06072017 sports

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SPORTS SECTION E

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 2017

‘Mighty Mouse’ brings home lightweight title By BRENT STUBBS Senior Sports Reporter bstubbs@tribunemedia.net

P

aul ‘Mighty Mouse’ Wilson, competing overseas for the second time this year, won the men’s lightweight of the 2017 NPC California State Championships in Culver City, California. It was Wilson’s first appearance in a championship outside of the state of Florida and he left his mark in the 154 1/4 –pound class on May 27 as he won the divisional title over Aidan Acuff, who was second. Steven Mendoza came in third and Pete Yamamoto was fourth. “This was the biggest and the most prestigious show in the state of California because it qualified any resident or American to the USA National Championships,” Wilson said. “So I just wanted to go there and see how well I could compete against the competitors over there.” As it turned out, Wilson surprised himself and his rivals. He was the lone Bahamian competing in the championships, but Wilson said he didn’t let that deter him. “When you go to competitions like this, you don’t know who you will compete against,” said Wilson, who has won a couple of titles competing in the Florida State Championships in the past. “At the end of the day, you are competing against yourself and you just hope that your performance is good enough to pull it off.”

Wilson, coming off his bronze medal in his first meet in March in Santo Domingo as he made his return after a year off, said he was prepared for the challenge in California. “When I saw the competition, I kind of knew that I had a chance to win my division,” he stated. “But I was hoping to win the overall title too, but of course with me being a smaller bodybuilder, that didn’t come to fruition.” Being a fresh new face on stage, Wilson said he stunned the audience and impressed the judges with his performance. “The physique that I had and the quality that I brought to the show in that class, to be a lightweight, but to be bigger than an averaged lightweight, they were really surprised,” he said. “Since the event, I’ve gotten a lot of feedback on my social apps like Instagram and WhatsApp. I made a lot of friends over there and they congratulated me, telling me that they’ve never seen poses like that and the quality that I brought to the lightweight class.” Wilson said he was in awe of the accolades he got because he rarely gets it from home. But he said it has also given him the motivation to continue to compete against his rivals here. “Now, I’ve gotten the exposure upstate and I’ve gotten the exposure in the region, so I’m going to con-

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PAUL ‘MIGHTY MOUSE’ WILSON in action at the NPC California State Championships in Culver City, California.

Joshua Turnquest has ‘pretty good’ season By BRENT STUBBS Senior Sports Reporter bstubbs@tribunemedia.net JOSHUA Turnquest was more than delighted with his freshman year at Asbury University in Wilmore, Kentucky. He was named the Eagles men’s tennis Player of the Year and was selected to the NAIA Second Team All-American, all during the month of May. “The season was pretty good,” said Turnquest, who is back home on his summer vacation. “In the fall, I was able to compete in the ITA event and I made it and because of that, I got a ranking of number 48 and we made it to Nationals. “We won our conference and I was able to win Player of the Year, Rookie of the Year and AllConference Team. As a team, as a

result of competing in the Nationals, our ranking jumped from 26 to 17. So it was a pretty good year for me.” Turnquest finished the season 18-3 in doubles play and from his No. 1 singles position he went an impressive 23-2 over the course of the year, including in the ITA Regionals back in the fall. Turnquest was instrumental in the Eagles’ River States Conference win in the conference tournament as well as a big piece of their upset in the NAIA National Tournament over the College of Coastal Georgia for the programme’s first-ever national tournament win. Adding to an already impressive list of accomplishments this season, including conference Player of the Year and Newcomer of the Year, Turnquest picked up his first

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JOSHUA TURNQUEST has been named Eagles men’s tennis Player of the Year and was selected to the NAIA Second Team All-American in May.

Midnight

Road Race, Page 3

KATRINA SEYMOUR OVERCOMES HURDLES ON TRACK, AND IN HER LIFE JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (June 5, 2017) – When senior ETSU track and field athlete Katrina Seymour, of New Providence, Bahamas, gets set into the blocks at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon, everything will seem routine. In front of her are 10 evenly placed hurdles surrounding 400 metres of track surface with multiple competitors right by her side. Just like on the track, Seymour has had to overcome multiple hurdles during her time in Johnson City. From adjusting to a new town, to wondering if she would be able to compete and dealing with injuries, Seymour’s journey to the NCAA Championships has been nothing but hurdles. However, both on the track and in life, Seymour has breezed over the hurdles she has faced. During her senior campaign for the Buccaneers, Seymour has re-written the record books. In the indoor season, the hurdler shined at the Southern Conference Championships, earning titles in the 60m dash, 400m, 200m and 4x400 relay. She only continued her success during the outdoor season, as Seymour broke the ETSU school record in the 400mH four times and broke a Bahamian national record at the NCAA East Prelims. All the accomplishments led to Seymour becoming the first ETSU female track athlete to compete at the NCAA Championships since 2009. While the New Providence, Bahamas native makes it look easy on the track, it wasn’t always that way. Arriving at ETSU in January of 2016, Seymour was presented with the challenge of learning a new place, new culture and a new way of life. If moving to a new country and city weren’t big enough hurdles for Seymour, injuries would soon become the next great block. After running a lifetime best time of 56.86 in the 400mH at the Aggie Last Chance Qualifier in 2016, which was one hundredth of a second away from the Bahamian national record, the injury hurdle struck. A few weeks later at the Aliann Pompey Invitational in Leonora, Guyana, Seymour suffered a seasonending injury, which required months of rehab for a fractured knee and bone bruise. However, once again the hurdles of life were un-

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Darius Adams earns national championship honours in long jump By RENALDO DORSETT Tribune Sports Reporter rdorsett@tribunemedia.net MULTIPLE sports star Darius Adams continues to excel for the Coast Guard Academy Bears and his latest exploits

earned national championship honours in the process. Adams won the national championship in the long jump at the NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio. On his third attempt, Adams leapt 7.35m for the winning jump to take the national title in his first NCAA Championship appearance. He began with a round-one jump of 7.20m to tie for third place and moved into first place with a second-round mark of 7.31. Matt Fleming of Benedictine finished second at 7.28m and Jerry Williams of Wisconsin-Stevens Point was third at 7:27. Adams made school history by becoming the first member of the Bears’ athletic programme to claim an individual national title and All-American honours since 2014. He is also the school record holder in the long jump with a mark of 7.46m, set at the

