Rose sits, but Bulls hammer Raptors.

Chicago Bulls Logo - Red bull with script above head

TORONTO—Luol Deng had 19 points, Joakim Noah scored 18 and the Bulls overcame the absence of Derrick Rose to beat the Toronto Raptors 96-80 on Friday night for their first road win of the season. Deng and Noah also had nine rebounds apiece as the Bulls earned their third consecutive win. Kirk Hinrich started in place of Rose and scored 12 points, helping the Bulls improve to 1-3 on the road. Rose, the 2011 NBA MVP, was sidelined by the right hamstring injury that knocked him out in the fourth quarter of Monday’s home win over Cleveland. He will be re-evaluated before the Bulls host undefeated Indiana on Saturday. The Bulls (4-6) never trailed while defeating Toronto for the first time in three meetings. They have held their opponent to 81 points or fewer in each of their four victories this season. Carlos Boozer and Jimmy Butler had 14 points apiece for the Bulls,who avoided its first 0-4 road start in five seasons. The Bulls had lost at Philadelphia, Miami and Indiana before winning north of the border.DeMar DeRozan matched his career high with 37 points and Rudy Gay had 20 points and nine rebounds as the Raptors lost for the fifth time in seven games. No other Toronto player reached double figures. Deng scored nine points in the first and Boozer had eight as the Bulls took a 27-16 lead after one. The Raptors made just six of 22 field-goal attempts in the opening quarter.Toronto’s shooting was even worse in the second, with the Raptors hitting on five of 21 attempts. Taj Gibson scored six points for the Bulls who carried a 45-31 lead into halftime. Hinrich, Deng and Butler each made 3-pointers as the Bulls made it 60-35 by opening the second half with a 15-4 run, forcing Toronto to call timeout at 6:57. The Bulls led 74-54 after three.

NOTES—This was the first in a stretch of six of seven at home for Toronto. The Raptors entered play Friday tied with Cleveland and Washington with an NBA-high six road games. … The Bulls outrebounded the Raptors 48-43. … Saturday’s game against Indiana marks the Bulls first back-to-back this season.

NU fades in second half, fall to Stanford 71-58

STANFORD—Josh Huestis scored 13 of his team-high 18 points in the second half to help Stanford beat Northwestern 71-58 on Thursday night.Chasson Randle, who scored a combined 51 points in Stanford’s first two games, was held to 14 as the Cardinal (2-1) improved to 6-2 against the Wildcats (1-1).Anthony Brown added 12 points for Stanford.JerShon Cobb scored 17 points for the Wildcats. Drew Crawford, the active scoring leader in the Big 10, added 15 points.Huestis hit a 3-pointer with just over a minute left and Stanford took a 29-27 edge into the intermission.Stanford, which gave up 112 points in a loss to BYU Monday, looked to be in synch against the Wildcats, who beat Eastern Illinois 72-55 Saturday.NU made seven of its first 27 shots (26 percent) in the second half.The Cardinal maintained its lead throughout the second half, using an 18-6 run to pull ahead 50-36 with 9:10 remaining to play in the contest.The Wildcats made a run to cut the lead to single digits but could never get all the way back as Stanford eventually opened an 18-point lead.Stanford made its first four shots to take the early advantage and then went 1 for 7, with four turnovers as the Wildcats built a six-point advantage on a Crawford 3-pointer midway through the first half.NU coach Chris Collins and Stanford’s Johnny Dawkins both are Duke grads who served as assistant coaches under Mike Krzyzewski.Randle and Wildcat Dave Sobolewski were teammates on an AAU team in Illinois.

Hawks outlast Coyotes 5-4 in shootout, then reacquire Kris Versteeg from Florida

Jonathan Toews and rookie Brandon Pirri scored in a four-round shootout, and the Blackhawks beat the Phoenix Coyotes 5-4 on Thursday night for their fourth straight win.Radim Vrbata had the lone shootout goal for Phoenix, 7-1-1 in its last nine games.Pirri tied the score 4-all 3 minutes into the third, and 4 seconds after a Hawk power play had elapsed. He connected on a midair deflection of Brent Seabrook’s drive from the top of the circle.Brandon Saad, Patrick Sharp and Marian Hossa also scored in regulation for the Blackhawks, who extended their point streak to eight games (7-0-1).The Hawks fired a season-high 52 shots through overtime at Coyotes goalie Mike Smith.

