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The Paducah Sun | Sunday, September 20, 2015 | paducahsun.com
Section
B
McCracken routs St. Louis school
BY MIKE STUNSON
mstunson@paducahsun.com
Cash Jones and the rest of
his offensive weapons didn’t
even need a full half to pile
on the stats Saturday night
in McCracken County’s football game against Lift for Life
Academy (Missouri).
The starters were pulled late
in the first half, but not before
they put the running clock on
the Hawks. The Mustangs led
by 42 points in the first half
and came away with the 55-20
victory over the small charter
school from St. Louis.
“You just had to get in and
get out, and we did a good job
of that,” McCracken coach
Shawn Jackson said.
“It was an odd atmosphere,
some ‘Twilight Zone’ moments
with a lot of quietness. But we
got the job done.”
Cory Fike ran for touchdowns on his first two rushes,
the first one coming on the
second play of the game when
he ran up the middle for an
85-yard touchdown. His second score occurred after Lift
for Life’s only touchdown, and
began a run of 42 points in a
row for the Mustangs. Fike finished with 133 yards on four
carries.
Jones, McCracken’s quarterback, began his terrorizing
of the Hawks on the next possession. He ran in for a 21-yard
touchdown run on a drive that
included pass plays of 23 and
45 yards.
His next three possessions
all resulted in touchdown
passes, with Tyce Daniel (56
yards), Peyton Cadwell (23
yards) and Ethan Schaaf (15
yards) all getting in on the action from Jones. The junior
quarterback finished with 250
yards passing with his four total touchdowns.
From then on, McCracken’s
backup quarterback, Max
Howard, was put in to the
game along with the rest of
the second string. In the fresh-
man’s first series, he found
Elijah Crider for a 15-yard
touchdown to make it a 49-6
halftime score.
Also coming up with some
big plays was Kyle Garner,
who pulled in two interceptions. The Mustangs’ defense
forced three turnovers in the
game.
Lift for Life added a second and third touchdown in
the second half, with Darrion
Please see MUSTANGS | 2B
Macias, Dowdy top
runners at St. Mary
BY MIKE STUNSON
mstunson@paducahsun.com
Associated Press
Kentucky running back Stanley Williams (18) gets past Florida defensive back Brian Poole
during the first half of Saturday’s game in Lexington.
Gators’ defense stymies UK
BY GARY B. GRAVES
Associated Press
LEXINGTON — Will Grier
and Kelvin Taylor each rushed
for short touchdowns and
Florida’s defense registered
six sacks and two interceptions to hold off Kentucky 14-9
Saturday night and extend its
winning streak over the Wildcats to 29 games.
Defense was the story for the
Gators on a night in which they
barely outgained the Wildcats
245-241.
All-Southeastern
Conference cornerback Vernon Hargreaves III got things
going early with a 53-yard interception return leading to
Grier’s 1-yard run and Florida
(3-0, 1-0 SEC) held firm after
Taylor’s 3-yard TD made it
14-3 in the third quarter.
The Gators held Kentucky’s
Patrick Towles to 8-of-24
passing for just 126 yards and
allowed just 115 yards rushing behind those half-dozen
sacks. The Wildcats (2-1, 1-1)
had several chances to score
but managed just three Austin
MacGinnis field goals.
Grier rushed 12 times for 61
yards and completed 13 of 22
passes for 125 yards. Taylor
had 45 yards rushing on 16 attempts.
Florida gave first-year coach
Jim McIlwain his initial SEC
win and turned in its second-
Broncos speed past
Racers in Kalamazoo
Staff report
Coming off tough back-toback losses to Michigan State
and Georgia Southern, Western Michigan (1-2) was looking to get things right — regardless of its opponent.
Murray State (1-2) was looking to do much of the same,
again facing a Mid-American
Conference squad after losing
to Northern Illinois last week
57-26.
But it was the Broncos
whisking away with a 52-20
victory at Waldo Stadium in
Kalamazoo, Michigan – outpacing the Racers behind
strong quarterback play from
junior Zach Terrell and sophomore running back Jarvion
Franklin, as the two combined
for more than 500 yards of offense Saturday night.
The Racers were stymied
early, generating just 36 yards
of offense in the first quarter before head coach Mitch
Stewart and his horses drew
up an 11-play, 81-yard drive to
bring the Racers within 10-6
and 10:50 remaining in the
half.
Junior quarterback KD
Humphries, who finished
25-of-41 for 304 yards and
a touchdown, found Jeremy
Harness for a 37-yard slash
to break open the drive. Roman Clay’s 10-yard rush set
up a short touchdown from
Humphries to Janawski Davis
to cap the 4:10 of possession.
Western Michigan answered right back with its
own 14-play, 75-yard drive to
take a 17-6 lead – capped by
a touchdown from Terrell to
NFL prospect Corey Davis.
Davis finished with two scores
and six catches for 139 yards.
Terrell’s other target, Daniel
Braverman, added 14 catches
for 167 yards and two scores.
Braverman came into Saturday’s game leading the nation
in receptions per game (13).
Please see RACERS | 4B
best defensive effort of the
young season after holding
New Mexico State to 200
yards in the opener. Having
several players back from injury certainly helped the Gators,
with Hargreaves wasting no
time making his presence felt
after missing last week’s victory over East Carolina with a
leg injury.
Hargreaves was perfectly positioned to intercept
Towles’ tipped pass and return it to Kentucky’s 19. Grier
scored five plays later, getting
the angle on the right side to
reach the pylon and silence a
Please see KENTUCKY | 4B
Graves County used youth
from its girls and experience
from its boys to lead the way
at the St. Mary Cross Country
Invitational on Saturday at
Noble Park.
In the girls race, the Lady
Eagles placed five runners in
the top 13 of the 70-person
race, easily winning the team
title. The top runner from
Graves was Carley Dowdy,
whose time of 21 minutes,
36.12 seconds trailed only
University Heights Academy’s Muki Kunnmann.
Dowdy, a seventh-grader
running in the high school
varsity race, was the key
part in the youth movement
for the Lady Eagles. Of their
top five runners for Saturday’s meet, none has passed
the ninth grade. In fifth
place overall for Graves was
eighth-grader Clair Lamb,
with eighth-grader Desteni
Thomas finishing in seventh,
freshman Faith Elder 11th
and seventh-grader Adriana
Pearson in 13th place.
Other top-five finishes
came from Trigg County’s
Livi Ricks in third place and
Calloway County’s Kelly Norton taking fourth.
Paducah Tilghman placed
four runners in the top 14,
including Kate Rogers in 10th
place, to finish second overall
behind Graves.
The Graves boys did not
win the team title — finishing
in second place behind Apol-
lo — but Eagle senior Marcos
Macias coasted to the individual championship with
his time of 16:38.35. His time
was nearly 30 seconds ahead
of Seth Boone from Apollo.
Macias, who last year won
the Region 1, Class 3A championship, led the Eagles, who
also got a 15th place finish
from Marshall McKee and
a 20th from David Brooksbank.
Apollo placed five runners
in the top 10 to easily take the
team title.
Also in the top five individually were Calloway County’s
Cameron Cooper in third,
Apollo’s Will Scott in fourth
and Cameron Galloway of
Paducah Tilghman in fifth.
The St. Mary Invitational
hosted around 500 runners
in five division: varsity boys,
varsity girls, middle school
girls, middle school boys and
the elementary group.
St. Mary Invitational results
Top 25 girls
1. Muki Kunnmann, University Heights
Academy, 21:07.30
2. Carley Dowdy, Graves County, 21:36.12
3. Livi Ricks, Trigg County, 21:44.85
4. Kelly Norton, Calloway County, 21:58.76
5. Clair Lamb, Graves County, 22:22.91
6. Emma Stovall, Apollo, 22:16.07
7. Desteni Thomas, 22:22.91
8. Spring Dolbee, Marshall County,
22:37.22
9. Holly Obryan, Apollo, 22:40.68
10. Kate Rogers, Paducah Tilghman,
22:57.55
11. Faith Elder, Graves County, 23:03.83
12. Anya McCombs, Christian Fellowship,
23:05.11
13. Adriana Pearson, Graves County,
23:09.57
14. Liza Burlutska, Murray, 23:11.28
15. Kori Redden, Graves County, 23:24.03
Please see RUNNERS | 3B
Cubs defeat
Cardinals
in testy game
BY MATT CARLSON
Associated Press
CHICAGO — Kris Bryant got
another Chicago Cubs rookie
record.
Meanwhile, it looks like the
Cubs and Cardinals might just
want to just get at each other.
Jorge Soler and Bryant hit
back-to-back homers, and
tempers flared for the second
straight game as Chicago beat
St. Louis Cardinals 5-4 on Saturday for its fifth straight win
to tighten the NL Central race.
The Cardinals still clinched
a postseason berth. They
sealed a playoff spot when San
Francisco lost to Arizona 6-0.
The Giants’ defeat ensured St.
Louis at least an NL wild-card
slot.
Chicago is five games behind
Associated Press first-place St. Louis, which got
St. Louis Cardinals manager Mike Matheny (right) ques- a two-run homer from Matt
tions a call with home plate umpire Bruce Dreckman during Carpenter in the ninth. The
the fifth inning of Saturday’s game against the Chicago
Cubs, in Chicago.
Please see CUBS | 8B
Sports
2B • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Mustangs lose players to injuries, sink Lakers
BY JON FUTRELL
jfutrell@paducahsun.com
McCracken County’s
boys soccer team really
wanted to avenge a brutal loss from earlier in the
season Saturday against
Calloway County at
Lourdes Field. The Mustangs accomplished this
goal, but may have paid
a steep price in doing so.
Down 2-0 in the first
10 minutes of play, McCracken fought to keep
the ball in the Lakers’ end
of the field. The Mustangs
battled back for a halftime tie, then got a late
goal from Anthony Olberding for the 3-2 win.
On Aug. 29, McCracken fell to Calloway 6-2 at
the Murray Tiger Classic.
After Saturday’s game,
however, a couple of the
top Mustangs required
medical attention. Caleb
Perry and Carlos Flowers, two of McCracken’s
top scorers, took cleats
to the shins and left the
game. Perry scored the
first Mustang goal, but
was on crutches at halftime. Olberding also exited the game after scoring
the game-winning goal
Briefs
Racer volleyball wins two at Winthrop
The Murray State volleyball team closed its final non-conference tournament of the season by
winning both matches Saturday on the final day
at the Winthrop Invite in Rock Hill, S.C. It now
sits at 10-1 heading into conference play.
The Racers opened the day with a four-set
victory over Winthrop. Set scores were 25-19,
19-25, 25-23 and 25-21. In the second match
of the day, the Racers also won in four, this time
over West Virginia (25-18, 25-15, 21-25 and 2520).
Versus the Eagles (5-9), four Racers had
double-digit kills, led by Scottie Ingram’s 16 and
.297 attack percentage.
Taylor Olden added 15, while Alyssa Lelm and
Kristen Besselsen had 14 and 11 kills, respectively.
Ingram also recorded her fourth double-double
of the season as she added a season-high 18
digs against Winthrop. Ellie Lorenz led the squad
with 20 digs from her libero position, Besselsen
and Sam Bedard had 11 and 10, respectively.
Bedard’s 55 assists in the contest is a new
season-high for her.
Against the Mountaineers, Ingram led the way
again, tying a season-high with 21 kills and hitting .372. Lelm added 11 and Besselsen had 10
kills in the victory. Lelm recorded a .550 attack
percentage, and was named the tournament’s
Most Valuable Player for her efforts over the
weekend.
TJoining Lelm on the all-tournament team were
Besselsen and Ingram.
The Racers open OVC play next weekend as
they travel to face SEMO Friday night at 6:30
and will face UT Martin at 6 p.m. Saturday.
— Staff report
United States takes 2-1 lead in Davis Cup
TASHKENT, Uzbekistan — A straightforward
win in the doubles for Steve Johnson and Sam
Querrey on Saturday lifted the United States to a
2-1 lead over Uzbekistan and the brink of victory
in their Davis Cup World Group playoff.
Johnson and Querrey held their serve throughout the 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 win over Uzbekistan’s Denis Istomin and Farrukh Dustov, wrapping up the
match in just over 90 minutes.
“I served well, Stevie cleaned up stuff at the
net. I was hitting forehands. He was hitting forehands,” Querrey said. “It was a solid win and we
are happy to get a point for the team.”
It was more success for Johnson and Querrey
after they reached the semifinals of the men’s
doubles at the U.S. Open earlier this month,
beating the top-ranked Bryan brothers on the
way.
“Today is a byproduct of the confidence they
gained at the U.S. Open. There’s no doubt about
that. Winning just leads to more winning,” United
States captain Jim Courier said.
One win from today’s reverse singles will ensure the U.S. extends its 26-year stay in the toptier World Group.
The U.S. had gone 1-0 down to Uzbekistan
on Friday when Istomin beat Johnson, but Jack
Sock beat Dustov to tie the score.
On Sunday, the top-ranked players from both
teams clash in the fourth rubber as world No. 29
Sock meets the 62nd-ranked Istomin.
In the final singles match, 47th-ranked Johnson plays Dustov, who is ranked 111 places
beneath him.
— Associated Press
Fever beats Sky to force Game 3 in East
INDIANAPOLIS — Tamika Catchings scored
22 points to help the Indiana Fever hold off the
Chicago Sky 89-82 Saturday night and force a
deciding Game 3 in their Eastern Conference
semifinal series.
Shavonte Zellous had 16 points and Briann
January added 14 for the Fever.
Courtney Vandersloot scored 19 points and
Allie Quigley had 14 for the Sky. Elena Delle
Donne, who averaged a league-best 23.4 points
during the season, was held to 11 points on
3-for-9 shooting. Erika De Souza also scored 11
points.
January’s jumper gave Indiana a 79-78 lead
with 51⁄2 minutes left. Catchings made two free
throws and Marissa Coleman added a jumper to
put the Fever up 85-80 with 3 minutes remaining. Vandersloot’s layup pulled the Fever within
three, but Catchings had a basket and then
made two free throws with 24.9 seconds left.
— Associated Press
with less than 15 minutes
left.
“It was a very physical
game,” McCracken coach
Michael Wiersema said.
“They did a pretty good
job of sticking to business.”
Calloway grabbed an
early edge. Just a couple of minutes in, Brian
Wilhelm made a pass to
Christian Adams, who
booted it past Mustang
goaltender Trevor Massa. Shortly after that,
Wilhelm took a shot himself and put it in for a 2-0
lead.
From that point on,
the Mustangs did a far
better job of keeping the
ball in their end of the
field. The Mustangs fired
several big shots from
the left of the goal which
sailed wide right. When
McCracken made lower
shots, they got past Laker
goalie Aaron Dawson to
tie the score going into
halftime.
“I always tell the boys
you cannot get scored on
set pieces because those
are about who wants it
more,” Calloway coach
Alex Walandro said. “It
was like we didn’t want it
enough.”
The Lakers had a 9-8
edge in shots on goal as
both Massa and Dawson
made five saves.
The Mustangs and the
Lakers both face stiff
challenges this week. Calloway plays at Mayfield
on Monday, then hosts
Murray on Tuesday. McCracken will host Graves
County on Tuesday, then
travel to Hopkinsville on
Thursday.