New England Open Championship which featured athletes from Divisions I, II and III. According to the Bears’ athletic website, Adams has been one of the most standout student-athletes in the institution because of his contributions to multiple disciplines. “A junior from Nassau, Bahamas, he is one of the most gifted athletes at the academy. He was a member of the men’s basketball team for two years, averaging 9.3 points and 5.8 rebounds per game as a sophomore. Adams earned All-NEWMAC honours with a second-place finish in the long jump (21.6.75) last year and had a breakout season as a member of the football team this fall as Adams, playing his first year of football at any level, tied three records and earned several postseason accolades,” it said. “He was named to the 2016 New England Football Writers Division II/III All-

New England Team. He was also named the New England Football Conference (NEFC) Offensive Rookie of the Year and was a first team all-conference selection. He broke single-season school records with 1,054 receiving yards and 13 touchdown receptions while also tying the single-game record of three touchdown receptions twice this season. He was second on the team with 47 receptions.” In 2014, Adams - a member of the Royal Bahamas Defence Force - made history when he became just the second Bahamian to the academy. Prior to joining the RBDF, he graduated from Pensacola Christian College with a grade point average of 3.78 while pursuing a degree in accounting and a minor in information services. He is currently a junior studying electrical engineering with a minor in computer science.


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THE TRIBUNE

KATRINA SEYMOUR OVERCOMES HURDLES ON THE TRACK, AND IN HER LIFE FROM PAGE 1 able to deter Seymour, as she powered her way through the indoor season for ETSU --racking up eight top five finishes, five event victories and ten top 10 finishes. With momentum on her side heading into the SoCon Indoor Championships, the injury bug struck again. While over Christmas break, Seymour suffered a broken big toe while training in the Bahamas. An injury that still lingers as she heads to the NCAA Championships. “I am grateful for everything that I have accomplished this season,” said Seymour. “I set a bunch of major and minor goals heading into the season and it all was leading up to this moment.” With a broken big toe still lingering as the outdoor season began Seymour was able to accomplish one of the most memorable seasons in ETSU Track & Field history -- claiming four event victories, 11 top ten finishes and setting the school record in the 400mH four times. The SoCon Outdoor Championships was poised for Seymour to shine once again in front of some of the conference’s best athletes, but life had a different plan. Prior to her main event, the 400 metre hurdles, Seymour experienced a tight hamstring, an ultimate hurdle in the track and field world. The many hurdles that have been thrown at Seymour during her career at ETSU prepared her for the ultimate moment in Lexington, Kentucky at the NCAA East Prelims. Battling through a hamstring pull and a broken big toe,

Seymour got into the right mindset before bursting out of the blocks for the 400mH. “My mindset when going into the blocks was to take it as another day in practice, because I train a lot harder and that makes the meets become easier,” said Seymour. “The way I see it, it is just one hard rep in practice and I have to make it count.” Seymour made it count at the NCAA East Prelims. On day one of the east prelims, Seymour strolled to a second place finish in her heat of the 400mH; giving her one last hurdle, make the NCAA Championships. The next day, despite all of the injuries and all of the hurdles that plagued her throughout the year, Seymour qualified for the national championships with a personal best and ETSU record time of 56.32. The time of 56.32 also went on to set a new Bahamian Record in the 400 meter hurdles, breaking the previous record set by Michelle Cumberbatch back in 2010. It was yet another goal that had been achieved during Seymour’s senior season. “When I completed the race, it didn’t set-in that I broke the record. I just really wanted to win the race and run a fast time,” said Seymour. “I was really excited and happy because that was one of my goals that I was working towards. I am happy that I got the record.” Hurdle after hurdle, both on and off the track, Katrina Seymour continues to persevere. Seymour readies for the NCAA Championships, creating an opportunity of a lifetime, as she is the first ETSU female track and field athlete

‘MIGHTY MOUSE’ WILSON BRINGS HOME TITLE FROM PAGE 1

to compete in the NCAA Championship since 2009. Yet again a hurdle that Seymour has seemingly glided over. So when Seymour hits the track in Eugene, Oregon, at historic Hayward Field for the NCAA Championships, the 10 evenly spaced hurdles covering 400 metres of track will stand before her. Each hurdle seemingly reminds her of the challenges she has been presented at ETSU.

Calling All High

SCHOOL

KATRINA SEYMOUR, both on the track and in life, has breezed over the hurdles she has faced.

tinue to push hard because I have a lot more to do this year,” he said. “It all depends on what the new (Free National Movement) government will do for our federation because we need the support to compete in more international events.” Right now, Wilson is waiting on the verdict from Bahamas Bodybuilding and Fitness Federation President Joel Stubbs on exactly when the National Bodybuilding Championships will take place. The event is normally held between July and August as it serves as the federation’s final qualification for the Central American and Caribbean Bodybuilding Championships. This year’s CAC Championships is scheduled for September 28 to October 1 in Mexico and Wilson is confident that he will be a member of the national team that will represent the country. “The CAC is supposed to be a big event this year because it’s going to be in a Spanish-speaking country,” Wilson said. “A lot of the Spanish-speaking countries normally come to that competition, so we will definitely have more competitors in this show than we had when it was held here or in Bermuda or Barbados.” Wilson said it takes a village to grow an individual up, but it takes a nation to build a champion and he expressed his gratitude to Vitamalt, Gunite Pools, and Island Luck, who all helped to sponsor his trip to California. “It’s so disappointing that as an amateur athlete, people have to see you win before they can invest in you,” he said. “We lose a lot of our local talent because a lot of them are discouraged when they approach the local businesses to get themselves started.” But he said all he wants is to get a chance to compete and he knows that he can bring in the success.

STUDENTS JOSHUA TURNQUEST HAS ‘PRETTY GOOD’ SEASON FROM PAGE 1

Every year in August THE TRIBUNE publishes a popular Back to School supplement as a guide to the following academic year. In the supplement we feature the profiles of high school students across the Bahamas and Family Islands. We want profiles from as many schools and students as possible to make this guide essential and informative.

Profiles must include 1. Name 2. Age 3. School 4. Grade 5. Parent name or names 6. Goals and aspirations, prizes won and honours awarded

7. Name of college they will be attending (if attending) Plus a suitable photograph in .jpeg format (graduation or any other image).

How to submit profiles Email to back2school@ tribunemedia.net with ‘Back To School’ in the subject field and photos in .jpeg format. By post to Back To School, The Tribune, Shirley Street & Deveaux Streets, PO Box N-3207, Nassau. By hand to The Tribune office The deadline for the profiles is June 30, 2017 and there is no cost involved. For any questions please contact Tribune Features at 5022380 or 502-2391.