Then after the game. the Hawks announced today that they have reacquired forward Kris Versteeg and forward Phillippe Lefebrve from the Florida Panthers in exchange for forward Jimmy Hayes and defenseman Dylan Olsen. Lefebrve will report directly to the Toledo Walleye of the ECHL.

“We are excited to bring Kris back to Chicago and are pleased to add a player with his experience and versatility to our lineup” said Vice President and General Manager Stan Bowman. “Kris is well respected within our organization and will be able to make a seamless transition to our team because of his familiarity with many of our players and with Coach Quenneville. This move strengthens our team depth and Kris’ skill is a great complement to our current roster.”

Versteeg, a member of the Blackhawks 2010 Stanley Cup championship team, has registered seven points (2g, 5a) in 18 games this season with the Panthers. The 27-year-old forward recorded a season-high two points on two occasions (Oct. 11 vs. PIT and Nov. 10 at NYR).

 

GROBBER’S WEEK 11 NFL PICKS

Thur Night—Indianapolis over TENNESSEE

Sunday—-
Washington over PHILADELPHIA
TAMPA BAY over Atlanta
NEW ORLEANS over San Francisco
New York Jets over BUFFALO
CINCINNATI over Cleveland
HOUSTON over Oakland
MIAMI over San Diego
Arizona over JACKSONVILLE

Sun Night—-DENVER over Kansas City
Mon Night—CAROLINA over New England

NFC NORTH GAMES—
SEATTLE over Minnesota
Detroit over PITTSBURGH
NEW YORK GIANTS over Green Bay
BEARS over Baltimore

Last week,             LES   6-8     ADAM 10-4
Through 10 weeks, LES  101-46      ADAM  99-48

HOME TEAMS in all CAPS

Huge finish against Ball State keeps NIU,Lynch, unbeaten

DEKALB—Northern Illinois coach Rod Carey thinks Huskies quarterback Jordan Lynch deserves to be mentioned in Heisman Trophy talk.

”If Jordan isn’t in the conversation for the Heisman I don’t know what people are watching, they were asleep,” Carey said. ”In my estimation that trophy goes to the best player in the nation and with the performance he had tonight, he dang sure should be in that conversation.”

Can Jordan Lynch get your Heisman love?  Playing in front of a national television audience, Lynch threw two touchdown passes ran for two scores to help No. 20 Northern Illinois beat Ball State 48-27 on Wednesday night.

”I feel like I’m improving every week,” Lynch said. ”I still think the best is yet to come.”

Lynch threw a 36-yard touchdown pass to Da’Ron Brown to break a tie with 5:49 left, and the Huskies (10-0, 6-0 Mid-American) ran the nation’s longest active home winning streak to 25 and their conference run to 23. The 10-0 mark is their best since the 1963 team finished 10-0.Lynch added a 16-yard touchdown run with 1:26 to go, and defensive end Joe Windsor scored on a 49-yard interception return with 46 seconds left.Lynch was 26 of 32 for 345 yards and ran for 123 yards on 20 carries. Brown had 12 receptions for 209 yards, also catching a 58-yard touchdown pass in the first quarter.

”He’s a very good player,” Ball State coach Pete Lembo said. ”He’s fast, he’s built like a linebacker, but he’s got tailback speed. He’s got a lot of savvy.”

