Page <strong>10</strong>B - <strong>Sun</strong>day, October <strong>11</strong>, 20<strong>09</strong> - Plainview Daily Herald http://www.MyPlainview.com Petersburg vs. Kress Hayley Cox/Plainview Daily Herald (Clockwise from top left) <strong>The</strong> Petersburg Buffaloes charge the field through pink ribbons in respect to Breast Cancer Awareness Month; Petersburg water boys Zack Byrd, 13, and Yovahn Marroquin, 9, wear a pink ribbon; Petersburg’s Eric Van Gundy (5) takes down Kress Kangaroo Jonathan Cavazos (13); Kress cheerleaders freshman Melissa Rascon (left), sophomore Jessi Stark and mascot Isis Infante cheer on the team; the Kress Kangaroos watch from the sideline; Petersburg’s Josh Ramirez (6) heads down the field; and Petersburg fans bundle up.
http://www.MyPlainview.com Plainview Daily Herald - <strong>Sun</strong>day, October <strong>11</strong>, 20<strong>09</strong> - Page <strong>11</strong>B Scoreboard By <strong>The</strong> Associated Press All Times CDT TV SPORTSWATCH Today AUTO RACING 2:15 p.m.: ABC — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Pepsi 500, at Fontana, Calif. 6 p.m.: ESPN2 — NHRA, Virginia Nationals, final eliminations CYCLING 5 p.m.: VERSUS — Paris-Tours, Chartres to Tours, France GOLF 8 a.m.: TGC — European PGA Tour, Madrid Masters, final round <strong>11</strong> a.m.: NBC — PGA Tour, Presidents Cup, final round, at San Francisco MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL <strong>11</strong> a.m.: TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 3, Los Angeles at Boston 2:30 p.m.: TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 4, Los Angeles at St. Louis 6 p.m.: TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 3, New York at Minnesota 9 p.m.: TBS — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 3, Philadelphia at Colorado NFL FOOTBALL Noon: CBS — Regional coverage, doubleheader FOX — Regional coverage 3 p.m.: FOX — Regional coverage 3:15 p.m.: CBS — Regional coverage, doubleheader game 7:15 p.m.: NBC — Indianapolis at Tennessee — — — Monday MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Time TBA: TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 4, N.Y. Yankees at Minnesota (if necessary) Time TBA: TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 4, L.A. Angels at Boston (if necessary) NFL FOOTBALL 7:30 p.m.: ESPN — N.Y. Jets at Miami NHL HOCKEY 7 p.m.: VERSUS — Calgary at Chicago BASEBALL American League DIVISION SERIES American League New York 2, Minnesota 0 Friday: New York 4, Minnesota 3, <strong>11</strong> innings Today: New York (Pettitte 14-8) at Minnesota Los Angeles Angels 2, Boston 0 Friday: Los Angeles 4, Boston 1 Today: Los Angeles (Kazmir <strong>10</strong>-9) at Boston (Buchholz 7-4) National League Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 0 Saturday: Los Angeles 5, St. Louis 1 Philadelphia 1, Colorado 1 Saturday: Philadelphia at Colorado, ppd., weather Today: Philadelphia (Happ <strong>12</strong>-4) at Colorado (Hammel <strong>10</strong>-8), 9:07 p.m. FOOTBALL NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Jets 3 1 0 .750 74 57 New England 3 1 0 .750 87 71 Miami 1 3 0 .250 81 79 Buffalo 1 3 0 .250 74 1<strong>10</strong> South Indianapolis 4 0 0 1.000 <strong>10</strong>6 62 Jacksonville 2 2 0 .500 97 86 Houston 2 2 0 .500 94 92 Tennessee 0 4 0 .000 75 <strong>10</strong>8 North Baltimore 3 1 0 .750 <strong>12</strong>4 80 Cincinnati 3 1 0 .750 84 76 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 85 78 Cleveland 0 4 0 .000 49 <strong>11</strong>8 West Denver 4 0 0 1.000 79 26 San Diego 2 2 0 .500 <strong>10</strong>1 <strong>10</strong>2 Oakland 1 3 0 .250 42 86 Kansas City 0 4 0 .000 64 1<strong>12</strong> NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 4 0 0 1.000 <strong>10</strong>7 64 Philadelphia 2 1 0 .667 94 72 Dallas 2 2 0 .500 96 78 Washington 2 2 0 .500 56 62 South New Orleans 4 0 0 1.000 144 66 Atlanta 2 1 0 .667 57 53 Carolina 0 3 0 .000 37 87 Tampa Bay 0 4 0 .000 54 <strong>10</strong>7 North Minnesota 4 0 0 1.000 <strong>11</strong>8 80 Chicago 3 1 0 .750 <strong>10</strong>5 78 Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 <strong>10</strong>4 93 WBU From Page 4B also fi nished in the top ten, in seventh place, running a 24:59.20. Michael Sandoval, another sophomore, was <strong>11</strong>th (25:22.03), senior Timmy McCune was <strong>12</strong>th (25:27.07), and freshman Jarrod Morris came in 13th (25:35.60). “<strong>The</strong> men ran really well. We beat LCU and were right there with South Plains, and that was running without Kirby,” said WBU head coach Brian Whitlock, referring to senior Kirby Dunn, who has missed the past two meets with a breathing problem. “<strong>The</strong> times we turned in were extremely fast, and I don’t want to take anything away from our guys, but the course may have been a little short. “Hildon got out to a much better start today, not as fast as last week, so I was real pleased with that. Timmy ran well again, and I was excited about the way our other freshman, Jarrod Morris ran. He • 4 Chicken Strips • Fries or Tots • Texas Toast • Country Gravy • Onion Ring • Medium Drink* Tech Corporate Sponsor 2 Locations: Bowling Results Gutter G tt Dusters D t Team W L Lewis, Kaufman & Co. 16 8 R&R Enterprises 16 8 Tule Creek Gin 14 <strong>10</strong> Tulia Health and Rehab 13 1/2 <strong>10</strong> 1/2 Johnson Gin 13 1/2 <strong>10</strong> 1/2 Bar W. Ford 13 1/2 <strong>10</strong> 1/2 Fleming Well <strong>11</strong> 13 GPAC <strong>11</strong> 13 Herald Divas 9 1/2 14 1/2 Herald Babes 9 15 HCSB 9 15 PBC 8 16 High Game: Mona Seago 165 High Series: Angie Rushing and Mona Seago 441 Early Bird League Team W L Wright Plumbing 15 1/2 8 1/2 Leal’s 14 <strong>10</strong> Plainview Bowling Center <strong>12</strong> 1/2 <strong>11</strong> 1/2 Sweet A&B 13 <strong>11</strong> B&B’s Girls <strong>12</strong> <strong>12</strong> High Game: Glenda Gordon 181 High Series: Margie Wright 489 Area Bowling League Team W L Mouser Agency 15 9 Plainview Bowling Center 14 1/2 9 1/2 Goyne Drilling <strong>12</strong> 1/2 <strong>11</strong> 1/2 Organic Alterations <strong>10</strong> 1/2 13 1/2 Randy Collie Electric 8 1/2 15 1/2 High Game: Diane Voyles 192 High Series: Voyles 500 Detroit 1 3 0 .250 83 134 West San Francisco 3 1 0 .750 <strong>10</strong>2 53 Arizona 1 2 0 .333 57 68 Seattle 1 3 0 .250 74 82 St. Louis 0 4 0 .000 24 <strong>10</strong>8 Today: Pittsburgh at Detroit, noon; Oakland at N.Y. Giants, noon; Cleveland at Buffalo, noon; Dallas at Kansas City, noon; Minnesota at St. Louis, noon; Cincinnati at Baltimore, noon; Washington at Carolina, noon; Tampa Bay at Philadelphia, noon; Atlanta at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m.; Jacksonville at Seattle, 3:15 p.m.; Houston at Arizona, 3:15 p.m.; New England at Denver, 3:15 p.m.; Indianapolis at Tennessee, 7:20 p.m. Monday, Oct. <strong>12</strong>: N.Y. Jets at Miami, 7:30 p.m. — — — COLLEGE Saturday Top 25: No. 1 Florida (4-0) beat No. 4 LSU, 13-3; No. 2 Texas (5-0) beat Colorado 38-14.; No. 3 Alabama (6-0) beat No. 20 Mississippi 22-3.; No. 5 Virginia Tech (5-1) beat Boston College 48-14; No. 9 Ohio State (5-1) beat Wisconsin 31-13; No. <strong>10</strong> TCU (5-0) beat Air Force 20-17; No. <strong>11</strong> Miami (4-1) beat Florida A&M 48-16; No. <strong>12</strong> Iowa (5-0) beat Michigan, 30-28’ No. 13 Oregon (5-1) beat UCLA 24-<strong>10</strong>; No. 14 Penn State (5-1) beat Eastern Illinois 52-3; No. 15 Oklahoma State (4-1) beat Texas A&M 36-31; No. 16 Kansas (5-0) beat