NAIA All-American selection in just his first season in AU purple and white. “It was shocking to me because I was definitely playing very well and I felt very confident of my performance,” Turnquest said. “I put in a lot of hard work. Before I went to school, I put in a lot of work because I really wanted to go to a good school. “I want to thank coach Jarred Miller at Asbury because if it wasn’t for him, I would not have made it. He gave me a shot and I went there and I made the most of the opportunity to play college tennis.” In his spare time as he try to stay active so that he can be ready to return for his sophomore year in August, Turnquest said he will be working out with the younger tennis players at the National Tennis Centre. “I know they have the Youth Commonwealth Games coming up and so I’m practicing with them, making sure that they are in shape,” he said. “I’m working on my game as well as I work on getting ready for the fall season. “I have a lot of work to do on my doubles game. I mostly focus on singles, but I got a little better in doubles. I just need to be able to play with someone else and still compete at a high level.”

JOSHUA TURNQUEST Looking at his season, Turnquest said the ITA Tournament he competed in during the fall of 2016 was his most memorable. “Coach told me that I was the first rookie to come in and made the semi-final in the history of Asbury,” Turnquest said. “It was really motivating for me to do that. “But this upcoming fall, I want to win that tournament so that I can go to the individual nationals. So that is my first priority when I go back to school in August.” If there was any tournament that he would like to erase off his profile, it would have been one he played in Richmond, Virginia. “The guy I played was very good. He played for Virginia Tech,” Turnquest reflected. “He was the number two ranked player, but I didn’t play that well at all. I want to forget it, but I want to keep it in mind to see how well I’ve progressed over the season.”

Turnquest, 18, is a 6-foot, 2-inch 2015 graduate of CV Bethel Secondary High where he played basketball, softball and baseball. The son of Bernadette and Jeffery Turnquest, and sibling to former tennis player Victoria Turnquest, left some words of advice to the younger players here at home. “Just believe in yourself,” he said. “You could have the game, but without the mental strength, it doesn’t matter. So just stay strong mentally and just go out there and play hard.” Every year that he has been home and he had the opportunity to do so, Turnquest said he’s given it his best shot against the elite players in the country. He noted that he would like to one day represent the Bahamas on the Davis Cup team. But he knows that with the team travelling while he is in college, it’s going to be difficult. “Unfortunately for me, even if I get into the top four where I would be able to be on the team,” he pointed out. “I still won’t be able to compete because it’s when my college season is on. “So I just go out there to give my teammates some good competition.” Before he leaves on August 12, Turnquest said he would like to get to play in a tournament or two to show everybody the progress that he has made.


THE TRIBUNE

Wednesday, June 7, 2017, PAGE 3

Midnight 10k fun run/walk charity road race winners take the spotlight By BRENT STUBBS Senior Sports Reporter bstubbs@tribunemedia.net FOR the second consecutive year, the Roadmasters Running Club showed its support for a local charity by hosting its Midnight 10-kilometre fun run/walk charity road race. The event got started at Arawak Cay at midnight on Thursday, travelled to the round-a-bout at Baha Mar and ended up at Arawak Cay where the participants took part in light refreshments as they mixed and mingled. Although they didn’t give out any awards for their accomplishments, triathlete Cameron Roach earned bragging rights as the first overall finisher, while Suzy Eneas was the first female to cross the line. For Roach, the former national swim team member said after he started competing in triathlons about four years ago, he decided to test his skills in the run, which is the last component of the gruelling event. “It was good, it was hot, but it was a good pace,” said the soon-to-be 39-year-old Roach. “There were three of us in the pack and I was holding on waiting for the opportunity. “After I saw that Jason (Maynard) was tiring, I tried to take advantage of it. I went out and he came after me. I decided to hold on and I was able to hold on by a couple of feet.” While he does a lot of his training in the mornings before the sun comes up, Roach said he wasn’t affected by the conditions they competed in. “It’s better than running in the day or early in the morning,” he said. “I can run this again anytime. I am trying for a couple other events later this year, so it

was good to get this one under my belt.” As Roach raced to the finish, Maynard was right on his trail, but wasn’t able to catch him before the end was in sight. “It was really good, better conditions than last year,” Maynard said. “It was a flat course, very fast, so I was just happy with the race. I ran a very good time and finished strong.” Maynard, 40, said he saw Roach shadowing him but after he passed him, he ran out of real estate as he tried to regain possession of the race. “It was close,” Maynard stressed. “He kicked and I kicked, but he managed to get away.” With very limited concerns from the traffic on the road, Maynard said as soon as the next race is scheduled, he will be there to compete again. Last year, Eneas came in second behind Joan EllisLightbourne. This year, the result was reversed as Eneas ran with Roach and Maynard before they slowly pulled away from her at the end. “It was very good. This is the second one. I had a great time last year, so I decided to come back for this one,” Eneas stated. “I’m one of the Roadmasters members and they always put on a very good organised event, so I really enjoyed it.” Once Roach and Maynard pulled away, Eneas said she contended not to be caught. She wanted the victory to help her celebrate her 39th birthday today. “I feel kind of lucky because this humidity doesn’t affect me at all,” said Eneas about the conditions they competed in. “The only thing that bothers me in the night was the traffic, but it wasn’t a problem, so I felt very safe.”

1ST place male finisher Cameron Roach at the finish line. Photos: Shawn Hanna/Tribune Staff

2ND place female finisher Joan Ellis-Lightbourne. Last year, Ellis-Lightbourne was the first female finisher, but she admitted that she wasn’t disappointed in relinquishing the title to Eneas this year. “It was very humid, some breeze and lots of traffic out there, but it was enjoyable as usual,” she said. “It’s a charitable event and the monies will be donated to the Sickle Cell Association, so I’m glad that we as Roadmasters can help and give a

lending hand.” As a teacher at TG Glover Primary School, EllisLightbourne, who turns 42 on July 14, said it was good to get in the run before she joined her working collegiate in celebrating Labour Day. Roadmasters president Charles Johnson said they had over 200 competitors signed up, but just over 100 participated and completed the course without any in-

1ST place female finisher Suzy Eneas.