The victory preserved Northern Illinois’ hopes for a second straight Bowl Championship Series appearance They played in the Orange Bowl last season and are 15th in the BCS rankings. They need to stay undefeated and pass Fresno State in the BCS to have a shot.Keith Wenning was 35 of 49 for 324 yards for Ball State (9-2, 6-1). Willie Snead had 12 catches for 121 yards and a touchdown, and Jahwan Edwards ran for 156 yards and a score.The loss ended the Cardinals’ seven-game winning streak and 11-game MAC run.The teams combined for three scores in the final 1:28 of the first half.Edwards’ 2-yard touchdown run – his school record 38th – gave Ball State a 21-13 lead, but Lynch and Brown combined on the 58-yard touchdown strike with 1:13 left to make it 21-20.Scott Secor lined a successful 43-yard field goal into the wind with 30 seconds to go, and Sims missed a 52-yard try with a second left, leaving the Cardinals up 24-20.Ball State had the ball to start the second half, but stalled at midfield and was forced to punt for only the second time.Northern Illinois’ subsequent drive included a key third-down 10-yard pickup by Lynch as he escaped two defenders, a fourth-down keeper for a first down at the Cardinals 47 and a fourth-and-goal touchdown run from the 1 by tailback Cameron Stingily for a 27-24 lead.Northern Illinois stopped Ball State at the 1, forcing the Cardinals to settle for a 19-yard field goal that tied it at 27 with 3:07 to go in the third.Ball State was held to three second-half points.

”We just couldn’t keep the drives going,” Lembo said. ”We’d move the ball, have long drives and get on their side of the field and then the drives would just kind of stall. I think that was the different from the first half to the second half.”

Lynch combined with Brown on a 54-yard pass to the Cardinals 10 early in the fourth quarter, but Brown fumbled and Ball State safety Brian Jones recovered at the 13.Lynch and Brown teamed again for the go-ahead score with 5:49 left.The Huskies resume play next Wednesday night at Toledo.

Illini hold off Valpo 64-52

CHAMPAIGN—Rayvonte Rice scored 18 points and Illinois fought off a second-half charge by Valparaiso Wednesday for a 64-52 win.The Illini (3-0) led by eight at halftime. But the Crusaders (2-1) clawed back to within two at 49-47 with an 8-0 run capped by a 3-pointer by Bobby Capobianco with 6:43 to play.Then Illinois guards Tracy Abrams and Rayvonte Rice scored on back-to-back drives into the paint on the much bigger Crusaders to give the Illini a 54-47 lead, part of an 11-1 run that stood up.After Capobianco’s shot the cold-shooting Crusaders scored just that single point over the next five-plus minutes. Both teams spent the night missing far more than they made, some of it the result of tough defense and some of just cold shooting. Illinois hit 31.8 percent of its shots and Valpo 32.7.At least five of the Crusaders misses were air balls.Illinois opened the second half playing fast, running at the bigger Crusaders. But over the first six and a half minutes, all that pace did was turn an eight-point halftime lead into a nine-point edge at 45-36.Then the Crusaders started climbing back.Alex Peters’ layup in traffic on the baseline made it 47-39 with 9:06 to play, and the game felt closer than that.The Crusaders outscored the Illini 8-2 over the next two and a half minutes before Abrams and Rice took control for Illinois.Joseph Bertrand added 14 for the Illini and Abrams had 12. Jon Ekey had a game-high 15 rebounds for Illinois. Center Nnanna Egwu had 10 points before fouling out late.Jordan Coleman led Valpo with 15 points and LaVonte Dority played through an early ankle sprain to add 12 points, including a pair of 3-pointers.Illini coach John Groce said this week that Valparaiso’s size would test Illinois. The Crusaders have four players who are 6-10 or taller, including 7-0 center Moussa Gueye, and guard-heavy Illinois has just two.But the Illini outrebounded the Crusaders 49-36, and held them to nine offensive rebounds, most of them late in the game, and just four second-chance points.Gueye had just two rebounds and didn’t score a point.Ekey ended a sometimes ugly, physical first half with a rainbow of a 3-pointer at the buzzer to give the Illini a 33-25 lead.Points were looking unlikely on the possession. Abrams fed Ekey with an inbounds pass with just two seconds left on the clock. But the 6-7 forward spun quickly and fired the fade-away.Just a minute earlier, Valparaiso had closed to within three at 28-25 on a pair of free throws by Coleman.The Illini host Bradley at home Sunday while Valpo plays at Ohio.

