This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 2010 BASEBALL Marquis is outdueled by Phillies’ Halladay nationals from D1


elbow in May, and the Nationals (52-70) were encouraged that pro- cedure would allow Marquis to right himself after a series of dreadful outings and validate his contract worth $15 million over two years. Perhaps the wait final- ly is over. The only run Marquis permit-


ted came in the third, when with two outs, he walked second base- manChaseUtley and right fielder JaysonWerth consecutively. That set the stage for Raul


Ibanez’s RBI double on a whis- tling shot down the first base line that Adam Dunn was unable to field after getting his glove on the ball.


Marquis got center fielder


ShaneVictorino to fly out to avoid additional damage. “I think he’s getting more con-


fident,” Manager Jim Riggleman said of Marquis. “He’s making progress, and I’m very pleased with what I sawout there.” Marquis (0-6) got no assis-


tance from his teammates, who went 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position when he was in the game. The Nationals’ best chance


came in the first, when leadoff hitter NyjerMorgan doubled and went to third on a balk. Shortstop Ian Desmond flied out to center for the first out, but Dunn and Ryan Zimmerman walked in back-to-back at-bats to load the bases for Roger Bernadina, bat- ting fifth because of a season-end- ing injury to regular No. 5 Josh Willingham. Halladay, however, induced


grounder to second that triggered a double play to end the threat. The Nationals put multiple


runners on base in the third and fourth innings, both times with one out, but Halladay simply grew more determined in those situations. In the third, he got Zimmer-


man and Bernadina to fly out after yielding two straight sin- gles, and in the fourth, Marquis flew out, and Morgan grounded to short with runners on first and second. In the seventh, Washington


again had runners on first and secondwithoneout, butHalladay escaped when Desmond was dou- bled up on a deep fly ball to left field off the bat of Zimmerman. Desmond was attempting to steal third, but Zimmerman got a fast- ball down the middle and swung. By the timeDesmondrealized the ball was caught, he already had slid into third base and was re- treating to second. Utley then tagged him out sliding back into the bag, leaving Desmond stand- ing in disbelief with his hands on his waist.


Desmond also was the final


batter Halladay (16-8) faced, de- parting after 116 pitches that in- cluded eight hits, three walks and five strikeouts. The bullpen made


MATT ROURKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Against the Phillies, JasonMarquis resembled the pitcher who won 15 games for Colorado last year.


PHILLIES1, NATIONALS0


WASHINGTON AB R H BI BB SO AVG Morgan cf .................5 0 1


Desmond ss..............5 0 3 A.Dunn 1b.................3 0 1 Zimmerman 3b.........3 0 1 Bernadina lf..............4 0 1 Morse rf....................4 0 0 I.Rodriguez c.............4 0 1 A.Kennedy 2b ...........4 0 2 Marquis p .................2 0 0 Mench ph..................1 0 0 Jo.Peralta p ..............0 0 0 Slaten p ....................0 0 0 W.Harris ph..............1 0 0


TOTALS PHILA.


36 0 10 MATT ROURKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS


WashingtonNationalsManager Jim Riggleman watches his team lose to RoyHalladay of Philadelphia, a Cy Young winner.


it stand, withRyanMadson work- ing an inning before handing the ball to closer Brad Lidge for his 17th save. “He’s one of the best, just like


he is every other day,” Zimmer- man said of Halladay. “We had our chances against him.We had


Nationals Journal 6Blogging at washingtonpost.com/nationalsjournal


Preliminaryplan inplaceforHarper WashingtonNationalsGeneral


ManagerMikeRizzo spoke Friday afternoonas theteamtookbatting practice at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, covering a wide range of topics, including Bryce Harper,whomthe clubsignedjust before Monday’s midnight dead- line. Harperisscheduledtobeintro-


duced to members of the media during the next homestand, but Rizzo did not indicate a specific day.Washington will play its next three games in Philadelphia, then will come home for seven straight atNationalsPark,beginningMon- day against theChicagoCubs. OnceHarperhascompletedhis