2ND place male finisher Jason Maynard. jury or incident. “This is the brainchild of Dr Ebby Jackson, who thought we should have a night run, something that is different and something that runners would be enthusiastic about doing,” he said. “We also decided to support one of the local charities. As this is the second year doing it, we decided to choose to give the proceeds to the Bahamas Sickle Cell

Association. We were quite pleased with the amount of competitors who showed up to participate.” For the record, Roach was timed in just about 40 minutes and Eneas came in as the first female about three minutes afterwards. For those who didn’t run, they walked as they were laminated with brightly coloured clothing, tennis shoes or other items to be visible to the motoring public.


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RYON HEALY HOMERS TWICE FOR 5 RBIS, A’S BEAT THE BLUE JAYS By JANIE MCCAULEY AP Baseball Writer OAKLAND, California (AP) — Ryon Healy is finding his timing at the plate and adjusting to his down time as a designated hitter. Manager Bob Melvin might consider having him take groundballs in the clubhouse if need be to keep the second-year major leaguer from getting bored when the Athletics are in the field. “He jokes about that, but I was seriously playing wall ball with myself in Houston,” Healy said, chuckling. He seems to have the routine down. Healy homered twice to drive in a careerhigh five runs, singlehandedly backing Sean Manaea’s fourth straight winning start as Oakland beat the Toronto Blue Jays 5-3 on Monday night. “If he doesn’t show up for work today, we’re in a little bit of trouble,” Melvin said. “He can hit.” Healy hit a three-run homer in the second and a two-run drive in the fourth for his second career multihomer game after previously doing so Saturday against Washington. He has 13 home runs for the year. Josh Donaldson wasted

ATHLETICS’ Ryon Healy connects for a three-run home run off Blue Jays’ J.A. Happ in the second inning Monday night. (AP Photos/Ben Margot)

BLUE Jays’ Kevin Pillar, left, is tagged out at home plate by Athletics catcher Josh Phegley in the fifth inning. Pillar attempted to score on a hit by Bautista.

no time reminding A’s fans what they’re missing, hitting an RBI double in the first inning for Toronto before striking out to end the game. Manaea (5-3) struck out

fence again after scoring 10 or more runs in its previous two games. Justin Smoak hit his 15th home run in the eighth off Liam Hendriks for the Blue Jays, who couldn’t do

seven over six innings, allowing two runs and four hits while walking three. And he extended the longest winning streak of his career. Oakland got plenty of of-

enough for J.A. Happ (0-4). Manager John Gibbons joked that Smoak is showing his power a year after he signed an $8.5 million, two-year contract. “He’s doing a heck of a

job. Shouldn’t have signed that contract. He’s losing money now,” Gibbons said. “I’ve never seen him this good. “We always envisioned it. It’s in there, and it’s just coming together for him.” Happ, making his second start since coming off the disabled list, suffered his first loss in eight starts against the A’s while allowing the most runs in those outings — having never given up more than three earned runs to Oakland. He was tagged for five runs and four hits in 5 1/3 innings, struck out four and walked three. He allowed two runs in four innings against Cincinnati last week, his first start after missing nearly six weeks because of a sore elbow. Yonder Alonso added two hits for Oakland, facing a lefty starter for the first time in nine games. Santiago Casilla, the third A’s reliever, finished for his ninth save in 11 chances. Mark Canha returned to right field for the A’s a day after being scratched with a stomach bug. Oakland left fielder Khris Davis experienced some tightness in his right calf but wasn’t overly concerned.

RENDON, GONZALEZ LEAD SURGING NATIONALS PAST DODGERS 4-2 By STEVE DILBECK Associated Press LOS ANGELES (AP) — It’s the great flaw of an otherwise elite team and has been all season for the Washington Nationals — their beleaguered bullpen. But on Monday night, the relief corps followed a solid start by Gio Gonzalez with three scoreless innings to lead the surging Nationals past the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-2 in a rematch of last year’s tight playoff series. “It’s about time we hung onto one of those,” manager Dusty Baker said. Anthony Rendon’s solo homer in the second started the scoring

for Washington, which got a tworun single from Matt Wieters with two outs in the fourth and another two-out RBI single from Bryce Harper in the fifth. “The key to the game was we got a couple of big two-out knocks,” Baker said. “That was the ballgame.” Washington, which owns the National League’s best record at 36-20, has won six of seven and increased its NL East lead to 11½ games. Gonzalez (5-1) went six innings, allowing two runs on four hits and two walks. He struck out five in the first meeting between the teams since the Dodgers edged the Nationals in five games during

their 2016 NL Division Series. Los Angeles scored both its runs in the sixth. Chris Taylor doubled in one, and Franklin Gutierrez had an RBI groundout. All of the Nationals’ scoring came against Hyun-Jin Ryu, who went a season-high seven innings. Ryu (2-6) yielded four runs on seven hits. He did not walk a batter and struck out four. “Hyun-Jin was good,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “He came out with a lot of conviction. Just to kind of see him come out with a purpose and focus was really encouraging.” The Dodgers, however, could never strike against Washington’s struggling bullpen. The unit has a

5.15 ERA and an opponents’ batting average of .280 — both the highest in baseball. But hard-throwing Enny Romero gave the Nationals two scoreless innings, and Matt Albers got the first two outs of the ninth. Oliver Perez struck out Yasmani Grandal looking at a 2-2 slider with a runner on for the third save of his 15-year career. The other two came in 2013 with Seattle. Six different Nationals have earned a save this year. “A pretty unbelievable breaking ball to throw on a 2-2 count,” Gonzalez said. “He grabs the ball and you know something good is going to happen. He’s just an exciting guy.”

