High School Boys Basketball score from across the valley, Tuesday January 22, 2019

Tuesday, January 22, 2019:

 

                                      Class 3A Section 1
Aliquippa    
Lincoln Park      WBVP
77
74     Final
                                  Class 4A Section 2
Central Valley 
Ambridge      WMBA
58
61   Final
Beaver
Quaker Valley     
43
68   Final
New Castle
Blackhawk
77
66   Final
                                Class 5A Section 2
Moon
West Mifflin
75
57  Final

Link for Central Valley vs. Ambridge on WMBA and Trib-Live High School Sports Network

1460 WMBA’s Tom Hays and Bruce Frey have the call from Ambridge High School of this WPIAL Class 4A Section 2 high school boys basketball game as the Bridgers battle the Warriors. The host Bridgers who are the surprise of the section this year come in 5-1 and in second place in section play and 10-5 overall. The visiting Warriors are trying to keep their playoff hopes up and come into the contest 3-4 in section play and 5-9 over all.

If you can’t tune into the broadcast on 1460 WMBA and want to hear the broadcast streaming live over the Trib-Live High School Sports Network click on the logo below at 7:05 p.m. for for the pre-game. Tip-off is scheduled for 7:30……

Link for Alquippa vs. Lincoln Park on WBVP and Trib-Live High School Sports Network

1230 WBVP’s Bob Barrickman and Jason Colangelo have the call from Midland Middle School of this WPIAL Class 3A Section 1 high school boys basketball game as the Leopards battle the Quips. The host Lincoln Park comes into the contest 7-0 in section play and 12-1 overall. The guest Quips come into the contest trying to get revenge on the Leopards for their only section loss of the season. The Quips are 6-1 in section and 10-4 overall. The two teams met on December 18, 2018 with the Leopards winning 73-69.

If you can’t tune into the broadcast on 1230 WBVP and want to hear the broadcast streaming live over the Trib-Live High School Sports Network click on the logo below at 7:05 p.m. for for the pre-game. Tip-off is scheduled for 7:30……

High School Basketball: January 22, 2019

BOYS

6:30pm
[NC] Beaver County Christian at Propel Montour

7:30pm
[5A] Moon at West Mifflin
[5A] Thomas Jefferson at West Allegheny
[4A] Central Valley at Ambridge (WMBA)
[4A] New Castle at Blackhawk
[4A] Beaver at Quaker Valley
[3A] Aliquippa at Lincoln Park (WBVP)
[3A] New Brighton at Ellwood City
[3A] Riverside at Neshannock
[2A] OLSH at South Side Beaver
[1A] Cornell at Western Beaver
[2A] Eden Christian at Rochester
[1A] Quigley Catholic at Union

GIRLS

Monday’s Scores
[5A] Moon 63, Lincoln Park 37
[5A] Thomas Jefferson 59, West Allegheny 46
[4A] Blackhawk 71, Quaker Valley 47
[4A] Ambridge 51, Keystone Oaks 31
[4A] New Castle 55, Hopewell 50
[3A] Beaver 48, Ellwood City 36
[3A] Beaver Falls 54, Freedom 49
[3A] Neshannock 56, Riverside 31
[2A] OLSH 63, New Brighton 19
[2A] Aliquippa 60, Northgate 32
[2A] South Side Beaver 52, Shenango 33
[1A] Quigley Catholic 57, Cornell 2
[NC] Central Valley 51, Hampton 20