media obligations, he will fly di- rectlytoFlorida,wherehewill join Washington’s Rookie-level Gulf Coast League affiliate. The Na-


tionals plan forHarper to partici- pate in the instructional league in Floridaafter theminor leaguesea- son ends, and hemight play in the ArizonaFallLeague. “What we’ll do is we’ll prepare


himfor an instructional league in Florida,” Rizzo said of Harper. “He’ll do his work with the GCL team [while] not playing in the games. Contractually, he’s not go- ing to play in the games in the GCL.” Rizzo also discussed the status


of JoshWillingham,whowas sent to the 15-day disabled list with an injury to the meniscus in his left knee. Initial indications were the slugging left fielderwouldrequire surgery,butRizzowasn’tasdefini- tive onFriday. “Surgery hasn’t been sched-


uled,”Rizzo said. “I don’t think it’s a forgone conclusion that it’s sur- gery yet. He’s at home now in Alabama. He’s going to fly to D.C.


when we get home, going to see ourdoctors, andwe’re going tosee what coursewe’re going to take.” Meantime, the Nationals are


getting set towelcome back pitch- er Jordan Zimmermann in the comingweeks.Theplanfornowis for Zimmermann to make one more minor league start, then bring him to the majors, as he rehabs from Tommy John elbow surgery a year ago. “We’vebeentakinghimstartby


start,” Rizzo said. “If he throws well, we’d probably consider bringinghimback.Put it thisway: If there’s no need for another mi- nor leaguestart,developmentally- wise, or to get him ready to pitch up here, thenwewould bring him uphere.” In his most recent outing on


Sunday, Zimmermann yielded one run over five innings forClass AAASyracuse.


—GeneWang


a good approach. We hit some balls hard that obviously were caught, but that’s part of the game. We had our chances, but when we had our chance to get a big hit, he made pitches and got out of them.”


wangg@washpost.com


Rollins ss..................3 0 0 Polanco 3b ................3 0 0 Utley 2b ....................3 1 1 Werth rf....................3 0 1 Ibanez lf....................4 0 1 Victorino cf...............3 0 0 M.Sweeney 1b..........3 0 0 C.Ruiz c.....................3 0 1 Halladay p.................2 0 0 Do.Brown ph.............1 0 0 Madson p..................0 0 0 Lidge p ......................0 0 0


TOTALS 28 1 4


0 0 1 .262 0 0 1 .272 0 2 1 .266 0 1 0 .305 0 0 0 .267 0 0 1 .277 0 0 2 .272 0 0 0 .261 0 0 0 .111 0 0 1 .100 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 --- 0 0 0 .179


0 3 7 —


AB R H BI BB SO AVG 0 1 0 .246


0 1 0 .316 0 1 0 .276 0 1 0 .302 1 0 2 .265 0 0 0 .256 0 0 0 .250 0 0 0 .294 0 0 0 .139 0 0 1 .238 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 ---


WASHINGTON..... 000 000 000 — 0 10 PHILA. .................. 001 000 00X — 1 4


1 4 3 — 1


1


E: Desmond (28), Rollins (5). LOB: Washington 12, Philadelphia 7. 2B: Morgan (13), Desmond (21), A.Kennedy (12), Werth (41), Ibanez (24). RBI: Ibanez (60). SB: Rollins (15). CS: Werth (3).


DP: Philadelphia 2 (Utley, Rollins, M.Sweeney), (Ibanez, Utley).


WASHINGTON IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA


Marquis ...................5 4 1 1 4 1 94 11.3 Jo.Peralta ................2 0 0 0 0 1 31 2.53 Slaten......................1 0 0 0 0 1 15 2.90


PHILA. IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA


Halladay ..................7 8 0 0 3 5 116 2.16 Madson....................1 1 0 0 0 1 16 3.23 Lidge........................1 1 0 0 0 1 11 4.13


WP: Halladay (16-8); LP: Marquis (0-6); S: Lidge (17).


