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WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 2010

BASEBALL

NATIONALS 6, BRAVES 3

Atlanta

McLouth cf Prado 2b

C.Jones 3b McCann c Glaus 1b

Heyward rf

Me.Cabrera lf Infante ss

Kawakami p Conrad ph

O’Flaherty p Venters p Hinske ph J.Chavez p

Totals

Washington

Morgan cf

C.Guzman 2b

A.Kennedy 2b-1b Zimmerman 3b A.Dunn 1b Taveras pr Batista p

W.Harris rf

Willingham lf Clippard p

Alb.Gonzalez ph-2b

I.Rodriguez c Bernadina rf-lf Desmond ss

L.Hernandez p S.Burnett p Maxwell rf Capps p

Totals

Atlanta Washington

BASKETBALL

AB R H BI BB SO AVG

4 1 1 0 1 2 .176 5 0 0 0 0 0 .337 4 1 2 0 1 1 .222 4 0 2 1 1 1 .257 4 0 0 1 0 0 .226 2 1 2 1 2 0 .289 4 0 0 0 0 1 .202 4 0 0 0 0 0 .304 2 0 1 0 0 0 .143 0 0 0 0 1 0 .200 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- 0000 0 0 --- 1 0 0 0 0 0 .286 0000 0 0 ---

34 3 8 3 6 5 — AB R H BI BB SO AVG

4 0 1 0 0 0 .273 4 0 2 1 0 0 .281 0 0 0 0 0 0 .214 4 0 0 0 0 1 .345 3 1 1 1 1 0 .236 0 1 0 0 0 0 .143 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .175 3 1 1 1 0 0 .265 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.00 0 0 0 0 0 0 .290

4 1 2 0 0 0 .406 4 0 2 1 0 0 .200 4 1 2 2 0 1 .260 1 0 0 0 0 0 .083 0 0 0 0 0 0 --- 1 1 0 0 1 1 .167 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000

32 6 11 6 2 3 —

100 100 001 — 3 8 0 020 011 11x — 6 11 2

E: Bernadina (1), Desmond (4). LOB: Atlanta 11, Washington 6. 2B: McLouth (3), C.Jones (5). HR: Heyward (8), off L.Hernandez; Wil- lingham (4), off Kawakami; Desmond (2), off Kawakami; A.Dunn (5), off O’Flaherty. RBI: McCann (9), Glaus (14), Heyward (24), C.Guzman (9), A.Dunn (11), Willingham (14), Bernadina (1), Desmond 2 (13). SB: Conrad (1). CS: C.Guzman (1). S: Alb.Gonzalez, L.Her- nandez. SF: Glaus.

Atlanta

Kawakami (L, 0-5)

O’Flaherty Venters J.Chavez

S.Burnett Clippard Batista

IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

5 7 3 3 0 1 79 5.47

1 1 1 1 0 0 14 1.69 1 1 1 1 1 0 13 1.86 1 2 1 1 1 2 30 5.11

Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

L.Hernandez (W, 4-1)

5B 5 2 1 5 1 123 0.99 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 2.84

1C 1 0 0 0 2 23 0.46 B 1 1 1 1 0 19 6.11

Capps (S, 11) C 0 0 0 0 0 4 0.63

Inherited runners-scored: S.Burnett 1-0, Clip- pard 1-0, Capps 1-0. IBB: off L.Hernandez (Heyward). WP: Batista. T: 3:06. A: 17,098 (41,546).

HOW THEY SCORED

Braves first: McLouth doubled. Prado safe at

first on Bernadina’s error, McLouth to third. C.Jones struck out. McCann walked, Prado to second. Glaus hit a sacrifice fly, McLouth scored, Prado to third. Heyward walked, McCann to second. Me.Cabrera grounded out.

Braves, 1-0.

Nationals second: Dunn flied out. Willing- ham homered to left. I.Rodriguez singled. Berna-

dina singled, I.Rodriguez to third. Desmond singled, I.Rodriguez scored, Bernadina to second. L.Her- nandez sacrificed, Bernadina to third, Desmond to second. Morgan grounded out.

Nationals, 2-1. Braves fourth: Heyward homered to cen-

ter. Me.Cabrera flied out. Infante grounded out. Ka- wakami singled. McLouth walked, Kawakami to second. Prado grounded into fielder’s choice, McLouth out.

Tied, 2-2.

Nationals fifth: Desmond homered to cen-

ter. L.Hernandez flied out. Morgan grounded out. Guzman singled. Zimmerman grounded out.

Nationals, 3-2. Nationals sixth: O’Flaherty pitching. Dunn homered to right. Willingham grounded out.

I.Rodriguez grounded out. Bernadina grounded out.

Nationals, 4-2.

Nationals seventh: Venters pitching. Desmond flied out. Maxwell walked. Morgan grounded out, Maxwell to second. Guzman singled, Maxwell scored. Zimmerman grounded into fielder’s choice, Guzman out.

Nationals, 5-2.

Nationals eighth: J.Chavez pitching. Dunn

walked. Alb.Gonzalez pinch-hitting for Clippard. Taveras pinch-running for Dunn. Alb.Gonzalez sacri- ficed, Taveras to second. I.Rodriguez singled, Tav- eras to third. Bernadina infield single, Taveras scored, I.Rodriguez to second. Desmond struck out. Maxwell struck out.

Nationals, 6-2.

Braves ninth: A.Kennedy in as first baseman.

Alb.Gonzalez in as second baseman. Batista pitch- ing. Prado flied out. C.Jones walked. On Batista’s wild pitch, C.Jones to second. McCann singled, C.Jones scored. W.Harris in as right fielder. Capps pitching. Glaus hit into a double play, McCann out.

Final Score: Nationals, 6-3.

NBA Playoff Leaders

Entering Tuesday’s Games

SCORING AVERAGE

Player,Team .................... G FG FT Pts. Avg.

Wade, MIA ........................ 5 62 27 166 33.2 James, CLE ....................... 7 74 54 218 31.1 Anthony, DEN .................. 6 64 50 184 30.7 Rose, CHI .......................... 5 57 18 134 26.8 Nowitzki, DAL .................. 6 58 40 160 26.7 Williams, UTA .................. 7 50 64 179 25.6 Durant, OKC ..................... 6 43 54 150 25.0 Bryant, L.A.L. ................... 7 61 38 172 24.6 Richardson, PHX ............. 7 59 25 168 24.0 Nelson, ORL ...................... 4 30 23 95 23.8 Boozer, UTA ..................... 7 69 15 153 21.9

SOCCER

Major League Soccer

Eastern Conference

W L T Pts GF GA

New York .................... 5 1 0 15 8 4 Columbus ................... 2 0 2 8 6 3 Chicago ....................... 2 2 2 8 8 6 New England .............. 2 3 1 7 8 7 Kansas City ................ 2 2 1 7 5 4 Toronto FC .................. 2 4 0 6 7 12 Philadelphia ............... 1 4 0 3 6 11 D.C. United .................. 0 5 0 0 2 13

Western Conference W L T Pts GF GA

TONI L. SANDYS/THE WASHINGTON POST

Nationals shortstop Ian Desmond high-fives Roger Bernadina in the second inning.

Nationals get the best of the Braves

nationals from D1

teams yet to suffer a three-game losing streak this season. The other five — the Twins, Yankees, Padres, Cardinals and Rays — own baseball’s five best records. The Nationals have not reached that level of the league’s elite, but they nearly crept closer Tuesday night. If the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies had not pulled off dramatic, last-inning wins, the Nationals would have been tied for first place in the National League East.

On Tuesday, the Nationals

won even thought Hernández fi- nally pitched like a 35-year-old with a mid-80s fastball. Hernán- dez carried into the game an ab- surd 0.87 ERA. He still mystified another offense with his darting sinkers and glacial curveballs, allowing one earned run over

51

⁄3

with two outs. Troy Glaus rock- eted a ball to the right-center gap, a sure run. Roger Bernadi- na, whose error had enabled the game’s first run, never conced- ed. He bolted for the gap and dove, his body horizontal when the ball nestled into his glove. As he ran off the field smiling, Bernadina tossed the ball to a bullpen attendant for safekeep- ing. Ian Desmond, the rookie

innings. But the Braves made Hernán- dez work from the start, sending seven batters to the plate in the first inning. Superstar rookie Ja- son Heyward, 15 years Hernán- dez’s junior, lambasted a 3-2 sinker in the fourth that trav- eled some 430 feet on a line, nearly reaching the back wall beyond the center field fence. Hernández received a few crucial breaks. In the third in- ning, with the game tied at one, Chipper Jones stood on second

Nationals Journal

6voices.washingtonpost.com/nationalsjournal

Lannan will

miss next start

John Lannan, the

Washington Nationals’ No. 1 starting pitcher, will miss his next start because of discomfort in his left elbow. Lannan said in the dugout

before Washington’s game against visiting Atlanta on Tuesday night that he began feeling pain during his fourth start of the season April 21 against Colorado. Lannan worked six innings in that game, giving up four runs and 11 hits. He also threw a season-high 107 pitches. Lannan has struggled this season, including walking three straight batters against the Chicago Cubs on April 26 and hitting the No. 8 batter during the third inning of his most recent outing against Florida on Sunday. “Last two starts, it’s been there, you know, and I battled through it,” Lannan said of the pain. “Last start [against the Marlins], I just knew something was wrong. I didn’t have the normal stuff. I didn’t have the [movement] that I usually have to get ground balls, and I said something, so now we’re taking the next step.” Lannan is 1-2 with a 6.34 innings, he has

ERA. In 322⁄3

allowed 45 hits and walked 18. “I think he can throw his fastball anytime he wants it, but I think his other pitches, he just feels a little something in there that he doesn’t release the ball with the same confidence that he does his fastball,” Manager Jim Riggleman said during his pregame media session. “He’s just not sharp.” It’s unclear at this point who will take Lannan’s place.

Marquis throwing

Jason Marquis, on the disabled list with bone chips in his right elbow, began throwing this past weekend

NATIONALS ON DECK

VS. ATLANTA

Tuesday: late game Wednesday, 7:05 (MASN) Thursday, 7:05 (MASN)

VS. FLORIDA

Friday, 7:05 (MASN) Saturday, 1:05 (MASN) Sunday, 1:35 (MASN, WDCW)

AT N.Y. METS

Monday, 7:10 (MASN) May 11, 7:10 (MASN) May 12, 1:10 (MASN)

RADIO: WFED (820 AM, 1500 AM)

and plans to throw off the mound Wednesday, a sign he may try to return far sooner than the six weeks originally laid out by the Nationals. Marquis said he has been throwing at full strength, figuring the sooner he discovers whether his elbow is sound or requires surgery, the better. . . . Catcher Jesús Flores and pitchers Ross Detwiler and Chien-Mien Wang are all progressing and are a few weeks away from heading out on rehab assignments, General Manager Mike Rizzo said. Detwiler is the furthest along because his injury (hip surgery) did not involve his arm. Wang is throwing off a mound and in a few days will throw against live hitters in batting practice. Rizzo also said Jordan Zimmermann is “well ahead of schedule” in his recovery from elbow ligament replacement surgery. . . .

Colton Willems, the 22nd

overall pick in the 2006 draft, informed the Nationals he is retiring. Willems had stalled this year at Class A Hagerstown, where he compiled a 9.49 ERA in five games as a reliever.

— Gene Wang and Adam Kilgore

shortstop who keeps on strengthening his hammerlock on the starting job, provided most of the Nationals’ offense. He twice drove in a run that put the Nationals ahead. In the third, after Josh Willingham’s solo home run, Desmond sin- gled home Iván Rodríguez. On Braves starter Kenshin Kawaka- mi’s first pitch of the fifth in- ning, Desmond roped a home run to left-center field, answer- ing Heyward’s blast and giving the Nats a 3-2 lead. With a lead, the Nationals could afford to leave Hernández — on deck during Desmond’s at- bat — in the game despite hav- ing thrown 113 pitches. He flew out, then retired the first out of the sixth inning. Sean Burnett took over after Hernández walked the second batter, serv- ing as the bridge to Tyler Clip- pard. The Nationals handed a Clip- pard a two-run lead thanks to

Burnett’s sold work and Adam Dunn’s mammoth home run in the sixth, a blast that landed six rows deep in the second deck in right-center field. The Nation- als, having played long ball all night, added their sixth run in the eighth on speed. Willy Taveras, pinch-running for Dunn, stood on third, Rodrí- guez stood on first and Bernadi- na stood in the batter’s box. Ber- nadina poked a weak grounder to the right side of the infield. Glaus scooped and looked home — Taveras had screamed too far down the line to throw out at home. Glaus looked to second — Rodríguez was sliding in. He looked at first and made a feeble flip to the pitcher covering — Bernadina beat the throw. The Nationals had extended their lead to four, making pos- sible a night off for closer Matt Capps. Instead, Miguel Batista surrendered a run and Riggle- man summoned Capps. Four pitches and one double play lat- er, Capps had sealed his 11th save in 11 tries. During the late inning, only a technical glitch marred the vic- tory. The enormous video board twice went black, and the public address announcer had to de- clare the count after each pitch. It had been fixed by the end of the night. This year, it’s harder to keep the Nationals down.

kilgorea@washpost.com

Strasburg moves up to Class AAA Syracuse

strasburg from D1

uled bullpen side session Tues- day morning at Metro Bank Park in Harrisburg, Pa., before the Senators’ 10:30 a.m. game against the Bowie BaySox. After the session, Strasburg was cool- ing down in the Senators’ club- house when he was summoned to the manager’s office. There, Manager Randy Knorr

and Nationals farm director Doug Harris delivered the hardly shocking news. The Nationals had long planned for Strasburg to make five starts in Harrisburg before moving up to Syracuse, and he mostly dominated during those five starts, going 3-1 with a 1.64 ERA. “With all the speculation, I think he kind of knew what was up” when he was called into the office, Knorr said. “He was excit- ed to go, just like all the others. And he was ready to move. There was nothing else for him to [ac- complish] here. I think he want- ed the next challenge.” In 22 innings for the Senators,

Strasburg struck out 27 batters and walked only six. His stint in Harrisburg was highlighted by back-to-back wins over the Read- ing Phillies in which he allowed just one hit — a flare into shallow center field — in 10 overpower- ing innings. The only reason his ERA isn’t lower is because he al- lowed three earned runs, mostly on weak grounders and bloops, in his final Harrisburg start, Sun- day against the Altoona Curve. “He’s done everything that he can do at the Double A level,” Rizzo said. “Now it’s time for him to progress to more veteran hit- ters with a little bit more sense of the strike zone and to get that type of experience at that level.” While Strasburg frequently appeared to simply outclass op- posing hitters in Harrisburg — failing to give up a single hit against his curve ball, for exam- ple — in Class AAA he will face older hitters. “He’ll be fine [in Class AAA].

He’ll pitch the same,” Knorr said. “He has very good stuff, and he’s

learning a lot about himself. He’ll see what [the hitters] are trying to do against him. He picks it up pretty fast.” The Nationals, Rizzo said, want to see Strasburg continue to improve in the areas they laid out when he broke spring train- ing — fielding his position, con- trolling base runners and grow- ing comfortable in the batter’s box.

While the Harrisburg fran- chise reaped the benefits of Strasburg’s presence — gaining about 2,100 extra fans over its season average on days he pitched — it came with unwant- ed side effects, such as a media pack that peaked at around 75 members for Strasburg’s debut on April 11. “Without all the attention

that’s brought, I think the guys are going to relax a little bit,” Knorr said. “I think offensively, especially, we’re going to be a lit- tle better. A lot of the guys have been pressing.” Now, the circus shifts four hours north up Interstate 81 to upstate New York, where the Chiefs are averaging only 3,915 fans at 11,000-seat Alliance Bank Stadium. By early Tuesday after- noon, the Chiefs’ official Web site featured a large photo of Stras- burg framed by a simple declara- tion: “Stephen Strasburg — Fri- day, May 7, 7:00 p.m.” The people of Syracuse may not be the only ones eager for his arrival. One Nationals player was asked Tuesday who he’d choose to replace John Lannan, who will miss his next start with elbow pain. The player answered, sim- ply: “Strasburg.” “He’s an electric guy,” short-

stop Ian Desmond said. “He brings energy nobody else has.” One phase of Strasburg’s de- velopment complete, the Nation- als and their followers can only begin counting down the days until the final step begins. Said Nationals Manager Jim

Riggleman: “It’ll happen soon enough.”

sheinind@washpost.com kilgorea@washpost.com

Los Angeles ................ 5 0 1 16 10 2 Houston ....................... 3 2 1 10 9 6 Colorado ..................... 3 2 1 10 8 6 Seattle ......................... 2 2 3 9 8 8 San Jose ...................... 3 2 0 9 7 7 Real Salt Lake ............ 2 3 1 7 9 8 Chivas USA ................. 2 3 1 7 6 9 Dallas ........................... 0 1 4 4 7 8

Wednesday’s Games

Kansas City at D.C. United ........................................ 7 Los Angeles at Colorado ............................................2 Chivas USA at New England................................ 7:30 Dallas at Houston........................................................ 9

Saturday’s Games

D.C. United at Dallas................................................... 9 Los Angeles at Seattle FC.......................................... 4 Chicago at Toronto FC............................................... 4 New England at Columbus........................................ 7 Philadelphia at Real Salt Lake ................................. 9 New York at San Jose................................................10 Houston at Chivas USA.......................................10:30

Women’s Professional Soccer

W L T Pts GF GA

FC Gold Pride ................ 3 1 0 9 6 4 Philadelphia .................. 2 0 2 8 5 2 Washington................... 2 2 0 6 8 7 Sky Blue FC.................... 2 2 0 6 3 4 Saint Louis..................... 1 1 2 5 5 5 Boston ............................ 1 1 2 5 4 5 Chicago .......................... 1 2 1 4 3 3 Atlanta............................ 0 3 1 1 2 6

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.

Saturday’s Games

Boston at Washington............................................... 7 Philadelphia at Athletica..................................... 8:10 Chicago at FC Gold Pride ........................................ 10

TENNIS

WTA Tour Internazionali BNL d’Italia

At Foro Italico; In Rome

Purse: $2 mil. (Premier); Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles — Second Round

Venus Williams (4), USA, def. Patty Schnyder, Switzerland, 6-2, 6-2; Jelena Jankovic (7), Serbia, def. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, USA, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1; Ag- nieszka Radwanska (8), Poland, def. Roberta Vin- ci, Italy, 6-1, 6-0; Shahar Peer (16), Israel, def. Po- lona Hercog, Slovenia, 2-6, 7-5, 6-3; Nadia Petrova (14), Russia, def. Katarina Srebotnik, Slovenia, 6-4, 6-4; Alexandra Dulgheru, Romania, def. Din- ara Safina (3), Russia, 6-4, 6-7 (7-5), 6-1; Maria Jo- se Martinez Sanchez, Spain, def. Francesca Schia- vone (13), Italy, 6-2, 6-2; Andrea Petkovic, Ger- many, def. Petra Kvitova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4; Yanina Wickmayer (11), Belgium, def. Aravane Rezai, France, 6-3, 6-7 (7-2), 7-5; Serena Williams (1), USA, def. Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland, 7-6 (2), 6-1; Elena Dementieva (6), Russia, def. Yaros- lava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, 6-4, 7-5; Lucie Safaro- va, Czech Republic, def. Flavia Pennetta (12), Ita- ly, 6-1, 6-2; Dominika Cibulkova, Slovakia, def. Al- berta Brianti, Italy, 6-3, 6-4; Ana Ivanovic, Serbia, def. Victoria Azarenka (9), Belarus, 6-4, 6-4; Caro- line Wozniacki (2), Denmark, def. Maria Elena Ca- merin, Italy, 6-1, 6-0.

Estoril Open

At Estadio Nacional; In Oeiras, Portugal Purse: Men, $597,000 (WT250) Purse: Women, $220,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Men — Singles—First Round

Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain, def. Nicolas La- pentti, Ecuador, 6-3, 3-1 (ret); Alberto Martin, Spain, def. Frederico Del Bonis, Argentina, 7-6 (8-6), 6-1; Pablo Cuevas (8), Uruguay, def. Pablo Andujar, Spain, 1-6, 7-5, 6-0; Bjorn Phau, Germany, def. Marc Lopez, Spain, 6-4, 4-6, 6-1; Rui Machado, Portugal, def. Nicolas Massu, Chile, 6-2, 6-4; Guil- lermo Garcia-Lopez (5), Spain, def. Xavier Malisse, Belgium, 6-2, 7-6 (9-7); Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, def. Steve Darcis, Belgium, 6-4, retired; Frederico Gil, Portugal, def. Florian Mayer (6), Germany, 6-2, 6-7 (7-5), 6-3.

Women— Singles—First Round

Kristina Barrois, Germany, def. Jill Craybas, USA, 6-0, 6-2; Ekaterina Makarova, Russia, def. Ni- na Bratchikova, Russia, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2; Stefanie Voe- gele, Switzerland, def. Melinda Czink (5), Hunga- ry, 6-4, 6-3; Anabel Medina Garrigues (4), Spain, def. Magali de Lattre, Portugal, 6-0, 6-0; Michelle Larcher de Brito, Portugal, def. Aliza Cornet, France, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3; Jarmila Groth, Australia, def. Magdalena Rybarikova (6), Slovakia, 6-4, 6-3; Ar- antxa Rus, Netherlands, def. Maria Joao Koehler, Portugal, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5; Sorana Cirstea (2), Roma- nia, def. Ioana Olaru, Romania, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1; Anas- tasia Rodionova, Australia, def. Yvonne Meusbur- ger, Austria, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1; Arantxa Parra Santonja, Spain, def. Dia Evtimova, Bulgaria, 2-6, 6-2, 6-4.

ATP World Tour Serbian Open

At SRPC Milan Gale Muskatirovic In Belgrade, Serbia

Purse: $564,000 (WT250); Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles— First Round

Richard Gasquet, France, def. Olivier Rochus, Belgium, 6-0, 6-1; Josselin Ouanna, France, def. Flavio Cipolla, Italy, 6-3, 6-1; Filip Krajinovic, Ser- bia, def. Evgeny Donskoy, Russia, 5-7, 7-6 (7), 6-1; Fabio Foginni, Italy, def. Franco Skugor, Croatia, 6-3, 6-1; Alessio DiMauro, Italy, def. Marko Djo- kovic, Serbia, 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-0; Andrea Seppi (8), Italy, def. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 2-6, 6-1, 6-4; Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, def. Janko Tip- sarevic (7), Serbia, 2-6, 6-4, 7-6 (7-2).

ATP World Tour BMW Open

At MTTC Iphitos; In Munich

Purse: $528,500 (WT250); Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles— First Round

Simon Greul, Germany, def. Nicolas Kiefer, Ger- many, 7-5, 6-2; Marcos Baghdatis (5), Cyprus, def. Peter Gojowczyk, Germany, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2; Jan Ha- jek, Czech Republic, def. Alexandre Sidorenko, France, 6-1, 6-2; Marco Chiudinelli, Switzerland, def. Thierry Ascione, France, 6-0, 6-4; Daniel Koel- lerer, Austria, def, Mario Ancic, Croatia, 7-6 (9-7), 7-5; Pera Riba, Spain, def. Lukas Lacko, Slovakia, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2.

LOCAL GOLF

Arfax Team Matches Division 1

Montclair 27 1 ⁄2 , Evergreen 26 1

River Bend 30, Belle Haven 24 Springfield 30, Fort Belvoir 24

Division 2

Belmont 30, Washington 24 Fort Belvoir 28, Westwood 26 CC of Fairfax 29 1

⁄2 Chevy Chase 31 1 ⁄2 , Heritage Hunt 24 1 ⁄2

Montgomery-Prince George’s

Women’s Golf Assocation Matches Division I

, Montgomery Village 22 1 Manor 27, Norbeck 27

Congressional 32, Bretton Woods 22

Division III

Manor 27, Bretton Woods 27 Lakewood 31 1

⁄2

Montgomery 28 1 TPC Potomac 27 1

⁄2

, Norbeck 22 1 ⁄2

⁄2 , Kenwood 25 1 ⁄2 , Leisure World 26 1 ⁄2

Falls Church — In the men’s nine hole senior event, Joe Leniart won flight A with net 29. Kenwood — Earl Gayler and Robert Wallace won the senior member-member/member guest. Maryland — For the Terps Tournament, the low gross winner was Linda Hoffman with a 91, the low net winner was Yung Kim with a 69. Montgomery Village — In the 18 hole low net event, Claudia Craig won the first flight with 72. Mount Vernon — In the LGA 18 Ladies Day, the low net winner was Cindy Langan with a 39, the low gross winner was Julie Rakes with a 50. Norbeck — In the ladies opening day event, Fiona Williams, Lois Rubin, Estelle Schwalb and Betty VanEtten won low gross while Linda Kelly, Diane Michnick, Diane Schweber and Nancy King won low net.

RESULTS

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Ferrum 7, Mary Washington 3 Liberty 16, George Mason 7 Maryland 10, Towson 5 Georgetown 12, UMBC 5 Davidson 14, Virginia Tech 10 Virginia 10, VCU 5

⁄2

⁄2

FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE

Player,Team ................................ FG FGA Pct.

Thomas, CHA ............................... 15 24 .625 Millsap, UTA ................................. 49 85 .576 Boozer, UTA ................................. 69 120 .575 Bynum, L.A.L. ............................... 35 62 .565 Wade, MIA .................................... 62 110 .564 Horford, ATL ................................ 47 84 .560

BLOCKS PER GAME

Player,Team .................................. G Blk. Avg.

Howard, ORL .................................. 4 20 5.00 Jos. Smith, ATL .............................. 7 17 2.43 James, CLE ..................................... 7 16 2.29 Horford, ATL .................................. 7 15 2.14

TRANSACTIONS

Major League Baseball

Kansas City Royals—Released RHP Roman Colon. Florida Marlins—Reinstated RHP Clay Hensley from the bereavement list. Optioned RHP Tim Wood to New Orleans (PCL). Announced OF John Raynor, selected by Pittsburgh in the Rule 5 draft, was returned to the team. Pittsburgh Pirates—Recalled 1B/OF Steve Pearce from Indianapolis (IL). Placed RHP Brendan Don- nelly on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 28.

Washington Nationals—Promoted RHP Stephen

Strasburg to Syracuse (IL).

NBA

Chicago Bulls—Fired coach Vinny Del Negro.

Golden State Warriors—Announced G Kelenna

Azubuike exercised the player option on his con- tract for the 2010-11 season. Oklahoma City Thunder—Exercised a team option on coach Scott Brooks, extending his contract through 2012.

NFL

Buffalo Bills—Signed G Cordaro Howard. Philadelphia Eagles—Signed G Greg Isdaner to a three-year contract. San Francisco 49ers—Agreed to terms with LB Patrick Willis on a five-year contract extension through the 2016 season.

Canadian Football League

Calgary Stampeders—Signed WR Ronald Keels, WR Landan Talley and WR Jonathan Lowe.

MLS

MLS—suspended Chivas USA MF Michael Lahoud for two games and fined him $500 for a reckless tackle on Chicago’s Justin Mapp during a May 1 game. Suspended DC United coach Curt Onalfo two games and fined him $1,000 for leaving his technical area and for improper behavior after he was ejected during an April 28 U.S. Open Cup game against FC Dallas.

Women’s Professional Soccer

Sky Blue FC—Acquired D India Trotter and a 2011 first-round draft pick from Saint Louis Athletica for D Anita Asante and the rights to F Nikki Wash- ington.

Colleges

Georgia Tech—Named Jim Lewis women’s assis- tant basketball coach. Illinois State—Named Sean Strauch director of compliance.

North Carolina State—Announced the resignation of athletic director Lee Fowler, down effective June 30.

Randoplh-Macon—Named Josh Merkel men’s as- sistant basketball coach. Seton Hall—Named Jenny Palmateer women’s as- sistant basketball coach and David Kim director of women’s basketball operations.

HIGH SCHOOLS

BASEBALL DISTRICT

Wilson 26, Coolidge 1 Cardozo 13, Dunbar 1

MARYLAND

Blair 4, Whitman 1

Churchill 6, Bethesda-Chevy Chase 3 Clarksburg 5, Wheaton 2 Gaithersburg 12, Damascus 2 (6) Kennedy 18, Watkins Mill 8 (5) Largo 18, Central 17

Magruder 10, Richard Montgomery 3 Northwest 4, Quince Orchard 3 Sherwood 5, Blake 4 (9) Wootton 5, Northwood 0 Paint Branch 4, Walter Johnson 1

VIRGINIA

Annandale 10, W.T. Woodson 9 Briar Woods 6, Dominion 5 Chantilly 9, Oakton 2

George Mason 8, Clarke County 0 Lake Braddock 9, West Potomac 0 Marshall 8, Langley 6 McLean 12, Madison 2 (5) Potomac Falls 5, Broad Run 2 South County 11, T.C. Williams 0 (5) South Lakes 9, Jefferson 0 Stone Bridge 9, Fairfax 3 Washington-Lee 7, Yorktown 5 Westfield 9, Robinson 2

Woodbridge 19, Freedom-Woodbridge 1 (5)

PRIVATE

Georgetown Day 12, Potomac School 7 (7) Landon 4, Episcopal 2 Maret 13, Sidwell Friends 5 McNamara 8, Good Counsel 5 St. Albans 11, St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes 0 St. John’s 3, Ireton 1

St. Mary’s-Annapolis 12, Glenelg Country 3

BOYS’ GOLF

DeMatha 9, Ireton 0

Gonzaga 5.5, Paul VI Catholic 3.5

BOYS’ LACROSSE MARYLAND

Magruder 13, Northwood 1 Reservoir 16, Oakland Mills 3 Richard Montgomery 10, Blair 6

VIRGINIA

Stone Bridge 18, Jefferson 5

PRIVATE

Bullis 10, St. Albans 8 Notre Dame 11, The Heights 8 Sidwell Friends 15, St. Andrew’s 4

BOYS’ SOCCER VIRGINIA

Chancellor 2, Spotsylvania 1 (2OT) Dominion 5, Briar Woods 1 Forest Park 3, Gar-Field 0 George Mason 3, Clarke County 0 Heritage 2, Osbourn 1 Loudoun Valley 3, Battlefield 2 Stone Bridge 2, Chantilly 0 Stonewall Jackson 4, Liberty 0 Freedom-Woodbridge 2, Woodbridge 1 W.T. Woodson 3, Lee 2

BOYS’ TENNIS

Episcopal 8, George Mason 1 Jefferson 6, Langley 3

Lake Braddock 8, T.C. Williams 1 Madison 8, Marshall 1

Potomac School 7, Georgetown Day 0 Sidwell Friends 4, Maret 3 St. James 4, Flint Hill 3

St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes 4, St. Andrew’s 3 W.T. Woodson 9, Lee 0 Yorktown 8, Washington-Lee 1

GIRLS’ LACROSSE MARYLAND

Blair 10, Richard Montgomery 8 Glenelg 25, Wilde Lake 6

VIRGINIA

Oakton 15, Robinson 13 Osbourn Park 19, Hylton 3 Stone Bridge 17, Jefferson 5

PRIVATE

Bullis 11, Holy Child 7 Episcopal 9, Flint Hill 7 Foxcroft 15, Wakefield School 4 Georgetown Visitation 13, Stone Ridge 7 National Cathedral 12, Sidwell Friends 6

GIRLS’ SOCCER VIRGINIA

Hylton 0, Brentsville 0 Broad Run 2, Potomac Falls 0 Fauquier 7, Skyline 0 Hayfield 1, Falls Church 0 Osbourn 4, Heritage 3 Robinson 4, Herndon 1

GIRLS’ TENNIS

Jefferson 6, Langley 3 Marshall 7, Madison 2

SOFTBALL DISTRICT

School Without Walls 23, Eastern 7 (4)

MARYLAND

Blair 10, Whitman 0 (5) Blake 8, Sherwood 2 Broadneck 1, Arundel 0 Centennial 2, Mount Hebron 1 DuVal 14, Eleanor Roosevelt 12 Gaithersburg 3, Damascus 2 (8) Glenelg 6, Wilde Lake 0 Leonardtown 3, Great Mills 1 Paint Branch 3, Walter Johnson 2 Richard Montgomery 12, Magruder 0 (5) Wootton 17, Northwood 3 (5)

VIRGINIA

Battlefield 6, Loudoun Valley 0 Briar Woods 12, Dominion 2 (5) Broad Run 4, Potomac Falls 2 Hayfield 26, Wakefield 0 (5) Jefferson 7, South Lakes 1 (7) Loudoun County 1, Park View 0 Madison 4, McLean 2 Marshall 12, Langley 6

Mount Vernon 15, Falls Church 0 (6) Osbourn Park 18, Potomac (Va.) 0 Skyline 5, Fauquier 3

South County 15, T.C. Williams 0 (5) Stone Bridge 5, Fairfax 0 Stuart 11, Edison 7

W.T. Woodson 3, Annandale 1 Washington-Lee 4, Yorktown 0 West Potomac 3, Lake Braddock 1 West Springfield 7, Lee 5 Westfield 7, Robinson 5

PRIVATE

Episcopal 20, John Paul the Great 3 Good Counsel 1, St. Mary’s Ryken 0 (12) Ireton 10, Holy Cross 4 Maret 3, Stone Ridge 1 O’Connell 8, Paul VI Catholic 0 Potomac School 20, Georgetown Day 0 (5) St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes 8, National Cathedral 4

KLMNO

S

SCOREBOARD

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