With the playoffs fast
approaching,
neither
team has an easy road
ahead.
“We don’t have any
cupcakes the rest of the
way,” Wiersema said.
“We’ve got to bring it every night and keep playing.”
“We have two important games in a row,”
Walandro said. “We have
to get our heads back.”
–––
SCORING
First half — C-Christian Adams (Brian
Wilhelm), C-Wilhelm, M-Caleb Perry, MCameron Aiken (Preston Wright).
Second half — M-Anthony Olberding.
STATISTICS
Saves — M-Trevor Massa 5, C-Aaron
Dawson 5.
Shots — Calloway 9, McCracken 8.
Records — McCracken 9-6, Calloway
8-3.
Howard helps Indiana over WKU
BY TERRY HUTCHENS
Associated Press
BLOOMINGTON, Ind.
— Jordan Howard has
quickly helped Indiana
fans forget about Tevin
Coleman.
The junior tailback
transfer from UAB, who
came into the game as
the Big Ten’s leading
rusher, ran for 203 yards
Saturday to lead Indiana
to a 38-35 victory over
Western Kentucky before a crowd of 44,823 at
Memorial Stadium.
When Coleman departed after last season
for the NFL, Indiana
fans were worried they
would miss his production. Coleman was the
nation’s second-leading
rusher with 2,036 yards
last year.
But Howard has simply picked up where
Coleman left off. The 6-1,
230-pound power rusher
has rushed for more than
100 yards in each of IU’s
first three games and is
a runner who appears to
get stronger as the game
wears on. Saturday, he
ran for 155 yards in the
second half including 82
in the fourth quarter.
“I feel like as the game
goes on I get stronger,”
Howard said. “I guess the
defense just gets tired of
tackling me for the power I’m giving them.”
When Indiana got the
ball back with 5:56 re-
Associated Press
Western Kentucky’s Taywan Taylor (left) sheds Indiana defender Jameel Cook Jr. during Saturday’s
game in Bloomington, Ind.
maining and was clinging to a three-point lead,
Howard helped run out
the clock by carrying
the ball seven times for
39 yards. Quarterback
Nate Sudfeld, who threw
for 355 yards and three
touchdowns, also had
a big play in the drive
when he hit senior Anthony Corsaro for a 20yard completion to extend the drive.
“At the end, we knew
they were tired, we knew
we were going to keep
pushing and we knew
they weren’t going to
stop us,” Howard said.
The win allowed In-
diana (3-0) to open the
season with three wins in
a row for the first time in
five seasons under head
coach Kevin Wilson. The
last time the Hoosiers
opened the season 3-0
was 2010.
The loss snapped a
seven-game
Western
Kentucky winning streak
over the past two seasons.
Wilson said he really
likes the way Howard
has been running the
football.
“I think he gets stronger, I think the offensive
line is pretty good and I
think the tight end group
is pretty good, too,” Wilson said. “Those guys
kind of wear on you a
little bit and that’s good
to see.”
Indiana was aided by
some big plays on special
teams, a goal line stand
that stopped the Hilltoppers at the IU 1-yard
line, two interceptions
by freshman safety Jonathan Crawford and two
touchdown drives of 99
and 97 yards. Mitchell
Paige returned a punt 91
yards for a touchdown in
the first few minutes and
Nick Mangieri blocked a
37-yard field goal try in
the third quarter.
For the third time this
season, Indiana trailed
at halftime. It was the
second time that the
Hoosiers had trailed by
11 points at the break.
Western Kentucky (21) had used two touchdowns in the final 4 minutes of the first half to
take a 28-17 lead at the
break.
But the trademark for
Indiana this season has
been big third-quarter
performances.
Saturday, IU scored 21 unanswered points in the
third quarter. The first
two touchdowns were set
up by interceptions from
Crawford. Indiana has
now outscored its first
three opponents by a total of 44-0 in the third
quarter.
Lady Marshals split 1-0 soccer contests
Staff report
At Evansville, Ind.,
Marshall County found
itself on both ends of the
1-0 shutout in a pair of
games on Saturday. Midway through the second
half of the first game,
Auburn Suttle scored
the only goal for Castle
against the Lady Marshals. Less than three
minutes into the second
game, Bailey Wood got a
pass from Rachel McWilliams and scored Mar-
Record — Marshall 7-4-2.
shall’s lone goal against
F.J. Reitz. Lady Marshal
Boys soccer
goaltender Allie Fiske
Massac 4, Mayfield
made seven saves over
1 — At Metropolis, Ill.,
both games.
–––
Massac County scored
SCORING
two goals in the first four
First half — None.
Second half — C-Auburn Suttle.
minutes and cruised past
STATISTICS
from there.
Saves — M-Allie Tiske 5, C-Jackie Mayfield
List 3.
Slade Culver and Tanner
Shots — Castle 8, Marshall 4.
Weatherbee each scored
–––
SCORING
two goals for the PatriFirst half — M-Bailey Wood (Rachel
McWilliams).
Second half — None.
STATISTICS
Saves — M-Allie Fiske 2, FJR-3.
Shots — Marshall 6, F.J. Reitz 4.
MUSTANGS
prepared as we’ll be as
long as these guys get
Glover finding Travon healthy,” Jackson said.
–––
Moorehead twice in the
SCORING
end zone. Glover fin- M-Cory Fike 85 run (Cameron Hartig
point), 7-0 11:38 1Q
ished with 115 passing extra
L-Darrion Glover to Travon Moorehead
yards for Lift for Life.
6 pass (failed extra point), 7-6 8:06 1Q
M-Fike 32 run (Hartig extra point),
Zander Hamby scored
14-6 6:04 1Q
from 10 yards out as
M-Cash Jones 21 run (Hartig extra
time expired to cap the point), 21-6 0:34.9 1Q
M-Jones to Tyce Daniel 56 pass (Harscoring for McCracken.
tig extra point), 28-6 8:22 2Q
M-Jones to Peyton Cadwell 23 pass
University of Kenextra point), 35-6 6:04 2Q
tucky commit Zy’Aire (Hartig
M-Jones to Ethan Schaaf 7 pass
Hughes did not play for (Hartig extra point), 42-6 4:32 2Q
M-Max Howard to Elijah Crider 15
the Mustangs, nursing pass
(Hartig extra point), 49-6 1:07 2Q
shoulder and knee injuL- Glover to Moorehead 17 pass (2conversion good), 49-14 5:18 3Q
ries. McCracken begins pt.L-Glover
to Moorehead 37 pass
its district schedule next (failed extra point), 49-20 8:19 4Q
week against Daviess 4QM-Zander Hamby 10 run, 55-20 0:00
County back at home.
RUSHING LEADERS
M-Fike 4-133
“We have to get
PASSING LEADERS
Zy’Aire healthy and a lot
M-Jones 11-17-250, Howard 5-8-37
L-Glover 7-12-115
of guys healthy, but we
RECEIVING LEADERS
have gotten better every
M-Woods 4-90, Daniel 1-56, Schaaf
week. We feel we’re as 3-75, Crider 4-24. CONTINUED FROM 1B
ots with Weatherbee assisting on both Culver
scores. David Flores had
the only goal for the Cardinals.
SCORING
First half — MS-Tanner Weatherbee
(Wesley Suttles), MS-Slade Culver
(Weatherbee), MS-Culver (Weatherbee),
MS-Weatherbee (Ben Bowlin).
Second half — MY-David Flores.
STATISTICS
Saves — MS-Jared Green 10, MSConnor Seitz 5.
Shots — Massac 14, Mayfield 5.
Records — Massac 4-4-2, Mayfield
6-6-1.
RUNNERS
CONTINUED FROM 1B
16. Elise Overlin, Paducah Tilghman, 23:45.93
17. Demonic Green, Paducah Tilghman, 23:50.08
18. Rachael Snyder, University
Heights, 23:51.29
19. Kaylee Simpson, Dawson
Springs, 24:00.19
20. Jennai Mitchell, Paducah Tilghman, 24:04.43
21. Alex Woods, Carlisle County,
24:12.82
22. Lindsey Thomas, Graves County, 24:19.46
23. Hadley Pagel, Marshall County,
24:31.10
24.
Claire
Wilson,
Murray,
24:36.73
25. Kaitlyn Alvey, Apollo, 24:41.08
Girls team results
1. Graves County, 24
2. Paducah Tilghman, 65
3. Apollo, 75
4. Marshall County, 91
5. McCracken County, 123
6. Dawson Springs, 134
–––
Top 25 boys
1. Marcos Macias, Graves County,
16:38.35
2. Seth Boone, Apollo, 17:06.22
3. Cameron Cooper, Calloway
County, 17:32.53
4. Will Scott, Apollo, 17:56.08
5. Cameron Galloway, Paducah Tilghman, 18:00.39
6.
Colby
Wiesman, Apollo,
18:00.98
7. Jalen Taylor, Apollo, 18:02.05
8. Jackson Yates, Marshall County,
18:06.28
9. Charlie West, St. Mary,
18:22.46
10. Oliver Melton, Apollo,
18:35.33
11. Kyle McClain, Marshall County,
18:43.22
12.
Houston
Gore,
Apollo,
18:49.10
13. Les Mackey, Apollo, 18:56.70
14. Ryan Taylor, Apollo, 18:59.17
15. Marshall McKee, Graves County, 19:04.57
16.
Logan
Bowlds,
Apollo,
19:09.44
17. Trevor Tilley, McCracken County, 19:10.90
18. Chris Toon, Graves County,
19:12.30
19. Ethan Dossette, Trigg County,
19:12.94
20. David Brooksbank, Graves
County, 19:13.79
21. Nick Coffey, Hickman County,
19:15.76
22. Joseph Reed, Marshall County,
19:16.58
23. Evan Marksberry, Apollo,
19:18.36
24. Garrett Cranston, Trigg County,
19:19.99
25. Sean Aquirre, Trigg County,
19:20.69
Boys team results
1. Apollo, 25
2. Graves County, 68
3. Marshall County, 87
4. Trigg County, 133
5. Paducah Tilghman, 137
6. McCracken County, 156
7. Hickman County, 205
8. Fort Campbell, 218
9. St. Mary, 221
10. Carlisle County, 268
Morning Update
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vs. Cleveland
at Cleveland
Time: 12:05 p.m.
On television
TODAY
AUTO RACING
6:30 a.m. — Formula One, The Singapore Grand Prix, at Singapore (NBCSN)
2 p.m. — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, The MyAFibStory.com
400, at Chicagoland Speedway (NBCSN)
BASKETBALL
Noon — FIBA Eurobasket, Final at Lille, France, TBA (ESPN2)
GOLF
1 a.m. — Women’s, Solheim Cup, final day, at St. Leon-Rot,
Germany (GOLF)
11 a.m. — PGA, BMW Championship, final-round, at Lake Forest, Ill. (GOLF)
1 p.m. — PGA, BMW Championship, final-round, at Lake Forest, Ill. (WPSD)
1 p.m. — Small Business Connection Championship, finalround, at Davidson, N.C. (GOLF)
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m. — N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets (ESPN)
NFL FOOTBALL
Noon — St. Louis at Washington (KBSI)
Noon — Tennessee at Cleveland (KFVS)
3:25 — Dallas at Philadelphia (KBSI)
7:20 — Seattle at Green Bay (WPSD)
SOCCER
8:30 a.m. — Budesliga, Schalke at Stuttgart (Fox Sports 1)
10 a.m. — Premier League, Manchester United at Southampton (NBCSN)
2 p.m. — U.S. Women’s National Team Victory Tour, United
States vs. Australia, at Birmingham, Ala. (ESPN2)
4 — MLS, New York at Portland (ESPN)
6 — MLS, Houston at Philadelphia (Fox Sports 1)
WNBA BASKETBALL
Noon — Playoffs, Conference Semifinal, New York at Washington (ESPN)
2 — Playoffs, Conference Semifinal, Minnesota at Los Angeles
(ESPN)
MONDAY
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
6 p.m. — N.Y. Yankees at Toronto or Baltimore at Washington
(MLB)
NFL FOOTBALL
7:15 p.m. — N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis (ESPN)
TUESDAY
BOXING
8 p.m. — Premier Champions, Williams-Cuello (junior-middleweight) (Fox Sports 1)
CYCLING
1 p.m. — UCI Road World Championships, at Richmond, Va.
(NBCSN)
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
9 p.m. — Texas at Oakland or Arizona at L.A. Dodgers (MLB)
MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
7 p.m. — Triple-A National Championship, TBA (NBCSN)
SOCCER
1 p.m. — Bundesliga, Wolfsburg at Bayern Munich (Fox Sports
1)
WNBA BASKETBALL
7 p.m. — Playoffs, Conference Semifinal (If NEC), TBA (ESPN2)
9 — Playoffs, Conference Semifinal (If NEC), TBA (ESPN2)
Local sports
MONDAY
HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER — Doubleheaders: Paducah Tilghman at St. Mary; Boys: Hopkinsville at Murray, Lyon County at
Trigg County; Girls: Calloway County at Mayfield, Hopkinsville at
Caldwell County, Hopkins County Central at Crittenden County.
HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL — Livingston Central at Paducah
Tilghman, Community Christian at Marshall County, Ballard Memorial at Mayfield, Fulton City at Hickman County.
TUESDAY
HIGH SCHOOL GOLF — Massac County at McCracken County
(boys only).
HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER — Doubleheaders: Graves County at
McCracken County, St. Mary at Ballard Memorial; Boys; Trigg
County at Christian County; Girls: Lyon County at Trigg County,
Caldwell County at Fort Campbell, Webster County at Crittenden
County.
HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL — Marshall County at Graves
County, Fulton County at Hickman County, Carlisle County at
Christian Fellowship, Lake County (Tennessee) at Fulton City.
Castiller produces TDs
as Rockets roll on Trojans
Yates led Trojan rushDIXON — After trading ers with 12 carries for 68
a pair of early scores with yards.
County
20 14 7 7 - 48
Webster County, Critten- Crittenden
Webster County
6 0 0 6 - 12
den County exploded for
SCORING
C-Maeson Myers 9 run (Will Perkins
34 consecutive points kick)
9:48, 1st
that led to a 48-12 victoW-Grant Carter 2 run (run failed)
1st
ry in high school football 7:35,
C-Alex Cosby 82 kickoff return (kick
action Friday night.
failed) 7:23, 1st
C-Seth Birdcall 14 pass from Nick
Rocket
quarterback Castiller
(Perkins kick) :56, 1st
Nick Castiller ran for two
C-Cosby 26 pass from Castiller (Perkick) 7:31, 2nd
touchdowns and passed kins
C-Castiller 3 run (Perkins kick) :50,
for a third. He was 12- 2nd
C-Castiller 70 run (Perkins kick)
for-16 through the air for 5:40,
3rd
155 yards. Castiller also
W-Carter 7 run (pass failed) 6:01,
ran eight times for 118 4thC-Devon Nesbitt 33 run (Perkins
yards.
kick) 4:43, 4th
TEAM STATISTICS
Alex Cosby put CritCrittenden - First downs: 13. Rushing
tenden County on top for attempts-yards: 27-282. Passing-yards:
Total yards: 437. Penalgood midway through 12-18-1-155.
ties-yards: 4-30. Fumbles-lost: 1-1.
the first quarter. After
Webster - First downs: 14. Rushing
46-168. Passing-yards:
Grant Carter scored for attempts-yards:
4-7-0-100. Total yards: 268. Penaltiesthe Trojans on a short yards: 4-47. Fumbles-lost: 1-0. INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
run, Cosby returned the
Rushing - Crittenden: Myers 4-32,
ensuing kickoff 89 yards Hollis 3-27, Dickerson 2-19, Johnson
Nesbitt 3-44, Castiller 8-118.
for the Rockets’ second 7-42,
Webster: Yates 12-68, Carter 7-60,
touchdown. He finished Skinner 18-30.