Balk: Halladay. T: 2:51. A: 45,093 (43,651).


HOWTHEY SCORED PHILLIES THIRD


Rollins grounded out to first baseman A.Dunn. Polanco grounded out to first baseman A.Dunn. Utley walked on a full count. Werth walked on a full count, Utley to second. Ibanez doubled to right, Utley scored, Werth to third. Victorino flied out to center fielder Morgan.


Final Score: Phillies, 1-0


WOMEN'SPROFESSIONAL SOCCER


W L


z-FC Gold Pride...........12 3 Philadelphia ...............10 6 Boston..........................8 6 Washington .................6 8 Sky Blue FC ..................6 9 Chicago.........................5 10 Atlanta.........................4 10


z- clinched playoff berth SATURDAY’S GAME


Atlanta at Boston, 5 SUNDAY’S GAMES


Philadelphia at Sky Blue FC, 4 FC Gold Pride at Chicago, 6


AUTORACING NASCAR


SPRINT CUP IRWIN TOOLS NIGHT RACE LINEUP After Friday’s qualifying, Saturday’s race At Bristol Motor Speedway; In Bristol, Tenn. Lap length: .533 miles; (Car number in parentheses)


NATIONALSONDECK


AT PHILLIES Saturday, 7:05 (MASN) Sunday , 1:35 (WDCW, Channel 50, MASN)


VS. CUBS Monday, 7:05 (MASN) Tuesday, 7:05 (MASN) Wednesday, 7:05 (MASN)


VS. CARDINALS Thursday, 7:05 (MASN) Friday, 7:05 (MASN) Aug. 28, 7:05 (MASN) Aug. 29, 1:35 (WDCW-50)


Radio: WFED (820 AM, 1500 AM) Rangers’ Wilson dominates Orioles for 2-0 victory BY JEFF ZREBIEC


baltimore — It was felt by Adam Jones, who angrily whippedhishelmetupthetunnel after he was robbed of an extra- base hit by diving Texas Rangers center fielder Julio Borbon, and by Baltimore Orioles Manager Buck Showalter, who repeatedly chirpedathomeplateumpireJeff Nelsonfromthedugoutbeforehe was finally ejected in the ninth inning. But the ultimate sign of frus-


trationonanightwhenthehome team was simply overwhelmed by Rangers starter C.J. Wilson and incensed by Nelson was de-


livered by the normally even- keeled Nick Markakis, who was ejected for the first time in his career after exchanging words with Nelson in the sixth inning following his third strikeout of thenight. Wilson struck out a career-


high 12 and allowed just three hits in82/3


innings as theRangers


ended a five-game losing streak against the Orioles with a 2-0 victory in front of an announced 18,751 atCamdenYards. Wilson gave up two of his


threehits toJulioLugoFollowing Lugo’s two-out double in the third, Wilson retired 18 of the final 19batters thathefaced,nine


of those outs onstrikeouts. Markakis struck out looking


inhis first two at-bats.Duringhis third at-bat, he turned around and hadwordswithNelson after two straight called strikes to make the count 1-2. Nelson then punched him out on the next pitch, a fastball that, like the two previous pitches, appeared to be outside. Markakis stared at Nelson,


then said, “That’s terrible, Jeff.” He continued to bark at Nelson, and he finally was ejected. Markakis threwdownhisbatand kept yelling before third base coachGaryAllenson pushed him towardthedugout.


Thoughhe’shistoricallystrug-


gledagainst theOrioles,going1-3 with a 7.15 ERA in 18 career games, Wilson entered the start on the best ray of his career. He was 4-0 in his previous six starts witha 2.72ERA.Hehadalsoheld opponents to three earned runs or less in13 ofhis last 14 outings. The Rangers got on the board


againstJakeArrietainthesecond when rookieMitchMoreland de- posited a 3-2 fastball into the left-field seats. ItwasMoreland’s thirdhome runof the season. Texas added another run in


the seventh on Josh Hamilton’s RBI single.