7:00pm
[1A] Rochester at Sewickley Academy

Prop bets popular for Super Bowl, but NFL wants them gone

Prop bets popular for Super Bowl, but NFL wants them gone
By WAYNE PARRY, Associated Press
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Many Americans in places where sports betting is legal for the first time are beginning to make wagers on the Super Bowl, including some bets on the performances of individual athletes.
But if the National Football League had its way, bets on things like passing touchdowns for New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady or rushing yards for Los Angeles Rams running back Todd Gurley would be restricted — or even outlawed as too risky and vulnerable to manipulation or cheating.
Proposition bets — also known as prop bets — are less popular during the regular season but gain steam during the Super Bowl each year as a way to bet on the outcome of more than one thing at a moment the sports world is intensely focused on a single game.
In testimony before a U.S. House of Representatives committee on Sept. 27, NFL Executive Vice President Jocelyn Moore asked Congress to let professional sports leagues and gambling regulators ban prop bets that involve the performance of individual athletes over the course of a game.
“Examples might range from the number of passing yards by a quarterback in a football game or the number of points or rebounds by a team during a quarter of a basketball game, to the number of ‘throw-ins’ in a soccer match, or even how many flags a referee might throw in a contest,” she testified. “These types of bets are significantly more susceptible to match-fixing efforts, and are therefore a source of concern to sports leagues, individual teams, and the athletes who compete.
“To address concerns regarding risky betting fixtures, we encourage Congress to allow professional and amateur sports organizations to identify which types of bets simply pose too significant a risk to the integrity of sports and to work with regulators not to authorize them,” she said.
An NFL spokesman said last week there has been no change in the league’s position since the September testimony.
Joe Asher, CEO of William Hill US, the American arm of the British bookmaker that runs several sportsbooks in this country, said the league’s request is a solution in search of a problem.
“We’ve been doing this for many years, and this issue is way overblown,” he said. “With the exception of the Super Bowl, player props are a tiny portion of the business — a fingernail on the world’s biggest man.”
He acknowledged such bets will make up a bigger proportion of Super Bowl gambling.
“Prop betting on the Super Bowl is quite popular and keeps people engaged throughout the game, even if it’s a blowout,” he said. “We’ve never seen evidence of a player prop being manipulated.”
Most sportsbooks also limit the amount of money that can be bet on player props to lessen the likelihood that cheaters would try to make a huge profit by conspiring with a player or referee to manipulate the outcome of such a bet.
Asher said William Hill’s limits vary, but typically restrict such bets to no more than $500 or $1,000.
In Sunday’s football championship games, prop bets offered by William Hill included bets on who would score the first touchdown of the game, ranging from 6-1 odds for Sony Michel of the Patriots (he did score first) and Damien Williams of the Chiefs, to 60-1 on Gehrig Dieter, a backup wide receiver for Kansas City.
Bets were taken on whether Brady would pass for more or less than 291 yards (he had 348); whether Michel would get more or less than 79 rushing yards (he had 113); whether Julian Edelman would have more or less than six receptions (he had seven); whether Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes would have more than 315 passing yards (he had 295); whether KC tight end Travis Kelce would exceed six receptions (he had three), and whether Chiefs receiver Tyreek Hill would exceed 84 receiving yards (he had 42).
Similar bets were taken on whether Saints quarterback Drew Brees would complete more than 25 passes (he completed 26); whether Saints running back Alvin Kamara would tally more than 107 combined rushing and receiving yards ( he had 111), and whether the Rams’ Todd Gurley would rush for more than 71 yards (he gained just 10).
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Follow Wayne Parry at http://twitter.com/WayneParryAC
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More AP NFL: https://apnews.com/NFL and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL

High School Basketball: January 21, 2019

GIRLS

6:30pm
[2A] OLSH at New Brighton

7:00pm
[1A] Cornell at Quigley Catholic

7:30pm
[2A] Northgate at Aliquippa
[2A] Shenango at South Side Beaver
[3A] Beaver at Ellwood City
[3A] Freedom at Beaver Falls
[3A] Riverside at Neshannock
[4A] Quaker Valley at Blackhawk
[4A] Keystone Oaks at Ambridge
[4A] Hopewell at New Castle
[5A] Moon at Lincoln Park
[5A] West Allegheny at Thomas Jefferson
[NC] Central Valley at Hampton