DePaul falls to S.Miss in HOF Classic

ROSEMONT—Aaron Brown scored all of his team-high 13 points in the second half and Southern Miss defeated host DePaul 75-68 in the CBE Hall of Fame Classic at Allstate Arena Wednesday night. Michael Craig finished with 12 points and eight rebounds while Daveon Boardingham had 12 points and seven rebounds. Southern Miss (2-0) didn’t start a player taller than 6-7, yet finished with a 36-29 rebounding advantage over the Blue Demons, who started three players taller than 6-7.Brandon Young led DePaul (1-1) with a game-high 23 points and had a team-high six rebounds in the loss. Cleveland Melvin had 16 points while freshman Billy Garrett had a game-high eight assists.The Golden Eagles led by as many as 11 points in the second half after falling behind 21-9 to start the game. DePaul made three of its first five 3-pointers but the Southern Miss zone defense worked out in the long run as DePaul finished 7 of 26 behind the arc.DePaul rallied late, cutting the lead down to 59-57 but a Brown 3-pointer extended it. A Melvin 3-pointer with 5:19 remaining helped DePaul get within one score but the Golden Eagles outscored DePaul 10-3 down the stretch.Southern Miss fell behind by double figures on several occasions during the first half but a 7-0 run forced DePaul to call a timeout with 4:52 remaining and a 26-22 lead. The timeout didn’t help as DePaul failed to score on their next two possessions and Neil Watson tied it 26-26 with 3:30 remaining. The Blue Demons never led again.Deonte Houston gave Southern Miss the lead with a three-point play and Boardingham helped the Golden Eagles take their biggest lead of the first half, 31-26, after he grabbed an offensive rebound and muscled in a putback.

#2 MSU holds off #1 Kentucky, #5 Kansas pulls away from #4 Duke(despite 27 by Jabari Parker)

State Farm Classic Tickets

As the United Center buzzer sounded and his Michigan State teammates raced onto the court to celebrate, Gary Harris held his index finger aloft.No doubt about who’s No. 1.For now, at least.Branden Dawson tipped in a miss with less than six seconds left, and the No. 2 Spartans hung on for a 78-74 victory over top-ranked Kentucky and its latest cast of phenoms in the first game of the Champions Classic on Tuesday night.

“We want to be No. 1 at the end of the season,” Keith Appling said. “Not the beginning.”

Keep playing like this and the Spartans (2-0) are sure to be in the conversation come the end of March.Kentucky, too. After trailing by as much as 13 in the second half, looking like the freshmen most of them are, the Wildcats (2-1) showed why there’s so much hype surrounding them. Julius Randle almost beat the Spartans single-handedly, scoring 23 of his 27 points in the second half and making a jumper with 42 seconds left that cut Michigan State’s lead to 76-74.But Dawson tipped in a miss by Denzel Valentine, and James Young missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer.

“You got guys crying in there, which is a good thing,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “I want it to hurt like that. I knew this would get their attention. The biggest thing is if you don’t do this together, you won’t win. You’ll never be a special team.”

This was the earliest 1 vs. 2 match-up, and first since Feb. 23, 2008, when Tennessee beat top-ranked Memphis. The Tigers coach then? None other than Calipari.This game had even more hype, mostly because of the Kiddie Cats. Much has been made of the youngsters, with good reason. The last time Calipari had a roster this star-studded, the Wildcats won a national title.This group might be even more impressive.Six were McDonald’s All-Americans, and all are considered lottery picks in next summer’s NBA draft, with Randle a possibility for the overall No. 1. The youngsters did nothing to lessen the hype in their first two games, with Randle averaging 22.5 points and 15 rebounds, and the Harrison twins averaging in double figures. No wonder the game brought out scouts from almost every NBA team and celebrities including the Bulls Nazr Mohammed and Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh.But the Spartans aren’t exactly slouches, returning six of their top seven scorers. Just as important, big-time games like this are nothing new to them, with Izzo routinely scheduling the likes of Connecticut, Duke, North Carolina and Kansas before Jan. 1.

“They’re really good,” Calipari said. “This is the second game out and they go 17 assists to seven turnovers? That’s unbelievable. Again, understand we’re not the greatest defensive team, but 17 and seven? With these lights and all that’s going on around them? They’re well coached. They played well.”