—Baltimore Sun


1. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 123.475 2. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 122.937 3. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 122.764 4. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 122.584 5. (00) David Reutimann, Toyota, 122.497 6. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 122.372 7. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 122.287 8. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 122.248 9. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 122.178 10. (43) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 122.154 11. (9) Kasey Kahne, Ford, 122.131 12. (98) Paul Menard, Ford, 122.131 13. (5) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 122.022 14. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 121.999 15. (12) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 121.999 16. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 121.968 17. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 121.952 18. (83) Reed Sorenson, Toyota, 121.89 19. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 121.867 20. (2) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 121.813 21. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 121.79 22. (47) Marcos Ambrose, Toyota, 121.651 23. (82) Scott Speed, Toyota, 121.512 24. (33) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 121.474 25. (77) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 121.466 26. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 121.42 27. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 121.382 28. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 121.29 29. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 121.274 30. (09) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, 121.113 31. (26) Jeff Green, Ford, 120.999 32. (66) Scott Riggs, Toyota, 120.953 33. (34) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 120.915 34. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 120.915 35. (55) Michael McDowell, Toyota, 120.915 36. (64) Todd Bodine, Toyota, 120.816 37. (07) Robby Gordon, Toyota, 120.763 38. (6) David Ragan, Ford, 120.71 39. (37) Tony Raines, Ford, 119.678 40. (7) Kevin Conway, Toyota, Owner Points 41. (19) Elliott Sadler, Ford, Owner Points 42. (71) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, Owner Points 43. (13) Casey Mears, Toyota, 120.664.


FAILED TO QUALIFY


44. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 120.286. 45. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 120.241. 46. (4) Kevin Lepage, Chevrolet, 119.269. 47. (46) J.J. Yeley, Dodge, 118.863. 48. (92) Brian Keselowski, Dodge, 117.957. 49. (32) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 112.997.


BASEBALL


LITTLELEAGUE WORLD SERIES


At South Williamsport, Pa. (Double Elimination) FRIDAY’S GAMES


Game 1—Fairfield, Conn. 3, Auburn, Wash. 1 Game 2— Pearland, Tex. 10, Plymouth, Minn. 8 Game 3—Manati, P.R. 11, Ramstein AFB,Germany 0 (4) Game 4—Tokyo, Japan 4, Nuevo Laredo, Mexico 2


SATURDAY’S GAMES


Game 5—Toms River, N.J. vs. Hamilton, Ohio, 11 a.m. Game 6—Chitre, Panama vs. Vancouver, BC., 1 Game 7 —Columbus, Ga. vs. Waipahu, Hawaii, 3 Game 8—Kaohsiung, Taiw. vs. Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, 6 Game 9—Auburn, Wash. vs. Plymouth, Minn., 8


eLindsay.com Open Sun 12-5


King Street @I-395 1-866-BUY-LEXUS


T 4 4 5 7 4 6 5


Pts GF GA 40 34 29 25 22 21 17


30 35 29 29 17 15 15


14 27 21 30 28 23 28


FOOTBALL NFLPRESEASON


FRIDAY’S RESULT at Cincinnati 22, Philadelphia 9 SATURDAY’S GAMES


Baltimore at Washington, 7 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Giants, 7 Miami at Jacksonville, 7:30 St. Louis at Cleveland, 7:30 Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 7:30 N.Y. Jets at Carolina, 8 Houston at New Orleans, 8 Oakland at Chicago, 8:30 Dallas at San Diego, 9 Detroit at Denver, 9 Green Bay at Seattle, 10


SUNDAY’S GAME Minnesota at San Francisco, 8 MONDAY’S GAME Arizona at Tennessee, 8


CANADIANFOOTBALL LEAGUE


EAST DIVISION W L Montreal ......................6 2 Toronto.........................5 3 Hamilton ......................4 4 Winnipeg......................2 6


WEST DIVISION W L Calgary .........................6 1 Saskatchewan..............5 2 Edmonton.....................1 6 B.C. ...............................1 6