Glen Wood, auto racing pioneer and patriarch, dies at 93

Glen Wood, auto racing pioneer and patriarch, dies at 93
By JENNA FRYER, AP Auto Racing Writer
Glen Wood, the courtly and innovative patriarch of the famed Wood Brothers Racing team who had been the oldest living member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame, died Friday. He was 93.
Wood Brothers announced the death of its team founder on social media, saying he died in Stuart, Virginia, after a long illness.
Wood Brothers is the longest continuous Cup team in NASCAR and has weathered lean years over nearly seven decades, including seasons in which the organization ran only a partial schedule. The team has been credited with revolutionizing pit stops from routine service calls into carefully orchestrated strategic events that can win or lose races.
Wood and younger brother Leonard co-founded Wood Brothers Racing in 1953. Glen Wood won four races as a driver over an 11-year racing career, but in 1998 was nonetheless named one of NASCAR’s 50 greatest drivers — a list that included 20 drivers who had once raced a Wood Brothers car.
“In building the famed Wood Brothers Racing at the very beginnings of our sport, Glen laid a foundation for NASCAR excellence that remains to this day,” NASCAR Chairman Jim France said. “As both a driver and a team owner, he was, and always will be, the gold standard. But personally, even more significant than his exemplary on-track record, he was a true gentleman and a close confidant to my father, mother and brother.”
Wood in 2011 was elected to the NASCAR Hall of Fame in a contentious decision in which many voters felt Glen and Leonard should be elected together as one entity. It was former Wood Brothers driver Kyle Petty who swayed the room, arguing the brothers could be separated. Glen Wood was elected as part of the Hall’s third class, and Leonard Wood was elected the next year.
“I made a case for separation, because I think they are two different people,” Kyle Petty told The Associated Press then. “I think Leonard is the smartest man I ever met that works on a race car, bumper to bumper. There are some guys out there that are good strategists and good mechanics, but he is the total package and always has been. But Glen owned the thing. He owned the team. You have to make that separation. To put them in and judge them as a single entity against some other people was not right.”
The Wood brothers came from humble beginnings but built a race team ahead of its time that still competes at NASCAR’s top level. The team has won 99 races in more than 1,500 starts in NASCAR’s elite division and they did it with an array of manufacturers and multiple star drivers.
“We started racing in 1950 with a car we bought for $50,” Glen Wood told The Associated Press as the team readied for its 1,000th start in 2000. “We put No. 50 on the side of the car because it just seemed like the right thing to do. Now here we are 50 years later.”
The car number was eventually changed to No. 21, which is now one of the most iconic numbers in NASCAR. Wood Brothers has won at least one NASCAR race in each of the last six decades.
Among those who raced for the team were David Pearson, Cale Yarborough, Curtis Turner and A.J. Foyt. The team won the Daytona 500 in 1963 (Tiny Lund), 1968 (Yarborough), 1972 (Foyt), 1976 (Pearson) and 2011 (Trevor Bayne). Pearson waged most of his battles with rival Richard Petty while driving for Wood Brothers.
Foyt drove 13 races for the Wood Brothers in 1971 and 1972, winning four races along with seven poles.
“I never had as much fun down there (in NASCAR) as I did driving for the Wood Brothers,” Foyt said. “Their cars were unbelievable to drive. Their team was the kingpin of stock car racing and I felt honored to be driving for them.”
Wood himself drove in the inaugural 1959 Daytona 500 and won the race five times as team owner. He attended every Speedweeks in Daytona since 1947 until his deteriorating health and fear of widespread flu kept him home for the first time last season.
Glen Wood always rode by car to Daytona Beach, driving a 1940 two-door Ford on his first trip in 1947. Wood took every ride through eight decades in a Ford.
“The Wood Brothers race team, by any measure, has been one of the most successful racing operations in the history of NASCAR. Most importantly for our company, Glen and his family have remained loyal to Ford throughout their 69-year history,” said Edsel B. Ford II, a member of Ford Motor Co.’s board of directors. “Glen was an innovator who, along with his family, changed the sport itself. But, more importantly, he was a true Southern gentleman who was quick with a smile and a handshake and he was a man of his word.”
NASCAR Hall of Fame executive director Winston Kelley credited the team with dropping the time teams spent on pit road by as much as 50 percent. Kelley noted that Wood Brothers Racing was recently recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the longest active NASCAR team, 69 years and counting.
Wood was nicknamed “The Woodchopper” because he first worked in a sawmill and, legend has it, he initially adorned “The Woodchopper” on cars he entered at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Wood was first hooked on racing when he made a trip to Daytona Beach, Florida, to watch cars on the beach-road course in 1947. His driving days ended in 1964, but he and brother Leonard carried on the team. At the Indianapolis 500 in 1965, four Wood brothers — Glen, Leonard, Delano and Ray Lee — served as the pit crew for Jim Clark, the most glamorous Formula One driver of the day and the winner that day.
“They pioneered the quick pit stops and were part of the reason Jimmy Clark won the Indianapolis 500 because they pitted him,” said Foyt, a four-time Indy 500 winner.
Bayne’s victory in the 2011 Daytona 500 was the team’s first win in more than a decade. Roger Penske and Ford strengthened their alignment with the Wood Brothers in 2016 and Ryan Blaney won his first Cup race the next season. Blaney now drives for Team Penske, but Penske-affiliated driver Paul Menard pilots the No. 21 for Wood Brothers.
The team is currently run by Wood’s two sons and grandson, with a heavy technical alliance from Roger Penske.
Funeral arrangements were pending.
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Bears hire former Steeler Townsend to coach defensive backs

Bears hire former Steeler Townsend to coach defensive backs
LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) — The Chicago Bears have hired former Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Deshea Townsend as defensive backs coach.
Townsend played on two Super Bowl championship teams with Pittsburgh and has spent eight years on NFL and college staffs. He was the New York Giants’ assistant defensive backs coach this season.
Townsend will work with two All-Pros in safety Eddie Jackson and cornerback Kyle Fuller. He replaces Ed Donatell, who joined Vic Fangio’s staff in Denver as defensive coordinator after getting passed over by the Bears in favor of Chuck Pagano. Chicago went 12-4 to win the NFC North and made its first playoff appearance since 2010 in coach Matt Nagy’s first season.
The Bears also hired Ronell Williams as defensive quality control coach on Friday.
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Kessel scores in overtime, Penguins beat Coyotes 3-2