Appling came within two rebounds and two assists of a triple-double, finishing with 22 points, and eight rebounds and assists. Harris had 20 points and Adreian Payne had 15 points and four rebounds for the Spartans.Kentucky had strolled through its first two games, with Randle and the other freshmen coming up big. But there’s a big difference between those non-conference patsies and Michigan State, and the Spartans let the Wildcats know what they were up against from the opening tip.Smothering the Wildcats defensively and leaving them flat-footed with their surprising speed on offense, Michigan State had a 10-0 lead before Kentucky got its first bucket. The `Cats had seven turnovers before the midway point of the first half, and would finish with 17.And it was clear that, with four freshmen in the starting lineup and another getting heavy playing time, the Wildcats are still getting used to each other, too. At one point, Andrew Harrison rifled a no-look pass to Willie Cauley-Stein that Cauley-Stein wasn’t expecting, and the ball sailed out of bounds.They struggled at the line, too, going just 20 of 36.

“They’re going to get a lot better. Give them credit,” Izzo said. “But I thought we played awfully well for a lot of that game.”

Still, the Spartans got in foul trouble midway through the second half, and the slower pace gave the Wildcats time to catch their breath and regroup. It also gave a seething Randle an opportunity to work out his anger.

“What I loved about him, he gritted his teeth, was ornery and nasty and he wanted to put them on his shoulders,” Izzo said. “For a freshman, that speaks volumes. He completely did that. You could see it and hear him. Tough kid.”

Randle scored nine points in a 13-1 run that cut Michigan State’s lead to 60-59 with 8:05 left, including a “How’d he do that?” off-balance jumper from behind a sea of green jerseys. He and Andrew Harrison each made a pair of free throws to tie the game at 66 with 4:48 left.But Appling drilled a 3, and Harris stripped Randle at the other end. He took it in for a layup that put the Spartans back in front, 71-66, bringing the Michigan State fans — including Spartan in Chief, Magic Johnson — to their feet.Randle wasn’t done just yet, however. After Andrew Harrison’s free throws Kentucky within 76-72 with 1:33 to play, the Wildcats pounced on an Appling turnover and Randle scored on a jumper. But Dawson’s tip-in sealed the win.

“I keep reiterating: They’re going to get a lot better,” Izzo said. “But I honestly believe so will we.”
===============================================================
Andrew Wiggins scored 16 of his 22 points in the second half, outplaying Jabari Parker down the stretch and helping No. 5 Kansas knock off fourth-ranked Duke 94-83 on Tuesday night.Parker, a former prep star at nearby Simeon High School, had 27 points, nine rebounds and three steals in a spectacular homecoming. But it was his fellow freshman star that made the biggest plays in the final minutes of a taut thriller between two storied programs.Wiggins drained a stepback jumper to give the Jayhawks an 85-81 lead with 1:33 to go, and then had a fast-break dunk after a steal by Perry Ellis. Wiggins held his arms out and yelled after the big jam.Ellis finished with 24 points, and Wiggins also had 10 rebounds for the Jayhawks.

Bulls beat Cavs, Rose with minor hamstring sprain

Chicago Bulls Logo - Red bull with script above head

Derrick Rose had 16 points before leaving in the fourth quarter with a right hamstring injury, and the Bulls pulled away from the Cleveland Cavaliers for a 96-81 victory on Monday night.Rose grimaced after he drove down the lane for a twisting layup with 3:39 left. He remained in the game for a short time before he was pulled for Kirk Hinrich, and a trainer then attended to the 2011 NBA MVP at the end of the bench.Rose left the game with a ‘minor’ hamstring injury,and is listed as day-to-day

”It’s just a minor sprain,” Rose said. ”Nothing bad.”

Rose will be re-evaluated on Tuesday, and he said he thought he would be able to play Friday night at Toronto.Carlos Boozer scored 17 points and reserve Mike Dunleavy Jr. added a season-high 16 for the Bulls, who went 24 for 26 at the free-throw line. Luol Deng finished with 12 points.Kyrie Irving had 16 points for Cleveland, but was 5 for 19 from the field in his first game against Rose. The Cavaliers committed 20 turnovers, leading to 29 points for the Bulls.

”When we hit adversity tonight we didn’t handle it well,” Cleveland coach Mike Brown said. ”They took us out of what we wanted to do.”