FRIDAY'S RESULT Hamilton 16, at Toronto 12


ARENAFOOTBALL


ARENABOWL FRIDAY’S RESULT Tampa Bay at Spokane, Late


LATESTLINE


NFLPRESEASON FAVORITE


LINE


SATURDAY at Washington Pittsburgh


at Jacksonville at Tampa Bay at Cleveland


at New Orleans N.Y. Jets at Chicago


at San Diego at Denver at Seattle


SUNDAY at San Francisco


MONDAY at Tennessee


3


31/2 2


2 3 1


11/2 1


21/2 3


1 3 31/2 UNDERDOG Baltimore


at N.Y. Giants Miami


Kansas City St. Louis Houston


at Carolina Oakland Dallas Detroit


Green Bay Minnesota Arizona


CHAMPIONS THE TRADITION


SOCCER


CONCACAFCHAMPIONS LEAGUE


Hometeamslisted first FIRST ROUND


FRIDAY’S RESULT Columbus (USA) vs. Santos Laguna (Mexico), Late


MAJORLEAGUESOCCER EASTERN CONF. W L T


Columbus .................. 11 5 4 New York .................... 9 7 4 Toronto FC .................. 7 7 5 Chicago ....................... 6 5 6 New England .............. 6 10 3 Kansas City ................ 5 9 5 Philadelphia ................ 4 10 5 D.C. United ................. 3 14 3


WESTERN CONF. W L T Los Angeles .............. 13 3 4 Real Salt Lake .......... 11 4 6 Dallas .......................... 8 2 9 Seattle ........................ 8 8 5 Colorado ..................... 7 5 7 San Jose ..................... 7 6 5 Houston ...................... 5 10 5 Chivas USA ................. 5 10 4


SATURDAY’S GAMES


New York at Toronto FC, 1 Los Angeles at San Jose, 4 Colorado at Columbus, 7:30 Chivas USA at Dallas, 8:30 New England at Kansas City, 8:30 Chicago at Houston, 8:30


SUNDAY’S GAME Philadelphia at D.C. United, 2


28 21 21 23 19 15 23 13


32 36 27 23 21 21 23 22


At Sunriver Resort, Crosswater Golf Club Course In Sunriver, Ore. Purse: $2.6 million; Yardage: 7,533; Par: 72 (36-36)


SECOND ROUND, LEADING SCORES D.A. Weibring ..................67-67 —


Pts GF GA 37 31 26 24 21 20 17 12


19 22 21 22 29 22 34 35


Pts GF GA 43 39 33 29 28 26 20 19


13 16 17 25 18 20 30 25


Tom Lehman....................67-69 — Gil Morgan .......................68-69 — Jay Don Blake ..................69-68 — Bob Tway .........................70-67 — Fred Funk .........................68-69 — Jay Haas...........................73-65 — Bernhard Langer..............69-69 — Tom Jenkins.....................69-70 — Bob Gilder ........................68-71 — Tommy Armour III ...........71-68 — Tom Purtzer.....................70-69 — Bobby Clampett...............69-70 — David Frost ......................74-66 — John Cook.........................72-68 — Scott Simpson .................69-71 — Fulton Allem....................68-72 — Michael Allen...................69-71 —


PGAEUROPEAN CZECH OPEN


At Prosper Golf Resort; In Celadna, Czech Republic Purse: $2.57 million Yardage: 7,155 SECOND ROUND, LEADING SCORES


Peter Hanson, Sweden .................... 67-70 — 137 Fredrik Widmark, Sweden............... 70-67 — 137 Clodomiro Carranza, Argentina....... 69-69 — 138 Fredrik Andersson Hed, Sweden..... 70-68 — 138 Nicolas Colsaerts, Belgium.............. 73-65 — 138 Peter Lawrie, Ireland ....................... 70-68 — 138


BASKETBALL


WNBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L PCT


yIndiana ...................................21 yWashington ...........................21 yNew York ...............................21 yAtlanta...................................19 Connecticut..............................17 Chicago ....................................14


12 .636 12 .636 12 .636 14 .576 16 .515 19 .424


WESTERN CONFERENCE W L PCT xvSeattle .................................26 xyPhoenix ................................15 San Antonio.............................13 xLos Angeles ...........................12 xMinnesota..............................12 Tulsa ..........................................5


v-clinched playoff spot v-clinched conference x-Late game.


FRIDAY’S RESULTS Washington 75, New York 74 San Antonio 75, Indiana 61 Connecticut 78, at Chicago 71 Seattle at Phoenix, Late Minnesota at Los Angeles, Late


SATURDAY’S GAMES Chicago at Tulsa, 8 Los Angeles at Seattle, 11


SUNDAY’S GAMES Washington at Atlanta, 3 Phoenix at San Antonio, 3 Connecticut at New York, 4 Minnesota at Indiana, 5


MYSTICS75,LIBERTY74 NEWYORK


MIN


McCarville Powell


McW.-Franklin Pondexter Mitchell Carson Pierson Vaughn Spencer


TOTALS


6 .813 17 .469


20 .375 GB


— — — 2 4 7


GB —


20 .394 131/2 20 .375


11 14


14 28 .152 211/2


134 136 137 137 137 137 138 138 139 139 139 139 139 140 140 140 140 140


T 0 0 0 0


T 0 0 0 0


Pts PF PA 12 269 193 10 191 215 8 4


201 215 225 244


Pts PF PA 12 223 142 10 235 196 2 2


145 239 135 179


KLMNO


EZ SU SCOREBOARD


TENNIS ATP


WESTERN & SOUTHERN FINANCIAL GROUPMASTERS


A U.S. Open Series Event At The Lindner Family Tennis Center; In Mason, Ohio Purse: $3 million (WT1000); Surface: Hard-Outdoor


SINGLES— QUARTERFINALS


M. Fish, USA, def. A. Murray (4), Britain, 6-7 (9-7), 6-1, 7-6 (7-5); A. Roddick (9), USA, def. N. Djokovic (2), Serbia, 6-4, 7-5; R. Federer (3), Switzerland, def. N. Davydenko (6), Russia, 6-4, 7-5; M. Baghdatis, Cyprus, def. R. Nadal (1), Spain, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4.


DOUBLES— QUARTERFINALS


M. Bhupathi, India, and M. Mirnyi (4), Belarus, def. M. Fyrstenberg and M. Matkowski (8), Poland, 6-3, 6-2; L. Kubot, Poland, and O. Marach (5), Austria, def. F. Cermak, Czech Rep., and M. Mertinak, Slovakia, 6-4, 6-2.


WTA


ROGERS CUP A U.S. Open Series Event At Uniprix Stadium; In Montreal Purse: $2 million (Premier); Surface: Hard-Outdoor


SINGLES— QUARTERFINALS


S. Kuznetsova (11), Russia, def. Z. Jie, China, 6-1, 6-3; V. Zvonareva (8), Russia, def. K. Clijsters (5), Belgium, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2; C. Wozniacki (2), Denmark, def. F. Schiavone (8-6), Italy, 6-3, 6-2; V. Azarenka (10), Belarus, def. M. Bartoli (17), France, 6-2, 7-6 (8-6).


DOUBLES— QUARTERFINALS


,M. Niculescu, Romania, and S. Peer, Israel, def. C. Yung-jan, Taiwan, and Zheng Jie (6), China, 4-6, 6-4, 11-9; G. Dulko, Argentina, and F. Pennetta (2), Italy, def. E. Vesnina and V. Zvonareva, Russia, 6-4, 6-1


GOLF


PGA WYNDHAMCHAMPIONSHIP


At Sedgefield Country Club Course; In Greensboro, N.C. Purse: $5.1 million; Yardage: 7,117; Par: 70 (35-35)