Iowa State 41-36; No. 17 Auburn (5-1) lost to Arkansas 44-23; No. 18 BYU (4-1) at UNLV (n); No. 19 Oklahoma (3-2) beat Baylor 33-7; No. 21 Nebraska (4-1) beat No. 24 Missouri 27-<strong>12</strong>, Thursday; No. 22 Georgia Tech (4-1) at Florida State; No. 25 South Carolina (5-1) beat Kentucky 28-26. Regional: WTA&M 34, Eastern New Mexico 24; Texas Tech 66, Kansas St. <strong>11</strong>; BASKETBALL NBA Preseason Saturday: New Orleans 88, Oklahoma City 79; Cleveland <strong>10</strong>2, Charlotte 96; Chicago vs. Milwaukee at Green Bay, Wis., (n); Golden State vs. Phoenix at Palm Springs, Calif., (n) Today: New Jersey at Boston, Noon; Washington at Toronto, 2 p.m.; San Antonio at Miami, 5 p.m.; Atlanta at Detroit, 5 p.m.; Memphis at Dallas, 6 p.m. HOCKEY NHL Saturday: Boston 4, N.Y. Islanders 3, SO; Pittsburgh 5, Toronto 2; Ottawa 4, Atlanta 2; Anaheim 3, Philadelphia 2, SO; New Jersey 3, Florida 2; Detroit 3, Washington 2; Tampa Bay 5, Carolina 2; Los Angeles 2, St. Louis 1; Buffalo 1, Nashville 0; Chicago 4, Colorado 3, SO; Columbus at Phoenix, (n); Montreal at Edmonton, (n); Minnesota at San Jose, (n). Today: Anaheim at N.Y. Rangers, 4 really turned on the burners there at the end and pushed ahead of a guy from LCU.” Also running for the Wayland men were Victor Lemay (18th - 25:52.71) and John Keith (22nd - 26:<strong>10</strong>.27). Regular cross country runners Catherine Leubner, Milca Villegas, and Diana Guiterrez all fi nished in the top <strong>10</strong> in the women’s race on Saturday. Leubner, a freshman, ran an 18:20.68 to fi nish 5th. Another freshman, Villegas completed the 5K course in 18:28.46 for 8th place, and Guiterrez, a senior, was ninth with a time of 18:33.<strong>11</strong>. <strong>The</strong> Pioneer tracksters, Trishawn Battiste and Mary Beth Arnold, ran times of 21:59.86 and 25:44.22. “Our three girls are really impressing me right now. Catherine ran a great race today, and Milca gets better every week.” Both Wayland teams will have next week off in preparation for the NAIA Mid- States Classic which will be held Oct. 24 in Winfi eld, Kan. 4004 Olton Rd. • 293-4848 501 W. 5th • 293-3199 p.m.; Dallas at Vancouver, 9 p.m. SOCCER Major League Soccer Saturday: Toronto FC 1, San Jose 1, tie; Columbus 1, New England 0; Kansas City at Chivas USA, (n). TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL MINNESOTA TWINS—Placed 3B Matt Tolbert on the 15-day DL. Called up 3B Brian Buscher from Rochester (IL). BASKETBALL NBA—Suspended Detroit F Austin Daye and Milwaukee G Carlos Delfino for one game without pay for their roles in an altercation in a game on Oct. 7. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS— Suspended G Stephen Jackson for two exhibition games for conduct detrimental to the team. LOS ANGELES LAKERS—Waived F Mickael Gelabale, F David Monds and F-C Michael Fey. FOOTBALL SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Signed T Kyle Williams from the practice roster. Released DT Michael Bennett. WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Signed P Glenn Pakulak from the practice squad. Released DE Renaldo Wynn. HOCKEY CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Recalled RW Jack Skille from Rockford (AHL). ST. LOUIS BLUES—Recalled D Tyson Strachan from Peoria (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Claimed LW Radek Smolenak off waivers from Chicago. VANCOUVER CANUCKS—Recalled F Guillaume Desbiens from Manitoba (AHL). Lady Dogs From Page 1B blocks and Welch had four aces and <strong>12</strong> assists. Senior Ashley Welch led the defense with 31 digs and Amanda Hinojosa added 14 digs. Ashley Welch also had an ace. Brittany Ramirez added 13 digs. Senior setter Meredith Mull added eight assists and Quenda Alexander had two kills and two blocks. <strong>The</strong> Lady Dogs will host Big Spring Tuesday as they begin the second round of district play. <strong>The</strong> match is scheduled to start at 6:30 p.m. Plainview swept Big Spring in three sets in the teams’ fi rst meeting. <strong>The</strong> junior varsity Lady Dogs fell to Cooper in two sets, 25-14, 30-28. Michelle Portillo had 16 digs, Shania Dulakis had three kills and two blocks and Natalie Tunnell had fi ve kills. <strong>The</strong> freshman Lady Dogs played two matches Saturday, one against Cooper’s freshman team and one against its sophomore team. In the match against the freshman team, the Lady Dogs fell 25-20, 25-15. In the loss, Taylor Esty had fi ve kills; Meagan Bordayo had fi ve digs; Miranda Ball had two kills; Kristian Reynolds had three assists; and Kymber Carroll had four assists. In the second match against the sophomore team, the Lady Dogs won 25-19, 25-21. In that match, Esty had four kills and two blocks; Olivia Tinoco had two kills; Reynolds had four tips; Carroll had three assists; and Mara Rodriquez had two aces. Pick 3 Fri.: 3-9-5; Night: 2-0-7 Sat.: 9-5-6; Night: 6-9-3 Daily 4 Fri.: 3-4-8-5; Night: 6-3-9-8 Sat.: 5-6-9-2; Night: 5-2-0-9 Cash 5 Fri.: 25-19-14-<strong>11</strong>-22 Sat.: 5-13-31-33-36 Mega Millions 3-14-21-24-51 MB: 14 No winner; Tuesday’s jackpot: $170 million Pick 6 9-13-16-19-39-40 Jackpot: $67 million; No winners * Medium Soft Drinks or Iced Teas only. Add-ins and fruit cost extra. No. 3 Alabama stuffs Ole Miss OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — Mark Ingram rushed for 172 yards and a touchdown and No. 3 Alabama stuffed No. 20 Mississippi 22-3 on Saturday. Jevan Snead threw four interceptions for Ole Miss (3-2, 1-2 SEC), tying a career high, and the Crimson Tide (6-0, 4-0) scored after a blocked punt and a fumble recovery on a punt return. No. 2 Texas 38, Colorado 14 In Austin, Earl Thomas returned an interception 92 yards for a touchdown and Ben Wells recovered a blocked punt for another score to help No. 2 Texas pull away from Colorado in the second half for a 38-14 win Saturday night. Jordan Shipley returned a punt for a touchdown in the fourth quarter for the Longhorns (5-0, 2-0 Big <strong>12</strong>), who can now look ahead to next weekend’s showdown with No. 19 Oklahoma. Arkansas 44, No. 17 Auburn 23 In Fayetteville, Ark. Michael Smith rushed for 145 yards and a touchdown, and Arkansas held off a late Auburn rally to hand the Tigers their fi rst loss. No. 5 Virginia Tech 48, Boston College 14 In Blacksburg, Va., Tyrod Taylor, Ryan Williams and Virginia Tech’s swarming defense made sure the Hokies’ regular season losing streak against Boston College ended. <strong>The</strong> victory ended a three- Get cooking! � Fun live cooking demos with top culinary specialists � Fabulous recipes and easy entertaining ideas � Prize giveaways and free gift bag Local Sponsors SHOW INFO: Plainview Daily Herald game regular season skid by Virginia Tech (5-1, 3-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) against Boston College (4-2, 2-2). No. 9 Ohio State 31, Wisconsin 13 In Columbus, Ohio, Kurt Coleman and Jermale Hines returned interceptions for touchdowns and Ray Small brought a kickoff back 96 yards, dealing the self-destructive Badgers their fi rst loss of the season. No. 13 Oregon 24, UCLA <strong>10</strong> In Pasadena, Calif., Kenjon Barner returned the second-half kickoff for a <strong>10</strong>0-yard touchdown, and Talmadge Jackson returned an interception 32 yards for another score just 13 seconds later. No. 14 Penn State 52, Eastern Illinois 3 In State College, Pa., Daryll Clark threw for three touchdowns and ran for another, Jared Odrick led a menacing defense with two sacks and linebacker Navorro Bowman returned a fumble 91 yards