NATIONALS starting pitcher Gio Gonzalez throws against the Dodgers on Monday night. (AP Photo/Jae C Hong)

BASEBALL CAPSULES ASTROS 7, ROYALS 3 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Yuli Gurriel hit a three-run homer, Brian McCann had a two-run shot and the Houston Astros beat the Kansas City Royals 7-3 on Monday night for their 11th consecutive win. It’s the longest winning

streak in the majors this season and one shy of the Astros’ record. They won 12 straight in 1999 and 2004. Houston, with the best record in the majors at 4216, has also won 11 road games in a row — a franchise record. Gurriel homered in the

ninth inning. He has gone deep in back-to-back games and has 10 RBIs during a six-game hitting streak. Astros starter Mike Fiers (3-2) was charged with two runs in five-plus innings. He is 6-0 in his past 10 road starts dating to August 20. Jorge Bonifacio homered for the Royals, but Ian Kennedy (0-6) gave up four runs and six hits over five innings. Kennedy, in the second season of a fiveyear, $70 million contract, is winless in 14 starts since a September 11 victory. Whit Merrifield went 0 for 5 to snap his 19-game hitting streak, longest in the majors this season. CUBS 3, MARLINS 1 CHICAGO (AP) — Eddie Butler pitched three-hit ball into the sixth inning, Kris Bryant hit a two-run homer and Chicago topped Miami for its fourth straight victory. Albert Almora Jr added a solo shot as Chicago remained perfect on its 10game homestand after going winless on a six-game West Coast trip. With closer Wade Davis on paternity leave, Mike Montgomery pitched 3 1/3 innings for his second save in his first appearance since May 28. Miami had won three straight and seven of eight. Marcell Ozuna had two hits, but the Marlins’ lineup struggled for the most part on an unseasonably cool, breezy night at Wrigley Field. Butler (3-1) was working on a shutout before Dee Gordon hit a sacrifice fly in the sixth, trimming Chicago’s lead to 3-1. Giancarlo Stanton followed with a two-out double, chasing Butler. REDS 4, CARDINALS 2 CINCINNATI (AP) — Eugenio Suarez and Scooter Gennett hit consecutive two-run doubles in the seventh inning, and the Reds came from behind to beat

the slumping Cardinals. St Louis starter Carlos Martinez (4-5) was dominant through six innings before wilting in the seventh as the Cardinals dropped their fourth straight and eighth in 11 games. The Reds had lost two in a row and five of six going into the opener of this fourgame series. Martinez, who was 4-1 with a 2.03 ERA in his previous six starts, faced the minimum 18 batters through six innings with the help of catcher Yadier Molina, who threw out major league stolen base leader Billy Hamilton trying to swipe third in the first inning and Adam Duvall attempting to steal second in the second. GIANTS 7, BREWERS 2 MILWAUKEE (AP) — Jeff Samardzija pitched deep into the game after a shaky beginning, Aaron Hill had a tiebreaking, pinch-hit double in the eighth inning and the Giants beat the Brewers. Hill drove in two with two outs off reliever Rob Scahill (1-2). Samardzija (2-7) surrendered two runs in the first but quickly settled down, retiring 19 consecutive batters in one stretch. Milwaukee’s first-inning runs came in an unusual fashion. With runners on second and third and one out, Hernan Perez lofted a fly to left. Eric Sogard tagged and scored when left fielder Orlando Calixte’s throw sailed high over catcher Buster Posey and caromed off the wall behind home plate. The ball dropped behind the padding and out of play, allowing another run to score. PHILLIES 11, BRAVES 4 ATLANTA (AP) — Odubel Herrera continued his power surge with a tworun homer and two doubles, Tommy Joseph homered

and drove in three runs, and the Phillies beat the Braves. Herrera became the first Philadelphia player to hit two doubles in three straight games, according to Phillies records dating back to 1913. He had three extra-base hits for the second straight game, with a homer in each one.

Aaron Altherr added a two-run shot off Eric O’Flaherty in the eighth. Braves 44-year-old righthander Bartolo Colon endured another rocky start, allowing eight runs. Nick Pivetta (1-2) permitted three runs in five innings for his first major league win.


THE TRIBUNE

Wednesday, June 7, 2017, PAGE 5

CLEVELAND (AP) — LeBron James isn’t changing his game, Tyronn Lue isn’t changing his lineup. The Cavaliers aren’t slowing down. Defiant — and some might argue delusional — in the face of a 2-0 deficit to the postseason-perfect Golden State Warriors in the NBA Finals, the defending champions are sticking with their plan. They may have no choice. Back home after being outrun and outgunned by the Warriors, who won Games 1 and 2 at Oracle Arena by a combined 41 points, the Cavs find themselves in the same predicament they were in last year. This time, though, the hole feels deeper mostly because Kevin Durant is now leading a team seeking revenge after blowing a 3-1 lead to Cleveland in last year’s Finals. To this point, chapter three of Cleveland vs. Golden State, a Finals dubbed “The Three-Match” has been a mismatch. Still, Lue, the Cavs’ coolunder-pressure coach, believes his team can equal the Warriors’ frenetic pace and flip the script as it did in 2016. “We just have to take care of the basketball,” Lue said yesterday after the Cavs practiced at Quicken Loans Arena. “I think taking good shots when we’re playing with pace and not turning the basketball over, letting them get out in transition. So that’s our game. We’re not going to change our game because of who we’re playing. And I’m confident that we can play that way, and we did it last year. “A lot of people said we couldn’t. But that’s our game. That’s who we are. And we’re not going to change just because we’re playing Golden State.”

One of the options Lue has heading into tonight’s Game 3 is to bench struggling starting guard J.R. Smith for Iman Shumpert, who played well defensively in Game 2 but wore himself out guarding Durant and needed IV fluids afterward. Smith drained a 3-pointer for the series’ first basket, but hasn’t scored since. He’s just 1 of 6 from the field, and for some strange reason, one of the game’s most confident shooters has been hesitant to let his jumper fly. Lue, though, is staying with Smith, who said his wife, Jewel, offered advice on how to end his slump. “She had a great idea for me,” he said. “She told me every time I touch it, shoot it.” That’s how the Warriors seem to be playing. Golden State’s breakneck speed on offence has been a sight to behold. With unmatched firepower, the Warriors are pushing the pace and the Cavaliers to exhaustion. According to ESPN’s research, the pace of play in the first two games was faster than in any of James’ previous 212 career postseason games. And, the first quarter in which the Warriors outscored the Cavs 40-34 and the teams combined for 130 possessions, was the fastest James’ career — regular or postseason — spanning 5,100 quarters. It’s no wonder James, who has been his typically dominant self, averaging 28.5 points, 13 rebounds and 11 assists, stopped attacking in the second half. He was gassed, and the Cavs couldn’t keep up as the Warriors scored 132 despite 20 turnovers. Cleveland prefers to play at a high tempo as well, and while that would seem to play into a trap with Golden State, Lue and James were adamant the Cavs aren’t pumping their brakes.