The Bulls opened a 13-point lead on Boozer’s fadeaway jumper with 8:08 left in the third, but Cleveland slowly whittled away at the advantage. Irving made a jumper for his first field goal and Tyler Zeller had a rebound basket in his first action of the game, trimming the Bulls’ lead to 64-60 entering the final period.It was a one-point game early in the fourth before the Bulls started to take control. Dunleavy had seven points during a 9-1 run that made it 87-76 with 2:10 remaining.Dunleavy then had a steal and a pass ahead to Deng for a fast-break dunk that extended the lead to 91-77 lead with 1:07 left.

”We had some chances to break it open, early on, each quarter,” Dunleavy said. ”They just hung in there. Fortunately in the fourth, we were able to pull away.”

Cavaliers center Andrew Bynum had 11 points and six rebounds in his first start since April 22, 2012, for the Lakers against Oklahoma City. Anderson Varejao was in the lineup about a half-hour before the game, but it was Bynum on the floor for the tip-off.Bynum missed all of last season with Philadelphia due to surgery on both knees and signed with Cleveland in July. The 7-footer played 21 minutes in his longest stint on the court since joining the Cavs.Rose was selected No. 1 overall in the 2008 draft and won the NBA Rookie of the Year award. Irving pulled off the same feat in 2012, but the dynamic point guards had never played against each other in the pros. Rose missed all of last season following left knee surgery, and Irving also has dealt with some injuries.Irving’s 39 points in a 127-125 double-overtime victory against Philadelphia on Saturday night only increased the hype for his first matchup with Rose, but their initial meeting was pretty much a dud, at least as far the individual duel was concerned. Irving was scoreless until he made two free throws with 1:36 left in the first half and missed his first six shots. Rose also had a slow start, going 3 for 9 in the first half for six points.At least Irving took care of the ball. Cleveland committed 12 turnovers in an ugly first half, leading to 17 points for the Bulls. Waiters had four of the miscues, helping the Bulls to a 45-36 lead at the break.

NOTES—Cleveland dropped to 0-5 on the road. … The Bulls won three of four games against Cleveland last season. The Bulls have won the season series against the Cavs for three straight years. … Duke plays Kansas on Tuesday night at the United Center, so Blue Devils coach Mike Krzyzewski brought his team to the game. Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau also worked with Krzyzewski with USA Basketball. ”He’s a fantastic leader. Just terrific,” Thibodeau said. ”To achieve the way he’s achieved throughout his career, that’s the mark of greatness.”

Four of AP top five on stage at United Center Tuesday night.

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Little change to note between the preseason polls and the second version of college basketball’s rankings system. The new lists for the Associated Press and Coaches polls were unveiled Monday afternoon. Atop the rankings, it remains the same first four: Kentucky, Michigan State, Louisville, Duke.

And when Kentucky and Michigan State play each other Tuesday night at the Champions Classic in the United Center, it will mark the earliest meeting between top-ranked teams in college basketball history — and the 39th time 1 has played 2 in the AP poll. It’s the first such tilt since Feb. 24, 2008, when Tennessee toppled Memphis 66-62. The all-time record in these games is 21-17 in favor of the No. 1-ranked program.

Kentucky is 5-2 all-time as a No. 1 team going against a No. 2. MSU has never been part of a 1 vs. 2 matchup in the regular season.

Duke brings Simeon’s Jabari Parker and Coach Mike Krzyzewski back to their native Chicago. Kansas’s Andrew Wiggins is already expected to be the #1 pick in next Summer’s NBA Draft. He is a Son on one time Bull Mitchell Wiggins.

As for the AP poll, there were no newcomers to the rankings. Ranked teams opened the season 26-0, according to the AP.

AP Poll

  1. Kentucky
  2. Michigan State
  3. Louisville
  4. Duke
  5. Kansas
  6. Arizona
  7. Michigan
  8. Oklahoma State
  9. Syracuse
  10. Ohio State
  11. Florida
  12. North Carolina
  13. Memphis
  14. VCU
  15. Gonzaga
  16. Wichita State
  17. Marquette
  18. Oregon
  19. Connecticut
  20. Wisconsin
  21. Notre Dame
  22. New Mexico
  23. Baylor
  24. UCLA
  25. Virginia