for a touchdown in the Nittany Lions’ most complete performance of the season against lowerdivision Eastern Illinois. No. 15 Oklahoma State 36, Texas A&M 31 In College Station, Zac Robinson threw two touchdown passes and Oklahoma State overcame the absence of its top two playmakers. <strong>The</strong> Cowboys (4-1, 1-0 Big <strong>12</strong>) played without All- America receiver Dez Bry- Thursday, Oct. 15, 20<strong>09</strong> Doors Open at 5:30 p.m. Show Begins at 6:30 p.m. Tickets $8 Ollie Liner Center 2000 S. Columbia • Plainview, TX Attendees are encouraged to bring one canned good to be donated to FISH and the attendee will receive a ticket good towards drawings for Taste of Home cookbooks to be given out during the event. ant, who was ruled ineligible by the school this week for lying to the NCAA about contact he made with a former NFL player. Oklahoma State was also missing Kendall Hunter, the Big <strong>12</strong>’s leading rusher in 2008, who sat out with an ankle injury. No. 16 Kansas 41, Iowa State 36 In Lawrence, Kan., Todd Reesing threw for 442 yards and four touchdowns and Kerry Meier set two school receiving records in a game fi lled with big plays and missed extra points. No. 19 Oklahoma 33, Baylor 7 In Norman, Okla., Heisman Trophy winner Sam Bradford threw for 389 yards and a touchdown in his return from a shoulder injury and Chris Brown had two short scoring runs. Bradford broke former Heisman runner-up Josh Heupel’s school record with the 14th game of his career with at least 300 yards passing, and he could have had even bigger numbers if the Sooners’ receivers didn’t have trouble handling his passes. No. 25 South Carolina 28, Kentucky 26 In Columbia S.C., Stephen Garcia threw for three touchdowns and ran for another and South Carolina stopped a potential tying two-point conversion in the fourth quarter, keeping coach Steve Spurrier a perfect 17-0 against the Wildcats. Padilla, Dodgers beat Cardinals 5-1 for sweep ST. LOUIS (AP) — Unemployed in August, Vicente Padilla kept the Los Angeles Dodgers going in October. <strong>The</strong> second-chance pitcher shut down Albert Pujols and the St. Louis Cardinals with a 5-1 victory Saturday night, putting the Dodgers back in the National League championship series. “Anytime you win a series it’s good,” Casey Blake said. “But to sweep the Cardinals, it just doesn’t happen. I would have never guessed we would have swept them.” Andre Ethier missed the cycle by a single, Manny Ramirez had three hits and two RBIs and the Dodgers didn’t need help this time from another St. Louis fi elding blunder to sweep their division series opponent for a second straight season. Los Angeles scored all fi ve runs with two outs. Pujols and Matt Holliday were a combined 2 for 8 with a late RBI for the Cardinals, who never recharged after becoming the fi rst National League team to clinch a division title. St. Louis was 1-9 after wrapping up the NL Central, and was swept for the fi rst time in the division series or NLCS play and only for the third time overall in the postseason. “From the get-go, they beat us to the punch all night,” manager Tony La Russa said. “So give them credit.” Pujols, 3 for <strong>10</strong> with an RBI and no extra-base hits in the series, left Busch Stadium without speaking to reporters. Closer Jonathan Broxton struck out Rick Ankiel for the last out and pumped his fi st as the Dodgers ran out to the mound to celebrate becoming the fi rst team to advance to the championship series. <strong>The</strong>y await the winner of the Philadelpia- Colorado series that is even at a game apiece. <strong>The</strong> Phillies beat Los Angeles in the NLSC last season in fi ve games. Tickets Available At Happy State Bank & Plainview Daily Herald PRESENTED NATIONALLY BY: