Indians, 957,179 4. Whit Merrifield, Royals, 589,154 5. Dustin Pedroia, Red Sox, 551,841 Third Basemen 1. Miguel Sano, Twins, 1,550,240 2. Jose Ramirez, Indians, 1,341,076 3. Josh Donaldson, Blue Jays, 1,191,244 4. Mike Moustakas, Royals, 1,067,150 5. Manny Machado, Orioles, 946,013 Shortstops 1. Carlos Correa, Astros, 2,229,857 2. Francisco Lindor, Indians, 1,648,532 3. Didi Gregorius, Yankees, 1,069,822 4. Xander Bogaerts, Red Sox, 982,987 5. Troy Tulowitzki, Blue Jays, 783,649 Designated Hitters 1. Nelson Cruz, Mariners, 1,366,962 2. Corey Dickerson, Rays, 1,267,234 3. Edwin Encarnacion, Indians, 1,186,483 4. Matt Holliday, Yankees, 1,107,847 5. Evan Gattis, Astros, 885,391 Outfielders 1. Aaron Judge, Yankees, 3,442,597 2. Mike Trout, Angels, 2,559,173 3. George Springer, Astros, 1,619,385 4. Michael Brantley, Indians, 1,325,473 5. Avisail Garcia, White Sox, 1,292,694 6. Mookie Betts, Red Sox, 1,223,195 7. Jose Bautista, Blue Jays, 1,055,645 8. Carlos Beltran, Astros, 1,054,503 9. Brett Gardner, Yankees, 889,616 10. Lonnie Chisenhall, Indians, 885,443 11. Andrew Benintendi, Red Sox, 869,774 12. Lorenzo Cain, Royals, 829,284 NATIONAL LEAGUE Catcher 1. Buster Posey, Giants, 2,530,713 2. Willson Contreras, Cubs, 1,216,513 3. Yadier Molina, Cardinals, 1,068,485 4. Yasmani Grandal, Dodgers, 749,923 5. Matt Wieters, Nationals, 680,644 First Basemen 1. Ryan Zimmerman, Nationals, 1,728,607 2. Anthony Rizzo, Cubs, 1,601,245 3. Paul Goldschmidt, D-backs, 1,200,995 4. Freddie Freeman, Braves, 767,375 5. Joey Votto, Reds, 703,832 Second Basemen 1. Daniel Murphy, Nationals, 3,057,360 2. Javier Baez, Cubs, 1,654,829 3. DJ LeMahieu, Rockies, 621,188 4. Brandon Phillips, Braves, 475,916 5. Logan Forsythe, Dodgers, 393,238 Third Basemen 1. Kris Bryant, Cubs, 1,978,692 2. Nolan Arenado, Rockies, 1,920,610 3. Justin Turner, Dodgers, 1,075,524 4. Anthony Rendon, Nationals, 779,468 5. Jake Lamb, D-backs, 726,560 Shortstop 1. Zack Cozart, Reds, 1,915,806 2. Corey Seager, Dodgers, 1,657,732 3. Addison Russell, Cubs, 1,204,204 4. Trea Turner, Nationals, 804,703 5. Chris Owings, D-backs, 676,666 Outfield 1. Bryce Harper, Nationals, 3,617,444 2. Charlie Blackmon, Rockies, 3,115,730 3. Marcell Ozuna, Marlins, 1,270,464 4. Jason Heyward, Cubs, 1,241,194 5. Ben Zobrist, Cubs, 1,122,946 6. Giancarlo Stanton, Marlins, 1,069,313 7. Matt Kemp, Braves, 1,058,050 8. Kyle Schwarber, Cubs, 949,780 9. Yoenis Cespedes, Mets, 785,178 10. Adam Duvall, Reds, 664,379 11. Dexter Fowler, Cardinals, 631,395 12. Yasiel Puig, Dodgers, 626,565 MiLB Northwest League North W Tri-City 8 Vancouver 8 Everett 6 Spokane 3 South W Eugene 7 Hillsboro 6 L 3 4 6 8 Pct GB .727 — .667 ½ .500 2½ .273 5 L Pct GB 5 .583 — 6 .500 1 Boise 6 6 .500 Salem-Keizer 3 9 .250 ——— Monday’s Games Boise 8, Salem-Keizer 2 Tri-City at Spokane, late finish Eugene 2, Hillsboro 1 Everett 9, Vancouver 2 Tuesday’s Games Salem-Keizer at Boise, 6:15 p.m. Tri-City at Spokane, 6:30 p.m. Hillsboro at Eugene, 7:05 p.m. Vancouver at Everett, 7:05 p.m. 1 4 NCAA College World Series At TD Ameritrade Park Omaha Omaha, Neb. Saturday LSU 6, Oregon State 1, LSU advances Florida 3, TCU 0, Florida advances Championship Series (Best-of-3; x-if necessary) Monday: Florida 4, LSU 3 Tuesday: LSU (52-19) vs. Florida (51-19), 5 p.m. (ESPN) x-Wednesday: LSU vs. Florida, 5 p.m. (ESPN) Basketball WNBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Washington 8 5 New York 7 5 Connecticut 6 6 Atlanta 5 6 Indiana 6 7 Chicago 3 10 Pct GB .615 — .583 ½ .500 1½ .455 2 .462 2 .231 5 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Minnesota 11 1 .917 — Los Angeles 9 3 .750 2 Phoenix 7 5 .583 4 Dallas 8 8 .500 5 Seattle 6 6 .500 5 San Antonio 0 14 .000 12 ———— Sunday’s Games Dallas 96, Connecticut 82 Washington 97, Chicago 63 Minnesota 87, San Antonio 78 Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games Seattle at Washington, 9 a.m. Los Angeles at Connecticut, 4 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Indiana at Chicago, 9:30 a.m. Soccer MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts Toronto FC 10 2 5 35 Chicago 10 3 4 34 NYC FC 9 5 3 30 GF 30 31 31 GA 15 17 20 Orlando City 7 6 5 26 Columbus 8 9 1 25 Atl. United FC 7 7 3 24 New York 7 8 2 23 New England 5 7 5 20 Philadelphia 5 7 4 19 Montreal 4 5 6 18 D.C. United 5 9 3 18 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts Sporting K.C. 8 4 6 30 FC Dallas 6 3 7 25 Houston 7 6 4 25 Portland 7 7 4 25 San Jose 6 6 5 23 Los Angeles 6 6 4 22 Vancouver 6 6 3 21 Seattle 5 7 6 21 Minn. United 5 9 3 18 Real Salt Lake 5 11 2 17 Colorado 5 10 1 16 20 29 33 17 27 21 24 12 26 30 25 23 25 20 26 25 GF 22 23 30 31 18 25 21 22 24 17 15 GA 12 15 25 28 21 24 21 27 38 37 23 Mackenzie Hughes 67-70-71-66—274 -6 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ———— Thursday’s Game Minnesota United at NYC FC, 4:30 p.m. Friday’s Game Orlando City at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, July 1 D.C. United at Montreal, 4 p.m. Portland at Sporting Kansas City, 4 p.m. Toronto FC at FC Dallas, 4 p.m. Vancouver at Chicago, 4 p.m. Atlanta United FC at Columbus, 4:30 p.m. Houston at Colorado, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, July 2 New England at Philadelphia, 2 p.m. Golf PGA Tour Travelers Championship Sunday At TPC River Highlands Cromwell, Conn. Purse: $6.8 million Yardage: 6,841; Par: 70 Final x-won on first playoff hole x-Jordan Spieth 63-69-66-70—268 Daniel Berger 68-67-66-67—268 Charley Hoffman 69-67-68-66—270 Danny Lee 68-67-68-67—270 Paul Casey 68-68-66-69—271 Patrick Reed 67-66-72-66—271 Boo Weekley 66-68-65-72—271 Keegan Bradley 67-70-66-69—272 David Hearn 67-70-66-69—272 Troy Merritt 65-68-73-66—272 C.T. Pan 70-68-64-70—272 Webb Simpson 70-68-66-68—272 Kevin Streelman 69-70-69-64—272 Xander Schauffele 66-70-70-67—273 Brandt Snedeker 70-67-72-64—273 Brendan Steele 68-68-69-68—273 Rory McIlroy 67-73-70-64—274 Tony Finau 70-67-70-67—274 Padraig Harrington 66-69-71-68—274 -12 -12 -10 -10 -9 -9 -9 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -7 -7 -7 -6 -6 -6 LPGA Tour NW Arkansas Championship Sunday At Pinnacle Country Club Rogers, Ark. Purse: $2 million FINAL RESULTS So Yeon Ryu 65-61-69—195 Amy Yang 68-65-64—197 Moriya Jutanugarn 66-65-66—197 Michelle Wie 68-68-64—200 Stacy Lewis 66-65-69—200 Minjee Lee 69-65-67—201 Inbee Park 69-65-67—201 Nicole B. Larsen 70-67-65—202 Marina Alex 69-67-66—202 Mina Harigae 70-71-62—203 Chella Choi 73-66-64—203 Tiffany Joh 72-67-64—203 Jeong Eun Lee 67-71-65—203 Eun-Hee Ji 70-67-66—203 -18 -16 -16 -13 -13 -12 -12 -11 -11 -10 -10 -10 -10 -10 Motorsports NASCAR Monster Energy Cup Toyota/Save Mart 350 Results Sunday At Sonoma Raceway Sonoma, Calif. (Starting position in parentheses) 1. (12) Kevin Harvick, Ford. 2. (13) Clint Bowyer, Ford. 3. (23) Brad Keselowski, Ford. 4. (14) Denny Hamlin, Toyota. 5. (4) Kyle Busch, Toyota. 6. (10) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet. 7. (17) Kurt Busch, Ford. 8. (8) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet. 9. (7) Ryan Blaney, Ford. 10. (2) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet. 11. (15) Paul Menard, Chevrolet. 12. (18) Joey Logano, Ford. 13. (24) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet. 14. (16) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet. 15. (20) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet. 16. (11) Daniel Suarez, Toyota. 17. (6) Danica Patrick, Ford. 18. (19) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet. 19. (9) Chris Buescher, Chevrolet. 20. (38) Matt Kenseth, Toyota. 21. (29) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet. 22. (26) Billy Johnson, Ford. 23. (27) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford. 24. (21) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet. 25. (30) Erik Jones, Toyota. 26. (1) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet. 27. (25) Trevor Bayne, Ford. 28. (35) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet. 29. (34) Boris Said, Chevrolet. 30. (31) Landon Cassill, Ford. 31. (28) David Ragan, Ford. 32. (32) Alon Day, Toyota. 33. (36) Kevin O’Connell, Chevrolet. 34. (37) Tommy Regan, Chevrolet. 35. (5) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet. 36. (33) Josh Bilicki, Chevrolet. 37. (3) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota. 38. (22) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford.