Look back as Zorro turns 100. Scene, A12
R unning red lights dangerous, but fixable. METRO // A7
Texas authorities unsure of motive in deadly mass shooting. A6 FORE CAS T: S u nny, HIGH: 91, LO W 71. A 2
Mo nd ay, S eptember 2 , 2019
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Oklahoma 49, houston 31 • Jalen Hurts stars in debut as Sooners’ quarterback
An uprooted tree is pictured following severe storms in Grove on Monday. Sh eil a Sto gsdil l /F or the Tulsa World
Fall severe weather a maybe Is fall Oklahoma’s second severe weather season? Experts say it depends
Oklahoma quarterback Jalen Hurts high fives a fan after the game in Norman on Sunday. IA N MAULE
Historic start
By Michael Dekker Tulsa World
When forecasters talk about severe weather season in Okla homa, most people know they’re talking about spring. But is there a second se vere weather season in the fall? The short answer, according to experts: Sometimes. “There is definitely a secondary peak in severe storm occurrence in the fall, though there typically is consider able yearto-year variability that makes identifying trends difficult,” said Bill Bunting , chief of forecast operations for the Storm Prediction Center in Norman. The center issues tornado and severe thunderstorm watches
From staff reports
N
ORMAN — New Oklahoma quarterback Jalen Hurts had one of the most prolific days in Sooners history, amassing more than 500 yards of offense and six touchdowns, as OU knocked off Houston 49-31 on Sunday in both teams’ season opener. Hurts, a transfer from Alabama, started at quarterback with the difficult task of following back-to-back Heisman Trophy winners and NFL first-round picks in Kyler Murray and Baker Mayfield. He likely put himself immediately in this year’s Heis-
more in sports
Great Raf t Rac e The Webco Industries raft shoots water balloons at spectators during Tulsa’s Great Raft Race in 2018. Tul s a World file
Float time down the river can take anywhere from 2 to 5 hours.
Where to watch
Tulsa’s Great Raft Race will commandeer the Arkansas River with its flotilla of oddball vessels Monday. Here are some things you need to know if you’re heading out to join the fun.
Case Community Park, River West Festival Park or anywhere along the River Parks trails. Parking is free at Case Community Park and $10 in the lot across from River West.
Start/finish
Finish line festival
The annual float trip down the Arkansas River begins with put in at 7 a.m. Monday at Sand Springs Case Community Park, 2500 S. River City Park Road. Waves will be launched every 30 minutes starting at 8 a.m. The race ends at the River West Festival Park, 2105 S. Jackson Ave.
Open 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at River West Festival Park. It features kids inflatables, a cardboard regatta, sand castle exhibition, food trucks and award presentations. For more information, visit tulsaraftrace.com. — From staff reports
Category 5 Dorian strikes Bahamas with record fury Catastrophic hurricane rakes island nation with winds of 185 mph By Ramon Espinosa Associated Press
McLEAN’S TOWN CAY, Bahamas — H urricane Dorian struck the nor thern Bahamas as a ca tastrophic Category 5 storm Sunday, its record 185 mph winds ripping off roofs, overturning cars and tearing down power lines as hundreds hunkered down in schools, churches and shelters. Dorian slammed into El bow Cay in Abaco island a t 12:40 p.m., and then made a second landfall near M arsh Harbour at 2 p.m., after authorities made las t-minute pleas for those in low-lying ar eas to evacuate. “It’s devastating,” said J oy Jibrilu, director general of the Bahamas’ Ministry of Tourism and Aviation. “There has been huge damage to proper ty and infrastructure. Luckily, no loss
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man conversation by completing 20-of-23 passes for 332 yards and rushing for 176 yards on 16 carries. It was the best total yardage debut for an OU player in school history, beating Mayfield’s 396 against Akron in 2015. The OU defense was under the direction of first-year coordinator Alex Grinch, who was brought in to bring life to a unit that was historically bad in 2018. The Sooners held Houston to 24 yards on its first four series, but allowed back-to-back 75-yard plus touchdown drives in the second half to come back to Earth.
Oklahoma dominates Houston in season opener. Page B1
»» See Fall, page A4
What you need to know to enjoy Monday’s Great Raft Race
/Tulsa World
Editorial A5 Movies A12 Obituaries A8
Sports TV B2 Sudoku A
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Seagulls gather near a woman who is feeding them chicken and French fries as dark clouds gather and Hurricane Dorian approaches on Taino beach in Freeport, Bahamas, on Sunday. R a mo n Es pino s a /A P
There were indica tions that the slow-moving Dorian would veer sharply nor theastward after passing the Bahamas and track up the U .S. Southeastern seaboard. But authorities warned that even if its core did not make U.S. landfall, the po tent storm would lik ely hammer the coas t with power ful
of life reported.” The hurricane was ap proaching the eas tern end of Grand Bahama island in the evening, forecasters said. With its maximum sustained winds of 185 mph and gusts up to 220 mph, Dorian tied the record for the most powerful Atlantic hurricane e ver to come ashore, equaling the Labor Day hurricane of 1935.
»» See Dorian, page A4
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A2 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2 , 2019
TODAY'S FORECAST
EXTENDED 5-DAY FORECAST
91 71
MORNING
68
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
93 70
Sunny and humid. Clear and humid tonight. Wind: SE 3-6 mph POP: 0% RealFeel®: 100/76 AFTERNOON EVENING
85
T ULSA WOR LD
92 71
Humid with plenty of sunshine Wind: SSW 6-12 mph POP: 0% RealFeel®: 101/77
91
THURSDAY
Mostly sunny and humid Wind: NE 3-6 mph POP: 5% RealFeel®: 101/74
FRIDAY
93 71
SATURDAY
94 68
Humid with plenty of sunshine Wind: SSE 4-8 mph POP: 0% RealFeel®: 101/71
Sunshine, very warm and humid Wind: S 6-12 mph POP: 5% RealFeel®: 101/69
86 65 Humid with clouds and sun Wind: S 6-12 mph POP: 25% RealFeel®: 90/65
The exclusive AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® (RF) 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. Shown are the highest and lowest values for each day. POP: Probability of Precipitation
REGIONAL FORECAST
WEATHER Weather ALMANAC Tulsa through 5 p.m. yesterday
Temperature High .................................................. 91 Low ................................................... 69 Normal high ....................................... 90 Normal low ........................................ 68 Record high ......................... 108 (2000) Record low ............................ 48 (1967) High one year ago .............................. 95 Low one year ago ................................ 77
Precipitation
National Extremes Yesterday High: 110 in Needles, CA Low: 27 in Yellowstone N.P., WY
National extremes are for the 48 contiguous states.
AIR QUALITY TODAY Yesterday's rating
Today's forecast
43 0 50 100 150 200
LAKE LEVELS Measures above unless denoted by minus. Statistics as of 7 a.m. yesterday. Beaver ........... 5.20 Keystone ....... 6.35 Broken Bow . -3.48 McGee ......... -1.88 Bull Shoals . 22.69 Oologah ........ 4.86 Copan ........... 1.82 Pine Creek ... -5.01 Eucha ............ 0.10 Salt Plains .... 1.54 Eufaula ......... 3.33 Sardis .......... -0.41 Fort Gibson ... 9.73 Skiatook ....... 0.35 Grand ............ 0.76 Spavinaw ....... 0.38 Heyburn ....... -0.54 Table Rock .... 1.87 Hudson ......... 3.91 Tenkiller ...... 10.04 Hulah ............ 2.54 Texoma .......... 0.27 Kaw ............... 6.04 Wister ........... 1.22
300
500
What it means: 0-50: Good; 51-100: Moderate; 101-150: Unhealthy for sensitive people; 151-200: Unhealthy; 201-300: Very Unhealthy; 301-500: Hazardous Source: airnow.gov
24 hours ending 5 p.m. Sunday 6 p.m. 75 2 a.m. 70 10 a.m. 77 7 p.m. 75 3 a.m. 71 11 a.m. 79 82 8 p.m. 74 4 a.m. 70 Noon 9 p.m. 73 5 a.m. 70 1 p.m. 86 10 p.m. 73 6 a.m. 69 2 p.m. 88 11 p.m. 72 7 a.m. 69 3 p.m. 89 Mid. 72 8 a.m. 70 4 p.m. 88 1 a.m. 71 9 a.m. 73 5 p.m. 89
First
Full
Last
New
Source: Allergy Clinic of Tulsa
Sep 5
Lawton 94/68
Amarillo 94/66
Today Hi/Lo/W 66/58/t 91/73/s 112/80/s 104/90/s 89/77/t 94/64/pc 73/49/pc 87/80/sh 69/52/pc 60/32/s 95/74/s 69/46/s 88/76/t 66/55/pc 110/90/s 62/55/c 73/48/pc 71/54/pc 89/71/t 87/80/t 92/75/pc 91/64/s
Tue. Hi/Lo/W 68/57/pc 92/73/s 109/78/s 104/92/s 89/78/c 94/64/s 74/54/s 84/79/t 70/53/pc 55/33/s 93/74/s 75/51/s 88/76/s 67/57/sh 108/90/pc 68/48/sh 76/52/pc 73/52/pc 87/73/t 88/79/r 96/79/s 93/64/s
Today City Kandahar Kuwait City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Oslo Paris Rome Santiago Seoul Sydney Tehran Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vienna Warsaw Zurich
Hi/Lo/W 101/70/s 119/90/s 90/68/s 71/55/pc 89/62/s 78/52/t 71/54/r 74/56/pc 93/82/pc 63/46/pc 73/52/pc 84/67/t 74/37/s 84/68/c 66/49/s 91/71/s 92/74/s 87/76/pc 75/57/sh 71/57/t 73/55/t 64/47/c
McAlester 92/69
Dallas 95/73
Jackson 93/70 Shreveport 97/73
NATIONAL CITIES
SKYWATCH Two close neighbors are hiding in the sunlight right now. Mars is going first, passing behind the sun today. Mercury will follow it tomorrow. Both will return to view next month: Mars in the dawn sky and Mercury in the evening sky. Source: McDonald Observatory
The Planets Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Rise 6:49 a.m. 7:22 a.m. 6:55 a.m. 2:42 p.m. 4:48 p.m. 10:13 p.m.
Set 7:54 p.m. 8:09 p.m. 7:54 p.m. 12:29 a.m. 2:34 a.m. 11:38 a.m.
NATIONAL FORECAST
Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Tue. Hi/Lo/W 101/69/s 118/86/s 92/71/s 73/58/pc 92/62/s 76/55/t 70/61/pc 74/55/pc 92/81/t 61/45/sh 75/54/s 85/64/t 77/45/pc 83/70/c 69/52/s 93/68/s 89/75/s 85/74/pc 74/63/c 73/49/t 70/50/t 72/48/pc
Little Rock 91/70
Oklahoma City 91/67
WORLD CITIES City Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bahrain Bangkok Beijing Berlin Bermuda Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Calgary Caracas Copenhagen Dubai Dublin Frankfurt Geneva Havana Hong Kong Islamabad Kabul
TULSA
91/71
El Paso 95/70
Sep 13 Sep 21 Sep 28
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019
Stillwater 92/69
Las Cruces 94/65
SUN AND MOON
POLLEN Trees ........................................... Absent Weeds ............................. Moderate (28) Grasses ...................................... Low (2) Mold ................................. High (15463)
Albuquerque 93/68
Kansas City 87/70 St. Louis 86/69
Topeka 88/70
Woodward 94/69
TULSA TEMPERATURES
Sunrise today ........................... 6:56 a.m. Sunset tonight ........................ 7:50 p.m. Total daylight ................... 12 hr., 55 min. Moonrise today .......................10:33 a.m. Moonset today ...................... 10:19 p.m.
Goodland 97/66
Durango 91/49
LATER INFO: Call 918-669-7521
24 hours ending 5 p.m. yest. ........... Trace Record precipitation ........... 2.24" (1974) Month to date ................................ none Normal month to date ................... 0.13" Year to date ................................ 44.06" Normal year to date ..................... 27.61"
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Denver 99/62
DORIAN
National Summary: Hurricane Dorian will sit just off the coast of Florida today as it remains a dangerous hurricane. Rain and gusty winds will batter the eastern part of the state with the worst impacts along the coast. Meanwhile, rain and a few thunderstorms will sweep across the Northeast. Severe thunderstorms will develop across the Upper Midwest.
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
Today
Tue.
City
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Abilene Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Austin Baltimore Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Burlington, VT Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Concord, NH Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Flagstaff Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, MS Jacksonville Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville
96/70/s 97/72/s 93/68/s 94/69/t 65/54/r 65/52/c 91/72/pc 93/72/s 99/70/s 98/72/pc 86/66/pc 85/68/s 75/56/t 68/47/pc 94/65/s 96/62/s 76/66/t 76/64/pc 75/60/r 78/66/pc 69/57/r 72/62/c 86/74/t 88/76/t 84/62/s 88/64/s 94/57/s 81/57/pc 81/67/pc 85/60/t 83/63/pc 86/69/s 77/60/pc 84/68/pc 68/54/r 77/56/pc 95/73/s 95/73/s 99/62/s 86/62/s 83/72/pc 87/56/s 80/62/pc 83/60/pc 95/70/s 95/70/s 81/51/t 83/51/t 88/53/pc 89/57/s 91/77/s 91/77/pc 96/75/s 96/76/pc 82/63/pc 85/66/pc 93/70/s 95/70/s 87/76/t 88/76/t 87/70/s 90/60/s 89/82/t 89/81/t 100/80/pc 103/84/t 91/70/s 92/71/s 91/71/s 90/70/s 86/67/pc 90/72/s
Today
Tue.
City
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Mobile Nashville New Orleans New York City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Portland, OR Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan Santa Fe Seattle Shreveport Spokane Tampa Tucson Washington, DC Wichita Yuma
92/72/s 92/72/s 88/78/r 89/78/t 77/63/pc 83/58/pc 78/69/c 76/54/pc 93/73/pc 96/72/pc 90/67/s 92/67/s 92/78/t 95/77/s 79/66/t 80/69/s 87/75/pc 88/57/s 87/78/t 84/76/r 83/68/t 84/70/s 106/87/t 110/86/t 77/59/t 81/67/pc 69/57/r 75/59/pc 83/61/pc 83/58/s 75/64/t 80/64/pc 86/68/c 88/68/s 91/58/s 79/54/s 96/62/s 95/62/s 88/68/pc 87/68/s 96/62/s 94/61/pc 86/69/s 91/67/s 98/73/pc 92/71/pc 98/74/s 98/76/pc 82/73/pc 84/73/pc 77/61/pc 75/60/pc 89/79/pc 89/78/pc 90/58/pc 91/59/t 79/60/s 78/59/s 97/73/s 98/73/s 83/56/s 87/56/pc 91/77/t 91/78/t 99/76/pc 101/77/t 87/70/pc 86/71/s 90/69/s 94/68/s 106/81/pc 109/84/t
TODAY IN HISTORY | Today is Monday, September 2, 2019.
Today’s Highlight in History On Sept. 2, 1969, in what some regard as the birth of the Internet, two connected computers at the University of California, Los Angeles, passed test data through a 15-foot cable. The first automatic teller machine (ATM) to utilize magnetic-striped cards was opened to the public at Chemical Bank in New York.
On this date Rafters paddle along the Arkansas River in Tulsa’s Great Raft Race last year. Mike Si mon s/T ulsa World file
HAPPENING THIS WEEK tulsaworld.com/calendar
Great Raft Race: The fifth annual Great Raft Race will launch Monday. The race begins at 8 a.m. at Sand Springs Case Community Park and ends at the Finish Line Festival at River West Festival Park, 2100 S. Jackson Ave. The festival runs from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will feature food trucks, live local music, a giant sand sculpture and more. Oklahoma breweries will be at the event this year. Information at tulsaraftrace.com. ”Hamilton”: Presented by Celebrity Attractions, “Hamilton” continues at the Tulsa PAC. The blockbuster musical tells the story of Founding Father Alexander Hamilton. The final
performances are at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday, and 1 and 6:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $95-$365. Call 918-596-7111, or go to tulsapac.com. A special lottery will offer 40 seats per show for $10. Go to hamiltonmusical.com/lottery. Tulsa Symphony Orchestra: The Tulsa Arts District’s regular First Friday Art Crawl will take on a symphonic air as the Tulsa Symphony Orchestra presents its “Symphony in the Park” concert at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Guthrie Green. The free event will conclude with a fireworks display. For more, visit tulsasymphony.org.
1864: During the Civil War, Union Gen. William T. Sherman’s forces occupied Atlanta. 1930: The first nonstop airplane flight from Europe to the U.S. was completed in 37 hours as Capt. Dieudonne Costes and Maurice Bellonte of France arrived in Valley Stream, New York, aboard their Breguet 19 biplane, which bore the symbol of a large question mark. 1945: Japan formally surrendered in ceremonies aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, ending World War II. 1958: President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the National Defense Education Act, which provided aid to public and private education to promote learning in such fields as math and science. 1960: Wilma Rudolph of the United States won the first of her three gold medals at the Rome Summer Olympics as she finished the 100-meter dash in 11 seconds. 1963: Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace prevented the integration of Tuskegee High School by encircling the building with state troopers. “The CBS Evening News” with Walter Cronkite was lengthened from 15 to 30 minutes, becoming
On Sept. 2, 1969, the first automatic teller machine (ATM) to utilize magnetic-striped cards was opened to the public at Chemical Bank in New York. T ULSA WOR LD FILE
network television’s first half-hour nightly newscast. 2001: Actor Troy Donahue, a one-time teen movie idol, died in Santa Monica, California, at age 65. 2003: A federal appeals court in San Francisco threw out more than 100 death sentences in Arizona, Montana and Idaho because the inmates had been sent to death row by judges instead of juries. 2004: President George W. Bush pledged “a safer world and a more hopeful America” as he accepted his party’s nomination for a second term at the Republican National Convention in New York. 2005: A National Guard convoy packed with food, water and medicine rolled into New Orleans four days after Hurricane Katrina. Scorched by criticism about sluggish federal help, President George W. Bush toured the Gulf Coast and met with
state and local officials, including New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin; at one point, Bush praised FEMA Director Michael Brown, telling him, “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job.” 2013: On her fifth try, U.S. endurance swimmer Diana Nyad became the first person to swim from Cuba to Florida without the help of a shark cage. Ten years ago: Pfizer agreed to pay a record $2.3 billion settlement for illegal drug promotion. A Taliban suicide bomber attacked officials leaving a mosque in Afghanistan, killing the country’s deputy intelligence chief and 23 others. Gunmen killed 17 people at a drug rehabilitation center in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. A magnitude 7.0 earthquake rocked Indonesia, killing dozens of people. Five years ago: Islamic State group extremists released a video showing the beheading of American journalist Steven Sotloff, and warned President Barack Obama against further U.S. airstrikes on the group. Apple said that hackers had obtained nude photos of actress Jennifer Lawrence and other female celebrities by pilfering images from individual accounts rather than through a broader attack on the company’s services. One year ago: Sen. John McCain was laid to rest on a grassy hill at the U.S. Naval Academy, after a horse-drawn caisson carrying the senator’s casket led a procession of mourners from the academy’s chapel to its cemetery. A huge fire engulfed Brazil’s 200-year-old National Museum in Rio de Janeiro, as firefighters and museum workers raced to save historical relics. — Associated Press Vol. 114 N o. 351
WILL ROGERS SAYS
We havent got a state in our whole Union but what has some great advantages that no other state possesses. – January 1, 1933 Quote provided by the Will Rogers Memorial Museum in Claremore. Quote excerpted from Will Rogers’ published works.
CORRECTIONS, CLARIFICATIONS Corrections and clarifications pertaining to Tulsa World articles will appear in this space when necessary. Report a correction to editors when you see inaccurate content at tulsaworld. com/corrections.
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Ohio AG sues to stop coming opioid trials He wants to consolidate local cases against drugmakers to ensure equal distribution of judgment By Andrew Welsh-Huggins Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio — U pcoming trials seen as tes t cases for forcing drugmakers to pa y for societal damage inflicted by the opioid epidemic should be de layed until Ohio ’s own la wsuits against the drugmak ers can be heard, Ohio At torney General Dave Yost argued in a lawsuit. Yost, a Republican, said a ttempts to force drugmak ers to pay should come in a single state action to allow equal dis tribution of money across Ohio. His lawsuit, filed Friday in fed eral appeals court in Cincinnati, comes amid urg ent negotiations over a potentially massive settlement between drugmakers and thousands of communities across the country. The Ohio trials, in volving claims brought by Cuyahoga and Summit counties in nor theastern Ohio, are scheduled for
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost speaks at the Ohio Republican Party event in Columbus, Ohio, in 2018. He is suing to stop upcoming trials seen as test cases for forcing drug makers to pay for societal damage inflicted by the opioid epidemic. He says lawsuits by hundreds of communities could lead to inconsistent damage awards with some counties receiving nothing. Tony De j ak /AP file
October. They’re considered “bellwether” trials to test claims being brought against the drugmakers. “The hardest-hit counties of Appalachia and the v ast majority of the state are being asked to take a number and wait — and that wait could delay or prevent justice,” Yost said in a statement.
Oktaha man killed in motorcycle crash near Checotah The Oklahoma Highway Patrol is investigating after an Oktaha man died in a motorcycle crash near Checotah late Saturday night. Stoney Nicholson, 26, of Oktaha, was pronounced dead at the scene from head injuries after crashing his 2006 Suzuki. The crash occurred on Texanna Road about a mile north of County Road 1140, about 5 miles southeast of Checotah. Nicholson was reportedly northbound and failed to negotiate a left curve in the roadway. The bike left the roadway to the right and struck a tree, according to a news release. Nicholson was reportedly wearing a helmet at the time of the crash. — From staff reports
Over the past few years, nearly every state and about 2,000 lo cal and tribal governments have sued over the toll of the opioid epidemic. The federal litigation involving cities, counties and tribal governments is being overseen by a judge in Cleveland, who has been pushing for a na tional
settlement before the first trial starts in October. Many of those lawsuits target Purdue Pharma, the mak er of OxyContin, a compan y seen as the villain in the opioid epidemic because of its aggressive marketing of the highly addic tive painkiller. Published reports last week said the company was offering to settle for $10 billion to $12 billion, a move dr awing criticism from some a ttorneys general who said it wasn ’t enough. Yost’s lawsuit angered communities scheduled to g o to court as part of those bellwether trials. Akron Mayor Daniel Horrigan, a Democrat, said Yost’s filing ignores local governments’ “constitutionally-protected interests” in seeking jus tice for taxpayers. “I stand with my fellow counties and cities in protecting what we have worked so hard to build together — viable, meaningful and necessary litigation against the opioid manufac turers that preyed upon our citizens and devastated our communities, ” Horrigan said. Horrigan’s sentiments echo what happened earlier this year
in Oklahoma, when the state settled with P urdue for $270 mil lion. Many local governments in Oklahoma with their own lawsuits declined to request part of the money in order to pursue their own claims. A similar proposal by the Ohio Attorney General to consolidate local lawsuits drew heated criticism last week all the way up to the governor’s office. Draft legislation backed by Yost would consolidate all local lawsuits against opioid compa nies under a state umbrella and allow the s tate to neg otiate on behalf of all residents and allot any settlement money accordingly. Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a fellow Republican, called tha t a “serious mistake” and said he would never sign such a bill. DeWine said the legal process should go through the cour t system since residents and lo cal governments have “borne a great deal of that cost.” Earlier this month, two drug companies — Endo and Aller gan — settled with the two Ohio counties, with Endo agreeing to pay $10 million and Allergan paying $5 million.
Migrant’s Twitter objection a no go Defense lawyers say Trump’s tweets against illegal immigrants tainted jury pool; judge disagrees By Nolan Clay The Oklahoman
OKLAHOMA CITY — A judge refused to dismiss an illegal immigration case because of President Donald Trump’s tweets. “Under these circumstances, the Court finds Defendant has not stated grounds sufficient to warrant any presumed
prejudice,” U.S. District Judge Scott Palk ruled T hursday. “Defendant will be given an opportunity at trial to address any concerns of juror bias. Dismissal of the indic tment on the grounds asser ted by Defendant is not warranted.” Pedro Hernandez-De Loera, a native of M exico, complained he couldn ’t get a fair trial anywhere in the U nited States. His court-appointed attorney, Joe Wells, told Palk — a Trump appointee — the presi dent’s “inflammatory, racist” comments have irreparably tainted the jury pool. In one of the complained
about comments, T rump in March tweeted about “illegals” being apprehended at the nation’s southern border . “With another President, millions would be pouring in. I am stopping an in vasion as the Wall gets built. #MA GA,” Trump tweeted. Hernandez-De Loera, 46, faces up to 20 years in feder al prison if convicted of illegally reentering the country. His trial is set for Sept. 17 in Oklahoma City federal court. Prosecutors had ask ed the judge to le t the case proceed to trial. T hey called the de fendant’s assertion about
the impact of T rump’s comments doubtful a t best. “Indeed, courts around the country conduct trials involving similarly situated defendants without mob jus tice taking over,” prosecutors wrote in a response. Wells said he plans to r aise the same concerns in other il legal immigration cases. “Mr. Trump needs to k eep his mouth shut. He’s poisoning the well,” Wells said Friday. “If a prosecutor can’t talk about a case, the president shouldn ’t be able to.” nclay@oklahoman.com
A4 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2 , 2019
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T ULSA WOR LD
Sand Springs police shoot, kill man Fall: Conditions resemble spring OSBI to investigate incident; one officer reported injured From staff reports
SAND SPRINGS — Au thorities are in vestigating what has been reported as an officer-involved shooting Sunday night. The shooting was re ported about 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, Sand Springs po lice said. T he shooting took place in a rural area in the 5600 block of 1 45th West Avenue. Sand Springs P olice Chief Mike Carter said Sunday night tha t shots were fired at the end of a pursuit. He said the shots were believed to have been fired by police officers. One person was fa tally shot, he said. T hat person is believed to be the per -
son who was being pur sued by police, said Carter. One officer was “pinned to his vehicle ” and was taken to the hospital, Carter said. The officer’s condition is not known a t this time. Sand Springs police are preserving the loca tion of the shooting for an in vestigation by the Oklahoma State Bureau of I nvestigation. No other information was immediately available.