Passing - Crittenden: Castiller 12-16the game with eight 0-155,
Boone 0-2-1-0. Webster: Skincatches for 97 yards. ner 3-6-0-26, Carter 1-1-0-74.
Receiving - Crittenden: Cosby 8-97,
Carter ran for both Web- Birdwell 3-35, Hollis 1-9, Hunt 1-(-2),
ster scores, but Peyton Myers 1-16. Webster: NA.
Staff report
The Paducah Sun • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • 3B
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North Carolina rolls through Illinois
BY AARON BEARD
Associated Press
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.
— Marquise Williams
threw three touchdown
passes and also ran for
105 yards to help North
Carolina beat Illinois 4814 on Saturday.
Williams led a big offensive
performance
for the Tar Heels (2-1),
who had plenty to feel
good about in a rout of
a Power-Five nonconference opponent. The
overhauled defense continued its improved play
by surrendering just
one touchdown through
the first three quarters,
Ryan Switzer had two
big punt returns after a
frustrating drought and
kicker Nick Weiler hit
two more field goals to
stay perfect on the season.
It was the kind of solid
across-the-board performance UNC coach Larry
Fedora has been hop-
Associated Press
North Carolina’s Bug Howard (center) runs into
llinois’ Eaton Spence (right) and Taylor Barton
(left) Saturday at Kenan Stadium in Chapel Hill,
N.C.
ing to see, one that has
eluded his team for four
straight games dating to
last season.
Josh Ferguson ran for
133 yards and a touchdown for the Fighting
Illini (2-1), who had
outscored their first two
opponents 96-3 under
interim coach Bill Cubit.
But the Tar Heels
dominated this one af-
ter halftime, rolling to
their most lopsided win
against a power-conference opponent in five
years.
Williams shook off an
early interception and
threw for 203 yards before exiting with the Tar
Heels up big early in the
fourth.
Then there was Switzer. He tied an NCAA
single-season
record
with five punt returns for
touchdowns as a freshman, but didn’t manage
any last year and had
largely been bottled up
since his last TD return
in the Belk Bowl against
Cincinnati to the end the
2013 season.
On Saturday, he had
a 71-yard return early in
the second quarter to set
up a short field goal, then
broke free for an 85-yard
touchdown in the fourth.
The junior finished with
168 punt-return yards to
set a UNC single-game
record that had stood
since 1951, and he also
made amends for dropping a sure long TD pass
with a 34-yard scoring
catch late in the third
from Williams.
Elijah Hood also ran
for 129 yards and a
touchdown, giving the
Tar Heels two 100-yard
rushers in the same
game since 2010.
4B • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • The Paducah Sun
Sports
paducahsun.com
Lee, defense save No. 1 Ohio State against NIU
Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio —
Darron Lee returned an
interception 41 yards
for a touchdown and
the Ohio State defense
bailed out its struggling,
two-quarterback offense
as the top-ranked Buckeyes beat Northern Illinois 20-13 on Saturday.
Cardale Jones started
for the Buckeyes (3-0)
and J.T. Barrett finished, but for the second
straight week neither
was particularly effective against an opponent
Ohio State was expected
to blow out.
Jones threw two interceptions and went to
the bench in the second
quarter. Barrett threw a
touchdown pass and a
pick. Ohio State had five
turnovers in all but still
managed to extend the
nation’s longest winning
streak to 16 games.
Last week, the Buckeyes shook free of Hawaii in the second half,
but they couldn’t do the
same with Northern Illinois (2-1).
No. 4 Michigan
State 35, Air Force
21
EAST LANSING, Mich.
— Connor Cook threw
three touchdown passes
in the first half — including one hauled in by
Aaron Burbridge with a
spectacular catch in the
end zone — and No. 4
Michigan State beat Air
Force.
Cook threw for 247
yards and four touchdowns, and Burbridge
caught eight passes for
156 yards and three TDs.
The highlight was Burbridge’s 28-yard scoring
reception in the second
quarter, when he leaped
to make the catch and,
as his body stretched
parallel to the ground,
touched his left foot
down in bounds.
The Spartans (3-0)
were coming off a big
win over Oregon, and
Air Force’s option isn’t
easy to prepare for, but
the Falcons (2-1) never
mounted much of an upset threat.
No. 7 Georgia 52,
South Carolina 20
ATHENS, Ga. — Greyson Lambert answered
his skeptics with a nearperfect
performance,
throwing for 330 yards,
three touchdowns and
setting a Georgia record
with 20 straight completions to lead the No. 7
Bulldogs to a victory over
South Carolina.
Nick Chubb eclipsed
100 yards rushing for the
11th game in a row, carrying 21 times for 159 yards
and two scores. Sony Michel ran for a TD and had
two more receiving.
Georgia (3-0, 2-0 SEC)
seized control with a
touchdown in the final
seconds of the first half
and two more in the first
2 1-2 minutes of the third
quarter, taking advantage of an interception
by South Carolina’s new
starting
quarterback,
former walk-on Perry
Orth.
South Carolina (1-2,
0-2) has lost its first two
SEC games for the first
time since 2008. It was
the most points a SteveSpurrier coached team
has ever given up to
Georgia.
No. 8 Notre Dame
30, No. 14 Georgia
Tech 22
SOUTH BEND, Ind. —
C.J. Prosise ran for 198
yards and three touchdowns, including one for
91 yards, and No. 8 Notre
Dame shut down Georgia Tech’s high-powered
offense in a win over
the 14th-ranked Yellow
Jackets.
Patrick Skov scored
on a 24-yard run and a
15-yard catch in the final minute after the Yellow Jackets recovered an
onside kick, but Notre
Dame’s Torii Hunter Jr.
recovered a second onside kick with 21 seconds
left to clinch the victory.
Georgia Tech entered
the game averaging 67
points and 457 yards
rushing per game, but
struggled to get much
going until the final minute. The Fighting Irish
held the Yellow Jackets
to 216 yards rushing.
Notre Dame is 3-0 for
the third time in the past
four seasons. Georgia
Tech (2-1) fell to 0-111 against Notre Dame
teams ranked in the top
10.
No. 12 Oregon 61,
Georgia State 28
EUGENE, Ore. — Jeff
Lockie made his first
start for No. 12 Oregon
a winning one, throwing
for 228 yards and two
touchdowns in a victory
over Georgia State.
Royce Freeman ran for
101 yards and a touchdown for the Ducks (2-1),
who rebounded from last
weekend’s loss at Michigan State. Aidan Schneider added four field
goals, all in the first half
as Oregon built a 33-7
lead.
Nick Arbuckle threw
for 318 yards and three
touchdowns, and freshman Penny Hart had
nine catches for 128
yards for the Panthers (12), who were more than
six-touchdown underdogs at Autzen Stadium.
Lockie replaced Vernon Adams, who was
RACERS
CONTINUED FROM 1B
After a quick threeand-out from the Racers,
the Broncos were able to
score again just before
halftime as Terrell found
Braverman open in broken coverage for a short
touchdown and a 24-6
lead to end the half.
While Murray State’s
rushing attack had lost
just two yards at the
line of scrimmage in
their first two games,
the Broncos had none
of it. The Racers generated 63 yards on 21
carries – most of that
behind a 29-yard burst
on a draw from Nick
Taylor late in the fourth
quarter. Humphries and
Clay each added rushing
touchdowns in the final
record with 572 total
yards. Samaje Perine ran
for 152 yards, Sterling
Shepard caught eight
passes for 144 yards and
Mark Andrews caught
two TD passes for the
Sooners (3-0).
Tulsa (2-1) stuck with
the Sooners for much
of the game with Dane
Evans throwing for 427
yards and four touchdowns and Keyarris Garrett catching 14 passes
for 189 yards.
Oklahoma led 31-24
at halftime. The teams
combined for 863 yards
in the first half, the most
in a first half since Fresno
State and San Jose State
combined for 1,002 in a
2013 game. Tulsa and
Oklahoma combined for
1,376 yards.
minutes.
Humphries did continue to find good chemistry with his receiving
corps, as Harness (seven catches, 114 yards),
Dominique
Rhymes
(four catches, 73 yards),
Janaswki Davis (four
catches, 48 yards) and
Paul Rice (four catches,
51 yards) all had receptions of at least 20 yards
against Western Michigan’s first and secondteam defense.
Stewart told Froggy
103.7 that while his
team was disappointed
with not having a better showing on the road,
especially early, he was
pleased with the “no
quit” attitude his team
displayed so far away
from home.
Associated Press
No. 22 Missouri 9,
UConn 6
Michigan State’s Aaron Burbridge (left) catches
a pass for a touchdown against Air Force’s Kalon
COLUMBIA, Mo. —
Baker during Saturday’s game in East Lansing,
Anthony
Sherrils’ lastMich.
minute interception alrested with a broken in- passes and ran for a score lowed Missouri to hold
dex finger on his throw- to lead Texas A&M to its on against Connecticut
ing hand. Adams said 19th straight nonconfer- in a game that featured
this week that the finger ence victory, the longest four turnovers, two
bothered him late in the active streak in the Foot- missed field goals and a
Ducks’ loss to the Spar- ball Bowl Subdivision.
blocked extra point.
tans.
The
Aggies
(3-0)
With just a under a
were up by four early in minute left, Sherrils
the second quarter be- picked off a pass by HusNo. 13 LSU 45,
No. 18 Auburn 21 fore scoring 17 straight kies backup quarterback
points, with two touch- Tim Boyle on a fourthBATON ROUGE, La. down catches by Josh down, fake field goal
— Leonard Fournette Reynolds, to make it 31- attempt. Sherrils also
ran for a career-high 228 10 early in the third. The forced and recovered a
yards and three touch- second one came soon fumble with 4:26 left in
downs, and No. 13 LSU after an interception by the first half for Missouri
steamrolled 18th-ranked Donovan Wilson on the (3-0). UConn is 2-1.
first play of the second
Auburn.
Fournette gained 71 half.
No. 23
Tyler Stewart threw
yards on LSU’s first play
Northwestern 19,
from scrimmage and had for 206 yards and two
Duke 10
169 yards by halftime, touchdowns for Nevada
then was rested for much (1-2).
DURHAM, N.C.
—
of the second half — perWarren Long ran 55
haps the only thing preNo. 16 Oklahoma yards for a touchdown
venting him from breakand recovered a fumbled
52, Tulsa 38
ing Alley Broussard’s
punt return late to help
single-game LSU rushNORMAN, Okla. — Northwestern beat Duke.
ing record of 250 yards, Baker Mayfield threw
Solomon Vault reset against Mississippi in for 487 yards and four turned the opening kick2004.
touchdowns and ran for off of the second half 98
LSU (2-0, 2-0 South- another 85 yards and yards for the touchdown
eastern Conference), fin- two scores to power that put the Wildcats (3ished with 411 yards on Oklahoma.
0) ahead to stay. Norththe ground. Quarterback
Mayfield set a school western forced three
Brandon Harris added
66 yards and two touchdowns.
Auburn (2-1, 0-1),
which needed overzone drop on the WildCONTINUED FROM 1B
time to avoid an upset
cats’ first drive didn’t
by Jacksonville State a
blue-clad sellout crowd help, especially when
week earlier, trailed 24-0
hoping for the Wildcats’ Hargreaves made the
at halftime and never
first win over the Gators pick two plays later.
threatened thereafter.
since 1986.
Kentucky took advanJeremy
Johnson
Kentucky responded tage to drive 75 yards
passed for 100 yards
with a 64-yard drive to for MacGinnis’ 22-yard
and two touchdowns,
set up Austin MacGinn- field goal early in the
but also threw his sixth
is’ 29-yard field goal and fourth before getting
interception this season
draw within 7-3, setting within 14-9 with his 45and set up an LSU TD
the tone for a night in yard kick with 11 minwhen he fumbled deep in
which it couldn’t reach utes left.
Auburn territory. He was
While Florida wasn’t
the end zone.
also sacked five times.
The Wildcats’ failure exactly sharp offensivespoke volumes about ly either, the Gators got
Florida’s defense, which untracked long enough
No. 17 Texas A&M
sacked Towles three in the second quarter
44, Nevada 27
times before halftime to drive 57 yards in 10
COLLEGE
STATION,
alone and controlled plays for Kelvin TayTexas
— Kyle Allen
the line of scrimmage. lor’s 3-yard TD run
threw four touchdown
Dorian Baker’s end- with 5:31 left in the half.
Grier chipped in effective running and efficient passing, though he
turnovers and opened
a season with three victories for the first time
since 2013 — also the last
time the Wildcats were
ranked.
Thomas Sirk had a
5-yard touchdown run
for Duke (2-1).
No. 24 Wisconsin
28, Troy 3
MADISON, Wis. —
Two-way player Tanner
McEvoy had one of No.
24 Wisconsin’s three
touchdown runs, and the
Badgers wore down Troy
for a win.
An odd game featured
two Badgers defenders
ejected for targeting, and
a brief fourth-quarter
delay for an errant fire
alarm.
The defense restored
order by holding Troy
scoreless in the second
half.
Dare Ogunbowale and
quarterback Joel Stave
also ran for scores.
The Big Ten power (21) led by 11 at the half
over Troy (1-2), from the
Sun Belt Conference, before capitalizing on quarterback Brandon Silvers’
fumble on a sack by Joe
Schobert on the opening
drive of the second half.
Seven plays later, McEvoy, who plays receiver
and safety, took a direct
snap on offense and ran
right 32 yards for a score
and a 21-3 lead with 7:16
left in the third quarter.
No. 25 Oklahoma
State 69, UTSA 14
STILLWATER,
Okla.
—
Oklahoma
State
forced seven turnovers,
all of which led to points,
and the No. 25 Cowboys
rolled to a victory over
UTSA.
Mason Rudolph completed 17 of 23 passes
for 280 yards and two
touchdowns, and Chris
Carson rushed for 104
yards and two touchdowns on 17 carries for
Oklahoma State (3-0).
KENTUCKY
“They didn’t come
here to have the outcome
that we had,” Stewart
told color commentator
Logan Stout during their
post-game show. “But
you can call this football
team a lot of things, but
what you’re not going
to call them is ‘quitters.’
That’s the thing that I’m
most proud of with this
group.”
The Racers host OVC
opponent
Tennessee
Tech for Family Weekend next Saturday at 6
p.m. to open conference
play. The Golden Eagles
will be coming off a 2922 come-from-behind
victory against Mercer.
NOTES: MSU LB Toby
Omli led the Racers with
15 total tackles, while
fellow LB Joey Cico-
ria finished with a sack
and a recovered fumble.