SECOND ROUND, LEADING SCORES Brandt Snedeker


Arjun Atwal


Kevin Streelman Lucas Glover John Rollins


Webb Simpson Boo Weekley Tim Herron


Justin Leonard Marc Leishman John Mallinger David Toms


Jeev Milkha Singh Garrett Willis Jonathan Byrd Spencer Levin Scott Piercy Martin Laird


Will MacKenzie Jerry Kelly


Scott McCarron Alex Prugh


Andres Romero Richard S. Johnson


63-65—128 61-67—128 64-65—129 64-65—129 64-65—129 66-64—130 64-67—131 67-64—131 68-63—131 66-66—132 65-67—132 64-68—132 64-68—132 66-66—132 66-66—132 65-67—132 66-66—132 67-65—132 68-64—132 66-67—133 65-68—133 69-64—133 66-67—133 67-66—133


-12 -12 -11 -11 -11 -10 -9 -9 -9 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -8 -7 -7 -7 -7 -7


D5


33:59 6-13 0-0 3-6 2 1 12 36:42 28:16


FG FT O-T A PF PTS. 2-9 5-5 4-6 5 3 10


36:01 8-14 11-13 2-2 2 5 28 34:10 9:49


5-8 2-2 2-6 2 3 12 2-7 0-0 2-3 2 2


15:20 2:25 3:18


1-4 0-0 0-0 0 1 2-5 1-2 1-2 1 2 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1


5 2 5 0 0


200 26-61 19-22 14-25 14 18 74


Percentages: FG .426, FT .864. 3-Point Goals: 3-9, .333 (Pondexter 1-1, Mitchell 1-2, Powell 1-5, McCarville 0-1). Blocked Shots: 4 (McCarville 2, Pierson, Powell). Turnovers: 15 (McCarville 4, Pondexter 4, McWilliams- Franklin 2, Pierson 2, Powell 2, Carson). Steals:9(Carson 2, McCarville 2, Mitchell 2, McWilliams-Franklin, Pon- dexter, Spencer). Technical Fouls: None.


WASHINGTON Currie


Langhorne Melvin Smith


Harding Sanford Coleman Ajavon Monroe


TOTALS MIN


17:30 34:59 29:50 30:09


26:40 15:28 2:23


FG FT O-T A PF PTS. 3-4 3-4 0-2 0 5


6-9 1-1 2-7 0 4 13 1-4 0-0 2-5 1 5


9 2


33:57 6-13 2-2 0-1 2 3 14 9:04


5-8 1-2 0-0 0 3 12 0-1 0-2 0-1 1 1


3-5 1-2 2-5 2 2


0 9


5-8 6-6 2-2 1 1 16 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0


0 200 29-52 14-19 8-23 7 24 75


Percentages: FG .558, FT .737. 3-Point Goals: 3-6, .500 (Coleman 2-2, Smith 1-2, Harding 0-2). Blocked Shots: 6 (Melvin 3, Harding, Langhorne, Monroe). Turnovers: 15 (Harding 4, Ajavon 3, Currie 2, Langhorne 2, Sanford 2, Melvin, Smith). Steals: 9 (Smith 4, Ajavon 2, Melvin 2, Harding). Technical Fouls: None.


New York ............................ 15 16 18 25 — 74 Washington ........................ 17 18 26 14 — 75


A: 13,109 (10,100). T: 2:01.


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34  |  Page 35  |  Page 36  |  Page 37  |  Page 38  |  Page 39  |  Page 40  |  Page 41  |  Page 42  |  Page 43  |  Page 44  |  Page 45  |  Page 46  |  Page 47  |  Page 48  |  Page 49  |  Page 50  |  Page 51  |  Page 52  |  Page 53  |  Page 54  |  Page 55  |  Page 56  |  Page 57  |  Page 58  |  Page 59  |  Page 60  |  Page 61  |  Page 62  |  Page 63  |  Page 64  |  Page 65  |  Page 66  |  Page 67  |  Page 68  |  Page 69  |  Page 70  |  Page 71  |  Page 72  |  Page 73  |  Page 74  |  Page 75  |  Page 76
Produced with Yudu - www.yudu.com