WARRIORS SEEM CAPABLE OF ANYTHING - EXCEPT ANOTHER COLLAPSE By BRIAN MAHONEY AP Basketball Writer CLEVELAND (AP) — The possibilities seem endless for the Golden State Warriors when they are rolling. A 150-point game isn’t even out of reach. “I mean, we could have gotten at least 140 the other night if we only had about 10 to 15 turnovers,” All-Star guard Klay Thompson said. Dominating like no team ever has in the postseason, the Warriors look capable of anything — except another NBA Finals collapse. They take a 2-0 lead over Cleveland into tonight’s Game 3, just as they did last year. The Warriors actually had a higher victory margin through two games in the 2016 Finals, but they didn’t have Kevin Durant or a fully healthy Stephen Curry then. They do now and are playing much better basketball than this time last year. “As a team, I think so,” Thompson said. “I think we’re moving the ball great, we’re shooting the ball at a high clip and our defence has been unbelievable.” Somehow, the Cavaliers have to change all that. They did last year, coming home after losing the first two by a combined 48 points and beginning the turnaround with a 120-90 rout in Game 3. The opponent and the situation are the same, yet things feel different. “That’s last year and I don’t even know the feeling anymore,” LeBron James said. “So I’m just mentally

strengthening my mind and getting my mind ready and focused on what tomorrow’s going to bring, and so I look forward to it.” The Warriors committed 20 turnovers in Game 2 but simply shook that off with an NBA Finals-record 18 3-pointers in a 132-113 romp. It was the second time in the postseason they committed at least 20 turnovers, and yet they scored at least 120 points in both games. They are averaging nearly 119 points and winning by a record 16.9 per game in the postseason, and they’ve really picked it up lately. Golden State has scored 126 per game on nearly 52 per cent shooting over the last five games. “We played against good teams, and we came to the Finals undefeated, and here we are up 2-0, so we’re playing amazing basketball right now. The best we probably played throughout the year,” centre Zaza Pachulia said. With a loaded lineup and enough hot hands to fill an octopus, the Warriors don’t need to rely on any one player to take a lot of shots. If somebody is struggling, they can just find someone else with their precision ball movement. A year after winning 73 games to set the NBA’s regular-season record, the Warriors can make more history if they sweep the Cavs to complete the league’s first undefeated postseason. They embraced the chase last year but said yesterday that they’re not thinking at all about 16-0.

JUDGE PARKER

CARPE DIEM

DENNIS THE MENACE Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so the each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Sunday

MARVIN BLONDIE CAVALIERS’ KYRIE IRVING, seated from left, LeBron James, Richard Jefferson, Kyle Korver and J.R. Smith sit on the bench during the second half of Game 2 of the NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors on Sunday night. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Monday, June 5th, 2017

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

TIGER

1

CRYPTIC PUZZLE 1 Catalogue produced by mountaineer (11) 9 Decrease one’s difficulties? (4,3) 10 Animal obtained in CALVIN & HOBBES a lottery (5)

11 Secluded spot arrived at by rail perhaps (4)

a minor riot (5)

18 Attempt to get smart at the meeting (8)

DENNIS MENACE 19 ATHE case for a sempstress (4) 22 Mother returns in a frenzy (5) 23 They attend to the ways of the world (7) 24 How near David got to Goliath? (6,5)

6

10

12 13

turn of fate (4) 4 Scolding a sailor (6)

14

15

16

5 Untrustworthy man who’s

17

been jailed more 6 Beaten, due to no

Spanish currency (6)

5

8

11

3 State of mind caused by a

into many (8)

16 A steep change in

4

caused no end of

than once? (3-5)

aristocrats (6)

3

9

2 Biblical character

12 One metal fused 14 Head over the French

2

7

Down

Across

18

19

20

21

preparation (7)

22

7 Hunting season problem

23

for the easily bored? (7,4) 24

8 Provisional allowances for serving men (4,7) 13 Check the others have water (8) 15 It may be fixed by

EASY PUZZLE

By TOM WITHERS AP Sports Writer

CALVIN & HOBBES

Across

1 Method Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9based grid on one at with variance (7) given numbers. The object is to place the several experience (4,2,5) numbers 1 noisy to 9 in(6)the empty squares so the each row, 17 Is unconsciously times long each column and each 3x3 box contains 9 theOf same number only(5)once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku 20 Play time past (7) increases from Monday to Sunday 21 It is usually taken in water (4)

Yesterday’s Cryptic Solution

Yesterday’s Easy Solution

Across: 1 Reeked, 4 Tidiness, 9 Lieder, 10 Specific, 12 Toys, 13 Green, 14 Scar, 17 No admittance, 20 Prussian blue, 23 Ride, 24 Amend, 25 Fair, 28 Boarders, 29 Russia, 30 Absinthe, 31 Sherry. Down: 1 Relating, 2 Everyman, 3 Eyes, 5 Imprecations, 6 Inch, 7 Effect, 8 Secure, 11 Protest march, 15 Smart, 16 Scene, 18 Cleanser, 19 February, 21 Arabia, 22 Ideals, 26 Eden, 27 Ruth.

Across: 1 Radish, 4 Upheaval, 9 Saying, 10 Gangling, 12 Root, 13 Shawl, 14 Glen, 17 Exaggeration, 20 Henceforward, 23 Peak, 24 Decry, 25 Lime, 28 Ecstatic, 29 Supine, 30 Rendered, 31 Decent. Down: 1 Reserved, 2 Day-to-day, 3 Sane, 5 Play with fire, 6 Edgy, 7 Vainly, 8 Legend, 11 Characterise, 15 Egret, 16 Board, 18 Maritime, 19 Adherent, 21 Appear, 22 Damson, 26 Haze, 27 Mute.

10 11 12 14 16 18 19 22 23 24

Discoloration (5) Concept (4) Particular (8) Small mechanical device (6) To mix (6) Shrank back (8) Encourage in crime (4) Series of linked events (5) Egg-shaped wind instrument (7) Coins of low value (5,6)

Down 2 Father’s brother (5) 3 Fencing sword (4) 4 Object of obsessive devotion (6) 5 Frenzied emotional state (8) 6 Significance (7) 7 Redeeming feature (6,5) 8 Effectively active (11) 13 Localised (8) 15 Speak rhetorically (7) 17 Courageous (6) 20 Existence (5) 21 Indonesian island (4)

Tuesday, June 6th, 2017 1

CRYPTIC PUZZLE Across 1 Exploded - like a balloon? (5,2) 4 He may be spotted, laughing (5)

need? (6) 13 Devious way to avoid overcrowding in cities (6) 15 Job taken up by a tenant (10) 18 He caters for people who don’t follow rules (8)

14 15

16

17

from Holland? (4) 6 Head branches (7)

18

19

9 Worried, with due respect perhaps (10)

20

11 Such tolerance may be a

21

matter of degree (8) 12 The sort of options exercised by Cochise (7) 16 The dark knight has been guillotined (5) 17 Some of the film is true to life, we hear (4)

Yesterday’s Cryptic Solution

Yesterday’s Easy Solution

Across: 1 Enumeration, 9 Iron out, 10 Otter, 11 Lair, 12 Antimony, 14 Nobles, 16 Peseta, 18 Trysting, 19 Etui, 22 Mania, 23 Roadmen, 24 Stone’s throw.

Across: 1 Rule of thumb, 9 Ancient, 10 Stain, 11 Idea, 12 Especial, 14 Gadget, 16 Mingle, 18 Recoiled, 19 Abet, 22 Chain, 23 Ocarina, 24 Small change. Down: 2 Uncle, 3 Epee, 4 Fetish, 5 Hysteria, 6 Meaning, 7 Saving grace, 8 Influential, 13 Regional, 15 Declaim, 17 Heroic, 20 Being, 21 Java.

Down: 2 Naomi, 3 Mood, 4 Rating, 5 Two-timer, 6 Outdone, 7 Killing time, 8 Army rations, 13 Restrain, 15 Bayonet, 17 Snores, 20 Tempo, 21 Bath.

13

5 Applied cosmetic food

20 Shoes repaired

21 The talk of the district (7)

12

hold-ups (10)

14 Place free of corruption (6)

we hear (5)

11

responsible for early road

19 Breathing space (4) and disposed of,

6

10

so unfair (3-5) 4 He may have been

12 Sign of a pressing

5

9

2 It could be indeed

8 He’s bound to better

style? (6,4)

4

8

inferior? (5)

3 Lock oil? (6)

himself elsewhere (8)

3

7

1 Feel depressed and

7 An inalienable right (4)

10 Takes notes, Chinese

2

Down

EASY PUZZLE

NO CHANGE: CAVS NOT SLOWING, STICKING TO PLAN VS. WARRIORS

Across 1 But on the other hand (7) 4 Minor impediment (5) 7 Raise (4) 8 Card game for gambling (8) 10 Inferior alternative (6-4) 12 Wild dog-like scavenger (6) 13 Lacking spontaneity (6) 15 Handle skilfully (10) 18 A precious metal (8) 19 Lean to one side (4) 20 Chain of mountains (5) 21 Baltic country (7)

Down 1 Cajolery (5) 2 Usefulness (8) 3 Despicable (6) 4 Mystifying jargon (5-5) 5 Division of academic year (4) 6 Impetuously rash person (7) 9 Singly (3,2,1,4) 11 Bring about (8) 12 A coniferous shrub (7) 14 Tiny (6) 16 Additional (5) 17 Daybreak (4)


THE TRIBUNE

Wednesday, June 7, 2017, PAGE 7

Latvian teen Ostapenko defeats Wozniacki, faces Bacsinszky in French Open semi-final By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer

PARIS (AP) — With the unbridled joy of a kid reaching heights she never has, and the go-forit strokes of someone too bold to know better, an unseeded 19-year-old from Latvia, Jelena Ostapenko, beat former No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 at the French Open on a rainy Tuesday to reach her first Grand Slam semi-final. Ostapenko sent shots toward the lines and put them right where she wanted often enough to deliver 38 winners — 32 more than the defensive-minded Wozniacki, a two-time runner-up at majors. “I knew,” the 47thranked Ostapenko said, “I had to be aggressive all match.” Ostapenko’s next opponent is 30th-seeded Timea Bacsinszky of Switzerland, who eliminated 13th-seeded Kristina Mladenovic of

France 6-4, 6-4. Both women’s quarter-finals were interrupted twice because of showers; the first delay lasted more than 3 hours, the second about a half-hour. The men’s quarter-finals involving Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic that had been scheduled for yesterday were postponed until today. When the women’s matches began, the wind averaged 18 mph (30 kph), with gusts up to 50 mph (85 kph), making balls swerve oddly. Serve tosses were an adventure. Players repeatedly wiped their eyes to get rid of dust kicked up from the clay court. “We had all the seasons rolled into one today. We had a hurricane, a sandstorm, and we almost had snow, too,” Bacsinszky told the crowd at Court Philippe Chatrier. “It was really tough to keep my concentration all day long. I feel exhausted — and I’m sure you do, too.”

JELENA Ostapenko clenches her fist after scoring a point against Caroline Wozniacki.

teresting before ceding it. Still, it was clear that she was up to the task against the 11th-seeded Wozniacki, who is 26 and has been to two US Open finals and yet somehow seemed the less sure of herself. Then again, this was a matchup that clearly suits Ostapenko: She is now 4-0 against Wozniacki. Ostapenko’s rise has been swift. A year ago, she lost in the first round of the French Open. The year before that, she lost in the first round of French Open qualifying. Before last week, she had

LATVIA’s Jelena Ostapenko serves against Denmark’s Caroline Wozniacki yesterday during their quarter-final match of the French Open at the Roland Garros stadium. (AP Photos/Petr David Josek)

Ostapenko had the most trouble in those conditions, quickly trailing 5-0. She calibrated her

strokes better as time went on, and the air swirled less, taking four games in a row to making the first set in-

THE WEATHER REPORT

5-Day Forecast

TODAY

ORLANDO

High: 82° F/28° C Low: 71° F/22° C

TAMPA

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

A couple of showers and a t‑storm

Partly cloudy, a t‑storm in spots

Clouds and sun, a t‑storm in spots

Partly sunny, a t‑storm in spots

Periods of sun, a t‑storm in spots

Partly sunny, a shower; breezy

High: 94°

Low: 79°

High: 95° Low: 80°

High: 92° Low: 81°

High: 93° Low: 80°

High: 92° Low: 78°

AccuWeather RealFeel

AccuWeather RealFeel

AccuWeather RealFeel

AccuWeather RealFeel

AccuWeather RealFeel

AccuWeather RealFeel

104° F

86° F

107°-89° F

109°-89° F

109°-88° F

100°-81° F

The exclusive AccuWeather RealFeel Temperature® is an index that combines the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine intensity, cloudiness, precipitation, pressure and elevation on the human body—everything that affects how warm or cold a person feels. Temperatures reflect the high and the low for the day.

N

almanac

E

W

ABACO

S

N

High: 85° F/29° C Low: 80° F/27° C

10‑20 knots

S

High: 85° F/29° C Low: 74° F/23° C

8‑16 knots

FT. LAUDERDALE

FREEPORT

High: 85° F/29° C Low: 76° F/24° C

N E S

E

W

WEST PALM BEACH

W

uV inDex toDay

TONIGHT

High: 85° F/29° C Low: 77° F/25° C

High: 88° F/31° C Low: 79° F/26° C

MIAMI

High: 87° F/31° C Low: 77° F/25° C

12‑25 knots

Statistics are for Nassau through 2 p.m. yesterday Temperature High ................................................... 90° F/32° C Low .................................................... 80° F/27° C Normal high ....................................... 86° F/30° C Normal low ........................................ 73° F/23° C Last year’s high ................................. 90° F/32° C Last year’s low ................................... 81° F/27° C Precipitation As of 2 p.m. yesterday .................................. trace Year to date ................................................. 4.89” Normal year to date ..................................... 9.52”

ELEUTHERA

NASSAU

High: 94° F/34° C Low: 79° F/26° C

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

High: 86° F/30° C Low: 81° F/27° C

N

KEY WEST

High: 87° F/31° C Low: 80° F/27° C

E

W

7‑14 knots

S

6‑12 knots

High

Ht.(ft.)

Low

Ht.(ft.)

Today

7:10 a.m. 7:37 p.m.

2.3 2.9

1:22 a.m. 0.2 1:16 p.m. ‑0.1

Thursday

7:50 a.m. 8:15 p.m.

2.3 2.9

2:03 a.m. 0.1 1:54 p.m. ‑0.1

Friday

8:30 a.m. 8:53 p.m.

2.3 2.9

2:42 a.m. 0.1 2:32 p.m. ‑0.1

Saturday

9:09 a.m. 9:31 p.m.

2.3 2.9

3:21 a.m. 3:09 p.m.

0.1 0.0

Sunday

9:48 a.m. 10:08 p.m.

2.2 2.9

4:00 a.m. 3:47 p.m.

0.1 0.1

Monday

10:27 a.m. 10:46 p.m.

2.2 2.9

4:38 a.m. 4:26 p.m.

0.1 0.2

Tuesday

11:08 a.m. 11:26 p.m.

2.2 2.8

5:17 a.m. 5:07 p.m.

0.2 0.3

sun anD moon Sunrise Sunset

6:19 a.m. 7:58 p.m.

Moonrise Moonset

6:28 p.m. 5:08 a.m.

Full

Last

New

First

Jun. 9

Jun. 17

Jun. 23

Jun. 30

ANDROS

SAN SALVADOR

GREAT EXUMA

High: 86° F/30° C Low: 80° F/27° C

High: 86° F/30° C Low: 80° F/27° C

N

High: 91° F/33° C Low: 81° F/27° C

S

LONG ISLAND High: 87° F/31° C Low: 80° F/27° C

L

E

W

insurance management tracking map

L

tiDes For nassau

High: 87° F/31° C Low: 79° F/26° C

N

S

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

The higher the AccuWeather UV IndexTM number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

CAT ISLAND

E

W

never been past the third round of any Grand Slam tournament in eight appearances. Now she will play for a berth in the final on Thursday, which just so happens to be Ostapenko’s 20th birthday, and Bacsinszky’s 28th. For Bacsinszky, it will be only slightly more familiar territory. She has played in one previous major semifinal, also in Paris, losing to eventual champion Serena Williams two years ago. “It’s the tournament closest to my heart,” Bacsinszky said. “I love to play here.”

6‑12 knots

MAYAGUANA High: 86° F/30° C Low: 81° F/27° C

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and

CROOKED ISLAND / ACKLINS

tonight’s lows.

RAGGED ISLAND High: 84° F/29° C Low: 81° F/27° C

GREAT INAGUA High: 88° F/31° C Low: 80° F/27° C

N

N E

W

E

W

H

High: 85° F/29° C Low: 80° F/27° C

S

S

6‑12 knots

4‑8 knots

marine Forecast ABACO ANDROS CAT ISLAND CROOKED ISLAND ELEUTHERA FREEPORT GREAT EXUMA GREAT INAGUA LONG ISLAND MAYAGUANA NASSAU RAGGED ISLAND SAN SALVADOR

Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday: Today: Thursday:

WINDS SW at 8‑16 Knots SSW at 8‑16 Knots S at 7‑14 Knots SSW at 7‑14 Knots S at 6‑12 Knots SSE at 6‑12 Knots SE at 6‑12 Knots SE at 6‑12 Knots S at 6‑12 Knots S at 7‑14 Knots SSW at 8‑16 Knots SSW at 10‑20 Knots S at 6‑12 Knots S at 6‑12 Knots NE at 4‑8 Knots S at 4‑8 Knots S at 4‑8 Knots SSE at 6‑12 Knots SE at 7‑14 Knots SE at 7‑14 Knots S at 8‑16 Knots S at 4‑8 Knots SE at 6‑12 Knots SSE at 6‑12 Knots S at 6‑12 Knots S at 7‑14 Knots

WAVES 2‑4 Feet 3‑5 Feet 1‑3 Feet 1‑3 Feet 2‑4 Feet 2‑4 Feet 2‑4 Feet 2‑4 Feet 2‑4 Feet 2‑4 Feet 2‑4 Feet 2‑4 Feet 1‑2 Feet 1‑2 Feet 1‑3 Feet 1‑3 Feet 1‑3 Feet 1‑3 Feet 4‑7 Feet 3‑6 Feet 1‑2 Feet 1‑2 Feet 1‑3 Feet 1‑3 Feet 1‑3 Feet 1‑3 Feet

VISIBILITY 3 Miles 3 Miles 3 Miles 5 Miles 8 Miles 8 Miles 10 Miles 10 Miles 5 Miles 8 Miles 3 Miles 3 Miles 8 Miles 8 Miles 10 Miles 10 Miles 8 Miles 10 Miles 10 Miles 10 Miles 3 Miles 5 Miles 8 Miles 10 Miles 8 Miles 8 Miles

WATER TEMPS. 80° F 79° F 84° F 81° F 80° F 81° F 82° F 83° F 80° F 80° F 80° F 79° F 83° F 83° F 83° F 84° F 83° F 84° F 82° F 83° F 81° F 81° F 83° F 84° F 81° F 82° F


PAGE 8, Wednesday, June 7, 2017

THE TRIBUNE


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