Kessel scores in overtime, Penguins beat Coyotes 3-2
By JOHN MARSHALL, AP Sports Writer
GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan did not like his team’s effort in a loss to San Jose earlier this week. A parade to the penalty box in the first period did not lift his mood.
A dominating second period and a big goal from Phil Kessel had Sullivan feeling a lot better.
Kessel scored on a power play at 4:09 of overtime, Matt Murray stopped 30 shots and the Pittsburgh Penguins beat the Arizona Coyotes 3-2 on Friday night.
“I thought the guys did a pretty good job of keeping their focus,” Sullivan said. “We had a real strong second period.”
Outscored 10-4 in consecutive losses, Pittsburgh fell behind on Clayton Keller’s first-period goal following a flurry of penalties.
The Penguins rallied in the second when Jusso Riikola and Jake Guentzel scored 40 seconds apart, but Derek Stepan scored with 5 1/2 minutes left in the third to tie it.
Pittsburgh had a 4 on 3 in overtime when Richard Panik was called for slashing and Kessel cashed in, redirecting Sidney Crosby’s shot from the point past Darcy Kuemper.
“It started off a little tough, going to the box as much as we were,” Crosby said. “But we got some good kills, got right back at it in the second period and it’s good to get two points.
Arizona had won four of its previous five games and Kuemper was on a four-game winning streak, one short of his career high.
The Coyotes withstood the two quick goals in the second period and rallied in the third, but gave Pittsburgh’s dangerous power play one too many chance.
Kuemper stopped 32 shots, including a nifty glove save on Guentzel late in overtime.
“We scratched and clawed again,” said Coyotes coach Rick Tocchet, a former Penguins assistant. “Those guys have some world-class players over there. We played a good game and had a chance to win the game”
Coming off a 5-2 loss to the Sharks on Tuesday, Pittsburgh had four penalties in the opening 20 minutes against the Coyotes, including two on the same shift. The Coyotes didn’t score on the 5-on-3, but Keller did shortly after it ended, one-timing a pass from Oliver Ekman-Larsson to beat Murray stick side on a 4 on 3.
Keller became the fastest player to 100 career points with his goal, doing it in 132 games.
“It’s a cool accomplishment, but I’m more focused on our team,” he said. “We’re playing good hockey right now.”
The Penguins had a big push at the end of the first period and quickly took the lead on goals 40 seconds apart.
Riikola had the first one on a power play, firing a shot from just inside the blue line that Kuemper couldn’t see through traffic. Guentzel put Pittsburgh ahead on a rebound of his own shot, lifting it over Kuemper from a tough angle.
Arizona appeared to tie it early in the third period when Panik poked a loose puck past a prone Murray. The Penguins challenged the play and the officials called Ekman-Larsson for goalie interference after clipping Murray with his skate.
Stepan converted in the third period, gathering a rebound from just outside the crease and flicking it past Murray.
NOTES: Penguins RW Patric Hornqvist participated in a portion of practice on Thursday, but missed his fourth straight game with a concussion. … Max Domi had been the fastest Arizona player to reach 100 points, doing it in 154 games. … Pittsburgh F Joseph Blandisi had three shots on goal in 21 minutes after being acquired from the Anaheim Ducks for Derek Grant on Thursday.
UP NEXT
Pittsburgh plays at Vegas Saturday night.
Arizona starts a six-game road trip at Toronto on Sunday.
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High School Basketball Scores from across the Valley, Friday January 18, 2019

Friday, January 18, 2019:

                                      Class 3A Section 1
Lincoln Park   
Riverside        
72
42     Final
Beaver Falls
New Brighton   
71
53     Final
Ellwood City
Aliquippa
29
90     Final
                                  Class 4A Section 2
Ambridge
Beaver
48
58    Final
Blackhawk 
Central Valley     WBVP
48
43     Final
Hopewell
New Castle
45
74    Final
                                Class 5A Section 2
Trinity
Chartiers Valley
63
90     Final
Thomas Jefferson
South Fayette
33
32   Final
West Mifflin
Montour
39
74     Final
West Allegheny
Moon                     WMBA
28
71    Final
                                Class 1A Section 1
Western Beaver
Quigley Catholic
0
0    Final
Rochester
Vincentian Academy
34
81     Final
Nazareth Prep.
Cornell
59
78  Final
Union
Eden Christian
0
0    Final
                                             Class 2A Section 3
South Side
Laurel
63
56  Final
Shenango 
O.L.S.H.
68
79   Final
Sewickley Academy
Mohawk
92
37   Final
                                             Class 2A Section 3
South Side
Laurel
63
56  Final
Shenango 
O.L.S.H.
68
79   Final
Sewickley Academy
Mohawk
92
37   Final
                                             Class 3A Section 2
North Catholic 
Freedom
80
40  Final
Seton LaSalle
Avonworth
57
40   Final