… Tom Flacco, who is
the younger brother
of Baltimore Ravens
quarterback Joe Flacco,
saw action for Western
Michigan – finishing
with three rushes for 33
yards and three completions for 36 yards. … This
is the second-straight
opponent the Racers
have faced this season
where their next game
is against No. 1 FBS program Ohio State. NIU
fell to the Buckeyes 2013 Saturday afternoon.
… The Racers came away
with two fumble recoveries in the second half,
while Humphries had
an interception returned
for a short touchdown by
DB Darius Phillips.
was intercepted by J.D.
Harmon in the end zone
midway through the
third quarter.
Kentucky still had one
last chance, but Towles
was intercepted by
Quincy Wilson with 33
seconds left.
The Wildcats came
in believing they were
in the best position to
end a generation of misery against Florida and
snap college football’s
longest losing streak
against an opponent.
They beat South Carolina 26-22 on the road
last week and were
primed to finally close
the deal against Florida
after falling short 36-30
in three overtimes in
The Swamp last fall.
MISSOURI GUN & KNIFE SHOW
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BUY • SELL • TRADE
Antique & Modern • Over 450 Tables
September 25, 26, 27 - 2015
Admission $6.00, Children Under 10 FREE
Fri. 4-8 • Sat. 8-5 • Sun. 8-4
ALL FIREARM REGULATIONS ENFORCED
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
For Information Call
J.D. King @ 573-243-0499 • Jody Geiser @ 573-204-8888 or
@ 573-335-2132
Children under 16 years of age must be accompanied by an adult at all times.
Visit us @ www.mogunshow.com
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • 5B
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Sports
6B • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Seahawks-Packers – not quite the same stakes
Associated Press
The Packers probably
don’t need any extra incentive when facing the
Seahawks, particularly
with the memory of
their fourth-quarter NFC
championship collapse
in Seattle still fresh and
painful.
Yet, when they figure
out that a win at Lambeau Field gives them
a two-game lead over
the two-time defending
conference champions,
they could be even more
stoked. Even if they
aren’t saying so.
“It’s early in the season, we’re both trying
to figure it out,” league
MVP Aaron Rodgers
says. “They had a tough
division one on the road,
we had a tough one on
the road, and now we’re
playing tonight.
“We played them last
year in the first game
and the last game. It was
definitely two different
teams at that point, both
of us. Teams change,
they find their identity
throughout the season,
and there’s definitely
motivating factors for
each team as they start
the year and look at their
goals. The team kind of
takes on their identity as
the season progresses.”
Seattle’s ID has been
as a defensive force. But
the Seahawks rank an
unflattering 20th after
the loss to the Rams, and
All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman has been
seeing time as a slot defender.
Like
Rodgers,
he
downplays the significance of the weekend’s
showcase game.
“I think it’s always
too early to think about
playoff
ramifications,
because you have to play
the game, you have to
deal with that, and so
many things change,”
Sherman says. “There
are teams who start off
undefeated and end up
not in the playoffs. There
are teams that start off
.500 and end up with the
No. 1 seed. ... You can’t
put too much into the
early season.”
Green Bay comes off a
solid enough win at longtime rival Chicago in its
opener, while Seattle was
stumbling at St. Louis.
That makes the math
easy heading into Week
2. No matter what each
side says.
The weekend began
with an AFC West showdown as visiting Denver
scored two touchdowns
in the final 36 seconds to
stun Kansas City 31-24.
Denver
cornerback
Bradley Roby returned
Jamaal Charles’ second
fumble 21 yards for a
touchdown with 27 seconds remaining for the
winning score.
Peyton Manning threw
a touchdown pass to Emmanuel Sanders with
36 seconds left as the
Broncos (2-0) appeared
headed for overtime.
But on the next play by
the Chiefs (1-1), Charles
was stripped by Brandon Marshall and the
ball bounced right into
Roby’s hands.
Today’s games
Tampa Bay at New Orleans,
Noon
Detroit at Minnesota, Noon
Arizona at Chicago, Noon
Houston at Carolina, Noon
San Francisco at Pittsburgh, Noon
New England at Buffalo,
Noon
San Diego at Cincinnati,
Noon
Tennessee at Cleveland,
Noon
Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, Noon
St. Louis at Washington,
Noon
Baltimore at Oakland, 3:05
p.m.
Miami at Jacksonville, 3:05
p.m.
Dallas at Philadelphia, 3:25
p.m.
Seattle at Green Bay, 7:30
p.m.
Monday
N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis,
7:30 p.m.
end. “We’re not beat just
because they get off the
bus, like some teams.”
Still, getting off that
bus will be Tom Brady
and Rob Gronkowski,
the most dangerous
pass-catch tandem in the
league right now.
Dallas (1-0) at
Philadelphia (0-1)
Yet another intriguing
early season matchup,
and a critical one for the
Eagles after they blew
their opener at Atlanta.
Look for RB Demarco
Murray, the 2014 Offensive Player of the Year
with Dallas who rode
free agency in Philly, to
carry a lot more than
eight times for 9 yards.
“I think DeMarco’s a
very grounded individual,” coach Chip Kelly
says. “He’s pretty consistent in his approach
every day that he’s here.
We’ll monitor him just
like we monitor all our
players this week, but I
haven’t seen any change
in him because it’s Dallas
week and he played for
Dallas.”
With Murray gone, the
Cowboys’ best offensive
player is WR Dez Bryant.
But he’s out with a broken right foot.
Associated Press
Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman
(front) intercepts a pass intended for Green Bay
Packers wide receiver Davante Adams during the
first half of the Jan. 18 NFC Championship game
in Seattle. The Packers won’t be lacking any extra
incentive when facing the Seahawks today.
yards against the Saints
after posting the league’s
worst rushing average
in 2014. But RB Andre
Ellington was carted off
with a sprained right
knee and they might
have to turn to recent addition Chris Johnson.
Chicago showed some
grit and potency against
Green Bay, most notably
versatile RB Matt Forte
(141 yards rushing, one
TD).
San Francisco (1-0)
at Pittsburgh (0-1)
A homecoming of sorts
for 49ers coach Jim Tomsula, a Pittsburgh native whose grandfather
owned a restaurant near
the old Forbes Field. In
a romp past Minnesota,
RB Carlos Hyde’s 168
yards were the most by a
San Francisco back in his
first start since 1970.
Pittsburgh lost by seven points at New England, yet was outplayed
in nearly every facet. RB
San Diego (1-0) at Le’Veon Bell finishes
his two-game suspenCincinnati (1-0)
sion, but veteran DeAnThe Chargers won a gelo Williams ran for 127
first-round playoff game yards against the Patriin their last visit and ar- ots.
rive having gained the
most yards on offense Tampa Bay (0-1) at
(483) in opening week New Orleans (0-1)
while beating Detroit.
Philip Rivers completBoth teams come off
ed his final 20 passes rough opening defeats,
against the Lions to set and top overall draft
a club record, four short pick Winston needs to
of the league mark by be sharper. He does have
Philadelphia’s Donovan a strong array of targets
McNabb in 2004.
in Mike Evans, Vincent
The Bengals domi- Jackson and emerging
nated Oakland in every TE Austin Seferian-Jenfacet and unveiled a new kins, who had a careerweapon in tight end Ty- high 110 yards receiving
ler Eifert (9 catches, 104 and two TDs last week.
yards, 2 TDs).
New Orleans, which
has won seven straight
against Tampa Bay,
Arizona (1-0) at
rushed for only 54 yards
Chicago (0-1)
at
Arizona.
Several
The Cardinals might Saints rookies looked
have found a running like defensive playmakgame — they gained 120 ers, though, particularly
9/20/15
BY BARRY WILNER
New England (1-0)
at Buffalo (1-0)
ANSWER TO TODAY’S PUZZLE
This was always a juicy
confrontation
when
Rex Ryan was coaching the Jets. Nothing
has changed with him
moving to Western New
York.
“If they beat us, they
beat us, but we don’t
concede anything,” says
Ryan, whose new club
was among the NFL’s
best on opening week-
CB Damian Swann.
Houston (0-1) at
Carolina (1-0)
After one week, Texans coach Bill O’Brien is
switching quarterbacks,
from Brian Hoyer to
Ryan Mallett. But Houston might need to win
with defense, and it has
the league’s best player in
end J.J. Watt. The unanimous Defensive Player of
the Year in 2014 had six
tackles for a loss and two
sacks against the Chiefs.
The Panthers’ star defender, LB Luke Kuechly,
suffered a concussion vs.
the Jaguars. If Kuechly
doesn’t play, A.J. Klein
starts in the middle and ferent results.
rookie Shaq Thompson
Atlanta’s Julio Jones
starts on the strong side. victimized Philadelphia
for 141 yards on nine
N.Y. Jets (1-0) at catches and a touchIndianapolis (0-1) down. Matt Bryant made
all four field goal attempts, including a deciMonday night
After struggling might- sive kick.
ily against Buffalo’s asEveryone except ownsertive defense, the Colts er John Mara has taken
get another one, albeit at responsibility for the Gihome, in the Jets. Unless ants’ mismanagement
Indy finds some balance of the clock in their loss
with a running game to at Dallas. The Falcons
aid Andrew Luck’s pass- could be the right tonic:
ing — it got 64 yards New York has won four
against the Bills — New of the last five meetings.
York could be a difficult
obstacle.
Baltimore (0-1)
The opportunistic Jets
at Oakland (0-1)
recovered four Cleveland
fumbles, added an interThe Ravens headed
ception and won Todd further west after their
Bowles’ debut as head loss in Denver and next
coach in the Meadow- face an opponent they
lands.
have routed in the last
four meetings, outscoring Oakland 133-49. BalDetroit (0-1) at
timore’s defense allowed
Minnesota (0-1)
no TDs in the opening
Adrian Peterson had loss.
all of 10 carries for 31
Oakland allowed lots
yards in his return from of touchdowns — two
missing 15 games while rushing and two passing
on the commissioner’s in a 33-13 wipeout. QB
exempt list over child Derek Carr missed much
abuse charges last sea- of that loss with a hand
son. He might get that problem, but was back
many rushes in the first practicing this week.
quarter against a Lions defense that clearly
Miami (1-0) at
missed departed tackles
Jacksonville (0-1)
Ndamukong Suh and
Nick Fairley in a loss at
The battle for the Sunshine State? It won’t be
San Diego.
Also vastly underused much of a skirmish if
last week: Lions star the Jaguars can’t protect
wideout Calvin Johnson, Blake Bortles, who was
who had a career-low sacked five times by Cartwo receptions for 39 olina, or protect the ball
yards.
(three turnovers, including a pick-six).
Miami didn’t show a
Atlanta (1-0) at
lot on offense, either, at
N.Y. Giants (0-1)
Washington. But Jarvis
Two teams whose Landry broke a punt regames came down to the turn 69 yards to make
wire last week with dif- the difference.
g
y
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
“AMEN” By C.C.
BURNIKEL
ACROSS
1 Applies gently
5 Lowers in
intensity
9 Record flaw
13 Intros may be
brief ones
17 Folklore
monster
18 Parlement
français division
19 Sunning sites
21 Rice of Gothic
fiction
22 Novelist whose
works were
banned in his
native land from
1968-’89
24 Time’s 1977
Man of the Year
26 Bit of trivia
27 “Yadda yadda
yadda”: Abbr.
29 Implied
30 Covert __
31 Mark of a
hothead
33 Dress with a
flare
35 WWII Enigma
machine user
37 Call lead-in
40 TV host who
was an Army DJ
in Vietnam
42 Pizza chain
43 Old court org.
44 Pres. Carter’s
alma mater
45 “I see”
47 Sighs of content
48 They may be
French
50 Pitchers’
deliveries
52 “See if I care!”
56 Field
58 Maritime raptor
59 Voice of the title
character in
“Kung Fu
Panda”
61 Old Detroit
brewer
63 “Most likely ... ”
65 91, at the
Forum
66 Favorite
68 “Burnt” shade
70 Marked down
73 Cast lead-in
74 Model Mendes
75 Letting fly
77 Rival of
Djokovic
79 Neil deGrasse
Tyson mentor
83 Hot streak
85 Photo-sharing
website
88 Crustacean
used in Cajun
cuisine
89 Education, e.g.
91 Choir voice
92 Gunpowder is a
type of it
93 Former “60
Minutes”
debater
Alexander
95 Funhouse cries
97 “Evita” narrator
98 Improved
101 “The Aviator”
Oscar nominee
103 Ref’s calls
104 General
Assembly
member
105 Surprises in
bottles
107 Lincoln was one
109 Hilo keepsake
110 Tinker with text
112 Turn bad
114 Sci-fi memoir
118 Two-time Rock
and Roll Hall of
Fame inductee
121 Three-time
Oscar-winning
director
123 Wafflers maker
124 “Same here”
9/20/15
125 Ticket prices?
126 Placed
127 Recently blond,
say
128 Wedding venue
129 Comments
130 Gives in to
gravity
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
DOWN
Remove politely
Yamuna
Expressway
terminus
Bric-a-__
Mailed
Delivers à la
Steven Wright
Like Gershwin’s
piano concerto
Creators
Sports page
item
Place to kick
back
Raft in an Oslo
museum
Hawkeye fan
Not quite win
Lamb’s lament
Like some
running tracks
15
16
18
20
23
25
28
32
34
36
37
38
39
41
42
44
46
49
51
53
xwordeditor@aol.com
Even (with)
Gets started on
Cuts corners
__ Lankan
Kravitz of
“Divergent”
Ticket
exchange giant
Sweet-talked
Tour de France
stage
Pull-up targets
Roger Federer’s
birth city
Chicago mayor
Emanuel
Slender black
reed
The Packers
retired his #15
in 1973
Plans for chairs
Prince Albert’s
prov.
Geek Squad
callers
Romanov royals
Minor gripe
Heat-sensitive
patch
Very large
amount
54 Quantum theory
pioneer
55 Maker of Golf
Street shoes
57 Dauphin’s father
59 Sound of keys
60 Taunt
62 Hägar’s wife
64 Desert partly in
Arizona
66 Upper bod
muscle
67 Brush fire op
69 Policy of many
dot-gov
websites
71 Seat for
toddlers
72 Tinkers with
text
76 Flier to Shiraz
78 King topper
80 __ art: barista’s
creation
81 Kid in the 1941
cartoon “Child
Psykolojiky”
82 Month before
Nisan
84 One-eyed
“Futurama”
character
86 TriBeCa
neighbor
87 Greek war god
89 Colombian city
90 Cabs, e.g.
94 Practical, as
experience
96 Inuit craft
98 Stuck out
99 Zip or zing
100 Emergency
sorting process
102 Philip Morris
parent company
103 Court events
105 “Our Lady of the
Flowers” author
106 Maternally
related
108 Top-left key
111 “Dee-lish!”
113 Gets rid of,
mob-style
115 NC-17 issuing
org.
116 Copier insert:
Abbr.
117 Enterprise
vehicles
119 Coal carrier
120 All the rage
122 “__ takers?”
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Sports
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • 7B
Mariota follows ‘perfect’ start
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press
Associated Press
Tennessee Titans quarterback Marcus Mariota
throws a pass to running back Bishop Sankey for
a touchdown during last Sunday’s game against
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Titans’ rookie
had four touchdown passes in his NFL debut.
CLEVELAND — Marcus Mariota set the bar
high for himself in his
first pro start. His NFL
debut was spectacular,
statistically sublime.
Being perfect twice in
a row might be asking
too much of Tennessee’s
rookie quarterback.
Or, maybe it isn’t.
The second overall
pick in this year’s draft,
Mariota recorded a pristine 158.3 passer’s rating last week in a 42-14
win over Tampa Bay,
one of the league’s worst
teams. He threw four
touchdown passes in the
first half, completed 13
of 16 passes — after two
incompletions to start —
and displayed poise and
polish well beyond his 21
years.
His hyped matchup
with No. 1 pick Jameis
Winston dissolved into a
one-sided affair.
“If you just woke up
from a couple years of
sleep, didn’t know anything and watched the
game with the sound off,
you wouldn’t know that
he was a rookie,” said
Browns coach Mike Pettine, whose defense will
try to shut down the 2014
Heisman Trophy winner
on Sunday. “He handled
himself very well. But it’s
not surprising, knowing
what we know about the
kid and how dedicated
he is to the sport and
how much he put into it
and prepared.”
It’s too early to start
fitting Mariota for a gold
Hall of Famer’s jacket,
but he announced his arrival with a performance
only matched by a handful of elite quarterbacks.
In typical style, he handled it with humility, one
of the personality traits
that drew the Titans to
him.
It certainly intensified
the spotlight on Mariota,
but Titans coach Ken
Whisenhunt is confident
it won’t change his young
star.
“I don’t think it’s a big
deal to him,” he said.
This will be the second straight road game
for the Titans (1-0), who
haven’t opened the season with two straight
road wins since 1981,
when they were in Houston.
For the Browns, Sunday’s home opener is
vital. They played poorly — 12 penalties, five
turnovers — in a 31-10
loss last week against the
Jets, and some grumbling Cleveland fans are
already clamoring for
change.
MANZIEL STARTS? —
Cleveland’s quarterback
situation is muddled just
one week into the sea-
son. Josh McCown sustained a concussion last
week will miss today’s
game. The starter will
be Johnny Manziel, who
replaced McCown in the
opener and showed some
progress compared to
where he was as a rookie,
but his three turnovers
were costly against the
Jets.
BACK’S BACK — The
Browns traded running
back Terrance West,
their leading rusher last
season, to Tennessee
on Sept. 6 knowing they
hosted the Titans in their
home opener. But injuries to a couple of Titans
running backs pushed
West onto the field pretty
quickly.
West ran 13 times for
41 yards in the opener.
Asked about returning
to Cleveland, West said
it will be special and
he still talks to several
Browns.
Redskins-Rams connected to RG3, even if he won’t play
BY HOWARD FENDRICH
Associated Press
LANDOVER, Md. —
For however long Robert Griffin III remains a
member of the Redskins,
the team will be linked
to the St. Louis Rams
because of the massive
trade that brought him
to Washington.
When the teams met
last season, Rams coach
Jeff Fisher sent out six of
his players — all acquired
thanks to the swap that
allowed the Redskins to
pick RG3 second overall
in the 2012 draft — for
the pregame coin toss,
and St. Louis wound up
winning 24-0.
“Coaches have different ways to try and motivate their team pregame,
and if their way was to
send out guys they got in
that trade, so be it,” Redskins coach Jay Gruden
said ahead of a Week 2
reunion today, insisting
he didn’t notice what
Fisher did last season. “I
don’t know how he motivates his organization.
But it didn’t affect us one
iota. What affected us
(was) they played better
than us that game. Who
they sent out as captains
had nothing to do with
it.”
Fisher, for his part,
says he has no plans to
repeat that stunt.
When the Redskins
(0-1) host the Rams (10) this time, the benched
Griffin will be a backup
to Kirk Cousins, at best;
Gruden wouldn’t say
whether RG3 or Colt McCoy will be Washington’s
No. 2 quarterback or inactive.
And while the Redskins are still trying to
find their way, the Rams
appear headed in the
right direction, coming
off a season-opening
overtime victory over
two-time NFC champion
Seattle.
The Redskins are 7-26
since the start of the
2013-14 season, which
Gruden referred to when
asked whether his players might be particularly
fired up by what happened against St. Louis
last year.
“We shouldn’t need
any motivation right
now,” Gruden said.
“We’ve won seven games
in two years, so we’re
motivated to get this
thing turned around,
whoever we play.”
SPECIAL, AND NOTSO-SPECIAL, TEAMS —
All eyes will be on Rams
punt returner Tavon
Austin, the NFC special
teams player of the week,
and how the Redskins
manage to deal with him
one game after allowing
Miami’s Jarvis Landry to
earn AFC special teams
player of the week honors. Austin scored on a
75-yard punt return and
a 16-yard run in Week
1; last year against the
Redskins, he produced a
78-yard punt return for a
TD. “He’s electric,” Rams
quarterback Nick Foles
said.
MASON AND GURLEY? — Neither firstround draft pick Todd
Gurley (coming off knee
surgery) nor Tre Mason (hamstring injury)
played for the Rams in
Week 1, but both run-
ning backs practiced this
week. “If you’re going to
draw up a running back
on Xbox,” Gruden said,
“it’s probably going to
look like Todd Gurley.”
O-LINE VS. D-LINE —
In Week 1, the Redskins
and their revamped right
side of the offensive
line — rookie Brandon
Scherff at guard, secondyear player Morgan Moses at tackle — had to
deal with Ndamukong
Suh and the rest of Miami’s talented defensive
line. Now comes St. Louis, which had six sacks
against Seattle, including
two each by Aaron Donald and Robert Quinn.
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Sports
8B • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Beltran’s homer helps Yanks even Subway Series
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Carlos
Beltran hit a three-run,
second-deck home run
on a 100 mph fastball
from Noah Syndergaard
in the first inning, Michael Pineda pitched his
best game in two months
and the New York Yankees beat the Mets 5-0
Saturday to rebound
from an opening loss in
the weekend Subway Series.
Brian McCann added
a two-run homer in the
sixth, the Yankees’ 200th
home run this season, to
quiet the sellout crowd of
43,630 at Citi Field on a
sunny late-summer afternoon.
The Mets started the
day eight games ahead
of Washington in the NL
East. The Yankees began
the day 41⁄2 games behind
AL East-leading Toronto
but four games in front
of Houston for the first
AL wild card.
Pineda (11-8) had
struggled since returning from a month on the
disabled list caused by a
right forearm strain. He
allowed four singles in
51⁄3 innings to win for just
the second time since the
All-Star break.
Syndergaard
(8-7)
gave up five runs in six
innings.
Associated Press
Boston Red Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia slides safe past Toronto
Blue Jays catcher Russell Martin to take the lead during the ninth inning of
Saturday’s game in Toronto. Boston won 7-6.
two-run homer off Roberto Osuna (1-5) in the
ninth.
Xander Bogaerts also
homered for the Red
Sox, who are 9-9 against
Toronto this season. The
Blue Jays’ lead in the
AL East dropped to 31⁄2
games with the Yankees’
5-0 win over the Mets.
One out after Bradley’s
homer, Dustin Pedroia
walked and Osuna was
replaced by Aaron Sanchez. Bogaerts singled to
right and Ortiz followed
with an RBI single to left.
Bogaerts made it 6-4
when he scored on a wild
Red Sox 7,
pitch and Rusney CastilBlue Jays 6
lo added an RBI single to
TORONTO — David center, chasing Sanchez.
Ortiz singled home the
go-ahead run in a fiveAngels 4, Twins 3
run ninth inning and the
MINNEAPOLIS — Kole
Boston Red Sox rallied
to beat the Toronto Blue Calhoun’s liner eluded
shortstop Eduardo EsJays.
Jackie Bradley Jr. cobar’s glove in the 12th
snapped an 0-for-21 inning, allowing Dan
slump with a game-tying Robertson to score the
double in the seventh, go-ahead run from third,
then tied it again with a and the Los Angeles An-
gels held on to beat the
Minnesota Twins to gain
ground in the AL wildcard race. It was the first
game of a day-night doubleheader.
Escobar knocked the
ball down and tried to
throw home to get Robertson, but the throw was
late as Los Angeles won
the first game of the split
doubleheader and pulled
even with Minnesota in
the race for the second
wild-card spot. The two
teams trail Houston by
11⁄2 games.
Mike Morin (3-1)
struck out the only two
batters he faced in the
11th. Huston Street
earned his 37th save.
Blaine Boyer (3-5) allowed an unearned run
in 11⁄3 innings in the loss.
Angels 5, Twins 2
MINNEAPOLIS — Albert Pujols had two hits
and two RBIs, and Garrett Richards was one
out away from his second
CUBS
Diamondbacks 6,
Giants 0
SAN FRANCISCO —
Patrick Corbin pitched
seven sharp innings and
helped his own cause
with an RBI single, and
Nationals 5,
Marlins 2
WASHINGTON
—
Bryce Harper tied the
game with a sacrifice fly,
then added insurance
with his 41st homer — a
two-run shot into the
second deck in right field
that earned “M-V-P!”
chants — and Washington came back to beat
Miami.
Harper entered the
day leading the NL in
homers, batting average
and runs. His three RBIs
raised his total to 95, putting him 17 behind Colorado’s Nolan Arenado.
Jordan Zimmermann
(13-8) allowed two runs
over six innings, both in
the first. Jonathan Papelbon got his 24th save.
Brad Hand (4-7) gave
up three runs, four hits
and six walks in 4 2-3
innings. He is 0-8 in 12
appearances — 10 starts
— against the Nationals.
Orioles 2, Rays 1
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
— Wei-Yin Chen pitched
seven effective innings,
Adam Jones drove in two
runs and Baltimore beat
Tampa Bay.
Chen (10-7) allowed
one run and struck out
seven. He ended his outing by escaping a two-on,
no-out jam.
Darren O’Day worked
a scoreless eighth before
Zach Britton got three
outs for his 34th save.
Erasmo Ramirez (106) took the loss.
Braves 2, Phillies 1
ATLANTA — Freddie
Freeman hit a two-run
double in the eighth inning and the Atlanta
Braves rallied past the
Philadelphia Phillies.
In a matchup of the
two worst teams in the
majors, the Braves have
consecutive victories for
the first time since winning three straight over
Miami from Aug. 6-8.
The
Phillies
have
dropped five straight and
13 of 16. Arodys Vizcaino
earned his sixth save in
seven chances after facing four batters in the
ninth.
With Andres Blanco
of the Phillies on second
base, Gold Glove shortstop Andrelton Simmons
made the best defensive
play of the game.
Hunting & Fishing
Picture Contest
CONTINUED FROM 1B
Cubs entered the contest one game behind
Pittsburgh for the top NL
wild-card spot.
Cubs
pitchers
hit
St. Louis batters three
times. After closer Hector Rondon plunked
pinch-hitter Greg Garcia to lead off the ninth
with Chicago leading 5-1,
both he and manager Joe
Maddon were ejected.
“Obviously, we’re not
trying to do that right
there,” Maddon said.
Bryant’s drive against
the wind and into the
last row of the left field
bleachers gave him 25
homers and tied the Cubs
record for a rookie set by
Billy Williams in 1961.
Bryant, who sparkled at
third base, also drove in
a run with a double and
scored in the first as he
went 2 for 3 with a walk.
“He’s been outstanding,”
Maddon
said.
“Great defense, wonderful hitting, one of the
best baserunners in the
National League already.
“He is the rookie of the
year.”
Soler went deep for
the first time since missing 23 games with a left
oblique strain. Starlin
Castro, who had six RBIs
on Friday, and Tommy
La Stella also drove in
runs for Chicago.
Rondon hitting Garcia
nearly sparked a St. Louis comeback.
Carpenter homered off
Zac Rosscup to cut it to
5-3. Tommy Pham and
Jason Heyward followed
with singles, but Pedro
Strop got the final three
outs — including a sac
fly by Yadier Molina that
trimmed it to 5-4 — for
his third save.
“It was a very intense
game,” Carpenter said.
complete game this season as the Los Angeles
Angels beat the Minnesota Twins to sweep the
day-night doubleheader.
Mike Trout and Chris
Iannetta added solo
homers for Los Angeles
(76-72), which won its
third straight in the series and pulled a game
ahead of Minnesota (7573) in the AL wild-card
race.
Entering the nightcap,
the two teams trailed
Houston by 11⁄2 games
for the second wild card.
Houston is hosting Oakland on Saturday.
Richards (14-11) gave
up five hits and two runs,
including a solo homer to
Trevor Plouffe.
the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the San Francisco Giants 6-0.
Ender Inciarte had
three hits and two RBIs,
while David Peralta and
A.J. Pollock added three
hits apiece for Arizona.
The Diamondbacks have
won four of their last
five games against the
defending World Series
champs and five straight
at AT&T Park.
Corbin (6-4) ended his
own skid in San Francisco after going winless
in four previous starts
at the ballpark. The Arizona left-hander gave up
five hits, struck out five
and retired 16 of the final
18 batters he faced.
David Hernandez and
Josh Collmenter combined for the final six
outs to complete the Diamondbacks’ second consecutive shutout in this
series between the two
division rivals.
Mike Leake (10-9) took
the loss for San Francisco, which began the day
81⁄2 games behind the
Dodgers in the NL West.
Associated Press
St. Louis Cardinals’ Jhonny Peralta (right) is safe
at home as Chicago Cubs catcher David Ross
makes the tag during the second inning of Saturday’s game in Chicago. Chicago won 5-4.
“But you know what? Every game from here on
out is going be an intense
game.
“We had a nice little
ride there at the end.
It just came up a little
short.”
Shortstop
Addison
Russell ended it by diving up the middle to
grab Stephen Piscotty’s
grounder and flipped to
second to force out Heyward.
“That was a base hit the
moment it left the bat,”
Maddon said. “(Russell)
just willed his glove on
the ball at the end of it.”
After St. Louis’ Kolten Wong was hit for
a second time in the
eighth, plate umpire
Bruce Dreckman issued
a warning.
Maddon used eight
pitchers in a patchwork
effort to cover for an
empty spot in Chicago’s
rotation. The second
pitcher, Trevor Cahill (13), entered with two outs
in the third and earned
his first win with the
Cubs by pitching 3 1-3
scoreless innings.
Michael Wacha (16-6)
had won five of his pre-
vious six decisions, but
gave up four runs — on
six hits and four walks —
in five innings.
Maddon’s
ejection
came after the manager
called the Cardinals a
“vigilante group” Friday night. He was upset
when Cubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo was
hit with a pitch by Matt
Belisle in Chicago’s 8-3
win. Dan Haren had hit
Cardinals slugger Matt
Holliday in the head with
a pitch in the fifth.
30-30
Rizzo has been hit by
a pitch an MLB-leading
29 times this season. He
also leads the Cubs with
30 homers.
“It (being hit by a
pitch) is part of the
game,” Rizzo said. “It’s
what teams do.”
Trainer’s room
Cardinals: OF Matt
Holliday suffered only a
bruise when he was hit
by Haren, Matheny said.
But Holliday continues
to improve slowly from
a right quadriceps strain.
Send us your best hunting or fishing pictures and we
will publish them in our upcoming issue of Fall Hunting
& Fishing publishing in The Paducah Sun on October 2nd.
Emailed photos are accepted as long as they are high
resolution. Email to abreedlove@paducahsun.com or mail
to The Paducah Sun, Attn: Hunt Contest, 408 Kentucky Ave.
Paducah, Ky 42003. Mailed photos will not be returned.
Deadline to submit photos is September 25th. No purchase
necessary. Employees and immediate family of PMG and
participating advertisers are not eligible to win.
The winner
will receive a
$100 GIFT
CERTIFICATE
of their choice at any of the
participating advertisers in
the Fall Hunting & Fishing
publication. The winning photo
will be shown on the
4).' 5.
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Television
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • 9B
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Wine
Goes By
’Å
’Å
Augustus Magnussen. ’
’Å
Ethics
Bull Riding
Heartland
CBS Evening 60 Minutes (N) ’ Å
(:01) Big Brother (N) ’ Å
Madam Secretary ’ Å
CSI: Cyber “Ghost in the
Heartland
(:35) M*A*S*H (:05) M*A*S*H Rookie
News (N)
News
Machine” Å
News (N)
Blue Å
The Love Boat Wedding
The Love Boat Wedding
Access Hollywood Top
Columbo “Dead Weight” Suspected murderer M*A*S*H
The Odd
The Honey- Cheers ’ Å Bob Newhart Paid Program Paid Program
cruise to Alaska.
cruise to Alaska.
stories of the week. (N)
courts witness.
“Lil” Å
Couple
mooners
› “Exit Wounds” (2001) Steven Seagal. ’
››› “Backdraft” (1991, Action) Kurt Russell, William Baldwin. ’
›› “Rocky IV” (1985) Sylvester Stallone. ’
›› “Rocky V” (1990)
USA
ESPN 22 WNBA Basketball
ESPN2 23 Women’s Soccer
6 PM
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Mod Fam
Henry
Game
Full House
Full House
Friends ’
Friends ’
(:12) Friends ’ Å
Thunder
Henry
Live From the Red Carpet (N) (Live)
Bassmasters (N) Å
CNN Newsroom
24 CNN Newsroom
25 (2:40) ›› “Bruce Almighty” (2003) Jim Carrey.
Underground Life on the
Line Å
News 3 News (:35) Seinfeld
at 10
Å
Family
Family
Guy Å
Guy Å
Local 6 at
10:00 (N)
News at 9 on FOX23 (N)
Thunder
MLS Soccer: Red Bulls at Timbers
Becoming
NewsHour
Charlie Rose Masterpiece Mystery! (N)
Masterpiece Mystery! Holmes hates Charles Vicious (N)
Wk
’Å
Augustus Magnussen. ’
’Å
America’s Funniest Home Once Upon a Time “Mother” Once Upon a Time “Operation Mongoose” The Author and
Videos ’ Å
’Å
Gold form an alliance. ’ Å
Castle City councilman dies. Bones “The Graft in the
Bones The team looks into
Monopoly
Monopoly
’Å
Girl” ’ Å
the death of a teen.
Millionaires Millionaires
Football Night in America (N) ’ (Live) Å
(:20) NFL Football Seattle Seahawks at Green Bay Packers. (N) ’ (Live) Å
Shorts
CNN Newsroom
100 Things
Kardashian
Full House
Dash Dolls
Full House
House of DVF (N)
SportsCenter (N) Å
MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets. (N) (Live)
Baseball Tonight
SportCtr
CNN Newsroom
CNN Republican Debate “First Round”
Kardashian
Dash Dolls
SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å
SportCtr
ESPN FC (N) Å
NHRA Drag Racing Carolina Nationals. From Concord, N.C. (N Same-day Tape)
Anthony Bourdain Parts
Anthony Bourdain Parts
(7:55) ›› “Bruce Almighty” (2003) Jim Carrey.
(:15) ›› “Warm Bodies” (2013) Nicholas Hoult.
LIFE
“Stalked by My Neighbor” (2015, Suspense) Å
(:02) “The Murder Pact” (2015) Beau Mirchoff.
BET
›› “Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds” (2012, Drama) Tyler Perry. Å
P. Popoff
Fr. Rutler
Life on the Rock
Pope Francis In Cuba
White Collar
MTV
› “Zookeeper” (2011) Kevin James, Voices of Rosario Dawson. ’
Mod Fam
“Ungodly Acts” (2015) Dominique Swain. Å
“The Murder Pact” (2015) Beau Mirchoff. Å
26 “Sorority Surrogate”
(:11) › “Alex Cross” (2012, Action) Tyler Perry, Matthew Fox. Å
28 (2:11) ›› “Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds” (2012)
Pope Francis In Cuba
(:15) Pope Francis In Cuba “Meeting With Youth”
Cuba: Winds of Change
EWTN 29 Pope Francis In Cuba
Paid Prog.
WEN Hair
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
On Money
Blue Coll.
The New High:
CNBC 31 Fighting
A&E
TNT
Behind Bars
Behind Bars
Behind Bars
34 Behind Bars
›› “The Day After Tomorrow” (2004, Action) Dennis Quaid.
35 (2:30) ››› “Cliffhanger” (1993)
36 “How to Lose”
Jeannie
FNET 37 Jeannie
FNC 42 America’s News HQ
FAM
TVL
TLC
44 Reba
46 Fabulous
›› “Monster-in-Law” (2005) Jennifer Lopez.
Good Time
Good Time
Sanford
MediaBuzz
Marijuana Country:
Behind Bars
›› “Limitless” (2011) Bradley Cooper.
All/Family
Bunker
Bunker
Fox News Sunday
FOX Report (N)
L&L: Real West
Stossel
Reba ’
Reba ’
(:12) Reba ’ Å
Raymond
Fabulous
Fabulous
Fabulous
Sister Wives ’ Å
Sister Wives (N) Å
Sister Wives (N) Å
Reba ’
62 To Be Announced
Vacation
63 Vacation
Sister Wives ’ Å
››› “Back to the Future” (1985, Comedy) Michael J. Fox.
Raymond
J. Osteen
The Greg Gutfeld Show
L&L: Real West
Raymond
King
Raymond
(:01) Sister Wives (N)
King
(:02) Sister Wives Å
FOX Report
King
››› “The Fifth Element” (1997)
The Strain Dutch fights for her life.
The Strain “Dead End”
The Strain
Island
Hunt Intl
Island Life
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Beach
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Last Frontier
Fear the Walking Dead
Fear the Walking Dead
Fear the Walking Dead
Fear the Walking Dead
(:08) › “Gone in Sixty Seconds” (2000) Å
Counting Cars ’
Raymond
Cnt. Cars
Cnt. Cars
Teen
Gumball
TOON 64 Teen
COM 65 (1:48) ›› “Dinner for Schmucks”
Island Life
Island
Hunters
Island Life
Last Frontier
PGA Tour Golf BMW Championship, Final Round. From Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, Ill.
Bar Rescue ’
Bar Rescue ’
Bar Rescue ’
Bar Rescue ’
Ice Road Truckers ’
Ice Road Truckers ’
Ice Road Truckers (N)
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Pawn Stars
Big Bang
Big Bang
Big Bang
Broke Girl
Broke Girl
››› “Role Models” (2008) (DVS)
››› “Role Models” (2008) Paul Rudd (DVS)
Big Bang
Broke Girl
Broke Girl
Bar Rescue ’
Bar Rescue ’
(:01) Ice Road Truckers
Rugged Justice (N) ’
(:01) North Woods Law
(:02) Ice Lake Rebels
(:03) Rugged Justice ’
(:04) North Woods Law
Mansions
Mansions
Mansions
Extreme RVs Å
Big- RV
Big- RV
Mega RV Countdown
Mega RV Countdown
Extreme RVs Å
Mega RV Countdown
Gumball
Teen
Teen
Teen
King of Hill
Cleveland
Cleveland
Amer. Dad
Family Guy
Aqua Teen
To Be Announced
Mansions
Island Life
King
(:02) Sister Wives Å
Fixer Upper Å
Beach
Jeremiah
›› “Muppets From Space” (1999, Comedy)
››› “Back to the Future Part II” (1989) Michael J. Fox.
››› “Iron Man 3” (2013, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow.
(:24) › “Gone in Sixty Seconds” (2000) Nicolas Cage. Å
52 AF1
Golf Central (N) (Live)
GOLF 56 European PGA Tour Golf
Bar Rescue ’
Bar Rescue ’
SPIKE 57 Bar Rescue ’
Cnt. Cars
58 Cnt. Cars
59 MLB Baseball
(:36) Reba
“The Expendables”
›› “What to Expect When You’re Expecting” (2012)
››› “The Muppets Take Manhattan” (1984)
Inspiration
Behind Bars
(:15) ›› “Red” (2010) Bruce Willis. Å (DVS)
Reba ’
AMC
TRV
Marijuana- Am.
Behind Bars
Reba ’
HGTV 50 Fixer Upper Å
DSC 51 Last Frontier
AP
Marijuana USA
Reba
SYFY 47 (2:30) ››› “Skyfall” (2012) Daniel Craig, Judi Dench.
›› “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2” (2012)
49 Twilight
TBS
All/Family
Theology Roundtable
Behind Bars
››› “Pitch Perfect” (2012) Anna Kendrick, Skylar Astin.
Sanford
FX
HIST
Behind Bars
Rosary
(:18) ››› “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” (2005)
Diners, Drive
FOOD 67 Diners, Drive
(:45) Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood ’
VH1 99 He Got
Teen
Amer. Dad
(:45) ››› “Hot Tub Time Machine” (2010) John Cusack.
Family Guy
Rick, Morty
(:15) ››› “Hot Tub Time Machine” (2010) John Cusack.
Mr. Pickles
South Park
Food Truck Race
Guy’s Grocery Games
Guy’s Grocery Games
Food Truck Race
Cutthroat Kitchen (N)
Cutthroat Kitchen
Food Truck Race
Love & Hip Hop
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Basketball Wives LA ’
Love & Hip Hop
Basketball Wives LA ’
PREMIUM CHANNELS
(:40) ››› “Nightingale” (2014) ’
HBO
Another
SHO
“Bridget Jones’s Diary”
Everest
(:15) ››› “St. Vincent” (2014) Bill Murray. ’
(:20) ››› “Dolphin Tale” (2011)
Masters of Sex Å
(:15) “Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb”
Greenlight
Ray Donovan ’ Å
Masters of Sex (N)
Ray Donovan “Poker”
Channel 2
Midnight
Noon
8:00 p.m.
Doll & Em
Last Week
Greenlight
Ray Donovan “Poker”
Doll & Em
Last Week
Masters of Sex
Community Billboard
Grace and Truth Ministries
Community Billboard
Channel 11
Horoscopes
SUNDAY, SEPT. 20, 2015
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
A trip, conference or trade
show will lead to new possibilities and connections.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20): An unexpected change
in a friendship or romantic
relationship will disappoint
you. Embrace the future with
optimism and never doubt
that you can do better. A
contract you’ve been considering will spark new interest
if you reread what’s being
offered.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Plan to have friends or relatives over for a get-together,
or make personal changes
to your living quarters or
arrangements. Romance
is highlighted along with
personal improvements and
greater security. Take control
and be the one to initiate
change.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Stay focused on the choices
you have and the changes
you can make to improve
your quality of life. Consider
unusual alternatives to the
way you have been living.
Don’t feel challenged by the
changes going on around
you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Spend time with the people
you love. Make plans to
do something you’ve never
done before. Challenge your-
self and play to win. Your
enthusiasm will attract the
people you want by your side
and will help you succeed.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Don’t believe everything you
hear. Emotions will be unstable, and misunderstandings
are likely to leave you feeling
confused or uncertain. Don’t
make assumptions -- ask
questions until you feel satisfied that you understand
the pros and cons of any
situation you face.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22):
Don’t give in or give up. Take
action and follow through
with your plans. Day trips
and interacting with friends
and neighbors will lead to
new possibilities and positive changes in your relationship with someone special.
Say what’s on your mind.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
21): Take care of unfinished
business. Emotional matters are likely to cause some
uncertainty. Don’t give up
on someone who is going
through a rough time.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): Your emotions will
lead you into all sorts of
predicaments. Get the facts
before you react to any situations you are facing. The
improvements you make to
your appearance or attitude
will attract compliments and
could spark romance. Avoid
overindulgence.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Gather information, but
do your own fact-checking.
Knowledge is power and will
help you avoid being taken
advantage of by someone
unscrupulous.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): You’ve got everything
going for you, so don’t lose
sight of your goals. Personal
improvements will result in
favorable responses and an
unexpected alternative.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): Keep your life simple
and your ideas down to
earth. Don’t be lured into a
venture that you know little
about.
A&E
10B • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Sanders receives warm ‘Late Show’ welcome
BY FRAZIER MOORE
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK — Bernie
Sanders brought a “Feel
the Bern” coffee cup for
Stephen Colbert along
with his message of lifting the middle class, and
in return received a rock
star’s welcome from the
studio audience as a
guest on CBS’ “The Late
Show” Friday.
The Vermont senator and Democratic
presidential hopeful also
brought along statistics
to support his cause.
“It is a moral outrage
that the top one-tenth of
1 percent today owns almost as much wealth as
the bottom 90 percent;
that 58 percent of all new
income is going to the
top 1 percent,” he said.
To that, as with nearly
everything he said, the
audience cheered.
Sanders, who is currently a strong rival to
Hillary Rodham Clinton
in Iowa and New Hampshire, said it’s time
Americans demand that
“government start working for all of us, not just
the few.”
But Colbert asked him
how he expected to go
all the way to the White
House without forming
a Super PAC and soliciting campaign contributions from big donors.
“You don’t bring a
spoon to a knife fight,”
Colbert said.
Sanders countered he
was getting small donations from hundreds of
thousands of individual
contributors instead.
“I don’t support the
agenda of corporate
America or the billionaire class,” he said. “I
don’t want their money.”
“You are a liberal and
you are a socialist, and
people call you a liberal
and a socialist,” said
Colbert impishly. “Why
will you not accept those
two terms as the insults
they are meant to be?”
Associated Press
Sanders laughed.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (left), a Democratic candidate for president, joins host
“I prefer the term ‘pro- Stephen Colbert on the set of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” on Frigressive,’” he declared.
day, in New York.
Editorials shed light on Lee’s father Cox, Tambor
honored ahead
of Emmy awards
BY JAY REEVES
Associated Press
MONROEVILLE, Ala.
— Long a hero to millions of readers, Atticus
Finch is a conflicted figure these days.
Is the fictional lawyer the kind father and
noble hero of Harper
Lee’s first novel “To Kill
a Mockingbird,” a character so beloved people
named their children
for him? Or is Finch the
hard-core segregationist
whose racism is at the
heart of Lee’s newly released “Go Set a Watchman?”
Based on the decades-old writings of
the Southern man who
inspired Finch, Lee’s father A.C. Lee, the truth is
somewhere in between.
A small-town newspaper editor long before
“Mockingbird” was published, Lee expressed
support for racial segregation, wistfulness for
the vanquished Confederacy and a strict brand
of conservatism in the
pages of The Monroe Journal, which he
owned and ran in the
south Alabama town of
Monroeville for nearly
two decades beginning
in 1929.
Lee’s favorite editorial topics were fiscal restraint, warnings about
encroaching big government and opposition to
alcohol. Still, he veered
into race on occasion.
Sounding much like
the Atticus of “Watchman” — released in July
yet actually written be-
fore “Mockingbird” —
Lee cited states’ rights
in editorials opposing a
1938 proposed federal
anti-lynching law, calling it a bid for Northern
black votes. A few years
earlier he had defended
the prosecution of nine
blacks wrongly accused
of raping two white
women in the infamous
“Scottsb o r o
Boys”
case in
north
A l a bama.
Such
positions
A.C. Lee
w e r e
hardly unusual among
whites in a South that
was still recovering from
the Civil War and used
Jim Crow laws to impose strict segregation
and limit the legal rights
of blacks. Yet Lee also
displayed another side
that more resembled the
heroic Atticus of “Mockingbird.”
Despite opposing the
federal lynching bill,
which never passed,
Lee also editorialized
against lynchings and
published
front-page
stories that brought attention to the horror.
He sometimes ran positive news stories about
Monroe County’s black
community on the front
page, an unusual practice for white-owned
newspapers in the Deep
South at the time.
And once, Lee used
the front page to seek-
Entertainment Briefs
Beatles contract sells for over $90,000
NEW YORK — A New York auction house says it
has sold the first recording contract ever signed by
the Beatles for over $90,000.
Heritage Auctions says the 1961 contract was
for a recording of a rock and roll version of “My
Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean.”
The session was before Ringo Starr joined the
Beatles. Drummer Pete Best signed the contract
along with John Lennon, Paul McCartney and
George Harrison.
The contract was sold Saturday by the estate of
German Beatles collector Uwe Blaschke.
Heritage Auctions did not identify the buyer who
paid for $93,750.
— Associated Press
Comedy Central OKs Rannazzisi special
NEW YORK — Comedy Central decided to go
ahead with Steve Rannazzisi’s stand-up special after the comic’s admission that he lied about being
in the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001.
His special, “Breaking Dad,” was scheduled to
air Saturday. The network said earlier in the day
it was making no changes to its schedule, and
spokesman Steve Albani said there would be no
additional comment.
Rannazzisi lost a high-profile endorsement deal
with Buffalo Wild Wings, which pulled its commercials featuring Rannazzisi after the admission.
The comic apologized for the false story. He had
said in interviews that escaping the terrorist attacks was a key factor in his decision to move to
California and start a show business career.
— Associated Press
BY DERRIK J. LANG
AP Entertainment Writer
Associated Press
Annie Hill looks through newspapers edited by
A.C. Lee, father of novelist Harper Lee, on Sept.
15, in Monroeville, Ala. The elder Lee owned The
Monroe Journal from 1929-47. Editorials written
by Lee in The Monroe Journal in the 1930s and
1940s show he was a mix of the noble attorney
Atticus Finch of “To Kill a Mockingbird” and the
view presented of Finch as a racial segregationist
in “Go Set a Watchman.”
public donations to
help a 36-year-old black
mother of 21 children
who was struggling during the Great Depression.
By some counts, Lee
became more moderate later in life. He may
have regretted some of
his editorial stances by
the time he died in 1962,
when the civil rights
movement was gaining
steam. Yet Lee didn’t
take back a word in
1947, when he wrote his
final editorial reflecting
on his past writings.
“And with the added
experience of the years
we are unable to recall
any position we have
previously taken on
any important question
that we would wish to
change,” Lee wrote.
Charles Shields, who
wrote an unauthorized
biography of Harper Lee
in 2006, said her father
eventually saw the “tsunami of change” coming
in the South as segregation laws fell and wanted
to see society revamped
in a proper, orderly way.
“He was one for the
process,” said Shields,
author of “Mockingbird:
A Portrait of Harper
Lee.”
But
Shields
said
there’s scant evidence
that Lee abandoned his
Jim Crow-era opinions
and became a civil rights
advocate.
“He was moving in the
direction of progressive
political thought in the
South at the time,” said
Shields. “But he ran out
of time.”
‘Orange’ soundtrack
tune a family affair
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Producing the second
soundtrack for the
Netflix series “Orange
Is the New Black” became a family affair
for show creator Jenji
Kohan.
Kohan’s 14-year-old
daughter, Eliza Noxon, has the opening
song on “Music from
the Original Series Orange Is the New Black:
Seasons 2 & 3.”
“Hummingbird,”
an original track, was
used in the season
BOYHOOD
THURSDAY SEPT. 17
RoboCop 7:00 pm
Starring Lorelei Linklater, Elijah Smith,
SEPT.Arquette
18
EthanFRIDAY
Hawke, Patricia
The Third Man 7:00 pm, 9:00 pm
The life of a young man, Mason,
from age 5 toSEPT.
age 18.19
SATURDAY
The Third Man 4:00 pm
Woody
8:00 pm
Fri,
/Pines
@ 7:30pm
Sat,
/ @ SEPT.
4, 7:30pm
SUNDAY
20
TSun,
he Third/
Man@
4:00
7:00 pm
4 &pm,
7:30pm
three opening episode.
Kohan said her daughter wrote the song when
she was 12 at a family
camping trip. “She went
off to the cabin and she
came back with this
song fully formed ... she
sat down and played this
song and everyone was
kind of gobsmacked,”
Kohan said.
LOS ANGELES —
Before they strut down
the red carpet at the
Emmys, Jeffrey Tambor and Laverne Cox
were among the honorees at the first-ever
Television
Industry
Advocacy Awards.
Tambor and Cox
were recognized Friday at the Creative Coalition event for their
efforts in bringing attention to the transgender community.
“The opportunity to
play a trans character
as a trans actress has
changed my life and
also changed the lives
of so many people
who have seen me,”
said Cox, the “Orange
is the New Black” costar who was the first
transgender actress to
be nominated for an
Emmy last year.
Tambor is up for the
outstanding lead actor in a comedy series
trophy at Sunday’s
Emmys for his role as
a patriarch who opens
up to his family about
his struggles with gender identity in Amazon’s “Transparent.”
“(’Transparent’ creator) Jill Soloway gave
me the responsibility
and privilege of a lifetime,” Tambor said.
“I think my award
should really be the
Luckiest Guy in the
Room Award.”
Alfre Woodard was
honored for her work
with the Turnaround
Arts initiative as part
of the President’s Committee on the Arts and
Humanities. She was
brought to tears when
presented with her trophy by Ron Gubitz, principal of the ReNEW Cultural Arts Academy in
New Orleans.
“Arts in education
makes it a complete education,” said Woodard,
who has volunteered
at ReNEW and other
schools. “Arts in society
is imperative to have a
civil society.”
Other honorees at
Friday’s ceremony included “Entourage” costar Constance Zimmer,
“black-ish” actor Anthony Anderson, “Under the Dome” executive producer Neal Baer,
“2 Broke Girls” co-star
Beth Behrs, “Desperate Housewives” star
Eva Longoria and “The
Shawshank
Redemption” actor Tim Robbins.
Monica Lewinsky was
on hand to present a
trophy to her friend and
“The Good Wife” actor
Alan Cumming, who was
honored for his advocacy on behalf of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender community.
“I know what you’re all
thinking,” Lewinsky jokingly told the crowd at
the Sunset Tower Hotel.
“What the hell is Monica
Lewinsky doing here?”
Pork Peddler and the Staff
Would Like To Invite You
Down To Our
Breakfast Table!
Tuesday – Thursday
Full Breakfast Menu
MAZE RUNNER: THE SCORCH TRIALS PG-13
11:05AM 11:50AM 2:35PM 3:20PM
6:10PM 6:55PM 9:15PM 10:05PM
TCM PRESENTS PSYCHO R
2:00PM 7:00PM
THE VISIT PG-13
11:315AM 1:50PM 4:15PM 7:10PM
10:10PM
90 MINUTES IN HEAVEN PG-13
11:50AM 3:05 6:50PM 9:55PM
A WALK IN THE WOODS R
11:25PM 2:00PM 4:35PM 7:15PM
9:50PM
WAR ROOM PG
11:00AM 1:50PM 4:40PM 7:35PM
10:25PM
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUE NATION PG13
11:00AM 9:50PM
BLACK MASS R
11:45AM 3:15PM 7:00PM 10:00PM
THE PERFECT GUY PG-13
11:20AM 1:55PM 4:25PM 7:05PM
9:35PM
CAPTIVE PG-13
11:3AM 2:05PM 4:45PM 7:20PM
10:15PM
THE TRANSPORTER
REFUELED PG-13
1:45PM 7:25PM
GRANDMA R
11:35AM 2:10PM 4:30PM 7;30PM
9:45PM
NO ESCAPE R
11:10AM 4:20PM 10:20PM
Friday – Sunday
We have a full
breakfast buffet
We have kids breakfast as well!
8th & Park Avenue • Paducah, KY • 270-442-7414
Remember, we are CLOSED on Mondays!
Sports
paducahsun.com
The Paducah Sun • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • 11B
Chase newcomers won’t change their race
BY JENNA FRYER
Associated Press
JOLIET, Ill. — When
the green flag drops on
the opening round of
NASCAR’s playoffs, Jamie McMurray and Paul
Menard will be racing
for a Chase for the Sprint
Cup championship for
the first time in their careers.
Unlike the other 14
drivers in the Chase,
they have no experience
in racing for the title.
They don’t know what
strategies will get them
through to the second
round, and haven’t seen
firsthand how the intensity will pick up starting
today at Chicagoland
Speedway.
It may not be the worst
thing.
“I’ve never been in this
position before, so I’m
just taking it like I take
every week,” said Menard. “I feel good about
how we’re approaching
it. We’re just going to put
our heads down and go
as far in this deal as we
can.”
The elimination format was implemented
last year, and drivers
used varying approaches to navigate their
way through the three
rounds that lead to the
finale at HomesteadMiami Speedway. A win
in any of the first three
segments guarantees a
Associated Press
Kevin Harvick looks on from his garage during Friday’s practice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Chicagoland Speedway today. Friday’s qualifying was
rained out, leaving points leader Harvick on the pole.
strategy going in, we
would love to win the
first round. But mostly,
we don’t want a bad
race,” McMurray said. “I
don’t know if anyone selected (Newman) for getting to the final round. If
we can do what he did,
getting to Homestead
would be a realistic goal.”
McMurray and Menard have to pick up their
performance, though, to
make it through the first
three weeks.
McMurray has just
two top-five finishes this
year, has led only 14
laps and only has seven
top-10 finishes. Menard
also has two top-five finishes, but only four top-
driver a spot in the next
round; four drivers are
eliminated every three
races.
Consistency can push
a driver into the final
round, as Ryan Newman
proved last year by using
solid finishes in a winless
season to have a shot at
the title.
Both McMurray and
Menard are winless this
year, and both used consistency to make it into
the 16-driver field. McMurray thinks that’ll be
good enough to get him
out of the first round,
which is comprised of
Chicago, New Hampshire and Dover.
“When I look at our
10s and has led just one
lap. His average finish is
16.7 through the first 26
races.
But he is teammates
at Richard Childress
Racing with Newman,
and that organization
proved last year it can
game a system that was
supposed to reward winning.
“I’m not going to
change how I race,” said
Menard. “This has gotten
us to this point. We just
need to step it up a little
bit. We’ll all fight tooth
and nail.”
PRACTICE PATIENCE
— Denny Hamlin knows
exactly what he needs
to do today, and he isn’t
sure how easy it’ll be at
the start of the race.
His Joe Gibbs Racing
team struggled in Friday’s only practice session, and when qualifying was washed out by
rain, their poor showing
earned them the 29th
starting position — the
lowest of the 16 Chase
drivers.
He believes his first
task will be staying out of
trouble at the start of the
race as he tries to pick his
way through traffic.
“I’ve got to be careful,
first of all,” he said Saturday. “It is 400 miles,
so the goal is don’t get
too anxious when they
tell me the leader is on
the same straightaway as
I am. I think that’s going
to happen.
“I’ve got to just rely on
the car to do its thing, it’s
been really fast here lately. I think just being patient and not getting too
caught up in the first part
of the race is my biggest
challenge.”
Hamlin said the issues
with the No. 11 team began when they switched
into qualifying trim
Friday and discovered
something amiss with his
Toyota. It took too much
time to fix the issues, and
he never got in a fast lap
that would have stood
for seeding the field once
qualifying was canceled.
“We got behind, we
found something wrong
with the car that was
causing us to be behind,”
he said. “I felt like we
were really fast in race
trim. We switched things
over and had some things
wrong with the car and
just couldn’t get it identified until too late.
“It was just a bad effort
by me and the team, just
not getting a decent lap.”
RESTARTS TO BE ADDRESSED — NASCAR
will explain to drivers
in the pre-race meeting
about its restart policy
during the Chase.
Drivers have complained about a lack of
consistency on the policy
and that NASCAR has not
intervened when drivers
have gone too early on
recent restarts. The most
recent gripe came on the
final restart last weekend at Richmond, where
many believed Matt
Kenseth jumped the start
and shed Joey Logano to
pull away for the win.
NASCAR made no call
against Kenseth, and
drivers this week have
called on the sanctioning
body to take a stance.
NASCAR apparently
plans to both reposition
some at-track cameras
to give the officials in the
tower a better look at restarts, and there will be
a dedicated official who
will monitor the restart
zone area.
Nemechek grabs 1st career
Truck Series win saving gas
BY JENNA FRYER
Associated Press
JOLIET, Ill. — John
Hunter
Nemechek
grabbed his first career
victory by capitalizing in
the Truck Series race at
Chicagoland Speedway
when others didn’t have
the fuel to make it to the
finish.
The
second-generation NASCAR driver
was running second
Saturday morning behind Kyle Larson when
Larson ran out of gas
two laps from the finish.
With Larson coasting on
the bottom of the track,
Nemechek cruised past
him to grab his first national series victory.
Nemechek turned 18
in June and drives for a
team fielded by his father, journeyman Joe
Nemechek. The team
has nine full-time employees for Nemechek’s
truck team, and his father said his son would
be at the North Carolina
shop by 8 a.m. on Sun-
day morning to work on
the truck he’ll race next
weekend at New Hampshire.
“The one thing I do
give John Hunter credit
for is he does have the
want-to,” Joe Nemechek
said. “It’s determination, it’s focus and he
knows what he wants.
You don’t see that a lot
in the sport anymore.”
John Hunter praised
his father, who has 1,115
starts across NASCAR’s
three national series. Although Joe Nemechek
has 20 career victories,
none were in the Truck
Series.
“He has everything
invested in me and he
believes in me. Without
him, none of this would
be possible today,” John
Hunter said.
His father noted that
John Hunter beat him to
victory lane in the Truck
Series. John Hunter
won in his 23rd career
race, and is the fourth
youngest winner in se-
ries history.
“He’s won his first
truck race, I haven’t
been able to win a truck
race yet, and it’s his first
of many to come,” Joe
Nemechek said. “He’s
such a talented driver.
For what we’ve had to
work with ... he’s accomplished a lot. I am so
proud of him because we
have such a small group
of guys on a very limited
budget.”
The race, postponed
from Friday night because of a severe thunderstorm at Chicagoland
Speedway, quickly developed into a test to see
which team had the right
strategy and ability to
conserve enough fuel to
the finish. Veteran crew
chief Gere Kennon calculated Nemechek was
four laps shy of making
it, but coaxed the young
driver into saving.
He worried, though,
that Nemechek didn’t
have enough experience
to “know how to save.”
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Associated Press
Kyle Busch does a burn out after he wins Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series
at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Ill.
Kyle Busch gets Xfinity win
Associated press
JOLIET, Ill. — Joe
Gibbs Racing grabbed its
first victory of the weekend on Saturday night
when Kyle Busch won
the Xfinity Series race at
Chicagoland Speedway.
The race was a rout
for JGR as drivers Busch
and Matt Kenseth combined to lead 186 of the
200 laps.
The two then dueled
over the closing laps,
with Kenseth sliding
past Busch for the lead
with two laps remaining.
Kenseth had to race his
way around Chase Elliott
and John Wes Townley
to make the sweeping
pass of his teammate.
But Busch immediately answered, snatched
the lead back, and sailed
off to his record 74th career Xfinity Series victory. Kenseth was stuck
behind Townley over the
final lap, which held him
up and prevented him
from making another attempt at the win.
He dryly then referred
to Townley as the character who played a fried
chicken magnate in
“Stroker Ace” when discussing the closing laps.
Townley is sponsored by
his family’s chain of fried
chicken restaurants.
Busch marveled at the
closing laps in victory
lane.
“That was some fun
racing,” he said before
accepting the winning
trophy from actor/rapper Ludacris.
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Sports
12B • Sunday, September 20, 2015 • The Paducah Sun
paducahsun.com
Day runs in place, still up six
from there and wound
up between two greenside bunkers. He used
his putter from there,
but wound up missing a
7-footer to save par.
“Just horrible,” he
said about the tee shot
at 15. “I’m just trying to
get something down the
fairway and give myself
a chance at birdie and
ended walking off with a
bogey.”
But Day said rolling
in a birdie putt from 20
feet at the 18th restored
some momentum and
that should give his rivals pause — as if they
didn’t have enough to
worry about.
BY JIM LITKE
Associated Press
LAKE FOREST, Ill. —
Instead of running away
from the field one more
time, Jason Day spent
most of the third round
at the BMW Championship running in place.
He was hardly the only
player struggling to cope
with the suddenly cool,
wet and windy conditions at Conway Farms
left behind by a wave of
overnight storms. After opening rounds of
61 and 63, the Aussie
made his first bogey in
20 holes at No. 6, then
piled on three more to
offset a half-dozen birdies Saturday en route to
a 2-under 69.
“Obviously, the most
difficult round that
we’ve had this week by
far,” Day said.
He was at 20-under
193 and had a six-stroke
lead. That’s one shot
better than he had at the
start of the round, and
the biggest cushion any
54-hole leader has enjoyed on tour this season.
“I think a lot of players
really understood how
hard it was,” Day said.
“It was very difficult to
get anything going.”
Day has won three
times — including his
first major, the PGA
Championship — and
is an aggregate 99 under in tournament play
since a narrow miss at
the British Open in late
July.
While the pack pursuing the FedEx Cup leader got no closer, there
was some reshuffling.
Scott Piercy overcame
some shaky play early to
shoot a 67 and moved
up from a tie for fifth
into second, and a spot
alongside Day in the
final pairing Sunday.
Brendon Todd, who
played in Day’s group
Associated Press
Brittany Lang (left) and Lizette Salas of the United States, celebrate during Saturday’s fourballs on
Day2 at the Solheim Cup in St. Leon-Rot, southern
Germany.
Europe leads U.S.
at Solheim Cup
birdie to match Lee on
the last hole played before darkness intervened.
Stacy Lewis rediscovered her form as she and
Gerina Piller were 1 up
over Germany’s Caroline
Masson and Sweden’s
Caroline Hedwall after 16
holes played.
Catriona Matthew of
Scotland gave the Europeans reason to cheer
when she birdied the
15th hole to leave her and
Karine Icher of France 1
up against Brittany Lang
and Lizette Salas with
three holes to play.
“At least we have a little
bit of red on the board.
I haven’t seen much of
that the last few days,”
U.S. captain Juli Inkster
said. “But we need to finish. We need to buckle
down and get those last
two holes.”
Earlier Saturday, Hull
and Pettersen recovered
from 4 down to win 1 up
against Paula Creamer
and Morgan Pressel, as
Europe took a commanding 8-4 lead from the
morning’s foursomes.
Creamer and Pressel
were 4 up and comfortable after the 11th hole.
BY CIARAN FAHEY
Associated Press
ST. LEON-ROT, Germany — Lexi Thompson
and Cristie Kerr earned
a point for the United
States to trail Europe
8-5 in the Solheim Cup
before the other fourball
matches were suspended
Saturday due to bad light.
The American duo defeated Spanish pair Carlota Ciganda and Azahara
Munoz 3 and 2 to reduce
the Europeans’ lead after
a good morning for the
home team.
“We knew where we
stood going into the afternoon. It didn’t really
change our mindset,”
Thompson said. “We
knew we made a good
team with the matches
that we’ve played together. We just went out and
played aggressive.”
The U.S. held a slight
advantage in the three remaining fourball matches to be resumed today at
St. Leon-Rot Golf Club.
Rookie Alison Lee and
Brittany Lincicome were
1 up after 15 holes against
England’s Charley Hull
and Norway’s Suzann
Pettersen, who missed a
Associated Press
Jason Day of Australia pumps his fist after making birdie on the 18th hole during Saturday’s
third round of the BMW Championship at Conway
Farms Golf Clubin Lake Forest, Ill.
Saturday, made a triplebogey 7 at No. 4, bogeyed the next two and
never recovered en route
to a 76 that dropped him
into a tie for 18th.
World No.1 Rory McIlroy climbed from a tie
for ninth to claim fourth
place. He will go off in
the next-to-last pairing
with rookie Daniel Berger, one of the few players
who held their ground.
Berger shot 70 and was
tied with Piercy for second.
“The tournament is
in Jason’s hands right
now,” McIlroy said, adding a moment later, “he
needs to come back to
the field a little bit.”
That seemed like a
distinct possibility midway through the third
round.
Day has been hitting
his driver so long and
straight that he rarely
walks through the locker
room these days without
someone joking he must
Paducah 5-Day Forecast
Today
Tonight
76°
Monday
80°
50°
50°
Partly sunny
Patchy clouds
Tuesday
Wednesday
St. Louis
76/55
79°
69°
81°
56°
97° in 1954
41° in 1973
Evansville
77/50
Precipitation
Cape Girardeau
74/49
Sun and Moon
Sunrise today
Sunset tonight
Moonrise today
Moonset today
New
Oct 12
6:41 a.m.
6:56 p.m.
1:13 p.m.
11:40 p.m.
UV Index Today
3
6
Owensboro
77/51
Paducah
Cadiz
76/50
76/53
Mayfield
76/51
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
0
86°
56°
Carbondale
73/48
24 hrs ending 6 p.m. yest. 0.26”
Month to date
0.41”
Normal month to date
2.29”
Year to date
40.84”
Last year to date
37.68”
Normal year to date
34.77”
Last
Oct 4
85°
55°
6
3
8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High;
8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme
Regional Forecast
Kentucky: Mostly cloudy and not as warm
today; partly sunny and pleasant in the
north.
Illinois: Partly sunny and beautiful today.
Clear tonight. Nice tomorrow with plenty
of sun.
Blytheville
78/55
Shown is
today’s
weather.
Temperatures
are today’s
highs and
tonight’s
lows.
the east. Clear tonight, but partly cloudy in
the east.
Arkansas: Not as warm today with a thunderstorm in spots, except dry in the east.
Tennessee: Mostly cloudy today. Not as
warm; a brief shower or two in the east.
74/50/pc
78/52/c
76/60/sh
74/49/pc
73/48/pc
75/56/c
84/64/c
77/51/c
74/52/pc
77/50/pc
74/62/t
76/53/c
73/50/pc
73/56/c
78/53/c
Nashville
80/57
Pulaski
81/56
Jackson
78/53
Today Mon.
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Belleville, IL
Bowling Gn., KY
Bristol, TN
C. Girardeau, MO
Carbondale, IL
Charleston, WV
Chattanooga, TN
Clarksville, TN
Columbia, MO
Evansville, IN
Ft. Smith, AR
Hopkinsville, KY
Indianapolis, IN
Jackson, KY
Jackson, TN
Clarksville
77/51
Union City
76/52
Memphis
82/62
City
Indiana: Partly sunny today; pleasant in the
south and west. Partly cloudy tonight.
Missouri: Partly sunny today; pleasant in
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation.
Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Around the Region
Temperature
First
Full
Sept 21 Sept 27
Thursday
Pleasant with plenty Warm with plenty of Warm with plenty of
of sunshine
sunshine
sunshine
Almanac
Paducah through 6 p.m. yesterday
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low
be playing off the ladies’
tees. Maybe that’s why
his drives at both Nos.
13 and 15 came as such
shocks.
Day
had
barely
launched his tee shot at
13 when he turned away
in disgust, then headed
back to his golf bag for
another ball — even as
his first one finally came
to rest in the front yard
of a home across the
road from the course.
“Just a poor swing ...
I’ve fought with that hole
in the past,” said Day,
who quickly gathered
himself and crushed his
second drive there, then
stuck a short iron from
147 yards out to within 5
feet of the pin and made
that for a hard-earned
bogey.
At the 15th, he found
plenty of trouble on the
other side of the fairway,
blocking his tee shot into
the knee-high rough
above a fairway bunker.
He hacked a wedge out
DAVIDSON, N.C. —
Argentina’s
Emiliano
Grillo shot a 4-under 68
for a share of the thirdround lead with Eric
Axley in the Web.com
Tour Finals’ Small Business Connection Championship.
Axley had a 70 to
match Grillo at 14-under
202 at River Run.
The tournament is
second in the four-event
series features the top 75
players from the Web.
com Tour money list,
Nos. 126-200 in the PGA
Tour’s FedEx Cup standings and non-members of the tour such
as Grillo who earned
enough money to have
placed in the top 200
had they been eligible to
receive points. The top
25 players on Web.com
regular-season money
list earned PGA Tour
cards. They are competing against each other
for tour priority, with
regular-season
earnings counting. The other
players are fighting for
another 25 cards based
on series earnings.
Around the Nation
84°
52°
Turning sunny and
beautiful
Small Business
Connection
Championship
77/51/s
79/49/pc
75/57/sh
79/50/s
76/49/s
69/56/pc
83/60/pc
80/50/pc
78/57/s
79/50/s
83/65/t
79/52/pc
75/51/s
75/54/pc
81/52/pc
City
Today Mon.
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Joplin, MO
Kansas City, MO
Knoxville, TN
Lexington, KY
Little Rock, AR
London, KY
Louisville, KY
Memphis, TN
Nashville, TN
Owensboro, KY
Peoria, IL
St. Louis, MO
Springfield, IL
Springfield, MO
Terre Haute, IN
74/59/pc
75/56/s
80/63/c
75/50/c
80/60/c
76/56/c
77/54/pc
82/62/c
80/57/c
77/51/pc
75/51/pc
76/55/pc
75/48/pc
73/57/pc
74/44/pc
78/64/s
80/63/s
79/59/c
77/49/pc
84/62/pc
77/51/pc
78/53/pc
83/61/s
82/54/pc
79/51/pc
77/54/s
79/59/s
78/52/s
78/61/s
76/44/s
National Summary: Cooler air will push into the Northeast today
with spotty showers from southeastern New England to the southern Appalachians. A storm will swirl offshore of the Carolinas.
Much of the area from the Great Lakes to California can expect a
sunny day. Showers and storms are in the offing for the southern
Plains. Rain will push into Washington state.
Today
City
Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque 87/61/s
Atlanta
87/67/pc
Baltimore
77/55/s
Billings
80/53/s
Boise
82/54/s
Boston
74/55/s
Charleston, SC 91/70/s
Charleston, WV 75/56/c
Chicago
70/50/pc
Cincinnati
74/50/pc
Cleveland
68/50/pc
Dallas
90/73/t
Denver
84/51/s
Des Moines
73/54/s
Detroit
70/53/s
El Paso
81/65/t
Fairbanks
45/31/pc
Honolulu
87/77/sh
Houston
97/71/pc
Indianapolis
73/50/pc
Jacksonville
91/68/s
Las Vegas
98/75/s
Paducah
Owensboro
Through 7 a.m. yesterday (in feet)
Flood
24-hr Mississippi River
stage
39
38
Stage Change
15.23
10.90
+0.15
-0.20
24-hr
Full
Pool Elevation Change
Smithland Dam 40 11.94
Lake Barkley
359 355.54
Kentucky Lake 359 355.70
-0.04
-0.11
+0.10
Flood
stage Stage
Cairo
87/63/pc
83/65/c
71/57/sh
76/49/pc
80/55/s
67/56/pc
87/68/c
69/56/pc
71/51/s
75/50/pc
71/52/pc
95/74/s
88/54/s
79/59/s
73/52/s
85/69/c
42/29/c
88/78/pc
92/71/s
75/51/s
88/70/s
96/74/pc
Today
City
Hi/Lo/W
Little Rock
80/60/c
Los Angeles
95/73/s
Miami
90/77/t
Milwaukee
70/51/pc
Minneapolis
71/56/pc
New Orleans 93/76/s
New York City 79/58/s
Oklahoma City 77/63/t
Omaha
75/57/s
Orlando
91/72/pc
Philadelphia 79/59/s
Phoenix
101/80/s
Pittsburgh
73/51/pc
Portland, OR 78/54/pc
Salt Lake City 80/57/s
San Antonio
94/73/pc
San Diego
88/74/s
San Francisco 86/59/s
San Jose
95/62/s
Seattle
68/50/r
Tucson
92/73/pc
Wash., DC
78/61/s
Mon.
Hi/Lo/W
84/62/pc
86/69/c
89/75/pc
70/51/s
77/61/s
88/73/pc
75/60/pc
89/66/pc
81/64/s
90/72/s
75/60/c
89/75/c
71/55/pc
72/48/s
85/59/s
95/72/s
84/74/c
81/57/pc
89/59/pc
66/47/pc
86/72/c
72/61/sh
Around the World
Lakes and Rivers
Ohio River
Mon.
Hi/Lo/W
40
16.15
24-hr
Change
-1.00
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,
r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Athens
Beijing
Berlin
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Hong Kong
Jerusalem
London
Manila
Mexico City
85/73/s
85/60/s
61/47/pc
65/58/pc
95/74/s
89/80/c
88/66/s
67/51/pc
91/78/t
74/55/t
80/66/t
86/64/pc
61/50/pc
63/58/pc
94/78/s
87/80/c
80/63/t
61/48/sh
89/77/pc
73/55/t
Moscow
Paris
Rome
Seoul
Sydney
Tokyo
Warsaw
Zurich
66/55/pc
64/46/pc
78/61/pc
80/59/pc
67/54/pc
77/66/pc
67/47/c
63/43/c
73/54/pc
66/51/s
80/58/pc
81/59/s
74/55/s
75/65/pc
60/45/pc
65/45/pc
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