Dorian: Wind gusts to 220 mph »» From page A1
winds and heavy surf. South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster ordered a mandatory evacuation of the entire coast of the state amid Dorian’s threat. The order, which covers about 830,000 people, g oes into effect at noon M onday, when state troopers will begin reversing lanes so they all head inland on major coastal highways. “We can’t make everybody happy,” McMaster said. “But we belie ve we can keep everyone alive.” Georgia’s governor, Brian Kemp, later ordered mandatory evacuations of tha t state’s Atlantic coas t, also starting at midday Monday. Authorities in Florida also ordered manda tory evacuations in some vul nerable coastal areas. More than 600 L abor Day flights in the U.S. had been canceled as of Sunday afternoon, many of them in Florida as Dorian barreled toward the state’s coast. The only recorded storm that was more power ful was Hurricane Allen in 1980, with 190 mph winds. That storm did not mak e landfall at that strength. “Catastrophic conditions” were reported in Abaco, with a s torm surge of 18-23 feet, and Dorian was expected to cross Grand Bahama later in the day “with all its fury,” the center said. The hurricane was moving to the west at 5 mph. In the northern stretches of the archipelago, hotels closed, residents boarded up homes and officials hired boats to move people to bigger islands. Video that Jibrilu and government spokesman Kevin Harris said was sent by Abaco residents showed homes miss ing parts of their roofs, downed power lines and smashed and over turned cars. One showed floodwaters rushing through the streets of an unidentified town at nearly the height of a car roof. In some parts of Abaco, “you cannot tell the difference as to the beginning of the street versus where the ocean begins,” said P rime Minister Hubert Minnis. According to the N assau Guardian, he called it “probably the mos t sad and worst day of my life to address the Bahamian people.” Earlier, Minnis had warned that anyone who did not e vacuate was “in extreme danger and can expect a catastrophic consequence.” The government opened 14 shelters across the Bahamas. Dozens ignored e vacuation orders, officials said. “The end could be fatal,” said Samuel Butler , assistant police commissioner . “We ask you, we beg you, we plead with you to get to a place of safety.” Bahamas radio station ZNS Bahamas repor ted a mother and child in Grand Bahama called to sa y they were sheltering in a close t and seeking help from po lice. Silbert Mills, owner of the Bahamas C hristian Network, said trees and power lines were torn down in Abaco. “The winds are howling like we’ve never, ever experienced before,” said Mills, 59, who planned to ride out the hurricane with his family in the concre te
home he built 41 years ago in central Abaco. Earlier Saturday, skiffs shuttled between outlying fishing villages and McLean’s Town, a se ttlement of a fe w dozen homes at the eas tern end of Grand Bahama island, about 150 miles from Florida’s Atlantic coas t. Most came from Sweetings Cay. “They said e vacuate, you have to evacuate,” said Margaret Bassett, a ferr y boat driver for the Deep Water Cay resort. But Jack Pittard, a 76-year-old American who has visited the Bahamas for 40 years, decided to ride out the s torm — his first hurricane — in Abaco. He said he ba ttened down his house to spend the storm in a nearby du plex. He noted the ocean is quite deep near where he was staying, and there is a cay that provides protec tion. A short video from Pittard about 2:30 p.m. showed winds shaking his home and ripping off its siding. Over two or three da ys, the hurricane could dump as much as 4 feet of rain, in addition to the winds and storm surge, said priv ate meteorologist Ryan Maue. Harris, the government spokesman, said Dorian could affect 73,000 resi dents and 21,000 homes. Authorities closed airports for Abaco, Grand Bahama and Bimini, but L ynden Pindling International Airport in the capital of N assau stayed open. The archipelago is no stranger to hurricanes. Homes are required to have metal reinforcements for roof beams to with stand winds into the up per limits of a Ca tegory 4 hurricane, and compliance is generally tight for those who can afford it. Risks are higher in poorer neighborhoods, with wooden homes in low-lying areas. After the Bahamas, the slow-crawling storm was forecast to turn sharply and skirt toward the U .S. coast, staying just off Florida and G eorgia on Tuesday and W ednesday and then buffeting South Carolina and N orth Carolina on Thursday. The National Hurricane Center issued a hur ricane watch for Florida’ s East Coast from Deer field
Beach north to the Volusia and Brevard county line. The same area was put under a s torm surge watch. Lake Okeechobee was under a tropical storm watch. Florida Gov. Ron De Santis warned the s tate’s densely populated Atlantic coast: “We’re not out of the woods yet.” He suspended tolls on the Florida Turnpike and other roads to k eep traffic flowing for evacuees. DeSantis noted some forecast models still bring Dorian close to or e ven onto the Florida peninsula. “That could produce life-threatening storm surge and hurricane force winds,” DeSantis said. “That cone of uncer tainty still includes a lot of areas on the eas t coast of Flor ida and e ven into centr al and north Florida, so we are staying prepared and remaining vigilant.” Dorian is a power ful but small storm with hurricane force winds Sunday only extending 29 miles to the west, but the y are e xpected to grow a bit. T hat makes forecasting its path delicate and difficult.
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for the entire country and also issues severe weather outlooks several times a day. “I think there is some thing to this quote ‘ secondary’ season e ven though it doesn’t pop out in the numbers,” said Rick Smith, warning coordination meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Norman. “Anytime you ha ve a transition between seasons ... the potential is there,” he said. According to the weather service’s Oklahoma tornado statistics dating from 1950 to 20 18, the highest number of torna does by far occur in April, May and June. While the numbers vary each year, more tornadoes have occurred in September and Oc tober between 1950 and 2018 in Oklahoma than any other month except for March, April, May and June. Last year, there were 12 tornadoes in Oc tober, nearly half as many as the highest total of 23 in May. In 1998, there were 27 tornadoes in the s tate in October, the mos t of an y month that year and the most ever recorded in that month. But in man y years, there have been no tornadoes in the s tate in Sep tember and/or October, according to the records. Of the s tate’s top 10 deadliest tornadoes, only one did not occur in April, May or June. That storm on Nov. 19, 1930, was rated an F4 and killed 23 people while injuring 150, tearing through the Oklahoma City suburb of Bethany. Steve Piltz, meteorologist in charge at the Na-
tional Weather Service in Tulsa, said an uptick in severe weather in the fall is due to the re turn of cold fronts moving through the region. He also said the secondary fall se vere weather season is more evident by looking at hail and wind damage events, rather than just tornadoes. Smith said fall se vere weather events have the same dynamics as spring severe weather. “Some of the e xtremes may not be there, but all you need is four ingredi ents to come together,” he said: Moisture, instability, lift and wind shear — a difference in wind speed or direction over a rela tively short distance in the atmosphere. “Our message is always, ‘It doesn’t matter the time of year. Storms don’t have a calendar, they don’t have a clock.’ ” Piltz said the yearly difference of a severe to mild secondary severe weather season in the fall depends on global conditions, such as the El Nino Southern Oscillation and other factors. “If (conditions) line up over your area, tha t makes the odds be tter,” he said. Last Monday, a se vere weather outbreak result ed in at least two reports of tornadoes, and dozens
of reports of hail and wind damage. The outbreak included a tornado with a pre liminary rating of EF1 that touched down near Seward in L ogan County, the weather service in Norman said. “I hope August is not an indication of wha t October might be,” Smith said. Meanwhile, with H urricane Dorian forecas t to buzz the eas t coast of Florida and the Carolinas within the coming days, September also marks the peak of hurricanes and tropical storms striking the U.S., according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. August and October rank second and third in the number of hurricanes and tropical s torms hitting the U.S., respectively. Smith said tha t such systems usually do not affect severe weather patterns in Oklahoma and the south-central U.S., unless they move directly over the area. “For it to ha ve an ap preciable impact on Oklahoma weather, it has to come over us,” he said. Michael Dekker 918-581-8469 michael.dekker @tulsaworld.com Twitter: @michaeldekkerTW
O pinion
“Publish and set up a standard; publish and conceal not.” Jeremiah 50:2
A5 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2, 2019
Editorial
Cartoon caption contest: facebook.com/tulsaworld
American takes off in Tulsa Airlines announces 400 new jobs coming to the city Here’s a happy Labor Day story for you. American Airlines, one of Tulsa’s largest private employers, announced last week that it is adding 400 jobs to its maintenance facility at Tulsa International Airport. That’s 400 high-skill, high-wage union jobs on top of the 5,200 people already working at the airline’s Tulsa facilities. It’s the first hiring announcement of its type for the Tulsa site in more than a decade, Erik Olund, managing director of base maintenance for American, told the Tulsa World’s Rhett Morgan. The jobs include work on aircraft overhaul and landing gear We’re overhaul for the airline’s not going Boeing 737 anywhere. and 777 fleet We’re and CFM56 engine maingrowing.” tenance and Erik Olund Airbus A321 American interior modiAirlines fications. It’s fabulous news for Tulsa, American Airlines and the members of the Transportation Workers Union of America Local 514. We see two critical points to be made: First, American was willing to invest in Tulsa because Tulsa workers do a good job for American. The airline’s workers know their stuff, and they do quality work. In air maintenance, the first essential is a skilled work force, and Tulsa has that. Second, American was willing to invest in Tulsa because Tulsa invested in American. The 2016 $884 million Vision sales tax renewal package included a $27.3 million investment in city-owned facilities used by the airline. The money retrofitted World War II vintage hangars to keep them usable for the contemporary air fleet. We see confirmation of both of those points in one of Olund’s comments to Morgan. “(The) announcement is really about the fact that we are in Tulsa forever,” he said. “We’re not going anywhere. We’re growing. It’s important for our team and the community to know how important Tulsa is for us, regardless of any of the other stuff that we’ve got going on.” Congratulations to American Airlines, its employees and the citizens of Tulsa who have formed a lasting partnership that will mean prosperity for all three for years to come.
Editorial Bo ard
Y
ou’re the cartoonist! Win your own Bruce Plante original! Tulsa World editorial cartoonist Bruce Plante will publish a cartoon each Monday and you get to create the punch line. Send your submission by leaving a comment at facebook.com/tulsaworld. Pseudonyms are not allowed for entries. Deadline for captions is noon Wednesday. We will choose the best submissions and let the online community vote on the winner, also at facebook.com/tulsaworld. The voting deadline is noon Thursday. The winning caption will be published on Mondays along with a new cartoon. The person with the winning caption will receive the original cartoon with the caption added.
Last week’s winning caption Me? Nothin’ special. I’m a “common tater” at an Idaho news program. Les Barrett
Runners up It’s National Suds for Spuds Day. Marci Stephens Shilman
Marilyn couldn’t shake the feeling that
Have we lost our dynamism? WASHINGTON — On this Labor Day, the American economy — the source of jobs for almost all of us — is full of promise and peril. It is hard not to be impressed with its job-creation capacity. Since the low point of the 2007-09 Great Recession, payroll employment has increased by 21.7 million jobs, with strong growth under both Robert J. President Samuelson Obama and President Washington Trump. Post Writers Group Just how much credit they deserve for the economy’s recovery is unclear. An alternative explanation is that the underlying rhythms of the business cycle drove the expansion. It’s an open question. Trump claims that, but for the Federal Reserve’s high interest rates, economic growth would be stronger. His critics respond that his chaotic “trade wars” have weakened business confidence and corporate investment. However this argument is resolved — both points might be true, or neither — there are bigger issues. As the economist Joseph Schumpeter (18831950) asked years ago: Can capitalism survive? Can our system, whatever its label, achieve a better balance between economic growth and economic security? Can we get the benefits of “disruption” without the social costs? The conventional wisdom is that the economy has already become more disorderly. Old-style capitalism is on the upswing. Workers and managers are more exposed to disruptive change. But does the evidence corroborate conventional wisdom? Consider a new study by economist Joel A. Elvery of
Gloria Fletcher �������������President and Publisher Wayne Greene ����������������� Editorial Pages Editor Ginnie Graham ���������������������������Editorial Writer
the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, who examined how workers’ occupations had altered from 1860 to 2015. He placed all workers in one of 23 large occupational groupings (examples: farmers, laborers, engineers and managers) and then monitored what happened to the various groupings over time. The sharper the decline of some occupational groups and the rise of others gauged the magnitude of economic disruption. Some changes, though familiar, were stunning. Farming (including fishing and forestry) dropped from 43% of employment in 1860 to 1% in 2015. In an interview, Elvery credited mechanization (tractors and the like), better seeds, more fertilizers and more irrigation for the shift. Over the same period, the number of non-farm laborers fell from about 10% of employment to about 4%. The bulldozer was a crucial cause, Elvery noted. “One bulldozer could do the work of 50 people,” he said. The impact was enormous. The study’s overall conclusion, however, was surprising and counterintuitive. Americans have been conditioned to think that present economic disruptions are at, or near, historical highs. Markets are cruel, hardhearted and volatile; job insecurity is on the rise. But that’s not what the study found. Instead, it concluded: “After 100 years of dramatic change, the mix of occupations has been more stable since 1970.” Occupational disruption is about half the level of the peak decades, the 1900s and the 1940s. In theory, the stability of the occupational structure can be reconciled with rising economic insecurity. As Elvery pointed out, people can lose their jobs without switching occupations. For example: Unemployed journalists can — perhaps — find other journalism jobs, as opposed to becoming rocket scientists. But, again,
this does not seem to be what’s happening. A more likely possibility is that, in many different ways, the U.S. economy is becoming less dynamic. The most significant evidence of this is “The Rise and Fall of American Growth,” by Robert J. Gordon of Northwestern University, an encyclopedic overview of technological change since the Civil War. Greatly simplified, Gordon’s thesis is that the innovations up to 1970 (cars, airplanes, telephones, indoor plumbing, television, air conditioning, modern pharmaceuticals and more) dwarf the internet as a source of rising living standards. Other indicators point in the same direction. The business startup rate has declined. Workers are moving less frequently to find new jobs. Productivity growth (aka, overall efficiency) has lagged. Large firms are returning sizable amounts of cash to their shareholders, arguably because they can’t find attractive investment opportunities or, possibly, because they have become more risk averse. The relative stability of the occupational structure fits the pattern. What connects all these trends is an impulse to stay with what’s familiar. Although this is understandable for individuals, the consequences for society as a whole may be less benign. The capacity to raise incomes is essential for political legitimacy, because it increases private living standards and provides funds for government. When that capacity gets corroded, the result is a more contentious society as various groups compete for limited economic resources. But we are left with a paradox: People’s feelings of insecurity have outrun actual instability. To restore dynamism, we may need more change. That is the long-term peril that should worry Americans on this Labor Day.
Bruce Plante ������������������������ Editorial Cartoonist Susan Ellerbach �������������������������Executive Editor Mike Strain ��������������������������������Managing Editor
she’d seen this guy before. Susan Gail Wilkes
Letters to the editor Uplifting story What a neat story by Tim Stanley about David Nelson (“She ‘deserves the best’: Decorated Vietnam veteran, 74, enrolls in welding school to support ailing wife,” Aug. 23). I wanted to publicly recognize and say kudos to Jorge Hinojosa and everyone else at Tulsa Welding School for giving him a full scholarship so he can pursue his education in welding. I wish Nelson success in his studies, his wife well in her cancer treatments and hopefully full remission of her cancer. Finally, I hope there is a company close to their home in Choctaw that will learn about his story and be just as kind as Tulsa Welding School and offer him a job once he graduates! Bill Mauerman, Tulsa
Honoring Eagle Scouts On Aug. 25, the Tulsa World honored eight young men who had received the Eagle Scout award, the highest achievment in Boy Scouts. Congratulations to Gordon Palva, Markos Rail Wester-Rivera, John Kingsley and brothers Brice, Hudson, Blair, Ford and Lake Luessenhop. They are all members of Troop 1, First Presbyterian, and their Scoutmaster is Ron Hart. Congratulations to all! Mike Sheehan, Collinsville
Please write us Letters to the Editor Tulsa World, P.O. Box 1770 Tulsa, OK 74102 letters@tulsaworld.com For more Letters go to tulsaworld.com/opinion/ letters
Jason Collington ������� Deputy Managing Editor Ashley Parrish ����������� Deputy Managing Editor
A6 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2 , 2019
tulsaworld.com
T ULSA WOR LD
Motive unclear in shooting Authorities trying to find out why man armed with rifle killed 7 people in West Texas By Paul J. Weber and Jake Bleiberg Associated Press
President Donald Trump speaks to the media as he returns to the White House from Camp David on Sunday in Washington. Jacq uelyn M ar tin /AP
U.S. buyers may see higher prices from trade war Prices likely to rise on shoes, clothes, sporting goods, more By Christopher Rugaber Associated Press
WASHINGTON — T he United States and C hina on Sunday put in place their latest tariff increases on each other’s goods, potentially raising prices Americans pay for some clothes, shoes, spor ting goods and other consumer items before the holida y shopping season. President Donald Trump said U.S.-China trade talks were still on for September. “We’ll see wha t happens,” he told repor ters as he returned to the White House from the Camp Da vid presidential re treat. “But we can’t allow China to rip us off anymore as a country.” The 15% U .S. taxes ap ply to about $112 billion of Chinese imports. All told, more than two-thirds of the consumer g oods the United States imports from China now face higher taxes. T he administration had larg ely avoided hitting consumer items in its earlier rounds of tariff increases. But with prices of man y retail goods now lik ely to rise, the T rump administration’s move threa tens the U.S. economy’s main driver: consumer spend ing. As businesses pull back on investment spending and exports slow in the face of weak global growth, American shoppers ha ve been a key bright spot for
the economy. “We have got a grea t economy,” said Sen. P at Toomey, R-Pa. “But I do think that the uncertainty caused by the volatile tariff situation and this developing trade war could jeop ardize that strength, and that growth, and tha t is, I think, that’s a legitimate concern,” he told ABC ’s “This Week.” As a result of higher tariffs, many U.S. companies have warned tha t they will be forced to pass on to their c ustomers the higher prices they will pay on Chinese imports. Some businesses, though, ma y decide in the end to ab sorb the higher costs. In China, authorities began charging higher duties on American impor ts at midday Sunday, according to employees who answered the phone a t customs offices in Beijing and the southern por t of Guangzhou. Tariffs of 10% and 5% apply to items r anging from frozen swee t corn and pork liver to marble and bicycle tires, the g overnment announced earlier. After Sunday’s move, 87% of te xtiles and cloth ing the United States buys from China and 5 2% of shoes will be subjec t to import taxes. On Dec. 15, the T rump administration is sched uled to impose a second round of 15% tariffs — this time on roughly $160 billion of impor ts. If those duties take effect, virtually all goods imported from China will be covered.
Saudi-led strikes kill at least 100 in Yemen Yemeni officials say airstrikes hit detention center run by Houthis Associated Press
SANAA, Yemen — T he Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen staged multiple airstrikes on a detention center oper ated by the Houthi rebels in the southwestern province of Dhamar, killing a t least 100 people and wounding dozens more Sunda y, officials and the rebels’ health ministry said. Franz Rauchenstein, the head of the Red Cross delegation in Yemen, suggested that the death toll could be higher af ter visiting the site of the a ttack, saying relatively few detainees survived. A Red Cross statement said the de tention center held around 170 detainees. It said 40 of those were being trea ted for injuries and the res t were presumed dead. “Witnessing this massive damage, seeing the bodies lying among the rubble, was a real shock. Ang er and sadness were na tural reactions,” Rauchenstein said. The attack was the deadliest so far this year by the coalition, according to the Yemen Data Project, a database tracking the war . The coalition has faced
international criticism for airstrikes that have hit schools, hospitals and wedding parties, killing thousands of Yemeni civilians. Saudi Arabia intervened on behalf of the in ternationally recognized Yemini government in March 2015, after the Iranbacked Houthis took the capital. The conflict has claimed tens of thousands of lives, thrust millions to the brink of famine and spawned the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. The attack comes as the Saudi-led coalition’s partners — chie fly the U nited Arab Emirates and an ar ray of Y emeni militias — are increasingly a t odds over the war ’s aims. T he past weeks have seen heavy fighting in Y emen’s south between Saudi-backed and Emirati-backed forces. Yemeni officials said Sunday’s strikes targeted a college in the cit y of Dhamar, which the Houthi rebels were using as a de tention center. The coalition denied it had struck a detention center, saying it had targeted a military site used by the rebels to re store drones and missiles. “We have seen now un der the ruble tha t there are still many, many dead bodies that its ver y, very difficult to e xtract,” said Rauchenstein.
ODESSA, Texas — Authorities said Sunday they still could not explain why a man with an AR-s tyle weapon opened fire during a routine traffic stop in W est Texas to begin a terrifying, 10-mile rampage that killed se ven people, injured 22 others and ended with officers gunning him down outside a mov ie theater. Authorities identified the shooter as Seth Aaron Ator, 36, of Odessa. Online court records show Ator was arrested in 200 1 for a misde meanor offense that would not have prevented him from legally purchasing firearms in Texas, although authorities ha ve not said where Ator got his weapon. Ator acted alone and feder al investigators believe the shooter had no ties to any domestic or international terrorism group, FBI special agent Christopher Combs said. Authorities said those killed were between the ages of 15 and 57 years old but did not immedia tely provide a lis t of names. T he injured included three law enforcement officers, as well as a 17-month-old girl who sustained injuries to her face and chest. Odessa Police Chief Michael Gerke refused to say the name of the shooter during a tele vised news conference, saying he wouldn ’t give him notoriety, but police later posted his name on F acebook. A similar approach has been taken in some other recent mass shootings. Gerke said there were still no answers pointing to a motive for the chaotic rampage, which began Saturday afternoon when Texas state troopers tried pulling over a g old car on Interstate 20 for failing to signal a left turn. Before the vehicle came to a complete stop, the driver “pointed a rifle toward the rear window of his car and fired several shots” toward the patrol car stopping him, according to Texas Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Katherine Cesinger. The gunshots s truck a trooper, Cesinger said, after which the gunman fled and continued shooting. He fired at random as he drove in the area of Odessa and M idland, two cities in the hear t of Texas oil country more than 300 miles wes t of Dallas. At one point, he hijacked
A U.S. Postal Service van (right) that was involved in Saturday’s shooting is pictured outside the Cinergy entertainment center on Sunday in Odessa, Texas. Seven people were killed, as well as the gunman. Sue O gr ocki /Associated Press
Daniel Munoz talks about his experience being injured in Saturday’s shooting during an interview in a park in Odessa, Texas, on Sunday. Sue O gr ocki /AP
a mail carrier truck, killing the lone postal worker inside. U.S. Postal Service officials identified her as Mary Granados, 29. Police used a marked SUV to ram the mail truck outside the Cinerg y Movie Theater in Odessa, disabling the vehicle. The gunman then fired at police, wounding t wo officers. Combs said the gunman might have entered the thea ter if police had not killed him. “In the midst of a man driving down the high way shooting a t people, local law enforcement and state troopers pursued him and stopped him from possibly g oing into a crowded movie thea ter and having another event of mass vio lence,” Combs said. Police said Ator had no outstanding warrants. His arrest in 200 1 was in the county where Waco is located, hundreds of miles eas t of Odessa. Online court records show he was charg ed then with mis demeanor criminal trespass and evading arrest. He entered guilty pleas in a de ferred prosecution agreement where the charg e was waived after he ser ved 24 months of probation, according to records. Texas Gov. Greg Abbot t said a 17-month-old girl is recovering but
faces surgery on M onday to re move shrapnel from her chest. She also suffered injuries to her face. Abbott says the mother texted: “Her mouth is pre tty bad, but will heal and can be fixed. Thankfully it doesn’t seem like her jaw was hit. Just lips, teeth and tongue...We are thanking God for healing her and appreciate continued prayers.” The shooting came a t the end of an already violent month in Texas, where on Aug . 3 a gunman in the border city of El Paso killed 22 people. Abbott ticked off a lis t of mass shootings tha t have now killed nearly 70 since 20 16 in his state alone. “I have been to too many of these events,” Abbott said. “ Too many Texans are in mourning. Too many Texans have lost their lives. T he status quo in T exas is unaccept able, and action is needed.” But Abbott, a Republican, re mains noncommittal about imposing any new gun laws in Texas. And even as Abbott spoke, a number of looser gun laws that he signed this year took effect on the first day of September. Witnesses described gunfire near shopping plazas and in busy intersections. Daniel Munoz, 28, of Odessa, was headed to a bar to meet a friend when he noticed the driver of an approaching car was holding what appeared to be a rifle. “This is m y street instincts: When a car is approaching you and you see a gun of any type, just get down,” said Munoz, who moved from San Diego about a year ago to work in oil countr y. “Luckily I g ot down. ... Sure enough, I hear the shots go off. He let off at least three shots on me.”
News briefs Stage set for Brexit clash in UK Parliament this week
prompting a reprisal of heavy Israeli artillery fire in a rare burst of fighting between the bitter enemies. LONDON — The U.K. Labour Although the shooting quickly Party’s chief Brexit adviser says subsided without casualties on opposition plans to block a “noeither side, the situation remained deal” Brexit would require postvolatile. The bitter enemies, which poning the country’s departure fought a monthlong war in 2006, deadline again so the withdrawal have indicated they do not want to doesn’t happen on Oct. 31 as now go to war but appeared on a collischeduled. sion course in recent days after a Labour’s Keir Starmer told the BBC on Sunday that the legislation pair of Israeli strikes against Hezto be introduced in Parliament as bollah. The militant group vowed it would retaliate. early as Tuesday will focus on an Lebanese Prime Minister Saad extension of the deadline to prevent Prime Minister Boris Johnson Hariri held telephone calls with from leaving the European Union U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo as well as an adviser to French without a deal. President Emmanuel Macron urg“The length of the extension is secondary, frankly. We have simply ing the international community to calm the situation. The U.N. got to stop us leaving without a peacekeeping mission in southern deal,” he said. Lebanon, known as UNIFIL, said it was in contact with all sides and WWII’s start marked in Poland urged restraint. with German remorse, warning WARSAW, Poland — Germany’s president expressed deep remorse for the suffering his nation inflicted on Poland and the rest of Europe during World War II, warning of the dangers of nationalism as world leaders gathered Sunday in the country where the war started at incalculable costs. “This war was a German crime,” President Frank-Walter Steinmeier told Poland’s top leaders, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other world leaders at an 80th anniversary ceremony marking World’s War II’s outbreak. Also in attendance were elderly Polish war veterans wearing military uniforms and a Holocaust survivor wearing a yellow Star of David and the striped clothes that prisoners wore at Nazi German death camps.
Israel, Hezbollah engage in brief, intense fighting JERUSALEM — Hezbollah militants on Sunday fired a barrage of anti-tank missiles into Israel,
Protesters block roads near Hong Kong airport
for its Boeing 737 Max jets. The airline said Sunday that while it “remains confident” that coming software updates and training will mean recertification of the aircraft this year, it is extending cancellations for Max flights through Dec. 3. The airline says this means about 140 flights per day will be canceled through Dec. 3. Not all flights scheduled on the Max will be canceled, though. The airline says it will use other aircraft for some of the flights. But some flights not scheduled on the Max jets may also be canceled. United Airlines had also delayed the Max return date through Dec. 19. Max jets have been grounded since March after two accidents that killed a total of 346 people.
Clock is ticking on N.Y. deadline for student vaccinations
BUFFALO, N.Y. — When New York lawmakers revoked a religious exemption for mandatory school vaccinations, the change HONG KONG — Anti-governsent thousands of the state’s parment protesters blocked roads ents scrambling to get their kids near Hong Kong’s airport with burning barricades and damaged a shots — or get them out of the train station Sunday after a night classroom entirely. Lawmakers did away with of violent clashes with police. the exemption in June amid the Train and some bus service to nation’s worst measles outbreak the airport on the outlying island of Chek Lap Kok were suspended. since 1992. More than 26,000 children in public and private Some passengers walked to the schools and day care centers had airport, one of Asia’s busiest, carpreviously gone unvaccinated for rying their luggage. religious reasons, according to the Hong Kong has been the scene of tense anti-government protests state Health Department. Unvaccinated students have 14 for nearly three months. The demonstrations began in response days from the start of school to to a proposed extradition law and prove they received the first dose of each immunization, and they have expanded to include other grievances and demands for more must make appointments for the democracy and the resignation of next round within a month. Most the semiautonomous Chinese ter- schools reopen just after Labor Day. ritory’s leader. Some parents opposed to vaccinations are choosing to pull American Airlines delays their kids from school rather than Boeing 737 Max return comply. American Airlines says it is delaying the expected return date — From wire reports
Metro&region
Tulsa brewer is honored. A12
A7 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2, 2019
Murder convict trying to atone Imprisoned for murder in a bank robbery, man earns degree and is teaching classes to other inmates By Harrison Grimwood Tulsa World
But they can backfire, too. After a referendum forced Houston to remove red-light cameras in 2010, the number of T-bone collisions jumped 26%, but the number of rearend collisions fell sharply at the same time, according to a study published in Scientific American. The researchers found “no evidence that cameras reduce the total number of accidents.” We could blame cellphones for distracting drivers and causing them to blow through intersections. But surveys show that only 40% of drivers who get a ticket for running a red light will claim they didn’t notice the traffic signal, according to data compiled by the Institute of Transportation
Many of the people C hristopher Lay tutored have gone on to college, as he stayed behind in a 50-square-foot cell. His classroom is se t behind the razor wire and elec trified fences that surround Dick Conner Correctional Center. Lay, 34, has been tutoring there for about a decade and he says he has helped more than 300 inmates acquire their g eneral equivalency diploma. “That’s a grea t source of comfort for me,” Lay said. “The academic habit s tuck with them, and they want to understand more.” Lay is ser ving life without parole for the May 2004 murder of K enneth Anderson, 36. His father is on death row for the same crime. Lay, who earned his bach elor’s degree in J une, elected to study sociology, in part, to better understand the motiv ations and circumstances of his own situation. He earned his degree through classes at Langston University and Adams State University in Alamosa, Colorado. “I didn’t understand it when it happened,” he said, re ferring to the events that led him to where he is toda y. “ ‘Life without’ is a phr ase that’s uttered, but it has to be felt, and I didn’t feel it for a while.” Kenneth Anderson was a se curity guard in May 2004 at the MidFirst Bank at 7050 S. Yale Ave. when t wo masked men, armed with guns, walk ed in and ordered employees to the floor. It was a tak eover-style robbery disrupted by Ander son. Lay and his fa ther, Wade Lay, shot and killed Anderson, fleeing from the bank with Anderson’s firearm and no cash. The two Lays were shot multiple times during the botched robbery. Her son did not tell her who fired the fatal shot, L ay’s mother testified in 2004. H e “was crying and upset” but did not want to go to the hospital. “He said he didn ’t want to g o to jail,” and he was repea tedly praying, “God, forgive me,” she said. Kim Tryon, Anderson’s sister, said her brother s tood a lit tle more than 5 fee t tall but tha t what he ma y have lacked in size he made up for with br avery. Anderson had worked as a security guard for more than a decade before he was killed. Tryon said she and her sis ter both feel L ay’s efforts to redeem himself ha ve been a waste of time. She said L ay would be
»» See Overall, page A9
»» See Graduate, page A9
Risky moves on red lights
Red-light fatalities have reached a 10-year high nationwide, surging 28% since 2012, according to a AAA analysis of government data. T ul sa World file
Getting Tulsans to stop on red easier than you think
I
seat? Will you be rear-ended by t had rained earlier Friday the car behind you? morning and was sprinIf you keep going, how much kling now, leaving the time will you save? Would you pavement damp but not get a ticket? Could you cause a slick. Traffic seemed almost wreck? non-existent, only myself and The light went from yellow one other driver sharing a twoto red. I stopped. But the other lane stretch of road in south Michael car kept going. Tulsa. Overall The Tulsa World reported A light turned yellow just nearly a year ago that red-light as we approached an intersecTulsa World running had reached “epition. Traffic engineers call it demic” proportions in the city. the “dilemma zone,” where you michael.overall have approximately one second @tulsaworld.com And last week came news that red-light fatalities have reached to decide whether to hit the a 10-year high nationwide, brakes or stomp on the gas. In surging 28% since 2012, according to a that moment, the brain basically goes AAA study of government data. through a quick cost-benefit analysis. Traffic cameras can reduce red-light If you stop, how late to work will you violations by 21%, according to AAA. be? Will your cellphone slide off the
Rape reports keep rising as police clear fewer cases Oklahoma outpaces the nation, and clearance rates have plummeted By Whitney Bryen Oklahoma Watch
The number of reported rapes and attempted rapes in Oklahoma climbed for the se venth consecutive year in 2018, reaching its highest level in at least 20 years, new data shows. But it’s unclear whether most of the increase came from a rise in sexual violence or a grea ter willingness to report the crime. And even as rape reports rose, police appeared to be failing or declining more often to clear or solve rape cases.
How to report a sexual assault If you or someone you know has experienced sexual assault, contact DVIS in Tulsa at 918-743-5763. Advocates are available 24/7.
About Oklahoma Watch Oklahoma Watch, at oklahomawatch.org, is a nonprofit media organization that covers significant public policy issues facing the state.
During the pas t two decades, the percentage of rape cases that were cleared by police statewide dropped from 62% to 22% las t year — possibly a record low. Clearance can mean arrested
and charged, or can be “ exceptional,” meaning although an offender is identified, something outside of police control, such as the offender’s death or the vic tim’s refusal to testify, prevented a prosecution. “Those (clearance) numbers are staggering,” said Amanda Kemp, who direc ts forensic e xams for se xual assault vic tims at the YWCA in Oklahoma Cit y. “As more people come for ward, we need to improve offender accountability.” The trends in incidents and clearances have puzzled crimi nal justice officials and victims’ advocates. The increase in r ape reports in Oklahoma was especially »» See Rape, page A9
Materials from a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner kit are spread out on a table at the YWCA in Oklahoma City. Swabs, photos, measurements and victim accounts of an incident are all part of the evidence collected by the specially trained nurses. Whitney B r yen /O klahoma Watch
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Our lives
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Sign the guest book attached to each obituary, watch online memorials created by family members and search the obituary archive. www.tulsaworld.com/obituaries
Mond ay, Sep te mber 2, 2019
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Circle of Life
Obituaries include a story about the deceased and a photo. They are available to funeral homes and the public for a charge. To submit a paid obituary, fill out our online form. If you have any questions about paid obituaries with online guest books, please call the Tulsa World Obituary Desk at 918-581-8503.
In an effort to honor those who have donated either organs, eyes or tissue, the Tulsa World is participating in the “Circle of Life” campaign sponsored by the Global Organization for Organ Donation (GOOD). If your loved one was a donor, please inform the funeral director if you would like to have the “Circle of Life” logo placed in his or her listing.
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Death notices include basic information about the deceased: the person’s name, age, occupation, date of death, place of death, visitation and service information. They are available only to funeral homes. Fees are waived when a full obituary is published or in cases in which funeral homes have waived fees due to hardship. Funeral homes can submit death notices by e-mail to obits@tulsaworld.com, by fax at 918-581-8353 until 8 p.m. daily or by phone at 918-581-8347 from 4 to 8 p.m.
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death notices TULSA Welch, Aaron Lee, 32, automotive sales, died Friday, Aug. 30. Services pending. Moore’s Southlawn. STATE/AREA Funeral home, church and cemetery locations are in the city under which the death notice is listed unless otherwise noted. Jennings Procter, Trilla J., 72, Oklahoma State University cook, died
Thursday, Aug. 29. Service 10 a.m. Wednesday, Chapman Black Funeral Home Chapel, Cleveland, Okla.
Vera Core, James Patrick “Pat,” 87, retired Bartlesville Fire Department captain, cattle rancher and Air Force veteran, died Thursday, Aug. 29. Service 1 p.m. Wednesday, Collinsville Dolton Funeral Home Chapel, and graveside service noon Thursday, Caulksville Cemetery, Caulksville, Ark. H
U.S.-World deaths
Bodybuilder Franco Columbu dies at 78 By Giada Zampano Associated Press
ROME — Italian bodybuilder, boxer and actor Franco Columbu, one of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s closest friends, has died in his na tive Sardinia. He was 78. Columbu died at John Paul II hospital in the city of Olbia af ter he became ill while swim ming in the sea, the hospital said. H e lived had in Los Angeles for years but was v acationing in Sardinia. Schwarzenegger, a bodybuilder before he turned to acting, posted a warm farewell on Twitter about the man he called “my best friend.” He often referred to Columbu as the s trongest man he ever knew. The two men built an enduring friendship after meeting in Germany 54 years ago. “I love you F ranco. I will always remember the joy you brought to my life, the advices you gave me, and the twinkle in your e ye that never disappeared,” the movie star and former Califor nia governor wrote. After starting his career as a boxer, Columbu progressed into Olympic weightlifting, powerlifting and la ter bodybuilding, winning the prestigious title of Mr. Olympia in 1976 and 1981. Besides his athletic career, Columbu ac ted for TV shows and in movies. He appeared in three of Schwarzenegger’s films: “The Terminator,” ‘’The Running Man” and
Maid of honor Caroline Kennedy and best man Franco Columbu leave St. Francis Xavier Church after the wedding of Maria Shriver to Arnold Schwarzenegger in 1986. Italian bodybuilder, boxer and actor Franco Columbu, one of Schwarzenegger’s closest friends, has died. Mike Kullen /AP file
“Conan the Barbarian.” Sylvester Stallone also remembered Columbu in a tweet. “The greatest and strongest bodybuilder I have ever met has passed... He taught me many things that I have applied throughout m y life — We will NEVER HAVE A MAN LIKE THIS AGAIN,” the ac tor tweeted Schwarzenegger, who chose his long time friend to be his bes t man when he married Maria Shriver in 1986, also paid tribute to Columbu Saturday on the website Medium and posted photos of them taken together. “From the minute we met in Munich, you were my partner in crime. We pushed each other , we competed with each other, and we laughed at every moment along the way,” the actor wrote.
Afghans see little voice in fate As U.S. and Taliban approach a deal, war-weary country is hoping for semblance of peace By Cara Annaand Tameem Akghar Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan — For almost a year, Afghanistan’s more than 30 million people have been in the awkward position of waiting as a U nited States envoy and the Taliban negotiate their country’s fate. An agreement on ending Ameri ca’s longest war, which the U.S. once hoped to reach by Sunda y, could set a timeline for U.S. troops’ withdrawal but also nudg e aside this month ’s presidential election and open the way for a T aliban return to power . The militants continue their a ttacks, again invading a major cit y, Kunduz, on Saturday and the city of Puli Khumrion Sunday. Without a say in their own future, Afghans’ frustration is clear . “We don’t know what is going on but we are just so tired,” said Sonia, a teacher in Kabul, who like many people goes by one name. Reflecting the helplessness, a ne w television ad shows residents of all 34 provinces holding up pieces of paper that simply say “Peace.” An art group in Kabul has begun painting concrete blast walls with tens of thousands of tulips as symbols of the civilians killed in nearly 18 years of fighting. And a peace movement pr aised by Afghans for a daring march across the country warns tha t the Taliban are just as harsh as the da ys when women were forced out of sight and entertainment was banned under a
An artist paints tulips on blast walls in Kabul, Afghanistan. The tulips represent people who have died in Afghanistan’s ongoing wars. N ish an uddin K h an /AP
strict form of Islamic law. A 23-year-old member of the peace movement, Sayed Rahim Omid, shyly lowered his trousers and showed The Associated Press a still-painful wound on his leg where he said T aliban members at his hometown in southern Helmand province had whipped him with cables. His family sec ured his release by swearing he would ne ver speak out again. Then he fled to Kabul. “I don’t know how to trus t them,” Omid said of the T aliban, even as its leaders meet with the U.S. envoy in Qatar. Repentance about the present seems to be another matter. A former Taliban military leader in a prov ince neighboring Kabul, Syed Akbar Agha, defended the beatings, saying
the peace movement gives the im pression the insurgent group doesn’t want the war to end. Better times are on the way for the Afghan people, Agha said, as some 20,000 U.S. and other foreign troops prepare to withdr aw in re turn for Taliban assurances that Afghanistan won’t be a ha ven for terror groups plotting overseas attacks. “Good memories of the Taliban will help them trust the Taliban and support them,” he said, but bristled when asked how the insurgent group could justify punishments such as s toning and cutting off hands. Such talk puts Afghans on the de fensive. “If the Taliban dream of rul ing the country as they once did, we don’t need them,” said Kabul resident Mahbob Shah.
U.S.-World deaths
Skating promoter Tom Collins dies By Barry Wilner Associated Press
To call Tom Collins the father of figure skating tours might be hyperbole. Then again ... “Tommy treated everyone like family,” Michelle Kwan, the grea test skater of her generation, said Sunday after learning of Collins’ death at his home in Minneapolis at age 88. “I skated for 14 years in his show, and I felt like the daughter he never had. “Tommy would help any skater. He’d open his wal let to anyone in need. H e was very special and we ’ll miss him dearly.” Kwan and 1988 Olympic champion Brian Boitano spoke on the phone Sun day, sharing both tears and laughs as they recalled their days on “ Tommy’s Tour,” and Collins’ role in the lives of so many figure skaters whose careers he helped prolong.
“Tom Collins’ dea th marks the end of an era, the golden age of figure skating,” Boitano said. “He stood out in the business. He was a man of loyalty, vision and tremendous generosity.” A former skater in Holiday on I ce, Collins orga nized an e xhibition tour of the U nited States with world champion skaters in 1969. It was the forerun ner of Champions on Ice. Collins was inducted into the figure skating halls of fame of the United States and Canada — he was born in Canada — and in 2006 sold the U.S. rights to the show. “We lost our hero, Tom Collins, today,” the fam ily said in a s tatement. “No words can explain how much love and joy he gave us. He shared his fun-loving charismatic personality with e veryone he met. He will be dearly missed by all of us, his
dear friends and the figure skating community.” Scott Hamilton, the 1984 Olympic champion and himself an entrepreneur in the spor t — H amilton founded Stars on I ce soon after he won the gold medal — called Collins “the greatest impresario of skating.” “There wasn’t a cham pion skater since the 1970s that didn’t perform in one of his shows, ” Hamilton said. “It was at one of his shows in T oledo, Ohio, that I sa w championship skating live for the ver y first time in his W orld Champions Tour in 1970. Little did I know I would do my first show with him in 1978, where I bombed and was so embarrassed I left without m y $50 honorarium. Every time I was able to speak publicly about Tommy, I would say that he still owes me $50.” Last spring, skaters and others in volved with Champions on I ce held a
reunion in Minneapolis to honor Collins. “It wasn’t just the ska ters who showed up but the choreographers, the peo ple who did the lighting , everyone who was par t of the shows,” Kwan recalled. “They all loved Tommy and he treated all of them so well. Hamilton, a cancer sur vivor who oversees man y charity events, last spent time with Collins about a year ago at Hamilton’s Sk8 To Elimin8 Cancer show in Minneapolis. Hamilton missed the reunion earlier this year while viewing his son’s school pla y. Collins later called him and said, “It was the grea test night of my life,” and the only thing that could’ve made it better was if H amilton were able to attend. “I haven’t cried this hard in a ver y long time. I will miss him every day for the rest of my life,” said Hamilton.
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TULSA WORLD
Mon day, Sep tembe r 2, 2019 A9
Rock volunteer firefighters Graduate: Inmate is teaching to host 28th annual auction »» From page A7
Find farm equipment, household items, more at Sand Springs event By Kelsy Schlotthauer Tulsa World
The Rock Volunteer Fire Department will host its 28th annual communit y auction in Sand Springs on Saturday. Farm equipment, household and miscellaneous items, as well as “items for fun” will be auc tioned off
beginning at 8:30 a.m. at Rock Fire Station 1, according to a ne ws release. The station is about 10 miles north of Sand Springs a t the end of Oklahoma 97 (the south entr ance to John Zink Ranch). Items for the auc tion must be submitted before 5 p.m. on Thursday, and all items will be a vailable for viewing on Friday. Concessions will be a vailable all day, starting at 7:30 a.m. Cash, credit or check will be accepted as pa y-
ment with a pic ture ID, and all items must be paid for the day of the auc tion and before removing them from the premises. All sales are final, and all items mus t be pick ed up the day of the sale. For more informa tion, contact Fire Chief Charley Pearson at 918-724-2078. Kelsy Schlotthauer 918-581-8455 kelsy.schlotthauer @tulsaworld.com Twitter: @K_Schlott
Overall: Risky moves on red Association offers a couple of low-cost measures that can significantly reduce Engineers. The majority were deliberately trying to red-light crashes, and without slapping more beat the light. people with tickets. In that split-second deFirst, “expand the dicision inside the “dilemma zone,” they misjudge how lemma zone” by lengthening the duration of yellow long it will take to get lights, giving drivers more through the intersection time to react and make and underestimate the risk. And the mistake can good decisions. Even just have tragic consequences: an extra half a second can reduce the number of redRed-light runners kill at light runners by as much least two people a day in the United States, accord- as 50%, according to ITE. Second, use an “all-red ing to the AAA. clearance interval” with What can Tulsa do? the intersection completeThe National Motorists »» From page A7
ly closed for a moment. Experiments have reduced T-bone collisions by as much as 75% by letting all lights remain red in every direction for just one or two seconds, according to the Federal Highway Administration. Those are far better results than far more expensive traffic cameras. Michael Overall 918-581-8383 michael.overall @tulsaworld.com Twitter: @MichaelOverall2
Rape: Reported cases increase »» From page A7
significant last year. The number of repor ted rapes and attempted rapes jumped by nearly 10% to 2,465, according to the 2018 report from the Oklahoma State Bureau of I nvestigation. That appeared to far outpace the national increase, according to par tial-year numbers from the Federal Bureau of I nvestigation. Nationwide, reports of rapes and attempted rapes were up by less than 1% during the first six months of 2018, compared to the same period in 20 17, the FBI’s preliminary crime report shows. Law enforcement of ficials and vic tims’ advocates believe the trend is likely due to an increase in both repor ting and the number of rapes. Capt. Gregory Johnston, who oversees Oklahoma City Police Department’s sex crimes unit, said re porting by vic tims has increased as the depar tment strengthened its partnerships with victims’ support groups. But an increase in incidents is also likely a contributing fac tor, he said. At the YW CA, another indicator of sexual-assault prevalence — the number of victims who receive
exams to collec t evidence of sexual assault — also increased last year. The number of e xams performed rose by 13% in 2018 over 2017, Kemp said. But she said she belie ves the increase reflects more that greater numbers of victims are willing to come forward than tha t more incidents occurred. Kemp said the higher number of exams and incidents are a more realis tic reflection of se xual abuse in Oklahoma. The Tulsa Police Department is one of the fe w reporting agencies that saw a decrease in the number of reported rapes in recent years. The department recorded 422 repor ts in 2018, down from 423 in
2017 and 439 in 2016. Sgt. Jill Phippen, who supervises Tulsa’s special victims unit, a ttributed it to a partnership with local prosecutors, who she said are being tougher on r ape cases by pursuing s tiffer penalties and prison time more often. “We’re saying, ‘This isn’t tolerated in Tulsa, and you will be held accountable for it,’ ” Phippen said. Local efforts and national attention about the issue are empowering women to stand up for themselves and report abuses tha t used to be taboo or cause shame, Phippen said. That makes it easier for la w enforcement officials and prosecutors to successfully press charges.
unable to utilize the degree he’s earned be cause he will be in pris on for life. H e was also sentenced to 25 years in prison for the a ttempted robbery, to be served consecutive with his life sentence. “It’s hard to e xplain to a 6 -year-old why your grandfather isn’t here,” Tryon said. “If he wanted to do some thing this good, he could have done it before he killed my brother.” Investigators recovered anti-government literature from the Lays’ apartment about events at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas. Prosecutors at the time said the t wo men were “operating outside of reality” and had a “ selfproclaimed mission to (avenge) Waco.” The younger Lay said he was taught reading , writing and some arith metic, but as far as for mal education, he had only a few months of sixth grade to his name when he was incarcer ated. He lived a cloistered life with his father, “living his vie w and his vi sion, which was a per verse one,” he said. “The country was broken,” Lay said he was taught by his father, and the robbery at MidFirst Bank would be par t of the means to the end “to fix it.” During their trial, the Lays acknowledged they had compiled a lis t of people they thought re sponsible for the Branch Davidian deaths where a fire erupted in Waco after a 51 -day standoff with law enforcement agents and feder al officials. Prosecutors asserted that the Lays needed the money in order to
kill people who the y thought participated in, or covered up, what happened in Waco. “The things that I had been taught his torically, philosophically, those things were jus t flat wrong, and I had to en counter those things for myself,” he said. “I had to see them writ ten and deal with the conflict that brought to mind.” Lay and his fa ther were quickly con victed by a jury in 2005 of firstdegree murder and a ttempted robbery. “I know how I feel guilty. I don’t merely feel guilty for the act itself, but for all the things I took from the people who care about him, ” Lay said. Lay said he is tr ying to live out an apology to Anderson and his fam ily through tutoring and teaching in the prison. While incarcerated, he acquired his g eneral equivalency diploma. He devoured books sent to him by his aunt, and he worked piecemeal on his degree. It took more than a decade because his family could only sparingly help him with the cost. Lay did not qualify for the Second C hance Pell pilot progr am, a program that provides grants for prisoners to obtain an education. All the funding for his edu cation was priv ate. In June, Lay celebrated his graduation as the only prisoner there to earn a four-year degree. Tulsa Community College has offered educational courses a t the prison since 2007 in a joint par tnership that also now includes Langston University and the Department of Cor rections. However, inmates’ access has been limited by their abilit y
to pay tuition and fees. Until the pilot progr am, only grants and schol arships funded through private donations were available. Lay said his degree lends credibility to his tutoring efforts and he works with students, fellow inmates, to under stand how an educa tion can help them outside of prison. “Someone that comes to understand that he is part of a ne twork of people and not jus t this independent thing tha t lives his life for himself , there is no end to the ripple effects of that for his family, for his em ployers for the people he encounters in the com munity,” he said. The recidivism rate for those who don ’t receive a post-secondary education while incarcer ated is about 1 in 4, TCC President Leigh Goodson said in June. For those who receive tha t education, she said, about 1 in 20 re-offend. “Prison education creates safer communities by reducing recidivism rates,” Goodson said in June. “It is clear tha t postsecondary education for s tudents in prison is a ver y valuable investment.” A Rand Corp. s tudy from 2013 found tha t inmates who par ticipated in correc tional education were 43% less likely to return to prison within three years than inmates who did not participate in any educational programs, according to a 20 16 Department of Education news release. Harrison Grimwood 918-581-8369 harrison.grimwood @tulsaworld.com Twitter: @grimwood_hmg
tulsaworld.com
A10 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2 , 2019
T ULSA WOR LD
Father leaves some sons less than others
change his will) repeatedly as time Dear Amy: Should I tell my children (ages 19 and 21) that their goes on. Also, unless this becomes a matfather has elected to bequeath ter for the court to decide in your them half of what he is bequeathdivorce proceedings, how ing their three half-siblings your ex divides his estate — aged 32, 37 and 39? post-divorce is not your The siblings are close and business. And it is not your have a strong bond. They sons’ business. all love their father. I’m going to speculate on This information only your ex’s possible motivacame to light recently at tions, and you and/or your our divorce trial during my lawyer could try to comhusband’s testimony. He Ask Amy municate with him about was answering questions it. Hearing his reasons for posed by his lawyer. Amy Dickinson doing this might help you I’m shocked and heartto understand and accept broken, but I don’t think I askamy@ should tell our children. amydickinson.com his choice. It occurs to me that he is It somehow feels wrong. making an assumption that Some friends disagree. I since he is (perhaps) surrendering need some sage advice. — Caught half his income — and other assets in a Dilemma — acquired during his marriage to Dear Caught: No, you should you (in the divorce), you will also not discuss this estate matter with be leaving your assets to your sons your sons. Fresh into a divorce after your death, so additional from their father, it is information wealth will eventually be passed to that is easily misunderstood or the sons through you. misinterpreted. Will you divide your estate Importantly, your soon-to-be equally with your sons and their ex could change his mind (and
nea crossword
half-siblings? I presume not, but you should think about this. Because of the differential in their ages, he may be trying to take into account the “time value” of the money for the younger sons — in short, because they are younger, they will have their wealth longer and can grow it larger than their older siblings. Treating children even-handedly doesn’t always translate into treating them equally. Misunderstandings and fights over money can do irreparable damage to family relationships. Do your best to have a peaceful divorce. Always encourage your sons to maintain their close sibling relationships — matters of wealth aside, they are all very lucky in this regard, and this should always be the most important thing to you. You can email Amy Dickinson at askamy@amydickinson.com or send a letter to Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068. You can also follow her on Twitter askingamy or Facebook.
The skinny on the popular keto and paleo diets Dear Doctor: I’ve heard that the keto or paleo diets are good for weight loss and controlling blood sugar. Now, I’m reading that a new study says they’re bad for your heart. What’s actually true? Dear Reader: You’re referring to the ketogenic diet, also known as keto, and the Paleolithic diet, or paleo. Both are low-carb approaches to eating that are quite popular. The paleo diet, also known as the caveman diet, draws from the foods that were presumably available to our Paleolithic ancestors. The result is a low-carb diet heavy on meat, with a limited amount of high-fiber fruit and vegetables. Because the Paleolithic era predates agriculture, things like grains, beans, cereals, legumes and dairy products, each of which require farming, don’t make it onto the plate. The keto diet is even more restrictive. Its roots go back to the 1920s, when researchers found that a diet containing a low proportion of carbohydrates and a high proportion of fat appeared to reduce the number or severity of seizures in people with epilepsy. The goal of the diet is to put the body into a metabolic state known as ketosis. In ketosis,
Ask the Doctors Dr. Ko & Dr. Glazier
the body has depleted its stores of carbohydrates, its first go-to for energy, and instead begins to burn fat. This results in the creation of metabolic byproducts, including certain fatty acids, which are believed to ease the symptoms of epilepsy. Another side effect of ketosis is steady weight loss. The keto diet is heavy on protein and fat, including meat, fish, sausages, bacon, oils, butter, cheeses, nuts and seeds. The diet allows highfiber carbohydrates but in limited amounts. It’s true that studies have associated the paleo and keto diets with improved blood glucose control. They each also result in better appetite control and speedy weight loss. We don’t yet have enough reliable data about whether these diets promote long-term weight loss or what health risks may be attached over time. The study you
CRYPTOQUOTE
9-2
Here’s how it works:
mentioned in your letter found a sharp increase in a certain blood biomarker linked to heart disease risk in participants who followed the paleo diet. At the same time, they had an increase in highdensity lipoprotein, or HDL, the so-called “good cholesterol.” Another study tied high-meat, low-carb diets to a drop in the diversity of the gut microbiome. An increase in the number of harmful bacteria was also observed. A separate analysis of a number of studies also found links between meat-heavy diets and an increase in cardiovascular risk. Bottom line — we’re still sorting things out. We understand the allure of the keto and paleo diets, but our advice continues to be a focus on whole rather than processed foods, lean proteins, a wide variety of fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains, nuts and legumes, and healthful oils. Good for the heart, good for the gut and good for the planet. Send your questions to askthedoctors@mednet.ucla.edu, or write: Ask the Doctors, c/o UCLA Health Sciences Media Relations, 10880 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1450, Los Angeles, CA, 90024.
Celebrity cipher
By Luis Campos
9-2
Today’s clue: E equals K
A X Y D L B A A X R is LO N G F E L L O W
One letter stands for another. In this sample, A is used for the three L’s. X is for two O’s etc.
Celebrity Cipher crypotograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.
Z M D
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B D E A D Z
G M D G O
P L
H B
B Z G A Z D O.
V D Z Z H R V
V D Z Z H R V —
B P S A E D
S R J R P K R
J A Z T Y B Y
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I V G Y J ZINS.”
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Yesterday’s Cryptoquote:
Previous Solution:
You can act to change and control your life; and the procedure, the process is its own reward. — Amelia Earhart
“I finished a big book the other day. 421 pages. That’s a lot of coloring when you think about it.” — Adam Sandler
kenken
challenging
easy
Previous Answers
1. Each row and each column must contain the numbers 1 through 4 (easy) or 1 through 6 (challenging) without repeating. 2. The numbers within the heavily outlined boxes, called cages, must combine using the given operation (in any order) to produce the target numbers in the top-left corners. 3. Freebies: Fill in single-box cages with the number in the top-left corner. Trademark Nextoy, LLC Distributed by Andrew McMeel
king crossword
Yesterday’s answer
tulsaworld.com
TULSA WORLD
Comi cs
f amil y circus
Mon day, Sep tembe r 2, 2019 A11
denn is the men ace
carpe d iem
bl ondIe
Garf ield
PICKLE S
BIZARRO
ZITS
w all ace the brave
BROO M HILD A
BEE TLE BAILE Y
BABY BL UES
RED & RO VER
Pearl s bef o re sw ine
D ILBE RT
HI & LO IS
l uAnn
Yesterday’s solution
sudoku Level:
1
2
3
4
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk
Previous Answers
Directions: Make a 2- to 7-letter word from the letters in each row. Add points of each word, using scoring directions at the right. Finally, 7-letter words get 50-point bonus. “Blanks” used as any letter have no point value. All the words are in the Official SCRABBLE Players Dictionary, 5th Edition. For more information on tournaments and clubs, email NASPA-NorthAmericanSCRABBLEPlayersAssociationinfor@scrabbleplayers.org. VIsit our website-www.scrabbleplayers.org. For puzzle inquiries contact scrgrams@gmail.com.
scene
A12 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2, 2019
Jimmie Tramel Tulsa World
I
jimmie.tramel @tulsaworld.com
Jimmie t would be a shame — Tramel
or “z” shame — if all of Tulsapassed without an 2019 World acknowledgment that Zorro is 100 this year. jimmie.tramel @tulsaworld.com Here are a dozen things to know about everyone’s favorite swordsman who initials his work: 1. Zorro’s 1919 debut came in the pulp magazine All-Story Weekly. The first Zorro story (“The Curse of Capistrano”) was published in a series of five installments. Seven years earlier, All-Story published the first Tarzan story. 2. Zorro was created by a reporter. Johnston McCulley wrote for The Police Gazette, a tabloid-ish publication, before launching Zorro and other pulp-fiction characters (including the Spider) into the hands of readers. Zorro was allegedly intended as a one-and-done character. But something happened the year after the first Zorro tale to cause interest to spike. 3. Douglas Fairbanks starred as the first big-screen Zorro in 1920’s “The Mark of Zorro.” The silent movie was based on McCulley’s original Zorro yarn. Young Noah Beery Jr. (decades later, he was Rocky in “The Rockford Files”) made his movie debut (his father was in the film). Another child actor in the flick was Milton Berle. “The Mark of Zorro” spurred McCulley to write additional Zorro stories. The movie was influential enough that it generated remakes 20 and 54 years later. 4. Zorro is part of Batman lore. Those familiar with Batman’s origin story know young Bruce Wayne’s parents were gunned down by criminals as the family walked home following a trip to a movie theater. The movie the Waynes saw was “The Mark of Zorro.” This was retroactively added to bat mythology after Batman’s 1939 debut. 5. Zorro was embraced by TV viewers from 1957-1959. The hit Disney-produced ABC series starred Guy Williams, who also is known for playing the dad (John Robinson) in the 1960s series “Lost in Space.” Among guest stars on the Zorro TV series were Annette Funicello (her son is drummer Jason Gilardi of Tulsa-based band Dead Metal Society) and Jonathan Harris, who was reunited with Williams when he was cast as cowardly Dr. Smith in the cheesy 1960s sci-fi series “Lost in Space.” The theme song for the
Catherine Zeta-Jones and Antonio Banderas, stars of “The Legend of Zorro,” are shown before the film’s premiere in 2005. R ene Ma cur a /A ssociated Press
Zorr o
The fictional masked vigilante debuted 100 years ago — here’s ‘Z’ rest of the story
George Hamilton, who is among actors who have portrayed Zorro in motion pictures, hurls his whip at critic Gene Shalit on NBC-TV’s “Today Show” in 1981. Hand sc hu h/A ssociated Press
Zorro TV series was a hit, too, climbing to No. 17 on the singles chart. Female group the Chordettes, best-known for “Mr. Sandman” and “Lollipop,” recorded the theme song. 6. CBS tried to play Zorro for laughs in a comedy series (“Zorro and Son”) that premiered in 1983. It fizzled after five episodes. A 1990s Zorro series on The Family Channel received a warmer reception. Starring Duncan Regehr, the series had a life span of four seasons and attracted guest stars like Adam
West and Andre the Giant. 7. Including serials, American films and foreign films, Zorro has appeared in more than 40 flicks (which means Rambo has a long way to go if he intends to keep pace). The roll call of Zorro actors includes Fairbanks, Reed Hadley, Tyrone Power, Alaine Delon, Frank Langella, George Hamilton, Anthony Hopkins and Antonio Banderas. Two Lone Ranger actors moonlighted as Zorro — Robert Livingston and Clayton Moore. 8. Zorro was a she, sort
of, in a 1944 movie serial, “Zorro’s Black Whip.” Though Zorro is in the title, the character never officially appears in the serial. Instead, the hero is a character called the Black Whip, played by actress and model Linda Stirling. 9. Tulsa’s Doug Claybourne produced the 1998 film “The Mask of Zorro,” which starred Hopkins as an aging Zorro who finds a younger swashbuckler (Banderas) willing to take up the mantle. A success at the box office and with critics, it spawned a 2005 sequel, “The Legend
of Zorro.” 10. Doing publicity for “The Mask of Zorro,” Hopkins said interesting things in a 1998 interview with Virginia-based film critic Mal Vincent. Hopkins said he chose the movie over being a bad guy in a James Bond film (“Zorro is in Mexico and it’ll be a nice hotel”), and he indicated he was looking for something less stodgy. “It’s an action movie, and I actively wanted to get away from those stiff British types — the ‘Masterpiece Theater’ stuff. I’ve played too many guys who are dead from the kneecaps up.” When asked about the possibility of returning to theater, Hopkins said this: “What a bunch of bull all that is. I’m considered the bad boy of the British stage, just because I’d rather make big money and not have to show up somewhere every night at 8 o’clock. There is a disease in the English theater today. It’s called ‘greatness’ — shouting and all that crap. I’ve done it. I look at Olivier’s ‘Othello’ on film now. It’s unwatchable; it’s so overdone. We thought that was great 30 years ago.” 11. Allegedly, youths got carried away with Zorro mania during the 1950s TV series and defaced property by carving a “Z” into items like school desks. And then there’s this: In 2000, after delivering a baby by Cesarean section, a 61-year-old doctor in New York used his scalpel to carve his initials into the mom’s abdomen. An Associated Press story said the doctor was dubbed “Dr. Zorro” by hospital staff members. The hospital revoked the doctor’s right to practice. 12. Want more Zorro? You can find it at zorro. com, which oversees the brand. Explore the Zorro history segment of the site and you’ll find this question: Why is there still so much interest in Zorro? Here’s zorro.com’s response: “The masked fox stands out as perhaps the most multidimensional character in the pantheon of superheroes. Zorro personifies action, romance, humor and heroism. An ethnic hero, he is simultaneously wise, brave, charming, cunning and romantic. Zorro has true cross-generational appeal, an icon to four generations of fans around the world. Zorro has had true staying power because he has been successfully reinterpreted within the spirit of the times.” Jimmie Tramel 918-581-8389 jimmie.tramel @tulsaworld.com Twitter: @JimmieTramel
Marshall Brewing Co.’s Adam Marshall receives prestigious award sented. Oklahoma state Sen. Stephanie Bice was the first recipient. She was instrumental in changing Adam Marshall, vice the alcohol laws in our president and lead counstate and advocating for sel for Marshall Brewing breweries. Marshall was Co., has received the 2019 presented with the award Champion of Oklahoma last week at Oklahoma’s Craft Award from the craft beer summit in OklaCraft Brewers Association. homa City. And rightfully so. “I love this business, I Brothers Eric and Adam love the industry, I love the Marshall founded Marfact that now you can take shall Brewing Co. in 2007, a taproom crawl in Oklawhen there were no other homa City and in Tulsa, breweries in Tulsa. It has and a couple of years ago, now grown into a fullyou really couldn’t do that. production craft brewery, “Marshall is a family taproom and Biergarten business. It has been a at 618 S. Wheeling Ave. pleasure to work alongThey were dealing with side my brother with a numerous roadblocks shared vision and passion then, what seems like a Adam Marshall, vice president and lead counsel for Marshall Brewing Co., stands in the Marshall in the craft beer industry long time ago. Legally, taproom, 1742 E. Sixth St. Marshall is this year’s recipient of the Craft Brewers Association’s Cham- in Oklahoma. I am very they couldn’t even taste proud of Adam for his their beer at the brewery. pion of Oklahoma Craft Award. TO M GILBERT /T ulsa World dedication to our entire We now have a flourishing industry and tireless work look at it and as a board tion of Oklahoma, I was craft beer industry due, in ate a fair system for craft with our friends in the member of the CBAO. I brewers in Oklahoma. His doing everything I can, part, to Adam Marshall’s Oklahoma Legislature,” just feel like it’s my job. along with my brother, dedicated and profesadvocacy and his work In a lot of ways, I am just brewmaster Eric Marshall to go down and advocate sional representation in to help change laws that said. trying to pay it forward for the craft beer industhe legislative arena has enabled breweries to sell “We have a full-fledged for what people like Joe try. And so now the role significantly helped craft beers at their taprooms. industry that contributes Prichard (Choc Beer Co.) is anytime there is a law brewers to start-up, obChange has even made a lot of excise tax to the and Rick Huebert (Hueor some draft of a law tain distribution and enits way into grocery and bert’s Brewing Co.) did for state and to look around joy the new franchise laws that directly relates to a convenience stores. and say, ‘Hey, as far as craft brewer, I am usually me,” Marshall said. and operate taprooms. Over the past 12 years, craft brewing and family This is the second year the one on behalf of the “Before we had the Marshall has worked manufacturing goes in craft brewers that takes a for the award to be preCraft Brewers Associabehind the scenes to creBy Tom Gilbert Tulsa World
Oklahoma, I left the place better than I found it,’ ” Adam Marshall said. Adam’s full-time job is a practicing attorney for the Barrow Grimm law firm. The Craft Brewers Association of Oklahoma Inc. (CBAO) is a 501(c)6 trade association dedicated to educating and creating awareness among legislators, regulators and the public of the issues facing the craft brewing industry in Oklahoma and to promoting a healthy economic environment in Oklahoma that enables public choices in the marketplace for the consumer and opportunity and access to the marketplace by Oklahoma breweries. Tom Gilbert 918-581-8349 tom.gilbert @tulsaworld.com
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gameday B1 | Mond ay, Sep te mber 2, 2019
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Prep football: Asher Brewer, Kaden Hanna lift Cleveland in opener, B3
SPORTS
31 New QB has 6 TDs, sets school yardage record in debut
49
Hurts makes history
Oklahoma quarterback Jalen Hurts (right) stiff-arms Houston safety Deontay Anderson while breaking off a run in the Sooners’ 49-31 victory Sunday night in Norman. IAN
Great start for Hurts — and room for more
By Kelly Hines Tulsa World
N
ORMAN — Jalen Hurts’ first game night at Owen Field began with a moment signifying his knack for leadership. “Crazy Train” was roaring as the OklaGuerin homa Sooners gathered Emig en masse at midfield in pregame, but Hurts was Sports screaming louder than columnist Ozzy Osbourne at his 100 guerin.emig some-odd teammates. @tulsaworld.com It was an impressive scene, the new starting quarterback taking command in the »» See Emig, page B5
MA ULE/T ulsa World
Oklahoma receiver Trejan Bridges (center) yells in celebration after making a tackle on a kickoff during the Sooners’ 49-31 win over Houston Sunday night in Norman. IAN MA ULE/T ulsa World
NORMAN — Succeeding a pair of H eisman Trophy winners? No sweat. After an offseason brimming with anticipation, Oklahoma quarterback Jalen Hurts confidently stepped into the Sunday night limelight and didn’t waiver, delivering the most productive debut in program history and likely performing well enough to put himself in this season’s Heisman conversation. “I’m sure he had some nerves, but he did a good job of managing them, ” OU coach Lincoln Riley said. “The guys around him made some plays.” Hurts, who transferred from Alabama in January, accounted for 508 yards and six touchdowns in the fourth-ranked Sooners’ 49-31 takedown of H ouston at Memorial Stadium. His predecessor, Kyler Murray, maxed out a t 478 yards las t season, and Baker Mayfield recorded 396 yards in his debut in 2015 against Akron. Connecting with a total of 10 receivers, Hurts was nearly flawless throwing, an »» See OU, page B5
Opening performance a nice first building block for defense
N
Bill Haisten Sports columnist bill.haisten @tulsaworld.com
ORMAN — When is a 15-point home victory an unpleasant memory? When it’s the 2018 Kansas game. When the hapless Jayhawks gashed the Oklahoma defense for 348 rushing yards — or 201 more rushing yards than Kansas had against any other Big 12 opponent. When the Jayhawks scored 40 points — or 12 more than they scored against any other conference opponent. When Kansas punted only three times, after having punted nine times against Texas Tech. That Kansas-OU game was played only 9½ months ago,
so it’s an easy and legitimate exercise to compare the Sooner defense of Nov. 17, 2018, to the Sooner defense of Sunday. As the Houston opener is the first point of reference on OU’s Alex Grinch defense — and as Jalen Hurts and the fourthranked Sooners rolled to 686 total yards and a 49-31 triumph — then most fans should have slept well on Sunday night. Arizona Cardinals QB Kyler Murray and his parents were in attendance. During the process of winning the 2018 Heisman Trophy, Murray as a Sooner senior had one of the more statistically impressive seasons in college
football history. Hurts’ final stat line was exactly consistent with what Murray did on a consistent basis. The offense cooked. The defense? There were a few missed tackles and two dumb, 15yard penalties, but even the most jaded critic must acknowledge that this Sooner defense looked much better than the 2018 Sooner defense. Through three periods, the Cougars had 221 total yards. Against overwhelmed Florida Atlantic in last year’s opener, OU was up 42-0 at halftime. By halftime on Sunday, the Sooners had more than doubled the Houston yardage total, yet led by only 21-10.
Gameday photo galleries and more. OUsp or t s extra
Most OU fans probably weren’t in the mood to give Houston any credit for having a renowned offensive coach (Dana Holgorsen in his Cougar opener) and a quarterback (D’Eriq King) and receivers who will smoke most American Athletic Conference defenses. There are Tulsa fingerprints all over this Sooner defense. As Oklahoma’s defensive starters were introduced on the big video board, five minutes before the Houston-OU kickoff, LaRon Stokes was presented to the crowd of 84,534 as having been a first-team Sooner. »» See Haisten, page B4
.c om
tulsaworld.com
B2 Mond ay, Sep te mber 2 , 2019
lOOKING AHEAD
GOLF ROUNDUP
See bottom of page for channel guide for area providers KTBZ am1430, KMOD fm97.5 Tickets: 800-456-4668, soonersports.com FB • SAT 9-14 at UCLA, 7 p.m., FOX23
Tickets: 877-255-4678, okstate.com FB • SAT 9-14 at Tulsa, 2:30 p.m., TBA
FB • SAT 9-21 at Texas, TBA
t ulsa
Men’s bkb: KXBL fm99.5 | Women’s bkb: Chrome93.5 Tickets: 918-631-4688, tulsahurricane.com
FB • SAT 9-7 at San Jose State, 8 p.m.
FB • SAT 9-14 vs. Oklahoma State, 2:30 p.m., TBA
FB • SAT 9-21 vs. Wyoming, TBA
a rkansas TBA
Tickets: 479-575-5151, arkansasrazorbacks.com
FB • SAT 9-7 at Ole Miss, 6:30 p.m., SEC
FB • SAT 9-14 vs. Colorado State, 3 p.m., SEC
FB • SAT 9-21 vs. San Jose State, TBA
drillers
KTBZ am1430 Tickets: 918-744-5901, tulsadrillers.com
MON 9-2 WED 9-4 THU 9-5 FRI 9-6 at Corpus Christi, TL Playoffs at Ark. TL Playoffs at Ark. TL Playoffs vs. Ark. 2:15 p.m. 7:10 p.m. 7:10 p.m. 7:05 p.m.
Australia’s Hannah Green overcame a three-shot deficit with a final round 5-under 67 to win the Portland Classic and deny teenager Yealimi Noh’s bid to become the third Monday qualifier to win on the LPGA Tour. Green erased a three-shot deficit with two birdies over the final four holes at Columbia Edgewater Country Club. She finished at 21 under and won for the second time this season. She claimed the KPGM Women’s PGA Championship in June. The 18-year-old Noh, who turned down an offer to play for UCLA and instead went pro in February, led by three strokes entering the final round and held the same margin after 14 holes. But, she struggled down the stretch and settled for a final-round 71 and 20 under.
Tickets: 918-744-5901, roughnecksfc.com
WED 9-4 at El Paso Locomotive, 8 p.m.
WED 9-11 at Rio Grande Valley FC, TBA
SAT 9-21 vs. Orange County SC, 7 p.m.
o ther sports MON 9-2 M soccer: Kansas City at ORU, 6 p.m.; Lipscomb at TU, 7
TUE 9-3 Vball: Missouri St. at ORU, 6 p.m. FRI 9-6 W soccer: St. Louis at
Television/Radio
AUTO RACING
10 a.m. N HRA U.S. N ationals N oon N HRA U.S. N ationals
MLB
ORU, 7 p.m.; Central Ark. at OSU, 7; Grambling at TU, 7:30 Vball: Illinois St. at ORU, 7:30 p.m.
TV Radio FS1 FO X23
— Associated Press
N oon T exas at N .Y. Yankees FSO K San Francisco at St. Louis FSP 1 p.m. 3 p.m. Houston at Milwaukee ESPN 7 p.m. Colo. vs. Dodgers/White Sox vs. Cle. MLB
KR XO -107.9 KYA L-99.9
2 p.m. T ulsa at Corpus Christi
KT BZ-1430
7 p.m. N otre Dame at Louisville ESPN
KYA L-97.1
TEXAS LEAGUE
COLLEGE FOOTBALL GOLF
2:30 p.m. Korn Ferry T our Championship
GO LF
6 p.m. O klahoma Sports Scene
CO X3
TALK SHOW
10 a.m. 6 p.m.
TENNIS
Basketball • W NBA EASTERN
OSU women’s soccer shuts out Oral Roberts
Serena wins, Djokovic out at U.S. Open Serena Williams was in pain after rolling her right ankle during the second set of her U.S. Open victory in New York Sunday. But while Williams reached the quarterfinals by beating No. 22 seed Petra Martic 6-3, 6-4 even with the rolled ankle, No. 2 seed Ash Barty and No. 3 Karolina Pliskova both exited her side of the bracket. Next up for Williams, the eighth seed, will be Wang Qiang, the 18th seed, who eliminated Barty. Novak Djokovic ended his title defense by retiring from his fourthround match against Stan Wawrinka. Djokovic was seeded No. 1 and seeking a fourth Open championship. But he has been battling a painful left shoulder, and was trailing 6-4, 7-5, 2-1 when he retired from the match.
Wes Short, Jr., $352,500 Scott McCarron, $206,800 Steve Flesch, $169,200 T om Gillis, $141,000 Joe Durant, $97,133 Billy A ndrade, $97,133 T om Byrum, $97,133 Ken Duke, $67,367 R etief Goosen, $67,367 Corey Pavin, $67,367 T im Petrovic, $56,400 David McKenzie, $47,783 Mark Brooks, $47,783 Bernhard Langer, $47,783 Woody Austin, $35,485 Paul Broadhurst, $35,485 Michael Campbell, $35,485 Doug Garwood, $35,485 Jeff Maggert, $35,485 R occo Mediate, $35,485 Ken T anigawa, $35,485 Doug Barron, $23,634 Jay Haas, $23,634 John Huston, $23,634 Mark O ’Meara, $23,634 Chris DiMarco, $23,634 Lee Janzen, $23,634 Scott Parel, $23,634 Stephen A mes, $17,021 Colin Montgomerie, $17,021 Jesper Parnevik, $17,021 Paul Goydos, $17,021 Brandt Jobe, $17,021 Jerry Kelly, $17,021 Vijay Singh, $17,021 Jeff Sluman, $12,489 Michael Bradley, $12,489 Glen Day, $12,489 Gibby Gilbert III, $12,489 Billy Mayfair, $12,489 Shaun Micheel, $12,489 David Morland IV, $12,489 Darren Clarke, $9,400 Dan Forsman, $9,400 Carlos Franco, $9,400 Davis Love III, $9,400 Kirk T riplett, $9,400 Duffy Waldorf, $9,400 O lin Browne, $7,050 Bart Bryant, $7,050 Jerry Smith, $7,050 Esteban T oledo, $7,050 Mike Goodes, $5,523 Stephen Leaney, $5,523 Frank Lickliter II, $5,523 T om Pernice Jr., $5,523 Grant Waite, $4,935 R uss Cochran, $4,113 Bob Estes, $4,113 Skip Kendall, $4,113 Greg Kraft, $4,113 Gene Sauers, $4,113 T ommy T olles, $4,113 Brandel Chamblee, $2,938 David Frost, $2,938 Cliff Kresge, $2,938 Brett Quigley, $2,938 Michael A llen, $2,209 Brian Cooper, $2,209 Steve Pate, $2,209 Steve Jones, $1,927 Blaine McCallister, $1,716 Larry Mize, $1,716 Scott Pieri, $1,551 John R iegger, $1,410 Joey Sindelar, $1,410
64-67-66 64-69-65 62-68-69 67-64-69 67-68-66 64-69-68 63-69-69 65-68-69 64-70-68 66-67-69 64-69-70 68-69-67 64-70-70 68-66-70 68-67-70 71-67-67 66-71-68 66-68-71 67-70-68 68-67-70 66-70-69 66-72-68 68-69-69 66-71-69 67-69-70 68-68-70 69-67-70 70-65-71 67-71-69 67-71-69 69-68-70 69-67-71 69-70-68 74-66-67 68-69-70 68-70-70 61-72-75 70-69-69 70-63-75 67-74-67 65-71-72 64-72-72 71-66-72 64-71-74 69-72-68 65-73-71 71-65-73 70-69-70 69-72-69 67-69-74 72-69-69 70-70-70 67-71-73 73-69-69 70-65-76 69-68-74 71-73-68 70-70-73 67-73-73 69-73-71 68-72-73 69-71-73 71-75-67 72-70-72 68-73-73 70-75-69 68-72-74 70-74-71 74-68-73 67-75-73 71-72-73 69-74-74 76-69-72 74-72-72 72-72-76 72-72-76
FOR THE RECORD
U.S. O pen ESPN 2 U.S. O pen ESPN 2
IN BRIEF
At Canyon Meadows G&CC; Calgary, Alberta Purse: $2.35 million; Yardage: 7,086; Par 70 Final
Green rallies to win Portland Classic
r oughnecks
• LPGA: Portland Classic
• Champions: Shaw Charity Classic
Wes Short Jr. made a short birdie putt on the final hole to win the Shaw Charity Classic on Sunday in Calgary, Alberta. His final-round 4-under 66 gave him a 13-under 267 total, one shot ahead of defending champion Scott McCarron. Short got a fortunate break when his second shot on the par 5, 18th hole just cleared the water before bouncing off a rock and onto the green. After his eagle attempt came up short, he tapped in a three-foot putt. Short’s final round included six birdies and two bogeys to give the 55-year-old golfer from Austin, Texas, just his secondever PGA Tour Champions victory. His last one was also in Canada at the 2014 Quebec Championship. McCarron rolled in a 39-foot putt for eagle on the 18th hole to card a round of 5-under 65, which pulled him into a tie for the lead with Short and Tom Gillis at 12 under. He then watched as Short made his clutch birdie, while Gillis fell back into fourth at 10 under with a double bogey on the last hole. Second-round leader Steve Flesch shot 69 to fall back into third at 11 under. Joe Durant, Billy Andrade and Tom Byrum finished in a tie for fifth at 9 under.
FB • SAT 9-28 vs. Texas Tech, TBA
oklahoma Stat e KFAQ am1170 FB • SAT 9-7 vs. McNeese, 6 p.m., ESPN+
Sunday’s Scores
Short birdies final hole to win Shaw Charity Classic
oklahoma FB • SAT 9-7 vs. South Dakota, 6 p.m., TBA
T ULSA WOR LD
L
Pct
GB
x-Washington x-Connecticut x-Chicago Indiana N ew York Atlanta
23 22 19 11 9 7
8 9 13 21 22 24
.742 .710 .594 .344 .290 .226
— 1 4½ 12½ 14 16
x-Las Vegas x-Los A ngeles x-Minnesota x-Seattle x-Phoenix Dallas
20 19 17 16 15 10
12 12 15 15 16 21
.625 .613 .531 .516 .484 .323
— ½ 3 3½ 4½ 9½
WESTERN
Olyvia Dowell scored two goals to help lead the Oklahoma State women’s soccer team to a 4-0 win over Oral Roberts at Patterson Stadium in Stillwater. Gabriella Coleman scored just 18 seconds into the match to give OSU (2-0-1) an early lead. The match stayed 1-0 until Dowell scored twice, in the 73rd and 75th minutes, respectively, to make it 3-0.
W
W
L
Pct
Saturday Washington 91, Dallas 85 Las Vegas 92, Los Angeles 86 Sunday Chicago 105, Phoenix 78 Seattle 92, Atlanta 75 Minnesota 81, Indiana 73 Monday No games scheduled
GB
• M ajor League Soccer
NASCAR Cup race starts late Sunday night The NASCAR Cup Series Southern 500 was delayed more than four hours due to heavy rains that hit the track right before the scheduled start at Darlington Raceway Sunday in Darlington, South Carolina. The race was still going on at press time. A story and results will appear in Tuesday’s Tulsa World.
EASTERN
W L T Pts GF GA
WESTERN
W L T Pts GF GA
15 8 6 51 54 14 5 8 50 51 15 10 3 48 47 11 10 9 42 39 12 12 5 41 47 10 9 9 39 41 10 10 8 38 44 11 15 4 37 42 9 13 7 34 35 8 12 10 34 44 8 15 7 31 33 5 20 3 18 28
Los A ngeles FC 19 3 5 San Jose 13 10 5 R eal Salt Lake 13 11 4 FC Dallas 12 10 7 12 8 7 Seattle LA Galaxy 13 11 3 Minnesota 12 9 6 Portland 12 11 4 Sporting Kansas City 10 11 7 Houston 9 15 4 Colorado 8 14 6 Vancouver 6 15 9
62 74 44 48 43 40 43 47 43 42 42 38 42 44 40 43 37 41 31 38 30 45 27 30
42 34 33 38 44 47 45 56 39 43 44 67
28 43 35 38 40 41 37 40 45 49 54 53
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday Colorado 2, New York 0 Chicago 1, Columbus 1, tie D.C. United 3, Montreal 0 Toronto FC 1, New England 1, tie Philadelphia 3, Atlanta 1 FC Dallas 3, Cincinnati 1 Sporting Kansas City 1, Houston 0 New York City FC 3, Vancouver 1 Portland 1, Real Salt Lake 0
— From staff and wire reports
• USL Eastern
W L T Pts GF GA
N ew York R ed Bulls II 16 5 5 53 64 31 N ashville 15 6 6 51 49 24 T ampa Bay 14 5 7 49 47 22 Pittsburgh 13 4 8 47 48 28 Indy 14 4 5 47 36 18 N orth Carolina 13 7 7 46 47 28 12 7 7 43 38 30 Louisville O ttawa 10 5 9 39 37 28 Birmingham 9 10 6 33 26 39 Charleston 7 7 10 31 31 35 Saint Louis 6 9 8 26 27 30 Charlotte 5 11 11 26 30 42 7 13 5 26 34 47 Bethlehem Steel Loudoun 6 12 6 24 35 41 Memphis 5 13 7 22 23 39 Atlanta 5 15 5 20 29 60 Hartford 5 17 4 19 33 64 Swope Park R angers 3 15 6 15 29 57
Western
SOCCER Philadelphia N ew York City FC Atlanta D.C. United N ew York N ew England T oronto FC Montreal O rlando City Chicago Columbus Cincinnati
San Jose 3, Orlando City 0 Sunday LA Galaxy at Seattle, late Minnesota at Los Angeles FC, late
Phoenix Fresno R eno O KC Energy R eal Monarchs Austin LA Galaxy II Portland Sacramento San A ntonio N ew Mexico O range County El Paso Las Vegas R io Grande Valley T ulsa Colorado T acoma
W L T Pts GF GA
19 2 5 62 71 25 13 4 8 47 42 26 13 8 5 44 54 44 9 8 10 37 41 40 10 8 6 36 47 39 10 9 6 36 37 39 9 8 9 36 43 49 9 9 8 35 48 44 10 11 4 34 35 29 9 10 7 34 45 40 8 7 10 34 45 44 8 8 9 33 40 36 8 8 8 32 26 26 8 10 7 31 33 38 7 11 7 28 39 44 5 13 8 23 33 55 6 17 4 22 24 52 5 15 5 20 27 60
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday Loudoun 4, North Carolina 0 Nashville 2, Tampa Bay 1 Phoenix 3, Colorado 0 Tulsa 2, Fresno 1 LA Galaxy II 1, Sacramento 0 Portland 3, Reno 1 Sunday Bethlehem Steel 2, Swope Park Rangers 0 Rio Grande Valley at Austin, late Hartford at Saint Louis, late Monday Memphis at Charleston, 5 p.m.
GOLF • College
The Carmel Cup Pebble Beach, California Team results 2. Oklahoma............ 349-350-352—1051 6. Oklahoma State.365-363-355—1083
— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —
197 198 199 200 201 201 201 202 202 202 203 204 204 204 205 205 205 205 205 205 205 206 206 206 206 206 206 206 207 207 207 207 207 207 207 208 208 208 208 208 208 208 209 209 209 209 209 209 210 210 210 210 211 211 211 211 212 213 213 213 213 213 213 214 214 214 214 215 215 215 216 217 217 218 220 220
At Columbia Edgewater Country Club; Portland, Ore. Purse: $1.3 million; Yardage: 6,476; Par 72 Final a-amateur
Hannah Green, $195,000 Yealimi N oh , $119,765 Brittany A ltomare, $86,881 N asa Hataoka, $60,653 Brooke M. Henderson, $60,653 Sarah Schmelzel, $44,260 Jane Park, $34,753 Marina A lex, $34,753 A lena Sharp, $24,163 Jeongeun Lee6, $24,163 Sei Young Kim, $24,163 Sarah Burnham, $24,163 Peiyun Chien, $24,163 Mi Jung Hur, $24,163 A zahara Munoz, $17,180 Su O h, $17,180 Lydia Ko, $17,180 Jeong Eun Lee, $17,180 Dana Finkelstein, $17,180 Jin Young Ko, $13,781 Giulia Molinaro, $13,781 Gerina Piller, $13,781 A my Yang, $13,781 Wei-Ling Hsu, $13,781 Sung Hyun Park, $13,781 A nne van Dam, $11,377 T iffany Chan, $11,377 Celine Boutier, $11,377 Mi Hyang Lee, $11,377 Elizabeth Szokol, $8,967 Cydney Clanton, $8,967 Austin Ernst, $8,967 A riya Jutanugarn, $8,967 Charlotte T homas, $8,967 Xiyu Lin, $8,967 Isi Gabsa, $8,967 Carlota Ciganda, $8,967 Jaye Marie Green, $6,442 Mirim Lee, $6,442 Pajaree A nannarukarn, $6,442 Ayako Uehara, $6,442 Cristie Kerr, $6,442 Youngin Chun, $6,442 Muni He, $6,442 Haeji Kang, $6,442 R yann O ’T oole, $4,983 Lindy Duncan, $4,983 Chella Choi, $4,983 A ngel Yin, $4,983 Linnea Strom, $4,983 Lindsey Weaver, $4,393 Georgia Hall, $4,393 Mariah Stackhouse, $4,000 Kristen Gillman, $4,000 Lee Lopez, $4,000 Pavarisa Yoktuan, $4,000 Aditi A shok, $3,423 Emma T alley, $3,423 Ellie Slama (a) T iffany Joh, $3,423 Brittany Lang, $3,423 Lee-A nne Pace, $3,423 R obyn Choi, $3,049 Kris T amulis, $3,049 Lauren Kim, $3,049 Gaby Lopez, $3,049 Sarah Kemp, $2,820 Louise R idderstrom, $2,820 Jennifer Song, $2,820 Stephanie Meadow, $2,634 Sakura Yokomine, $2,634 Marissa Steen, $2,634 Kim Kaufman, $2,540 Dori Carter, $2,540 Silvia Cavalleri, $2,492
64-63-73-67—267 65-68-64-71—268 69-65-68-69—271 66-71-70-66—273 67-68-67-71—273 72-62-69-71—274 65-70-74-66—275 70-65-73-67—275 67-70-70-69—276 66-68-72-70—276 71-61-73-71—276 69-66-69-72—276 69-67-67-73—276 64-70-69-73—276 69-70-71-67—277 70-67-72-68—277 67-70-72-68—277 72-69-66-70—277 66-69-68-74—277 68-69-72-69—278 67-68-74-69—278 71-67-69-71—278 74-66-66-72—278 66-69-71-72—278 67-65-73-73—278 70-69-74-66—279 69-71-70-69—279 69-68-72-70—279 68-71-68-72—279 72-67-74-67—280 69-72-70-69—280 68-71-72-69—280 70-68-71-71—280 67-69-73-71—280 67-68-73-72—280 70-64-74-72—280 68-72-66-74—280 71-69-72-69—281 68-69-75-69—281 68-70-72-71—281 69-67-74-71—281 71-69-69-72—281 67-66-76-72—281 70-64-74-73—281 69-69-68-75—281 69-71-74-68—282 72-67-75-68—282 70-69-72-71—282 66-67-78-71—282 73-66-70-73—282 69-71-73-70—283 68-70-72-73—283 71-70-72-71—284 69-70-72-73—284 69-70-72-73—284 68-71-71-74—284 70-70-73-72—285 72-69-71-73—285 68-69-74-74—285 73-68-69-75—285 69-71-70-75—285 67-66-73-79—285 71-70-74-71—286 73-67-75-71—286 67-73-75-71—286 70-69-76-71—286 70-71-76-70—287 67-74-76-70—287 71-69-70-77—287 69-67-77-75—288 68-69-75-76—288 66-68-77-77—288 70-71-74-74—289 69-72-73-75—289 67-72-74-78—291
» Report a score or notice to sports@tulsaworld.com, 800-944-PLAY or 918-581-8355
OU individual results 3. Turner Hosch.............. 69-67-69—205 7. Garett Reband...............65-70-71—206 11. Quade Cummins.........71-69-70—210 25. Jake Holbrook............. 69-72-76—217 33. Blake Lorenz...............75-76-69—220 37. Thomas Johnson........78-72-73—223 OSU individual results 13. Austin Eckroat...............75-71-65—211 20. Ferdinand Muller........69-72-74—215 23. Brian Stark.................... 72-73-71—216 28. Rayhan Thomas.......... 75-71-73—219 38. Aman Gupta...............74-76-74—224 46. Dillon Stewart............ 81-77-72—230
• Local: Holes-in-one
CHEROKEE HILLS: Dave Miles, No. 4, 145 yards, 8-iron. PATRIOT: Jason Stone, No. 13, 126 yards, 8-iron.
Shoots age or better
TULSA: Fred Swanda, 78, shot 70.
TENNIS • U.S. Open: Fourth round
Men’s Singles Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, def. David Goffin (15), Belgium, 6-2, 6-2, 6-0. Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, def. Alex de Minaur, Australia, 7-5, 6-3, 6-4. Daniil Medvedev (5), Russia, def. Dominik Koepfer, Germany, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, 7-6 (2). Women’s Singles Wang Qiang (18), China, def. Ashleigh Barty (2), Australia, 6-2, 6-4. Johanna Konta (16), Britain, def. Karolina Pliskova (3), Czech Republic, 6-7 (1), 6-3, 7-5. Serena Williams (8), United States, def. Petra Martic (22), Croatia, 6-3, 6-4.
LATEST Line National League
New York CINCINNATI ST. LOUIS ARIZONA LA DODGERS
-110 WASHINGTON +100 -152 Philadelphia +142 -173 San Francisco +161 -130 San Diego +120 -300 Colorado +270
NEW YORK Minnesota TAMPA BAY CLEVELAND
-190 Texas -200 DETROIT OFF Baltimore -237 Chicago
Interleague
+175 +180 OFF +217
ATLANTA OFF Toronto OFF CHICAGO CUBS -275 Seattle +245 Houston -170 MILWAUKEE +158
• College Football Notre Dame
19½ (OFF) 12 (OFF)
18 (54½) LOUISVILLE
Friday
RICE Marshall
Saturday
PITTSBURGH 7 (OFF) Ohio VIRGINIA TECH 27 (OFF) Old Dominion UAB 9 (OFF) AKRON MICHIGAN 22½ (OFF) Army PURDUE 7½ (OFF) Vanderbilt IOWA 20 (OFF) Rutgers Syracuse 3½ (OFF) MARYLAND MISSOURI 11½ (OFF) West Virginia OHIO STATE 16½ (OFF) Cincinnati KANSAS ST 23½ (OFF) Bowling Green UTAH 21½ (OFF) N. Illinois GEORGIA TECH 5 (OFF) South Florida Tulsa 6 (OFF) SAN JOSE ST Nebraska 6 (OFF) COLORADO CLEMSON 17 (OFF) Texas A&M WISCONSIN 33 (OFF) Cent. Michigan APPALACHIAN ST 21 (OFF) Charlotte MISSISSIPPI ST 17 (OFF) Southern Miss Illinois 20 (OFF) UCONN Arkansas St 2 (OFF) UNLV BAYLOR 28½ (OFF) UTSA ALABAMA 55½ (OFF) New Mexico St UCLA 6 (OFF) San Diego St FLORIDA ST 21 (OFF) La.-Monroe Wyoming 7 (OFF) TEXAS STATE SMU 3½ (OFF) North Texas TENNESSEE 4 (OFF) BYU 9 (OFF) FAU UCF FIU 10½ (OFF) W. Kentucky KANSAS 10 (OFF) Coa. Carolina Liberty LA-LAFAYETTE 11½ (OFF) MICHIGAN ST 17½ (OFF) W. Michigan LSU 4 (OFF) TEXAS AUBURN 20½ (OFF) Tulane MISSISSIPPI 7 (OFF) Arkansas 21½ (OFF) Nevada OREGON PENN ST 24½ (OFF) Buffalo KENTUCKY 14½ (OFF) E. Michigan TEXAS TECH 34½ (OFF) UTEP Miami 6 (OFF) N. CAROLINA SOUTHERN CAL OFF (OFF) Stanford WASHINGTON 12½ (OFF) California Minnesota 3½ (OFF) FRESNO ST HAWAII 4 (OFF) Oregon St
• NFL
• Major League Baseball
American League
Wake Forest BOISE ST
Thursday
CHICAGO
3 (46½)
MINNESOTA PHILADELPHIA NY JETS Baltimore TAMPA BAY Kansas City CLEVELAND LA Rams Detroit SEATTLE LA CHARGERS DALLAS NEW ENGLAND NEW ORLEANS OAKLAND
Sunday
Green Bay
3½ (47) Atlanta 9 (46) Washington 3 (40) Buffalo 6½ (37½) MIAMI 1 (49½) San Francisco 4 (52½) J’VILLE 5½ (45½) Tennessee 3 (50½) CAROLINA 2½ (47½) ARIZONA 9½ (44) Cincinnati 6½ (44½) Indianapolis 7 (45½) NY Giants 5½ (51) Pittsburgh
Monday
7 (53) PK (43)
Home team in CAPS
Houston Denver
Chiefs agree to deal with running back McCoy, who played for Reid with Eagles By Dave Skretta Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — LeSean McCoy is g oing from a rebuilding fr anchise in Buffalo to a Super Bowl contender in Kansas City, and he ’s reuniting with his close friend and former coach Andy Reid, too. The Chiefs and the t wo-
lOCAl Tv lISTINGS CHANNEL
KTUL (ABC) KOTV (CBS) KOKI (Fox) KJRH (NBC) Big Ten Network CBS Sports Network
time All-Pro running back have agreed to a $4 mil lion, 1-year deal, a person with knowledge of the negotiations told The Associated Press. The signing would allow him the week to prepare for the C hiefs’ opener in Jacksonville on Sunday. McCoy would become the top backup to Damien Williams, likely siphon-
ing carries from rookie Darwin Thompson and backup Darrell Williams. The Chiefs traded the other veteran running back that was e xpected to earn carries, Carlos Hyde, after he failed to impress during training camp and the preseason. The 31-year-old McCoy spent his first six seasons in Philadelphia, four of
them under Reid, be fore spending the pas t four seasons with the Bills. The six-time Pro Bowl selec tion was released on Sa turday. Over the course of 10 seasons, McCoy has run for more than 10,600 yards, placing him 25 th on the career list and fourth among ac tive players. Some of his bes t sea-
sons came under Reid, including the 20 11 season in which he r an for 1, 309 yards and 1 7 touchdowns while earning his first AllPro nod. McCoy had k ept Father Time at bay the pas t few years, too. H e had backto-back 1,000-yard seasons in Buffalo before a dropoff last season, when he totaled just 514 yards and
three touchdowns. A few weeks ag o, McCoy acknowledged seeing speculation that he may be traded or released, but he also expressed confidence that he would finish out his five-year contract with the Bills. “I know who I am. I know how to play. And my teammates know that,” McCoy said.
High definition channel numbers for four popular cable/satellite providers in the Tulsa area.
COX DIRECTV DISH U-VERSE
1008 8 8 1008 1006 6 6 1006 1005 23 23 1023 1002 2 2 1002 1348 610 405 1650 1318 221 158 1643
CHANNEL
Cox Channel Cox Sports TV ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU ESPN News
COX DIRECTV DISH U-VERSE
1003 1335 1025 1026 1303 1302
— — 206 209 208 207
— — 140 144 141 142
— — 1602 1606 1605 1604
CHANNEL
Fox Sports 1 Fox Sports 2 Fox Sports OK Fox Sports Plus FCS-Central FCS-Atlantic
COX DIRECTV DISH U-VERSE
1312 1313 1027 1315 1340 1339
219 618 676 — 608 608
150 1652 397 1651 416 1751 — — — 648 — 647
CHANNEL
COX DIRECTV DISH U-VERSE
FCS-Pacific 1341 Golf Channel 1365 Longhorn Network 1347 MLB Network 1320 NBA TV 1322 NBC Sports Network 1317
608 218 677 213 216 220
— 649 401 1641 407 1611 152 1634 156 1632 159 1640
CHANNEL
NFL Network NHL Network Pac 12 Network SEC Network Tennis Channel TBS TNT
COX DIRECTV DISH U-VERSE
1324 1326 1343 1345 1360 1047 1029
212 215 — 611 217 247 245
154 157 409 404 400 139 138
1630 1638 1759 1607 1660 1112 1108
tulsaworld.com
TULSA WORLD
Mon day, Sep tembe r 2, 2019 B 3
Brewer, Hanna lift Cleveland to win
A
fter making an impact on defense in 2018, Cleveland junior Asher Brewer spent the offseason looking forward to and preparing for being the primary running back in the Tigers’ offense this season. “Last year we had a Barry senior Lewis running back, now High school I guess it’s barry.lewis @tulsaworld.com my turn,” Brewer said. Brewer was a big factor and scored on both sides of the ball in the Brewer Tigers’ season opener Thursday. On offense, he had 27 rushes for 183 yards and three touchdowns. As a linebacker, he had eight tackles and scored on a pivotal 60-yard fumble return to help the Class 4A Tigers defeat 5A Glenpool 34-12. “Asher ran hard,” Cleveland coach Ricky Ward said. “He’s put in a lot of work all summer. He’s a big strong kid, works hard every day. We will ride with Asher Brewer.” The Tigers, on a steamy night at Billy Vessels Memorial Stadium, wore down the visiting Warriors in the second half and Brewer took advantage. “It was a lot of fun,” Brewer said. “I’m pleased, the offensive line opened up holes, every single play there was a huge gap. It was a great night.” Tigers quarterback Ben Ward rushed for 83 yards and a TD. The Tigers, who beat Glenpool 48-34 in last year’s opener, are coming off a 5-5 season when
Cleveland coach Ricky Ward addresses his football team after a season-opening, 3412 win over Glenpool on Thursday night. B ARRY LEWIS/Tulsa World
they averaged 32.8 points, but allowed 32.3. Cleveland’s defense totally shut down Glenpool in the second half Thursday and came up with the game’s biggest play. With Cleveland leading 14-12, Glenpool recovered an onside kick to start the second half. The Warriors had a chance to take the Hanna lead, but instead noseguard Kaden Hanna came up with a quarterback sack that led to Brewer’s TD fumble return. “It was time to shut it down and do our jobs,” Hanna said. “I just picked that center up and slammed him. I stepped over him and then I thought I got a sack, and I didn’t even know I hit the ball out of his hands. I went for the ball but I thought I had missed it. When I looked up after throwing down the quarterback, I see Brewer 20 yards down the field. “It was rough in the
first half but after halftime we were the team in better shape. I do feel like our defense made a good statement, we shut down the run pretty good and toward the end they couldn’t pass on us at all.” Hanna had 58 tackles and seven sacks last season. He opened this season with seven tackles, including three for losses. “Kaden played a great game and was a big force in the middle of our defense,” Ricky Ward said. “He is a massive workload in the middle, at 6-2 and 300 pounds, he can move. He demands a double-team every time and if not, he’s going to make a play.” Brewer also believes the Tigers’ defense will be better this year despite graduating many of its starters. “We’re more physical,” Brewer said. “We’re going to keep running to the ball and our defense is smarter. We might not be the most athletic team in the state but we’re pretty smart.” Although the Tigers aren’t in the Tulsa World’s first in-season 4A rankings, they will be
Elijah Bell, McLain Junior quarterback accounted for 257 yards and five touchdowns in a 32-20 win at Victory Christian.
Asher Brewer, Cleveland Junior running back/linebacker had 27 rushes for 183 yards and three TDs, plus had eight tackles and scored on a fumble return in a 34-12 win
over Glenpool.
Joe Cole, Barnsdall Senior QB/linebacker completed 9-of-12 passes for 195 yards and accounted for five TDs, including on two of the three passes he picked off, and blocked two kicks in a 69-6 win over Caney Valley.
Cole Dugger, Owasso Senior QB completed 20-of-30 passes for 327 yards and three TDs in a 47-34 win at Bentonville (Arkansas) West.
Jace Horton, Prue Senior QB/LB passed for 224 yards and four TDs plus a pair of conversions, had a rushing TD, and eight tackles with one sack in a 42-28 win over Strother.
High school rankings • Class 6AI
Pos. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
School (Previous) Broken Arrow (1) Owasso (2) Jenks (4) Union (3) Putnam North (5) Norman (6) Edmond Santa Fe (7) Mustang (8) Moore (9) Yukon (10)
• Class 6AII
Pos. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
School (Previous) Bixby (1) Stillwater (2) B.T. Washington (3) Del City (4) Sapulpa (6) Midwest City (5)
W-L 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 W-L 1-0 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-1
7. 8. 9. 10.
Lawton (7) Muskogee (8) Choctaw (9) Bartlesville (—)
• Class 5A
Pos. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
School (Previous) MWC Carl Albert (1) Bishop Kelley (2) OKC McGuinness (3) Duncan (4) Collinsville (5) Ardmore (6) Claremore (7) Edison (8) Tahlequah (9) El Reno (—)
• Class 4A
Pos. School (Previous) 1. Tuttle (1) 2. Bethany (2)
eventually if they consistently turn in more performances similar to Thursday’s against Glenpool.
“We’re senior-led and have a lot of talent,” Woods said. “We need to come together more, in the past few years we haven’t really meshed as a team. We’ve had Looking ahead our good spurts but we An interesting matchup haven’t really played to our full potential. We’ve this week has 3A No. 10 Verdigris visiting 2A No. 1 been conditioning really hard, and I think we have Sperry on Friday. what it takes to make a Verdigris’ top player is run at it.” lineman Austin Woods, who committed to Arkansas State in June after Week 0 notables visiting several colleges and camps over a 14-day Adair, which is ranked span. No. 7 in 2A, opened its “It was a long two season with a 32-14 win weeks,” Woods said at the over Dewey on Friday. Tulsa World Fall Sports Sophomore quarterback Photo Day. “Arkansas Nate Ratcliff completed State was my first visit. 20-of-31 passes for 267 After the two weeks, I yards and two TDs for knew Arkansas State was Adair. Barrett Bradbury the place where I needed had 10 catches for 112 to be. The coaching staff yards and a TD, and an was amazing. And a thing interception on defense... that stood out was the Senior quarterback facilities. Coaches leave Gavin Payton accounted but facilities stay, and for 224 yards and three they win, too.” TDs in a 38-7 win over Woods is excited about Claremore Sequoyah. Verdigris’ upcoming season. The Cardinals Barry Lewis were 5-6 and reached 918-581-8393 the playoffs last year, but barry.lewis only have one winning @tulsaworld.com season since their last Twitter: playoff win in 2012. @BarryLewisTW
Other top performers
Player of the week nominees To vote for high school football player of the week, see the profiles of each candidate and then cast your vote. Voting ends at 3 p.m. Tuesday. The readers’ choice for player of the week, along with the World’s choice, will be published in Wednesday’s Tulsa World and online at OkPrepsExtra.com.
Drillers road report
0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 W-L 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 W-L 1-0 0-0
KT Owens, Central Junior QB passed for 301 yards and four TDs in a 47-0 win at OKC Grant.
Brennan Presley, Bixby Senior receiver had 17 catches for 237 yards and six TDs in a 77-44 win over Mansfield (Texas) Timberview.
Mason Williams, Bixby Junior QB completed 32-of-44 passes for 435 yards and eight TDs in a 77-44 win over Mansfield Timberview. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Wagoner (3) Blanchard (4) Clinton (6) Weatherford (7) Poteau (5) Hilldale (8) Oologah (9) Bristow (10)
• Class 3A
Pos. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
School (Previous) OKC Heritage Hall (1) Lincoln Christian (2) Plainview (3) Sulphur (4) Berryhill (5) Kingfisher (6) Cascia Hall (8) Idabel (7) Seminole (9) Verdigris (10)
• Class 2A
Pos. School (Previous) 1. Sperry (1)
0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 W-L 0-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 W-L 0-0
James Dover, Gore: Senior RB/DB had 24 rushes for 160 yards and a TD plus 10 tackles in a 14-7 win over Haskell. JD Geneva and AJ Green, Union: Geneva, a senior QB, completed 19-of-25 passes for 287 yards and five TDs while Green, a junior running back, had 237 total yards and a TD in a 47-44 loss to Mansfield Lake Ridge. Isaiah Jacobs, Owasso: Senior RB had 24 rushes for 188 yards and a TD at Bentonville West. Asher Link, Metro Christian: Senior QB accounted for 346 yards and four TDs in a 35-9 win over Broken Bow. Chase Ricke, Lincoln Christian: Senior QB completed 10-of-11 passes for 281 yards and five 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Metro Christian (2) Vian (3) OKC Millwood (4) Jones (5) Beggs (6) Adair (7) Kingston (8) Eufaula (9) Holland Hall (10)
• Class A
Pos. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
School (Previous) Cashion (1) Rejoice Christian (2) Stroud (3) Thomas (4) Tonkawa (5) Pawhuska (6) Crossings Christian (7) Gore (8) Christian Heritage (9) Colcord (10)
• Class B
Pos. School (Previous)
ad 100588985-01
1-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 W-L 1-0 0-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 W-L
TDs — all in the first quarter — of a 51-19 win over Inola. Mason Siegel, Okla. Union: Junior QB/DB accounted for 229 yards and four TDs, and had 12 tackles in a 26-12 win over Nowata. Myles Slusher, Broken Arrow: Senior defensive back scored on a 52-yard interception return and deflected another pass that turned into a Pick-6 in a 42-13 win at Mansfield. Duncan Toothman, Prue: Sophomore WR/DB had 10 catches for 160 yards and two TDs, plus scored three 2-point conversions and had an interception against Strother. DeAngelo Washington, Hale: Senior QB/DB accounted for 160 yards and four TDs, intercepted a pass and had a 40-yard punt return in a 47-0 win over Webster. — Barry Lewis, Tulsa World 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Regent Prep (1) Davenport (2) Shattuck (3) Laverne (4) Dewar (5) Prue (7) Keota (8) Pioneer (9) Depew (10) Cherokee (—)
• Class C
Pos. 1. 2. 3 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
School (Previous) Pond Creek-Hunter (2) Tipton (1) SW Covenant (3) Fox (4) Coyle (5) Graham-Dustin (6) Midway (7) Timberlake (—) Buffalo (—) Medford (10)
0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 W-L 0-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0
— Barry Lewis, Tulsa World
Tulsa tops Corpus Christi, clinches second-half title Summary: Tulsa’s Markus Solbach pitched into the eighth inning to lead the Drillers to a 4-0 win and the Texas League North Division second-half title Sunday afternoon at Whataburger Field in Corpus Christi, Texas. Notes: Solbach threw 7 ⅔ innings, Solbach striking out nine while allowing just four hits, improving to 5-1. ... Michael Boyle threw a perfect 1 ⅓ innings to close out the win. ... Tulsa took a 1-0 lead in the seventh on a solo home run by Carlos Rincon. ... The Drillers added three runs an inning later on a three-run homer by Donovan Casey. ... Three of Tulsa’s five hits were extra-base hits. Up next: 2:15 p.m. Monday at Corpus Christi. Next home game: 7:05 p.m. Friday vs. Arkansas, Game 3 of Texas League North Division Playoffs. Broadcast: KTBZ-1430 — From staff reports Drillers 4, Hooks 0 Tulsa 000 000 130 — 4 Corpus Christi 000 000 000 — 0 Drillers AB R H BI W K AVG Estevez 2B 3 0 1 0 2 1 .295 Downs SS 5 1 1 0 0 2 .333 Parmelee DH 4 0 0 0 1 3 .236 Thomas LF 2 1 0 0 2 1 .238 Casey CF 5 1 1 3 0 3 .211 Rincon RF 4 1 1 1 0 1 .216 Walker 1B 2 0 1 0 2 0 .213 Procyshen C 4 0 0 0 0 1 .145 Robinson 3B 4 0 0 0 0 0 .311 Totals 33 4 5 4 7 12 .263
2B: Estevez (24). HR: Rincon (10); Casey (3). LOB: 10.
Hooks AB R H BI W K AVG De La Cruz RF 4 0 0 0 0 1 .280 Arauz 2B 4 0 1 0 0 1 .238 Meyers CF 4 0 1 0 0 1 .200 Matijevic 1B 4 0 0 0 0 2 .248 Adams DH 3 0 0 0 0 0 .266 Shaver 3B 3 0 2 0 0 1 .227 Julks LF 3 0 0 0 0 1 .152 Robinson C 3 0 0 0 0 0 .216 Sierra SS 3 0 0 0 0 2 .206 Totals 31 0 4 0 0 9 .248
2B: Shaver (5). LOB: 5.
Drillers IP H R ER W K ERA Solbach W, 5-1 7.2 4 0 0 0 9 2.57 Boyle 1.1 0 0 0 0 0 3.02 Hooks Bailey DeJuneas L, 2-6 Hernandez
IP H R ER W K ERA 5.1 1 0 0 3 7 3.30 2.0 2 3 3 2 3 8.31 1.2 2 1 1 2 2 3.42
WP: Bailey; DeJuneas. HBP: Thomas (by Hernandez); Adams (by Solbach). T: 2:53. Att: 4,818. Late Saturday
Drillers 6, Hooks 4 (10) Tulsa 010 001 200 2 — 6 Corpus Christi 000 101 020 0 — 4 Drillers AB R H BI W K AVG Avans CF 6 1 3 0 0 1 .278 Downs SS 5 1 1 0 0 0 .349 Parmelee 1B 3 0 0 0 2 1 .240 Thomas LF 4 1 2 1 1 1 .239 Wong C 4 1 3 3 1 1 .349 Estevez 2B 5 1 0 0 0 2 .295 Rincon RF 5 1 1 2 0 2 .215 Walker DH 4 0 1 0 0 1 .211 Robinson 3B 4 0 1 0 1 0 .320 Totals 40 6 12 6 5 9 .263
2B: Thomas (17); Wong (9); Walker (8). HR: Wong (9); Rincon (9). LOB: 11. E: Estevez (15). Hooks AB R H BI W De La Cruz RF 5 0 0 0 0 Arauz 2B 4 1 1 0 0 Wrenn CF 5 2 2 3 0 Matijevic 1B 5 0 2 0 0 Adams 3B 4 1 1 1 0 Shaver C 3 0 0 0 1 Julks LF 4 0 0 0 0 Robinson DH 4 0 0 0 0 Duarte SS 4 0 2 0 0 Totals 38 4 8 4 1
K AVG 2 .285 0 .238 1 .247 1 .252 1 .275 2 .220 2 .167 4 .218 1 .234 14 .249
2B: Matijevic (21). HR: Adams (7); Wrenn 2 (8). LOB: 7. CS: Duarte (10). E: Shaver (5). Drillers IP H R ER W K Crawford 5.1 4 2 2 1 5 Schueller 2.0 3 2 2 0 4 Spitzbarth (W, 3-3) 2.0 1 0 0 0 4 Long (S, 6) 0.2 0 0 0 0 1
ERA 2.37 9.00 2.05 2.29
Hooks Conine Scrubb McKee Sanabria (L, 4-3)
ERA 2.00 2.78 1.71 3.11
IP H R ER W K 6.0 7 2 2 1 5 0.1 2 2 2 3 0 1.2 0 0 0 0 3 2.0 3 2 1 1 1
WP: Spitzbarth 2. HBP: Walker (by Conine); Arauz (by Crawford). T: 3:42. Att: 6,310.
• Texas League N orth W L Pct. GB Tulsa (Dodgers) 40 29 .580 — x-Arkansas (Mariners) 38 31 .551 2 Springfield (Cardinals) 30 39 .435 10 N W Arkansas (Royals) 25 44 .362 15 South W L Pct. GB Midland (Athletics) 38 31 .551 — x-Amarillo (Padres) 37 32 .536 1 Frisco (Rangers) 35 34 .507 3 Corpus Christi (Astros) 33 36 .478 5
x-First Half Winner Sunday
Tulsa 4, Corpus Christi 0
Frisco 2, Northwest Arkansas 1 Arkansas 10, Amarillo 7 Midland 4, Springfield 0 Monday Midland at Springfield, 12:15 p.m. Frisco at Northwest Arkansas, 1:05 p.m. Arkansas at Amarillo, 1:05 p.m. Tulsa at Corpus Christi, 2:15 p.m.
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Four th and shor
STATISTICS How they scored Houston 0 10 7 14 — 49 Oklahoma 7 14 21 7 — 31 A: 84,534 First quarter OU: Jeremiah Hall 14 pass from Jalen Hurts (Calum Sutherland kick), 12:21. Second quarter OU: Hurts 1 run (Sutherland kick), 14:10. OU: CeeDee Lamb 45 pass from Hurts (Sutherland kick), 8:09. UH: Kyle Porter 23 pass from D’Eriq King (Dalton Witherspoon kick), 4:58. UH: FG, Witherspoon 34, 0:26. Third quarter OU: Charleston Rambo 56 pass from Hurts (Sutherland kick), 12:38. OU: Hurts 3 run (Sutherland kick), 7:47. UH: Mulbah Car 7 run (Witherspoon kick), 3:03. OU: Hurts 1 run (Sutherland kick), 0:00. Fourth quarter UH: Marquez Stevenson 4 pass from King (Witherspoon kick), 9:11. UH: King 5 run (Witherspoon kick), 2:11. OU: Rhamondre Stevenson 21 run (Sutherland kick), 1:17.
notebook Beer sales make debut
t
Providing for the University of Oklahoma a new revenue stream, beer was a first-time concessions option for all fans during the Houston-OU opener. During previous seasons, alcohol was sold only in the suites areas of Memorial Stadium. By the end of the 2019 season — which includes six home dates for the Sooners – beer revenue could amount to $1 million. OU’s options include Anheuser-Busch, Miller and Coors products, along with craft beers brewed in Oklahoma City. The Sunday night attendance was 84,534, extending OU’s streak of consecutive sellouts to 124. Since the start of the 1999 season, every Sooner home contest has been sold out. Available at more than 50 locations throughout the stadium, OU beer prices are $8 for a 16-ounce cup and $8.50 for a 20-ounce cup. Alcohol now is sold at each of Oklahoma’s three FBS stadiums. Since 2016, beer and wine have been available at the University of Tulsa’s H.A. Chapman Stadium. Last year, beer was made available to all fans at Oklahoma State’s Boone Pickens Stadium. OSU averaged 13,284 beers sold per game. Before expenses, OSU generated $743,904 on beer sales.
Everything you need to know about Sunday’s game in four downs
team statistics UH OU First downs 25 30 by rushing 13 15 by passing 7 14 by penalty 5 1 Rushing yards 241 354 Passing yards 167 332 Passing 14-27-0 20-24-0 Offensive plays 69 61 Total yards 408 686 Avg. per play 5.9 11.2 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-2 Penalties-Yds 6-48 7-94 Punts-Avg. 5-45.6 1-41 0-0 3-26 Punt returns-Yds Kickoff returns-Yds 4-61 2-37 Interceptions-Yds 0-0 0-0 1-7 0-0 Fumble returns-Yds Possession time 31:40 28:20 5-13 5-8 3rd downs 4th downs 1-2 0-0 Sacks by-Yds 0-0 3-11
Oklahoma running back Trey Sermon tries to evade Houston tacklers during Sunday night’s game at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium in Norman. The Sooners defeated the Cougars, 49-31. IAN MA ULE/T ulsa World
1
Houston RUSHING No. Yds TD D. King 15 103 1 M. Car 9 76 1 K. Porter 14 40 0 M. Stevenson 1 13 0 C. Smith 3 9 0
Lg 25 21 19 13 7
PASSING C-A Yds Int TD D. King 14-27 167 0 2 RECEIVING No. Yds TD Lg M. Stevenson 7 80 1 30 K. Porter 2 32 1 21 K. Corbin 1 28 0 28 C. Trahan 2 25 0 17 J. Singleton 1 5 0 5 C. McGowan 1 -3 0 -3 Kicking Conv FG Punts D. Witherspoon 4 1 0 0 0 5 D. Roy
3
Returns Punt KO Int Fum J. Singleton 0-0 3-34 0-0 0-0 B. Smith 0-0 1-27 0-0 0-0 TACKLES Solo Ast. Total TFL Sacks 5 14 0 0 G. Stuard 9 G. Owens 5 2 7 0 0 D. Mutin 4 2 6 1 0 D. Anderson 3 2 5 0 0 G. Sprewell 3 1 4 0 0 K. Smith 3 1 4 0 0 P. Turner 4 0 4 2 0 J. Carmouche 1 2 3 0 0 T. Edgeston 0 3 3 0 0 D. Williams 1 1 2 0 0 D. Anenih 1 1 2 .5 0 A. Bell 1 1 2 0 0 G. Vaughn 1 0 1 0 0 A Fleming 1 0 1 0 0 E. Gooden 1 0 1 0 0 B. Young 0 1 1 .5 0
Oklahoma RUSHING No. Yds TD J. Hurts 16 176 3 T. Sermon 11 91 0 K. Brooks 4 46 0 R. Stevenson 6 41 1
Lg 43 31 40 25
2
Matchup that mattered
New faces yield strong results
OU defense vs. D’Eriq King
There were two high-profile debuts for Oklahoma on Sunday night — Jalen Hurts at quarterback and Alex Grinch coordinating the defense. Both went very well. Hurts, the heir to Kyler Murray running Lincoln Riley’s offense, was as accurate as predecessors Murray and Baker Mayfield throwing the ball. What changed was Riley’s willingness to run his quarterback, whether on draws, counters or zone reads. That led Hurts to a 332-yard night passing and another 176 yards on the ground. Grinch had his defense playing as aggressively as he promised it would, especially in the front seven. The Sooners didn’t get the takeaways they wanted, but they flew to the ball and tackled once they got there.
The playmaking quarterback was Houston’s best hope to hang in. He needed to get loose on the run and improvise outside the pocket. The Sooners didn’t let him do much of either. Middle linebacker Kenneth Murray had the most to do with that. The Big 12 preseason Defensive Player of the Year played in a frenzy, tracking King wherever he went and dropping him several times in the process. King engineered one touchdown drive over nine first-half possessions. He got the Cougars in the end zone on his second series of the third quarter, though three personal fouls by the defense were as big a factor in that as King.
Game MVP
4
What’s next
Jalen Hurts
Mismatch at Owen Field
The numbers — 508 yards and 6 touchdowns total — stand out. But consider the little things from Sunday night… Hurts checked down to H-back Jeremiah Hall when primary target CeeDee Lamb was covered deeper downfield. That sparked a second-quarter touchdown drive. Hurts checked to Trey Sermon when primary target Nick Basquine was covered to set up a prehalftime field goal try. Hurts spotted Lamb 15 yards behind the secondary just as he was starting a second-quarter scramble, and found Charleston Rambo on a runpass option to open a third-quarter TD drive. The Alabama transfer has obvious physical gifts. Sunday night, he also displayed a quarterback’s presence.
South Dakota comes to Norman next Saturday for a 6 p.m. kickoff. The game should be decided by 6:15. The Coyotes are an FCS team. They aren’t a bad one. They lost their season opener Saturday to FCS No. 25 Montana 31-17, and they went 8-5 in 2017. But moving up a level to face the Sooners? That won’t be pretty at all. Put it this way: Montana quarterback Dalton Sneed threw for 430 yards and three touchdowns on the South Dakota defense Saturday. Imagine the damage Hurts and OU’s receivers might do. — Guerin Emig, Tulsa World
cringe-worthy. With 5½ minutes left to play, OU got a fourth-down stop at the The unveiling of starters was Sooner 23. A year ago, Houston attention-commanding because of the word “or” on recent depth probably converts or scores in that situation. charts. As first steps go for the deAt an edge-rusher position, it fense, this wasn’t bad. was Stokes or Jalen Redmond. Do-or-die tackling was an issue At the rush-linebacker spot, last season. Five minutes before it was Jon Michael-Terry or Nik halftime, it again was an issue. Bonitto. Grinch trusted Stokes (who as Houston’s Kyle Porter collected a D’Eriq King swing pass and a Tulsa high school athlete was homeschooled) and Michael-Ter- found himself in a face-to-face confrontation with Brown near ry (a dominant defender during the Sooner sideline. his years at Victory Christian) As an off-balance Brown was with starting roles. unable to score the takedown, With former Union stars Tre Brown and Pat Fields in the sec- Porter rocked his way into the end zone for a 23-yard score. It was ondary, there were four Tulsans in OU’s defensive starting lineup. the most glaring missed tackle of the night. Moments like this hapThis feels unprecedented — pened all the time last year. to have four Tulsans in the OU By Grinch’s tougher standards, starting defense — but maybe OU might have missed 30 tackles it happened 80 or 90 years ago. on Sunday. Certainly not in recent years. By my count, OU missed on no Reasonable Expectation No. more than 10 tackle attempts. In 1: That on opening night, the Sooner defense would be measur- an opener, and in consideration of Houston’s skill-position talent, ably improved. It wasn’t close to perfect, but at 10 is not a terrible number. Among positives was the the same time it was never really »» From page B1
RECEIVING No. Yds TD Lg C. Rambo 3 105 1 56 C. Lamb 2 46 1 45 J. Haselwood 2 46 0 42 N. Basquine 3 31 0 14 T. Sermon 2 25 0 20 J. Hall 3 25 1 14 G. Calcaterra 2 20 0 14 A.D. Miller 1 15 0 15 B. Willis 1 14 0 14 M. Jones 1 5 0 5 Kicking Conv FG Punts C. Sutherland 7 0 0 R. Mundschau 0 0 1 Returns Punt KO Int Fum C. Lamb 3-26 0-0 0-0 0-0 J. Hall 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 T. Brown 0-0 2-37 0-0 0-0 T. James 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 TACKLES Solo Ast. Total TFL Sacks K. Murray 7 6 13 2.5 .5 R. Perkins 5 2 7 2 1 D. Turner-Yell 3 3 6 0 0 N. Bonitto 3 3 6 0 0 P. Fields 2 3 5 0 0 Radley-Hiles 2 3 5 0 0 R. Jones 4 0 4 0 0 J. Redmond 1 2 3 1 0 T. Brown 2 0 2 0 0 D. White 1 1 2 .5 0 J. Terry 0 2 2 1 .5 M. Overton 0 2 2 0 0 J. Parker 1 0 1 0 0 J. Hurts 1 0 1 0 0
Four Tulsans start on defense in opener Among the defensive starters against Houston were four Tulsa natives: defensive tackle LaRon Stokes (NOAH); outside linebacker Jon-Michael Terry (Victory Christian); free safety Pat Fields (Union); and cornerback Tre Brown (Union). Stokes, Terry and Fields made the first starts of their careers. Other first-time starters were quarterback Jalen Hurts; offensive linemen R.J. Proctor, Marquis Hayes, Tyrese Robinson and Adrian Ealy; wide receiver Charleston Rambo; linebacker DaShaun White; and safety Delarrin Turner-Yell.
Lamb hits 2,000-yard career receiving mark
Haisten: Defense wasn’t cringe-worthy
PASSING C-A Yds Int TD J. Hurts 20-23 332 0 3 T. Mordecai 0-1 0 0 0
OU’S 2019 SLATE
Story of the game
With a 45-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter, Sooner wide receiver CeeDee Lamb became the 10th player in program history to eclipse 2,000 receiving yards. Lamb was among 10 receivers to catch at least one pass Sunday night.
First-quarter successes The Sooners held their opponent scoreless in the first quarter for the first time since last season’s game against Kansas State on Oct. 27. In the first quarter, OU ran 17 plays and collected 13 first downs, producing a dozen plays of at least 10 yards. OU scored on its opening offensive possession in the fourth consecutive season opener, the longest such streak in program history.
Dixon honored at halftime
Brown-Fields defense, on a deep throw by King, against Houston receiver Tre’Von Bradley. The coverage was executed perfectly, with Fields on the deeper end of the assignment, and he nearly got an interception. Linebacker Kenneth Murray sprinted 25 yards to grab King as the Houston QB released a wobbly incompletion. Murray seemed to get faster with each stride. It was beautiful. Houston punted five times. Against the Sooners last season, Kansas punted only three times. Houston had 408 total yards. Kansas had 524. Reasonable Expectation No. 2: That the Oklahoma defense is better at UCLA than it was on Sunday, and better in the Texas game than it was at UCLA. If Grinch takes this Houston building block and achieves steady improvement each week — with many of the same players who last season were 130th nationally in pass defense – then he will have been a phenomenal hire and worth every dime of the $1.4 million he’s being paid.
Former OU cornerback Rickey Dixon was recognized at halftime for his upcoming College Football Hall of Fame induction. Dixon, who has ALS, was shown on the big screen while his family and some of his former teammates represented him on the field. — Kelly Hines and Bill Haisten, Tulsa World
Oklahoma’s CeeDee Lamb went over 2,000 career receiving yards in Sunday night’s season opener against Houston. IAN MA ULE/T ulsa World
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SEPT. 28
OCT. 5
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NOV. 9
NOV. 16
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NOV. 30
W, 49-31
6 p.m. PPV
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11 a.m. (at Dallas)
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OU: Hurts joins Murray as 300-yard passers, 100-yard rushers »» From page B1
area of potential concern coming into the year , and he finished 20-of-23 for 332 yards and three touchdowns. Of the three in completions, at least one appeared catchable. Hurts, a H ouston-area native who joined Murray as the only Sooners to throw for a t least 300 yards and rush for at least 100 in a game, also made a respectable American Athletic Conference team pa y on the ground, rushing for 176 yards and three touchdowns on 16 carries. “He’s an impressive a thlete, no question,” Riley said. OU (1-0) opened the season with a dominant start, needing three plays to get the Cougar offense off the field and three pla ys for its offense to find the end zone. Behind Hurts’ dualthreat ability, the Sooners caught fire in the first quarter, picking up 10 yards or more on 12 of 1 7 plays. After Hurts punched in a touchdown early in the second quarter, he escaped the collapsing pocket to find a wide-open CeeDee Lamb for a 45 -yard pass and an easy 21 -0 advantage. Two field goals in the first half would ha ve provided more separ ation, but both were missed by Calum Sutherland. The debut of Ale x Grin-
Oklahoma running back Trey Sermon hurdles Houston cornerback Ka’Darian Smith Sunday night during the Sooners’ win over the Cougars. IAN MAULE/Tulsa World
ch’s new defense was as eagerly awaited as H urts’ first performance, given the struggles on tha t side of the ball in 20 18. Although OU surrendered 408 yards to H ouston, the majority came in the
second half when the lead was seemingly out of reach. “(Houston) is g oing to score a lot of points against a lot of people, ” Riley said. “We gave (quarterback D’Eriq King) hell.
… I thought we pla yed really well early . Certainly more positives than nega tives.” A penalty-filled drive that drew the Cougars within 35-17 late in the third quarter was a signif-
icant letdown, but H urts quickly responded with more impressive pla ys including a 24-yard run that set up another shor t score. Hurts played only one series in the four th quar-
ter, being replaced by backup Tanner Mordecai. Houston scored t wice in the period but failed to secure an onside kick tha t led to the Sooners’ final touchdown, a 21 -yard run by Rhamondre Stevenson.
Emig: Hurts’ running, passing skills give Riley, Sooners options »» From page B1
middle of his new home field. It’s just 84,534 fans came to the stadium to see the new quarterback mesh with his new coach. They came to see Hurts after kickoff, not before it. I imagine they loved what they saw. The quarterback whose accuracy came into question during three years at Alabama completed 20 of his 23 passes. The coach who wasn’t crazy about designed runs when Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray ran his offense turned Hurts loose. The result — 16 Hurts rushes for 176 yards. Thomas Lott holds OU’s single-game quarterback rushing record with 195. Imagine that. Thirty years after the curtain dropped on the Sooners’ wishbone era, Hurts came within 19 yards of that era’s singlegame running quarterback standard. Lott, of course, never threw for 332 yards as Hurts did Sunday night. He never balanced three rushing touchdowns with three more through the air, as Hurts did. So this really was something. It was something seeing Riley play with his new toy. Mayfield could run and throw, but he seemed to do his best work on grit and daring. Murray could drop a 65-yard dime and keep up with a cheetah. He was also 6-feet tall on his tiptoes, meaning he went into a baseball slide anytime danger lurked in the form of a head-hunting safety. Hurts, 6-2 and 220 pounds, is built to inflict some punishment himself. He is durable enough for Riley to call quarterback draws, counters and run-pass option rollouts without fear of physical repercussions. Hurts is also very, very fast. Not Murray fast. He isn’t going to blur by West Virginia Mountaineers and Texas Longhorns like Murray did last year. But did you see him get
Oklahoma quarterback Jalen Hurts (holding football) made a strong first impression with Sooner fans in OU’s 49-31 win over Houston Sunday night in Norman. Hurts passed for 332 yards and rushed for 176 more. IAN MAULE/Tulsa World
to the edge on Houston’s defenders Sunday night? That’s plenty of propulsion. It will be interesting to track Riley’s use of the quarterback run game moving forward. The season wears on a ballcarrier, no matter how strong and durable. For the purposes of early September, though, it’s fascinating to see Riley draw up run plays for his QB like the one in Sunday’s third quarter. As Hurts faked a handoff to running back Trey Sermon, the right side of OU’s offensive line rose and pulled around to the left, the direction Sermon headed. Hurts kept and ran right, against the grain of Houston’s pursuing defense and his own offensive line. The play gained a first down on third-andlong. It would have been Hurts’ most determined run of the night, had he not fumbled at the very end. Odds are Riley will run more deception like that down the road, maybe add another wrinkle, and this time Hurts won’t
fumble. It is tasty to consider the possibilities with this coach paired with this quarterback, especially
now that it appears the coach has tapped into the quarterback’s passing potential.
Riley polished Mayfield on the swashbuckler’s arrival from Texas Tech. He did the same for Murray
after the five-star’s transfer from Texas A&M. Now it appears Riley has waved his wand at Hurts. Alabama coaches swore Hurts was progressing as a thrower last year, even if nobody could see it amid Tua Tagovailoa’s emergence. Riley had something to work with, clearly. So he went to work after Hurts’ transfer. He did whatever he does to tighten a thrower’s mechanics, whatever he does to sharpen a thrower’s vision. He drew up plays to put receivers in position to come open. He trusted this quarterback, like the two before him, would flourish. Well, Hurts flourished Sunday night. We’ll see where he and Riley go from here, if he can hold up in the run game and continue to go 20-of-23 through the air. I like the odds. Guerin Emig 918-629-6229 guerin.emig @tulsaworld.com Twitter: @GuerinEmig
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SUNDAY’S GAMES
AMERICAN LEAGUE East New York Tampa Bay Boston Toronto Baltimore Central Minnesota Cleveland Chicago Kansas City Detroit West Houston Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle
W L Pct GB WC L10 Str 90 48 .652 — — 7-3 W-2 80 58 .580 10 — 6-4 W-4 74 63 .540 15½ 5 7-3 W-1 55 83 .399 35 24½ 3-7 L-1 45 91 .331 44 33½ 5-5 L-2 W L Pct GB WC L10 Str 84 52 .618 — — 7-3 W-1 79 58 .577 5½ — 5-5 L-3 60 76 .441 24 18½ 3-7 L-6 49 89 .355 36 30½ 4-6 W-2 40 94 .299 43 37½ 2-8 L-1 W L Pct GB WC L10 Str 89 49 .645 — — 8-2 W-1 78 58 .574 10 ½ 5-5 L-2 67 71 .486 22 12½ 4-6 L-1 65 73 .471 24 14½ 2-8 L-1 58 80 .420 31 21½ 4-6 W-1
Home 51-21 37-31 34-34 27-42 22-46 Home 39-29 41-27 33-35 27-43 18-48 Home 51-17 43-26 40-29 35-34 29-40
Away 39-27 43-27 40-29 28-41 23-45 Away 45-23 38-31 27-41 22-46 22-46 Away 38-32 35-32 27-42 30-39 29-40
Saturday’s results N.Y. Yankees 4, Oakland 3, (11) Kansas City 7, Baltimore 5 Toronto 6, Houston 4 Texas 3, Seattle 2 Tampa Bay 9, Cleveland 6 Atlanta 11, Chicago White Sox 5 Detroit 10, Minnesota 7 L.A. Angels 10, Boston 4 Sunday’s results Houston 2, Toronto 0 Kansas City 6, Baltimore 4 Tampa Bay 8, Cleveland 2 Seattle 11, Texas 3 Minnesota 8, Detroit 3 Boston 4, L.A. Angels 3 N.Y. Yankees 5, Oakland 4 Atlanta 5, Chicago White Sox 3 Today’s games Texas (Minor 11-8) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 10-7), 12:05 p.m. Baltimore (Wojciechowski 2-7) at Tampa Bay (Yarbrough 11-3), 12:10 p.m. Minnesota (Odorizzi 14-6) at Detroit (Zimmermann 1-9), 12:10 p.m. Toronto (TBD) at Atlanta (Soroka 10-3), 12:20 p.m. Seattle (Sheffield 0-1) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 9-9), 1:20 p.m. Houston (Cole 15-5) at Milwaukee (Houser 6-5), 3:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Detwiler 2-4) at Cleveland (Civale 2-3), 6:10 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE East Atlanta Washington Philadelphia New York Miami Central St. Louis Chicago Milwaukee Cincinnati Pittsburgh West Los Angeles Arizona San Francisco San Diego Colorado
W 84 77 70 69 48 W 76 73 70 64 60 W
89 70 66 64 59
L 54 58 65 67 88 L 60 63 66 73 77 L
50 67 70 72 79
Pct .609 .570 .519 .507 .353 Pct .559 .537 .515 .467 .438 Pct
GB — 5½ 12½ 14 35 GB — 3 6 12½ 16½ GB
.640 — .511 18 .485 21½ .471 23½ .428 29½
WC — — 2½ 4 25 WC — — 3 9½ 13½ WC — 3½ 7 9 15
L10 8-2 9-1 5-5 3-7 3-7 L10 8-2 5-5 6-4 4-6 8-2 L10
Str W-4 W-4 W-1 L-1 L-3 Str L-1 L-2 W-2 W-4 W-4 Str
Home 42-27 40-27 41-31 37-27 28-43 Home 43-25 45-24 39-29 37-31 29-37 Home
Away 42-27 37-31 29-34 32-40 20-45 Away 33-35 28-39 31-37 27-42 31-40 Away
4-6 W-1 52-18 37-32 6-4 L-1 33-33 37-34 3-7 L-2 30-38 36-32 5-5 W-2 31-37 33-35 1-9 L-6 34-35 25-44
Saturday’s results St. Louis 10, Cincinnati 6, 1st game Atlanta 11, Chicago White Sox 5 Arizona 6, L.A. Dodgers 5 Milwaukee 2, Chicago Cubs 0 Pittsburgh 11, Colorado 4 N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 3 San Diego 4, San Francisco 1 Washington 7, Miami 0 St. Louis 3, Cincinnati 2, 2nd game Sunday’s results Milwaukee 4, Chicago Cubs 0 L.A. Dodgers 4, Arizona 3 (11) St. Louis 4, Cincinnati 3, 1st game Atlanta 5, Chicago White Sox 3 Washington 9, Miami 3 Cincinnati 5, St. Louis 3, 2nd game Pittsburgh 6, Colorado 2 Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Mets 2 San Diego 8, San Francisco 4 Today’s games N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 9-7) at Washington (Ross 3-3), 12:05 p.m. Toronto (TBD) at Atlanta (Soroka 10-3), 12:20 p.m. Philadelphia (Smyly 2-6) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 9-7), 1:10 p.m. San Francisco (Samardzija 9-10) at St. Louis (Wainwright 9-9), 1:15 p.m. Seattle (Sheffield 0-1) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 9-9), 1:20 p.m. Houston (Cole 15-5) at Milwaukee (Houser 6-5), 3:10 p.m. San Diego (Quantrill 6-5) at Arizona (Leake 10-10), 3:10 p.m. Colorado (Lambert 2-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Buehler 11-3), 7:10 p.m.
AROUND THE MAJORS
HR RECORD: Major league batters hit 1,228 home runs in August, the Elias Sports Bureau said Sunday, breaking the monthly home run record for the third time this year. Major leaguers are on pace to shatter the season mark with weeks to spare. — Wire reports
STAT OF THE DAY
200
When Mike Trout, 28, stole a base in the second inning Saturday night in a 10-4 victory over Boston, he became youngest player to reach at least 275 home runs and 200 stolen bases in his career. — Associated Press
Brewers 4, Cubs 0
Verlander fans 14, fires third no-hitter
Padres 8, Giants 4
San Diego AB R H BI BB SO Avg. G.Garcia ss-2b 5 1 1 1 0 1 .253 Martini lf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .333 Renfroe ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .225 Machado 3b 5 0 2 1 0 0 .267 Hosmer 1b 4 1 3 1 1 1 .285 Naylor rf 3 0 2 0 0 0 .259 Margot cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .242 Myers cf-rf-lf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .224 Allen c 3 1 0 0 1 2 .235 France 2b 4 2 2 4 0 0 .231 Urías ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .178 Lauer p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .088 Jankowski rf 1 1 1 0 0 0 .167 Totals 38 8 13 8 2 7 San Francisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Solano 2b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .339 Slater rf 3 1 1 0 0 2 .282 Yastrzemski rf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .265 Pillar cf 4 1 2 2 0 1 .267 Longoria 3b 4 1 1 2 0 1 .266 Rickard lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .292 Vogt c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .272 A.Garcia 1b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .150 Belt ph-1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .233 Crawford ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 .232 Samardzija p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .114 Sandoval ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .268 Totals 34 4 7 4 0 12 San Diego 210 004 001 — 8 13 0 San Francisco 200 002 000 — 4 7 0 LOB — San Diego 5, San Francisco 3. 2B — Martini (1), Hosmer (26), Myers (17), Machado (20). 3B — Hosmer (2). HR — G.Garcia (4), off Samardzija; France (4), off Samardzija; France (4), off Abad; Pillar (20), off Lauer; Longoria (18), off Lauer. RBIs — G.Garcia (29), Hosmer (90), France 4 (16), Myers (42), Machado (76), Pillar 2 (75), Longoria 2 (61). DP — San Francisco 2. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO ERA Lauer, W, 8-8 6 6 4 4 0 9 4.55 Perdomo, H, 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 3.23 Muñoz, H, 7 1 0 0 0 0 3 1.77 Bednar 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO ERA Samardzija, L, 9-11 51/3 9 6 6 1 2 3.61 2 Abad /3 1 1 1 0 0 4.05 1 Menez /3 1 0 0 1 1 6.92 2 Coonrod /3 0 0 0 0 0 2.61 Anderson 2 2 1 1 0 4 5.34 T — 3:02. Att. — 38,701.
Pete Alonso hit his 43rd homer and Wilson Ramos extended his hitting streak to 25 games for New York.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
TORONTO — Justin Verlander pitched his third career no-hitter, punctuating a dominant season by striking out 14 to lead the Houston Astros past the Toronto Blue Jays 2-0 on Sunday. Verlander is just the sixth pitcher in major league history to throw at least three no-hitters. The right-hander became the first pitcher to throw two no-hitters as a visitor in the same park — he also threw one at Rogers Centre in 2011 with Detroit. His other no-no was in 2007 for the Tigers against Milwaukee. Canadian-born rookie Abraham Toro hit a twoout, two-run homer in the ninth inning off Ken Giles that cleared the way for Verlander to complete the no-hitter. Verlander allowed only one runner, with Cavan Biggio drawing a one-out walk in the first inning. The Blue Jays, with a lineup full of young, aggressive batters, never came close to a hit. “I can’t put it into words,” Verlander said, moments after the final out. It was the fourth no-hitter in the majors this year. CARDINALS 4, REDS 3 (1ST); REDS 5, CARDINALS 3 (2ND): Harrison Bader hit a game-ending single to lift host St. Louis over Cincinnati in the first game of a day-night doubleheader.
TWINS 8, TIGERS 3: Jake Cave and Nelson Cruz each drove in two runs and Minnesota beat host Detroit. DODGERS 4, DIAMONDBACKS 3 (11): Pinch-hitter Joc Pederson went deep in the 11th and Los Angeles rallied past host Arizona to prevent a four-game sweep.
FRED THORNHILL, THE CANADIAN PRESS
Astros right-hander Justin Verlander reacts after pitching a no-hitter against the Blue Jays on Sunday in Toronto. Luis Castillo threw six solid geles. Angels slugger Albert innings in the nightcap as Pujols had an RBI double in the third inning for his Cincinnati earned a split. 3,185th career hit, passing BREWERS 4, CUBS 0: Chris- Cal Ripken Jr. for 14th place. tian Yelich hit a three-run homer off Craig Kimbrel MARINERS 11, RANGERS 3: in the ninth inning, and Kyle Seager, Tom Murphy Milwaukee beat host Chi- and Daniel Vogelbach hit cago for a second straight home runs and Seattle beat shutout of the Cubs, who host Texas. scratched starter Yu Darvish with forearm tightness. ROYALS 6, ORIOLES 4: Adalberto Mondesi matched a YANKEES 5, ATHLETICS 4: career high with four hits Brett Gardner and pinch-hit- and stole three bases in his ter Mike Ford hit back-to- return from the injured list, back homers off Oakland leading host Kansas City closer Liam Hendriks, and past Baltimore. New York walked off a winner for the second straight game. PHILLIES 5, METS 2: Scott Kingery snapped an RED SOX 4, ANGELS 3: Xan- eighth-inning tie with a der Bogaerts homered as three-run double and PhilBoston edged host Los An- adelphia beat New York.
BRAVES 5, WHITE SOX 3: Freddie Freeman homered twice off All-Star Lucas Giolito and drove in five runs as host Atlanta beat Chicago. PADRES 8, GIANTS 4: Ty France homered twice as San Diego beat host San Francisco. RAYS 8, INDIANS 2: Charlie Morton earned his 14th win and Travis d’Arnaud had two RBIs as host Tampa Bay capped a three-game sweep of Cleveland. PIRATES 6, ROCKIES 2: Steven Brault hit his homer and pitched effectively into the seventh inning to lead Pittsburgh over host Colorado for a four-game sweep. NATIONALS 9, MARLINS 3: Ryan Zimmerman homered in his return from the injured as host Washington beat Miami.
BOX SCORES Astros 2, Blue Jays 0
Houston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Altuve 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .302 Brantley lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .329 Bregman ss 3 1 1 0 1 0 .290 Alvarez dh 4 0 1 0 0 2 .318 Díaz 1b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .272 Toro 3b 4 1 1 2 0 2 .207 Reddick rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .264 Chirinos c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .234 Marisnick cf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .239 Springer ph-cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .294 Totals 32 2 5 2 1 9 Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bichette ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .328 Biggio 2b 2 0 0 0 1 2 .214 Guerrero Jr. 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .278 Smoak 1b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .215 Tellez dh 3 0 0 0 0 3 .218 Grichuk cf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .233 McKinney rf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .216 Drury lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .222 McGuire c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .283 Totals 27 0 0 0 1 14 Houston 000 000 002 — 2 5 0 Toronto 000 000 000 — 0 0 0 LOB — Houston 5, Toronto 1. 2B — Díaz (7), Bregman (31). HR — Toro (2), off Giles. RBIs — Toro 2 (4). Houston IP H R ER BB SO ERA Verlander W,17-5 9 0 0 0 1 14 2.56 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO ERA Font 2 1 0 0 1 3 2.49 Gaviglio 3 0 0 0 0 3 4.50 Godley 3 2 0 0 0 2 3.94 Giles L,2-3 1 2 2 2 0 1 2.05 HBP — Godley (Díaz). T — 2:29. Att. — 24,104.
Mariners 11, Rangers 3
INDIANS: Right-hander Carlos Carrasco received a standing ovation upon entering in the seventh inning Sunday against Tamp Bay for his first major league appearance since being diagnosed with leukemia in June.
Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Grisham cf 4 1 1 0 1 3 .227 Grandal c 3 0 0 0 1 2 .246 Piña c 1 0 0 0 0 1 .233 Yelich rf 4 1 1 3 1 1 .328 Thames 1b 4 0 2 0 0 2 .258 Guerra p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333 Pomeranz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Pérez ph-3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .243 Gamel lf 4 1 2 0 0 1 .254 Shaw 3b-1b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .163 Spangenberg 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .261 Arcia ss 4 0 0 1 0 2 .222 González p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Freitas ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 —Moustakas ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .262 Austin 1b 0 1 0 0 1 0 —Totals 34 4 7 4 6 15 Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Báez ss 1 0 0 0 2 0 .281 Garcia ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .217 Castellanos rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .336 Bryant 3b 3 0 1 0 1 2 .282 Caratini 1b-c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .274 Lucroy c 1 0 0 0 1 0 .216 Rizzo ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .291 Almora Jr. cf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .241 Heyward ph-cf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .253 Russell 2b-ss 3 0 1 0 1 1 .239 Happ lf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .229 Chatwood p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .176 Schwarber ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .230 Kemp 2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .163 Totals 29 0 4 0 5 8 Milwaukee 000 100 003 — 4 7 0 Chicago 000 000 000 — 0 4 0 LOB — Milwaukee 9, Chicago 9. HR — Yelich (42), off Kimbrel. RBIs — Arcia (49), Yelich 3 (92). SB — Báez (11), Bryant (3). CS — Thames (2). DP — Milwaukee 2. Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO ERA González 3 0 0 0 4 2 4.14 Jackson W,1-0 2 2 0 0 1 1 4.43 Albers 0 1 0 0 0 0 4.72 Claudio H,21 12/3 0 0 0 0 0 3.86 2 /3 1 0 0 0 1 3.56 Guerra H,18 2 /3 0 0 0 0 2 2.63 Pomeranz H,6 Hader 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.74 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO ERA Chatwood L,5-3 32/3 3 1 1 4 7 4.14 1 /3 0 0 0 0 1 0.00 Wieck Phelps 1 2 0 0 1 2 1.86 Cishek 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.16 Ryan 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.98 Wick 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.96 2 /3 2 3 3 1 1 5.68 Kimbrel 1 /3 0 0 0 0 0 5.73 Strop T — 3:29. Att. — 40,912.
T ULSA WOR LD
Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Smith rf 5 3 2 0 0 0 .242 Lopes lf 5 2 3 1 1 1 .288 Seager 3b 5 1 1 3 1 3 .250 Narváez dh 3 1 0 0 2 1 .282 Murphy c 6 1 2 1 0 1 .284 Vogelbach 1b 3 3 2 2 2 1 .218 Nola 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .270 Moore ss 2 0 1 1 2 1 .210 Gordon 2b 5 0 2 2 0 0 .276 Bishop cf 4 0 0 1 1 1 .071 Totals 38 11 13 11 9 9 Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. DeShields cf 4 1 2 0 1 0 .250 Santana rf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .288 Andrus ss 4 1 1 0 0 0 .275 Solak dh 2 1 1 1 1 1 .333 Odor 2b 4 0 1 2 0 1 .194 Forsythe 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .226 Guzmán ph-1b 0 0 0 0 1 0 .193 Kiner-Falefa 3b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .239 Heineman lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .190 Mathis c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .161 Mazara ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .268 Trevino c 1 0 0 0 0 1 .245 Totals 34 3 9 3 3 7 Seattle 402 010 031 — 11 13 0 Texas 102 000 000 — 3 9 0 LOB — Seattle 12, Texas 8. 2B — Lopes (4), Heineman (4), Odor (24). 3B — Solak (1). HR — Murphy (17), off Farrell; Vogelbach (29), off Farrell; Seager (19), off Guerrieri. RBIs — Vogelbach 2 (72), Moore (21), Gordon 2 (31), Murphy (36), Bishop (3), Seager 3 (53), Lopes (11), Odor 2 (70), Solak (5). DP — Seattle 2; Texas 2. Seattle IP H R ER BB SO ERA Kikuchi, W, 6-9 5 6 3 3 0 1 5.36 Altavilla 1 0 0 0 1 1 8.10 Adams 1 1 0 0 1 2 3.33 Tuivailala 1 1 0 0 1 1 1.17 Brennan 1 1 0 0 0 2 5.35 Texas IP H R ER BB SO ERA 2 /3 3 4 4 2 2 5.17 Martin, L,1/3 Farrell 21/3 2 2 2 1 2 4.15 Gibaut 12/3 1 1 1 2 1 1.35 Springs 11/3 1 0 0 1 2 5.93 Vólquez 1 0 0 0 1 1 6.23 Guerrieri 1 4 3 3 1 0 4.22 Sampson 1 2 1 1 1 1 5.85 T — 3:39. Att. — 22,116.
Rays 8, Indians 2
Cleveland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Lindor ss 5 0 0 0 0 3 .296 Mercado cf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .268 Santana 1b 5 0 0 0 0 3 .290 Puig rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .252 Freeman 2b 3 1 3 0 1 0 .296 Reyes dh 3 0 0 0 1 1 .221 Bauers lf 3 0 1 2 0 1 .234 Plawecki c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .217 b-Allen ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .232 Haase c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Chang 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .208 Totals 32 2 6 2 4 10 Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Sogard 2b 5 1 2 1 0 1 .312 Meadows rf 5 1 3 1 0 0 .276 Pham lf 4 1 2 0 1 0 .274 Choi 1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .263 d’Arnaud ph-1b 2 0 2 2 0 0 .274 Wendle 3b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .210 Adames ss 3 0 0 0 1 1 .250 Kiermaier cf 3 2 1 0 1 0 .241 Lowe dh 3 2 2 2 1 1 .305 Zunino c 4 1 1 1 0 2 .172 Totals 35 8 14 8 4 5 Cleveland 010 000 010 — 2 6 1 Tampa Bay 100 210 13x — 8 14 0 E — Santana (8). LOB — Cleveland 10, Tampa Bay 7. 2B — Bauers (16), Meadows 2 (25), d’Arnaud (12), Pham (27). HR — Lowe (6), off Plutko. RBIs — Bauers 2 (41), Wendle (13), Lowe 2 (15), d’Arnaud 2 (54), Zunino (30), Sogard (10), Meadows (70). SB — Wendle (5), Pham (17). CS — Adames (2). SF — Bauers. DP — Cleveland 2. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO ERA Plutko, L, 6-4 41/3 6 4 4 4 2 4.53 2 O.Pérez /3 1 0 0 0 0 2.78 Hoyt 1 0 0 0 0 2 0.00 Carrasco 1 2 1 1 0 0 5.05 Otero 1 5 3 3 0 1 5.47 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO ERA Morton, W, 14-6 51/3 4 1 1 3 8 3.06 2 Milner, H, 1 /3 0 0 0 0 1 3.38 Fairbanks, H, 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 4.50 2 Kittredge /3 2 1 1 0 0 4.50 1 Roe, H, 21 /3 0 0 0 0 0 4.08 Pinto 1 0 0 0 0 0 15.43 T — 3:01. Att. — 14,922.
Yankees 5, Athletics 4
Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Semien ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .272 M.Chapman 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .259 Olson 1b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .269 Canha cf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .273 Davis dh 3 1 2 0 1 1 .224 Pinder rf 1 0 0 0 1 1 .237 Grossman ph-rf 1 1 0 0 1 1 .251 Profar lf 2 1 0 0 1 1 .214 Brown lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .423 Neuse 2b 3 0 1 2 1 1 .100 Phegley c 4 0 0 1 0 0 .248 Totals 29 4 4 4 7 9 New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. LeMahieu 3b 4 1 2 0 0 1 .335 Judge rf 3 1 0 0 1 1 .278 Torres 2b 3 0 1 1 0 0 .285 Sánchez c 3 0 0 0 1 1 .233 Gregorius ss 4 0 1 2 0 1 .253 Voit 1b 2 0 0 0 2 1 .276 Gardner cf 4 1 1 1 0 3 .249 Frazier dh 2 0 0 0 1 0 .280 Ford ph-dh 1 1 1 1 0 0 .236 Tauchman lf 2 1 0 0 1 0 .275 Totals 28 5 6 5 6 8 Oakland 000 000 310 — 4 4 0 New York 000 000 032 — 5 6 0 LOB — Oakland 5, New York 6. 2B — Davis (9), Neuse (1). HR — Olson (28), off Adams; Gardner (19), off Hendriks; Ford (10), off Hendriks. RBIs — Neuse 2 (2), Phegley (53), Olson (69), Torres (78), Gregorius 2 (47), Gardner (55), Ford (16). SF — Torres. DP — Oakland 1; New York 2. Oakland IP H R ER BB SO ERA Manaea 5 1 0 0 3 5 0.00 Petit 1 1 0 0 0 1 2.89 Diekman H,7 1 0 1 1 2 1 5.40 1 /3 1 2 2 1 0 5.49 Trivino Hendriks L,4-2 BS 2/3 3 2 2 0 1 1.77 New York IP H R ER BB SO ERA Happ 6 1 0 0 4 5 5.34 Dull 1 2 3 3 2 1 27.00 Adams 1 1 1 1 0 2 7.54 Ottavino W,6-4 1 0 0 0 1 1 1.69 T — 3:17. Att. — 42,860.
Pirates 6, Roockies 2
Pittsburgh AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Frazier 2b 5 1 2 1 0 1 .274 Reynolds lf 5 2 3 0 0 0 .335 Marte cf 4 1 1 1 1 1 .295 Bell 1b 5 0 2 1 0 0 .280 Moran 3b 4 0 2 1 1 1 .291 Osuna rf 5 0 0 0 0 2 .281 Díaz c 4 0 2 0 0 1 .251 E.González ss 4 0 1 0 0 1 .207 Brault p 2 1 1 1 0 1 .303 Cabrera ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .278 Musgrove pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .130 Totals 39 6 14 5 2 8 Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Story ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .296 Blackmon rf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .317 Arenado 3b 3 1 1 1 1 0 .311 Desmond lf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .257 McMahon 1b 4 1 1 0 0 3 .260 Hampson cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .214 Valaika 2b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .137 Wolters c 3 0 1 1 0 0 .279 Hoffman p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .200 Daza ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .219 Murphy ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .280 Hilliard ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .294 Totals 32 2 4 2 3 9 Pittsburgh 100 010 202 — 6 14 2 Colorado 000 001 100 — 2 4 3 E — Moran (12), Frazier (6), Arenado (9), McMahon 2 (14). LOB — Pittsburgh 9, Colorado 7. 2B — Moran (26). HR — Frazier (8), off Hoffman; Brault (1), off Tinoco; Arenado (35), off Brault. RBIs — Frazier (38), Bell (110), Brault (2), Marte (79), Moran (77), Arenado (105), Wolters (35). SB — Hampson (7). CS — Marte (6). S — Brault. DP — Pittsburgh 1; Colorado 1 . Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO ERA Brault W,4-3 61/3 4 2 1 2 5 3.88 2 Rodríguez H,13 /3 0 0 0 0 1 3.79 Kela H,4 1 0 0 0 1 1 2.66 Vázquez 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.65 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO ERA Hoffman L,1-5 5 9 2 2 1 3 7.35 Tinoco 12/3 3 2 1 1 1 4.34 1 Pazos /3 0 0 0 0 1 0.00 Estévez 1 0 0 0 0 2 4.19 Diaz 1 2 2 0 0 1 4.53 T — 3:19. Att. — 32,685.
Twins 8, Tigers 3
Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kepler cf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .256 Wade Jr rf 1 1 0 0 0 0 .000 Polanco ss 5 1 2 1 0 1 .302 Cruz dh 5 0 3 2 0 1 .309 Rosario lf 5 0 1 1 0 1 .282 Sanó 3b 3 1 0 0 2 2 .235 Arraez 2b 5 2 2 0 0 0 .333 Cave rf-cf 5 1 2 2 0 2 .268 Buxton cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .262 Astudillo 1b 2 1 1 1 0 0 .267 Cron 1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .262 J.Castro c 4 1 1 1 0 2 .237 Totals 39 8 12 8 3 10 Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Reyes rf 4 0 2 1 0 0 .295 W.Castro ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .233 Cabrera dh 4 0 1 0 0 1 .281 Rodríguez 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .229 H.Castro cf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .279 Lugo 3b 4 1 1 0 0 2 .235 Dixon lf 3 1 2 1 1 0 .251 Mercer 1b 4 1 2 1 0 1 .267 J.Rogers c 3 0 0 0 1 2 .114 Totals 34 3 8 3 2 11 Minnesota 050 010 020 — 8 12 0 Detroit 010 010 100 — 3 8 0 LOB — Minnesota 9, Detroit 6. 2B — Arraez (12), Lugo (6), Dixon (19). HR — Mercer (7), off Dyson. RBIs — Cave 2 (20), J.Castro (29), Polanco (69), Cruz 2 (91), Astudillo (14), Rosario (92), Dixon (46), Reyes (13), Mercer (15). SB — Reyes (4). DP — Minnesota 1. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO ERA Pineda, W, 11-5 6 5 2 2 1 9 4.11 Dyson 1 1 1 1 1 0 7.84 Romo 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.29 Graterol 1 2 0 0 0 1 0.00 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO ERA Turnbull, L, 3-14 42/3 8 6 6 3 4 4.45 Cisnero 11/3 1 0 0 0 2 3.67 Schreiber 12/3 3 2 2 0 2 13.50 McKay 11/3 0 0 0 0 2 5.06 T — 3:07. Att. — 13,776.
Royals 6, Orioles 4
Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Alberto 3b 4 2 2 0 0 0 .323 Mancini 1b 3 0 1 2 1 0 .275 Santander rf 4 0 2 0 0 1 .293 Núñez dh 3 0 0 1 0 1 .247 Villar 2b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .278 Severino c 3 0 0 1 0 1 .255 Stewart ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .254 Sisco c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .219 Smith Jr. lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .235 Wilkerson cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .216 Martin ss 3 1 2 0 0 0 .195 Peterson ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .220 Totals 34 4 8 4 1 5 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Merrifield rf 5 1 1 1 0 0 .299 Mondesi ss 5 2 4 0 0 1 .274 Soler dh 4 1 0 0 1 1 .251 Dozier 3b 4 1 2 2 0 0 .280 Gordon lf 3 1 1 1 1 0 .259 O’Hearn 1b 3 0 1 1 0 0 .185 Cuthbert ph-1b 0 0 0 0 1 0 .247 Viloria c 4 0 2 1 0 0 .244 Phillips cf 2 0 0 0 2 0 .188 Lopez 2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .231 Totals 34 6 11 6 5 4 Baltimore 102 001 000 — 4 8 0 Kansas City 300 000 21x — 6 11 2 E — Dozier (8), Viloria (1). LOB — Baltimore 5, Kansas City 9. 2B — Alberto (20), Santander (19), Dozier (25), Gordon (30). HR — Merrifield (16), off Armstrong. RBIs — Núñez (79), Mancini 2 (76), Severino (38), Dozier 2 (77), O’Hearn (27), Gordon (65), Viloria (11), Merrifield (69). SB — Mondesi 3 (34), Martin (8). SF — Núñez. DP — Baltimore 1; Kansas City 2. Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO ERA Brooks 41/3 6 3 3 4 3 6.75 Bleier 12/3 1 1 1 0 1 6.26 2 /3 0 0 0 0 0 4.52 Castro, H, 7 Fry, L, 1-7, BS, 3-7 0 1 1 1 0 0 4.83 Armstrong 11/3 3 1 1 1 0 5.06 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO ERA Duffy 61/3 7 4 3 1 3 4.89 McCarthy, W, 3-2 12/3 1 0 0 0 1 4.91 Kennedy, S, 25-28 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.48 T — 2:45. Att. — 18,208.
Nationals 9, Marlins 3
Miami AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Rojas ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .286 Ramirez rf 4 0 0 0 0 3 .270 Cooper 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .270 Castro 2b 3 1 1 1 1 0 .267 Prado 3b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .237 Brinson cf 3 1 0 0 1 0 .182 Dean lf 4 0 1 1 0 2 .202 Holaday c 2 0 1 1 0 1 .287 Smith p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .243 Walker ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .260 Totals 30 3 4 3 3 9 Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Turner ss 5 1 1 0 0 0 .293 Robles cf 3 1 0 0 0 1 .250 Rendon 3b 3 2 2 2 1 0 .337 Soto lf 4 2 3 3 0 0 .298 Kendrick 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .329 Zimmerman 1b 3 1 1 2 1 0 .248 Gomes c 4 1 1 1 0 0 .217 Parra rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .242 Corbin p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .071 Read ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Stevenson ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .333 Totals 34 9 9 8 2 7 Miami 000 030 000 — 3 4 3 Washington 011 023 20x — 9 9 0 E — Prado (2), Holaday (1), Rojas (9). LOB — Miami 4, Washington 4. 2B — Dean (6), Soto 2 (26), Kendrick (22). HR — Castro (16), off Corbin; Rendon (32), off Smith; Zimmerman (4), off Smith; Gomes (7), off Smith; Soto (31), off Guerrero. RBIs — Castro (72), Dean (13), Holaday (10), Soto 3 (95), Rendon 2 (111), Zimmerman 2 (17), Gomes (31). SF — Holaday. Miami IP H R ER BB SO ERA Smith L,8-9 51/3 7 7 6 1 5 4.30 2 /3 0 0 0 0 1 4.17 Kinley Guerrero 1 2 2 2 1 1 5.98 Ureña 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.64 Washington IP H R ER BB SO ERA Corbin W,11-6 6 3 3 3 3 8 3.19 Suero 1 1 0 0 0 1 4.45 Guerra 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.74 Doolittle 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.25 T — 2: 46. Att. — 29,345.
Red Sox 4, Angels 3
Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Betts rf 5 1 1 0 0 1 .287 Devers 3b 4 1 2 0 0 1 .321 Bogaerts ss 4 1 3 3 0 0 .312 Martinez dh 2 1 1 1 2 1 .317 Travis 1b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .239 Moreland ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .244 Benintendi lf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .281 Vázquez c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .274 Holt 2b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .321 G.Hernández cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Bradley Jr. ph-cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .220 Totals 33 4 8 4 4 10 Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Fletcher 3b-2b 5 0 1 0 0 0 .285 Trout cf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .293 Goodwin lf 5 0 2 0 0 0 .287 Pujols 1b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .252 Upton dh 4 1 1 1 0 1 .211 2 1 0 0 2 2 .239 Calhoun rf Simmons ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .268 Rengifo 2b 3 0 2 0 0 0 .245 Bour ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .182 Stassi c 1 0 0 1 0 0 .075 K.Smith c 1 0 0 0 0 1 .217 Totals 33 3 8 3 4 7 Boston 103 000 000 — 4 8 0 Los Angeles 001 100 010 — 3 8 0 2B — Bogaerts (48), Goodwin (27), Pujols (18), Rengifo (18). HR — Bogaerts (31), off Heaney; Martinez (34), off Heaney; Upton (10), off Barnes. RBIs — Bogaerts 3 (103), Martinez (93), Pujols (83), Stassi (2), Upton (35). SB — Calhoun (4). Boston IP H R ER BBSO ERA Price 2 1 0 0 1 2 4.28 Lakins 2 5 2 2 1 0 4.70 Weber, W, 2-2 2 1 0 0 1 1 4.09 Velázquez, H, 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 5.69 Barnes, H, 23 1 1 1 1 0 2 4.33 Workman, S, 10-16 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.20 Los Angeles IP H R ER BBSO ERA Heaney, L, 3-4 5 7 4 4 2 4 4.16 Del Pozo 1 0 0 0 1 2 2.70 Bard 11/3 1 0 0 0 1 5.09 2 /3 0 0 0 1 1 5.63 Mejía Robles 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.60 T — 3:21. Att. — 39,382.
Braves 5, White Sox 3
Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. García rf-lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .273 Anderson ss 3 0 2 0 1 1 .328 Abreu 1b 3 0 1 1 1 1 .284 Moncada 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .288 J.McCann c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .274 Jiménez lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .245 Sánchez 2b 3 1 0 0 1 0 .258 Engel cf 2 2 1 0 2 0 .235 Giolito p 2 0 1 2 0 1 .250 Skole ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .218 Goins rf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .270 Totals 31 3 5 3 5 8 Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Acuña Jr. rf 3 2 0 0 1 1 .284 Albies 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .288 Freeman 1b 4 2 3 5 0 0 .301 Donaldson 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .259 B.McCann c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .260 Swanson ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .258 Ortega lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .245 Hamilton cf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .333 Teheran p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .120 Camargo ph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .225 Hechavarría ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .282 Totals 29 5 6 5 2 8 Chicago 020 000 100 — 3 5 0 Atlanta 200 002 01x — 5 6 0 LOB — Chicago 6, Atlanta 2. 2B — Anderson (26), Camargo (11). HR — Freeman 2 (38), off Giolito. RBIs — Giolito 2 (2), Abreu (103), Freeman 5 (114). SB — Acuña Jr. 2 (33). CS — Anderson (5). DP — Chicago 1. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO ERA Giolito, L, 14-8 6 4 4 4 1 7 3.30 Marshall 11/3 1 1 1 1 1 2.95 2 Bummer /3 1 0 0 0 0 2.04 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO ERA Teheran, W, 9-8 6 3 2 2 4 5 3.38 Jackson, H, 8 1 2 1 1 1 2 3.58 Greene, H, 5 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.40 Melancon, S, 7-7 1 0 0 0 0 1 5.40 T — 3:08. Att. — 41,397.
L.A. Dodgers 4, Arizona 3
Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Pollock cf 5 0 2 0 0 0 .266 Freese 1b 2 1 1 1 0 1 .303 Beaty ph-1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .289 Pederson ph 1 1 1 1 0 0 .236 Turner 3b 5 0 0 0 0 0 .293 Bellinger rf 5 1 2 1 0 0 .310 Hernández lf-2b 5 0 0 0 0 0 .244 Taylor ss-lf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .265 Gyorko 2b-1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .158 Martin c 4 1 2 1 0 2 .215 Stripling p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .158 Negrón ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .250 Seager ph-ss 2 0 0 0 0 1 .267 Totals 41 4 9 4 0 10 Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Dyson cf 5 0 0 0 0 1 .245 Locastro rf 5 1 1 0 0 3 .256 Marte 2b 5 1 1 0 0 0 .320 Escobar 3b 5 1 2 0 0 1 .271 Lamb 1b 3 0 1 2 0 0 .204 Almonte ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Rojas lf 4 0 1 1 0 2 .217 Ahmed ss 3 0 2 0 1 0 .264 Avila c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .203 Young p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .056 Cron ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .203 Walker 1b 1 0 0 0 1 1 .263 Totals 38 3 8 3 2 10 Los Angeles 101 000 001 01 — 4 9 0 Arizona 000 300 000 00 — 3 8 0 2B — Pollock (12), Taylor (24), Ahmed (30). HR — Freese (10), off Young; Martin (5), off Young; Bellinger (43), off Chafin; Pederson (28), off Clarke. RBIs — Freese (28), Martin (16), Bellinger (102), Pederson (59), Lamb 2 (21), Rojas (5). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO ERA Stripling 3 2 0 0 0 2 3.50 1 May /3 4 3 3 0 1 5.11 2 Kolarek /3 1 0 0 1 0 0.00 Ferguson 2 0 0 0 0 2 4.95 Floro 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.79 Jansen 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.76 J.Kelly 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.56 Sadler W,4-0 1 1 0 0 1 1 2.33 Báez S,1-6 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.38 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO ERA Young 41/3 5 2 2 0 5 3.84 2 Crichton /3 0 0 0 0 1 3.92 2 López H,21 /3 0 0 0 0 0 2.83 McFarland H,7 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 4.99 Andriese H,2 21/3 1 0 0 0 3 5.01 Chafin BS,0-3 0 1 1 1 0 0 4.07 2 Ginkel /3 0 0 0 0 0 1.84 Clarke L,4-5 2 2 1 1 0 1 5.45 T — 3:56. Att. — 34,439.
Cardinals 4, Reds 3 First game Cincinnati AB R H BI BB SO Avg. VanMeter lf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .266 Votto 1b 3 0 0 1 0 2 .259 Suárez 3b 4 1 2 2 0 1 .262 Aquino rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .308 Barnhart c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .233 Galvis 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .294 Senzel cf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .255 J.Iglesias ss 3 1 1 0 0 0 .295 Mahle p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .097 Dietrich ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .198 Totals 31 3 5 3 0 10 St. Louis AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Edman 2b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .282 Carpenter 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .217 c-DeJong ph-ss 0 0 0 1 0 0 .245 Goldschmidt 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .256 Ozuna lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .262 J.Martínez rf 2 1 1 0 1 0 .268 O’Neill pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .275 Molina c 4 1 2 0 0 0 .277 Bader cf 4 0 2 2 0 0 .214 Muñoz ss-3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .268 Mikolas p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .137 Fowler ph 0 1 0 0 1 0 .251 30 4 6 3 2 6 Totals Cincinnati 003 000 000 — 3 5 2 St. Louis 010 000 111 — 4 6 0 E — Mahle (1), Garrett (1). LOB — Cincinnati 2, St. Louis 6. 2B — VanMeter (11), Galvis (3), Molina (20). HR — Suárez (40), off Mikolas. RBIs — Votto (41), Suárez 2 (87), Bader 2 (28), DeJong (66). SB — J.Martínez (3), Edman (10). SF — Votto, DeJong. Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO ERA Mahle 61/3 2 2 1 0 5 4.72 2 Stephenson, H, 7 /3 1 0 0 0 0 3.95 Garrett 0 1 1 0 1 0 2.70 Lorenzen, L, 0-4, BS 1 2 1 1 1 1 3.00 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO ERA Mikolas 6 4 3 3 0 5 4.32 Helsley 2 1 0 0 0 2 2.16 C.Martínez, W, 4-2 1 0 0 0 0 3 3.35 T — 2:58. Att. — 43,692.
Furniture-Household 6 Foot Long Back Bar For Sale. Sale price $3,500 OBO. Call, 918-585-3800.
Sporting Goods DOVE LEASE 2019 $70 per gun/ season 918-688-0464
Misc Merch Wanted WANTED FREON R12. We pay CASH. R12 R500 R11. Convenient. Certified professionals RefrigerantFinders.com/ad 312-291-9169
Merchandise Under $300 100+ Hard Bass Lures + more. New $500 $125 obo 918-316-1003 12 weeks Adorable male pitbull puppy please $300 4695324604
Merchandise Under $300
Audi
•2014 Q5 Audi• Mint condition, garaged it’s whole life, 90kmi. You won’t find a cleaner car! Reduced, must sell. $19,950. 720-951-8025 or 918-829-4221.
Merchandise Under $300
Merchandise Under $300
Giant Comfort Series Cypress bicycle txt 4 pic $300 9182938882
above ground pool sand filter $35.00 9186885965
Camping/tail gating canopyNIB $75.00 9186716747
Golf 3 Wood 15* Taylormade JetSpeed Stiff $45 9182604959
Antique Buffet - Duncan Phyfe $150 text 918-397-7441 pics
compoundbow Hoyt zr200 &arrow&case $165.00 9185579043
Golf balls: Titliest Pro V1 very good Dzn $10 918-698-0800
Men’s Nice Dan Post Size 9D Lizard Boots $35 918-697-0901
SHOTGUN 410 side by side & more $300.00 9186071864
Couches olive & beige 8ftx3ft $$75 and $125 9188964869
Golf Complete Full Set Taylormade & Nike $195 9182604959
Model A Restorations Magazines $1 each $1 918 697 0901
The NRA Book of Small Arms Volume I - circa 1946. $25. 918-638-1768
Antique Evenrude Elto OutBrd mtr 1 hp $130 918*812*8413
Craftsman 42” tractor red blades, star $20 918-671-6786
Golf Driver 2018 PING G400 Max Stiff $245 918 2604959
necklaces & rings turquoise $10 9185579043
Tire 27560R20 1 Dueler Bridgestone $90.00 918-500-6239
antique mechanic’s Creeper $40 9185006239
crossbow N Barnett jackal inbox $185.00 9185579043
Golf Irons Bridgestone J15 DF Forged Stiff $300 9182604959
Antique RCA Victrola Record Player (Works) $250 918-697-0901
Delta Commercial Table Saw $300 918-697-0901
Golf Wedges 2018 Bridgestone Forged 52 56 60 $195 9182604959
BEAR CLAWS authentic two price for both $50. 918.812.8413
DIShes noritake set $50.00 9185579043
Antique din table & chairs Duncan Phyfe $175 pics 918-397-7441
Belts western & Buckles $10.00 9185579043 Bench, concrete, cherubs on top, $60, 918-743-3945
Black & Decker portable power scissors $35.00 918-307-8488
Chevrolet Pickup-Van
’07 Classic Chevrolet Silverado 1500, 5.3 V-8 Vortec, 4 Speed Auto, 2 WD, Extended Cab w/ Camper, 1 Owner, Non-Smoker, 175,000 mi., $7,695. 918-639-3746.
DVD movies! Excellent condition. $2. 918-307-8488
High Chair w/ tray, child, $25, 918-520-2500 Hoers tack all kinds $10.00 9185579043
fishing Rod & reel $5.00 9185579043
iPhone 6 + 128gb vrzn $300 9185006239
FITBIT CHARGE 2, six bands total, GC $75. 918-638-1768
Jeep Wrangler 17” alloy wheel with sensor. $25. 918-638-1768
Furnace-Air Temp 80m, leave message, $250. 918-331-3822
Lg Oversize chair & ottoman, cream, $150. pics 918-397-7441
Chevrolet Pickup-Van
2012 Chevy Tahoe Z71, 4WD, 163kmi, V-8, 5.3L, remote start, heated seats, nav, dvd, sunrf, 1 owner, service history, exc. condi. $16,999. 918-371-3241
Dodge Pickup-Van-4x4
2006 Dodge Ram 2500, 4x4, 5.9L diesel, Quad Cab, 2" lift, tilt, cruise, $10,995. Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
Lift Recliner, like new, $290, call 918-397-7441 LR Sofa, 90", off white, loose pillows, $150. pics 918-397-7441
Ourdoor Reclinging Lounge Chair, $29. 918-307-8488 Patio furniture, 6 pieces, $75. 918-743-3945 pickup bed tool box black like new $$100. 918-688-5965
PORTABLE RADIATOR HEATER! $25.00 918-307-8488 Queen mattress & box springs clean, soft $100 OBO 918-671-6786
2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4WD, Laredo, 4 dr, auto, 4 liter 6 cyl., tow pkg, leather seats, 115,000 miles, tires fair, looks good, $2500, 918-638-9687
Ford Pickup-Van-4x4
2005 Ford F350 Lift Van. Diesel. Hydraulic wheelchair accessible lift. Starts. Drives. Lift is fully functional. $4500, sell or trade OBO. 918-630-0623
2000 Chevy Tahoe Limited, Black, 350, Auto, Really nice, Cold A/C, Like new tires, $2,900. Call, 918-857-6723.
2017 Chevy Trax LT SUV, great economy, 4 cyl. turbo, great safety reviews, black leather, back up camera, only 8500 mi. $12,395. 918-582-3082
Chrysler
2005 Chevy 4WD Suburban 1500 V8, loaded, A/C, video monitor, CD, leather, alum. wheels, 168K mi., runs great, $5,900. In Sand Springs 847-477-2074
2006 Nissan Frontier LE 4x4, crew cab, 4.0L V6, automatic, pw, pl, tilt, cruise, $8995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2008 Chevy Impala LT
Electric windows & locks, leather, real clean, rides and drives great. $3250. 918-645-8237
1992 Chevy Camaro • 1 owner, V6 auto cruise, new tune up & fuel pump, good tag, ready to drive. As is $4,100. 918-260-0984 or Leave message, 918-371-5701
’05 PT Cruiser Touring Edition Convertible, 2.4 turbo, new water pump & timing belt, cold AC, 158k mi. $2,195. Call or text for more pics, 918-629-7172.
1989 Chrysler Le Baron GT Conv., 49K miles, leather, auto, pw, pl, tilt, cruise, power seat, $3995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2014 Ram Promaster 2500, 159" WB high top cargo van, $16,995. Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2008 Ford Expedition Limited, leather, DVD, sunroof, power folding seats, 3rd row, $8995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
Ford Pickup-Van-4x4
1979 Ford Lariat F150 460 engine, excellent condition, A/C, P/B, P/S, new tires, dual exhaust, new paint 2 yrs, original cream puff, $13,500. 918-791-1402.
For Sale: 1961 Chevrolet Bel Air, 2 door. $4,250. 1988 Chevrolet short wide truck lowered 6in $850. 918-838-1786. Leave a message.
1997 Ford 1 ton truck, 7.3L diesel, 6 speed trans w/ cooler, gooseneck hitch. Call 918-758-7555.
Dodge Pickup-Van-4x4 2007 Chevrolet Tahoe LS, 6 passenger, pw, pl, tilt, cruise, rear air, $8995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
tools lots over 500 $125.00 9185579043
Treadle sew machine in cabinet, $100 OBO 918-520-2500 T.V. LED/1080/26" LIKE NEW! $$72.00 918-307-8488 Wreaths, 3, willow, $6, 918-7433945
Jeep
2013 Rubicon Unlimited, Hardtop, black w/black, pwr boards, 10,460mi, 6in lift w/35in tires, waren bumpers, wench, LEDs, $35,900. 918-855-9999.
1995 LEXUS ES300, Tan 4 dr Sedan, Power Sunroof, Windows, Doors, Seats, Mirrors & CD player. Fun, Sporty, Stylish design. Garage kept, NEW battery, good tires & brakes & only 170K mi. LOCALLY owned family car. Certified by Lexus of Tulsa. LOW as is $3700 price. CALL 918-492-0046
2008 Ford F250 4x4 Crew Cab Lariat 6.4L V8 diesel, new transmission, 5 spd auto, leather, 195,000 mi. $13,500. 918-845-1175, 805-914-3568 2012 Lexus LS460L AWD, blue/ivory leather, hard loaded, Navigation, heated/cooled seats, remote start, 177K miles, $14,900. 918-625-1770
1997 Ford F-150 Mark III Luxury Edition Good Condition, runs good, good work truck or first vehicle. 200k plus miles. No dents, no rust, front bumper slightly dented. Bed liner, V8 engine, with trailer hitch. $1,100 FIRM. 918-364-5468.
2010 Ford F150 XLT Super Crew 2WD • Sterling Gray Metallic w/Silver Accent. 40/20/40 Stone Cloth Interior. A/C, Power Windows/Locks/ Mirrors/Steering. AM/FM/ Sirius/CD.Trailer Tow Pkg, XLT Chrome and Convenience Packages, 3.55 Limited Slip Axle, 4.6l V8, Chrome Step Bars, Bedliner, 163,500 miles. Reduced to $12,500 918-617-2344.
Check the Classifieds Anytime!
Mini Cooper
GMC Pickup-Van-4x4 2010 MINI COOPER TURBO S Nice Clean Car, black interior, full sunroof, runs great. Low Miles 67,000 $8200.00 918289-6470
Ext. Cab S/W Bed 4x4 Electric windows & locks drives great $9825. 918-645-8237.
2001 Ford F250 XLT, 7.3L diesel, crew cab, long bed, pw, pl, tilt, cruise, $7995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2008 Mazda 5, cloth, P/W, P/L, tilt, cruise, automatic, $4495. Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
tulsamarketplace.com
2011 Chevy 1500 LT
2001 Dodge Ram 1500, Regular Cab, one owner, 89K miles, 5.2L V8, $4995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2015 Foose Ed. SS Camaro, #1 built of 2015. 50,400 mi., silver w/ gray leather, auto, $4,000 stereo system, $24,300, call 918-855-9999.
Tires Hankook 305/50r20 $100.00 918-813-0543
Mazda
1999 Dodge Ram 4x4 Quad Cab, leather, 5.9L V8, automatic, $5495. Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2013 Chevy Malibu LT, crystal red, dove tan leather, Navigation, heated seats, extra clean, new tires, tinted glass, 136K miles, $11,800. (918) 852-8927.
Tires (4) 245/70R17 good for spare or trailer $30 918-671-6786
Lexus
2004 Ford Crown Victoria, like new tires, 44,000 miles, looks & drives new, $3500. 918-443-9400
Chevrolet
SE HABLAR Back Side Welcome Neon $250 918 697 0901
Recliner, lift chair, big & tall, beige, $250. 918-907-4462
Bargain Lot
2002 Ford Explorer, V8, cloth, 3rd row, running boards, luggage rack, pw, pl, tilt, cruise, $2995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
Merchandise Under $300 Sawzall no case, good working cond. $20 OBO 918-671-6786
BOW 54’’ 45lb asian recurve & arrows $75.00 9185579043
22 cal. Winchester 69A target, ex w/2 mags $300 918*812*8413 88-06 chev&gmc 6.5 pickup bed cover $299.00 9186885965
Merchandise Under $300
97 S10 parts truck, no bed or tires $200 918-671-6786
1984 GMC Pickup • New engine & new trans. All power, dual exhuast. $1,950 OBO. Must Sell! Gary Staires: 918-838-1786, 918-260-9732
Mitsubishi
2012 Chevrolet Silverado LT 4x4, 1 owner, extended cab, cloth, pw, pl, tilt, cruise, $11,995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2004 Dodge Ram 2500 Quad Cab ST 4WD, diesel, auto, 267,000 miles, aluminum alloy wheels, below clean trade in price, $8500. 918-638-9687
2003 Ford F350, 4x4 Dually, V10, auto, monster truck, $7995. 918-250-5050
2012 GMC Acadia Excellent condition, 1 owner, lots of bells & whistles, 65k mi, $14,000. 918-421-9968.
2017 Mitsubishi Mirage ES, 5 spd, PW, great MPGs, $8995 or $1000 down, $136 mo, 72 mos. WAC, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2
CLASSIFIED
tulsamarketplace.com
Monday, September 2, 2019
Nissan Pickup-Van-4x4
2006 Nissan Frontier LE 4x4, crew cab, 4.0L V6, automatic, pw, pl, tilt, cruise, $8995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
Nissan Pickup-Van-4x4
2010 Nissan Armada Platinum, leather, 3rd row, DVD/CD, Light blue, new tires and sunroof. 114,428 miles. $14,500. Call 918-583-6999
Porsche
TULSA WORLD
Suzuki
1980 PORSCHE - 928
88K documented miles, exc. running luxury sports car w/ many new maintenance items. $7,500. Call 918-822-0074.
Toyota Pickup-Van-4x4
2012 Suzuki Equator Crew Cab, V6, auto, P/W, P/L, tilt, cruise, $9995. Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2003 Toyota Tundra SR5 Access Cab, 4.7L V8, automatic, cloth, P/W, P/L, tilt, cruise, 2WD, $5995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
Volvo
2006 Volvo V70 AWD Cross Country, only 92k miles, leather, loaded, $6995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
Antique-Classic Vehicles Toyota Pickup-Van-4x4
2016 NISSAN ROGUE SV AWD 2.5 L4 economy, back up camera, hand free phone, 61K mi., well maintained, great tires, sale price, $14,900. 918-582-3082 1988 Porsche 944 Coupe. Very nice. Needs a little work. Racing seats & steering wheel, redone motor heads, gas tank & more. $15,000. Tulsa, (817) 714-0950
2008 Nissan Armada 4x4, leather, loaded, $7995, Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
1996 Toyota 4Runner Limited 4WD, in good shape, 3.4 V6, new timing belt, water pump, pulley set, new tires, A/C is ice cold, has 10 CD changer from factory, runs perfect, $5,000 cash, 209K miles. Text, 918-948-4023
Service Directory
Air Conditioning and Heating
Specializing in sales, installation, repair & service of all brands heating & air cond. equip. Call Ken 918-402-0822. OK Lic. #132539
Cleaning-Housekeeping
Pressure Washing. Yard Work. Window Cleaning. Office Janitorial. House & Carpet Cleaning. Construction Clean up. dustofftulsa.com
Handy Workers
A+ Remodel & Restoration SR. 20% OFF • 35 Yrs Exp. • Carpentry •Painting •Tile •Free Friendly Estimates Robert @ 918-407-8606
2016 Toyota Tundra Crew Cab 4x4 SR5, TRD off road pkg, 5.7L V8, only 25K mi. 1 owner, like new, SVC history, leather, NAV, $36,900 OBO. 918-527-0271
To advertise call 918-583-2121
Home Improvements
Additions, Decks, Kitchens, Bathrooms, Doors, Windows, Tile, Handyman services available. Ken 918-402-0822 OK lic. #132539
FOUNDATION REPAIR
Concrete Work-Coating
1927 Track T, 66 GM 327, 350 auto trans, early Haili Brand quick change rear end, runs & drives excellent. $12,500 OBO. Call Steve, 918-284-9444.
Painting
918-859-4959
All Phases Interior & Exterior. Residential & Commercial. Over 30 years of satisfied customers. FREE Estimates, 100% Financing available. Got a car or truck you don’t need? Apply toward payment.
Roofing-Related
Expert Repairs Guaranteed Results
Senior & Veteran Discount
Summer A/C check up $39.95 No overtime anytime on service or replacement. Kwik Air,
918-605-0683 License # 17502
Attorneys-Business Affordable Concrete
Patios, Bldg Slabs, Driveways, Stained & Stamped Concrete. Call Jake 918-855-2127
FREE EST. CALL NOW Patio, Sidewalk, Driveways, Dirt Work, Steps & more! Repair, Replace, Add-on Insured & References.
2008-2009 FORD E250 VANS 57K-92K mi., shelving, dual ladder racks, strobe lights. We Finance - A&D Auto Sales 4315 E. 11th St., Tulsa
General Residential & Commercial Repair: painting, electrical, kitchen remodel, yard work, etc., fully insured, free est. Billy Hart 918-850-8623
918-830-9446
We do all types of work: Painting, carpentry, decks, floors, siding, interior remodeling, etc. 20 years experience!
A-1 Painting & Drywall
Water damage. No Job too small. Free estimates. THE ONE TO CALL 918-706-5494
Ceramic Tile-Marble
Hauling AAA+
FAST FREE HAULING
Anything of value hauled Free! Also, Garage, Attic, Trees, Brush, Trash, etc. 918-706-2291 Same Day Hauling, Mowing, Yard Debris, lite construction, small tree removal, paint, garage cleanout, fence. Call 918-313-5230
Bush Hogging JAKES TRACTOR SERVICE Brush hogging, front end loader work. Exp., reasonable. Skiatook, Owasso, C-Ville, Oologah 918-694-2402/694-9516
REMODELING REPAIR 30 Yrs Exp., BBB, Free Est. TOTAL REMODEL 1 CONTRACTOR Richard 918-760-1031
Painting & Carpentry Small or Large Jobs, 1 Day Service. Sr. Citizen Discount. 918-520-3840, 918-899-3545
Electrical Work
Unique Trees, Flowers & Plants of all kinds!
Garage Clean-Out. Brush or Anything You Have. 7 Days. Fastest Service. Lowest Rates. Call 918-836-0570
** TRASH HAULING **
Of any kind. Brush, Trash, Garage & house clean outs. Fast w/ low rates. 918-834-2012
BOB’S ELECTRIC Residential & Commercial wiring, indoor/outdoor LED lights, remodeling, breaker box upgrades. Free est. 918-521-1729
• IN HOME CARE • Companion, Appts., Motivation Therapy, Meals+Tidy up, transportation, grocery shopping. Peggy, (918) 688-0031.
Showers & tubs floors! Wood floors, vinyl plank, shower pans, 26 years of experience & Insured. Call/text 918-645-3699
Home/Business Electrical New & Repair Service., No Job Too Small, 36 yrs e xp. CC’s okay - Lic. #112759 www.knoxelectricok.com
918-859-4959
ROOFING Specializing in all types of flat roofing. Save up to 50%, free est. Storm Damage Repair. 539-777-9670 Tulsa.
Tractor Work-Grading
Brush Hogging & Tractor Work, No property too large or small! Insured. Call 918-260-0355.
"HOME PRO’S"
On time. Int./Ext. Painting, Wood Repair, Siding/Pwr.wsh. Prep, Caulk/prime/drywall/tex. Call now, low rates 918-829-3698
Tree Services
Lawn Services Bucket Truck, Climber, Chipper & Hauling. Fully Insured.
Landscaping, Lawn Care, Hydroseeding, Haul Offs, Cleanups, Tree, Dirt, Sod & Bobcat Work. Retaining walls, French Drains. 918-760-4807.
Steve’s Custom Painting. Paint, sheetrock repair, wallpaper, custom finishes, 35 yrs experience, insured, call Steve 918-855-9008.
Discount Pricing FREE ESTIMATES Storm Damage, Removal, Trim, Landscape. Lic./Ins./ Vet & Sr. discount. 918-810-3499
Masonry ALL MASONRY REPAIRS Mailboxes-new/repair. Replace metal box inserts. Cracks. Replace decayed brick. Free est. 38 yrs exp. 918-232-8665
Call Mike 918-513-2619
Pest Control
NEED A NO HASSLE YARD SERVICE? Free Estimates & Easy Payment Services. Call or Text 918-530-8499
CREEPY CRAWLERS TODAYS INSPECTION IS TOMORROW’S PROTECTION!
Member of the BBB, Insured, 35 yrs exp. Call Bunchy at 918-998-BUGS
Plumbing
MAR TREE SERVICE
Tree’s trimmed & removed Stump grinding & clean up 20 years experience, Insured 918-587-6004 Free Estimates!
Mailboxes, Split Walls, TuckPointing, Reface Brick, Fire Places, Mudcaps, etc. Free Est., 38yrs, Tulsa/BA and surrounding areas.
Miscellaneous Services-Repair WANT TO PLAY PIANO? Experienced teacher. Adults/children, S. Tulsa, 918-645-0801
Painting
Home Improvements
QUALITY TILE & MORE
FREE ESTIMATES Insured. 30 Yrs. Exp. Int./Ext. Drywall/Texture. Carpentry, power wash. Handyman. Wallpaper removal. 918-313-3090
Free Roof Quotes! Repairs and Replacements. ShinglesMetal-TPO-Liquid Applied Products. 918-568-9042. Bonded. Insured. Lic. #80002907.
(918) 232-8480
***TRASH HAULING***
Health Services Ceramic Tile repair, restoration & installation, Call or text Don 918-640-4650 Satisfaction Perfectly Guaranteed
Landscape Design • Drip Irrigation •
Drywall-Sheetrock
BIG MONEY FOR YOUR
***CASH BUYER*** We pay cash for trucks, cars, boats, RVs, cycles, etc. Title issues OK. Call 918-269-5990 or 662-587-1213
Landscape/Gardening
C&C Bush & Tree Trimming Flower beds, fence lines, overgrown shrubs, cleanups, small trees, & fence repair. 20 yrs Clint A+ BBB Ins. 918-636-6687
Household repairs, Lawn Care, Odd Jobs, Cleaning/Organizing Dependable. Free Estimates.
Specializing in decorative & all types of concrete work inc: foundations, driveways, patios, sidewalks, pole barns & more! BBB accredited. Free est. Ins.
VEHICLES, ATVs & CYCLES! Even If Wrecked Or Disabled! Cash Paid, Free Tow Away & Fast Pick Up John 918-633-5578
Squeaky Floors? Stuck Doors? Cracked Walls? Saggy Floors? Foundation Problems? Piers & Beams, Wood rot replacement, Termite & Pest Control
Office 918-998-2847 Call 918-694-1168
JEFF LINDUFF CONCRETE Local residential driveways, patios, and sidewalks. No job too small! Bonded. Call 918-933-2503
2011-2013 Chevy G2500. 62K-198K miles, shelving, dual ladder racks, strobe lights We Finance - A&D Auto Sales 4315 E. 11th St., Tulsa
Earthquake Damage?
Insured, Member of the BBB, 35 yrs exp. Today’s inspection is tomorrow’s protection!
Temporary Orders • Name Changes • One Signature• Two signature• Missing spouse Guaranteed • Excludes Court Fees. CALL NOW! 918-664-4482
Automotive Services
AweMan Construction, Repair & Remodeling. Drywall, Fencing, Decks, Water Leaks, Roofing. No Job too small. Bonded. Insured. (918) 613-5132
Why Not Give Us a Call? It May Cost Less Than you Think! SIZZLING SUMMER SPECIAL UP TO 30% OFF MATERIALS!
#1 TULSA PAINTERS- Int/Ext, Cabinets, Textures, Wallpaper Removal, Carpentry, Decks, Fences, Affordable. 36 Yrs. Exp, Free Est. 918-289-1038
A.S.A.P. Plumbing. All your plumbing needs. Over 35 years of experience. No overtime charge. Senior discount. Insured & bonded (918)497-6432 Plumbing, Drain Cleaning, Gas Piping, Leak Locating Camera, Water Heaters, Faucet Repair. 24hr. Service. Lic#28409. Call 918-902-5726
Power Washing
Tree Trimming & Removal, free est., free stump grinding & free small Oak Tree w/ tree removal. Senior/Vet Discounts. Certified Arborist & Fully Ins.
Trimming, Dead Limb, Raise Tree Canopy. Tree Hazard & Leaf Removal. Military, Sr. & New Homeowners Discounts. 18 yrs. Insured. 918-213-7240
All Phases Interior & Exterior. Residential & Commercial. Over 30 years of satisfied customers. FREE Estimates, 100% Financing available. Got a car or truck you don’t need? Apply toward payment.
Senior & Veteran Discount
Same Day Service & Repair No Job too Small Home or Business Licensed Bonded Insured Lic#12899
Why Not Give Us a Call? It May Cost Less Than you Think! SIZZLING SUMMER SPECIAL UP TO 30% OFF MATERIALS!
"MORE THAN PAINTING" Drywall, Carpentry, Siding, Commercial & Residential 40 yrs experience & BBB RI#100118 - Call 918-607-2716
Steam cleaning for restaurants & major commercial properties. Ventahoods & kitchen exhausts. Servicing OK, TX, AR. On Facebook! 918-916-4040
Trimming, Removal, Stump Grinding. Insured, Senior & Veteran Discounts. Free Estimates. 918-437-5027
TULSA WORLD
Antique-Classic Vehicles
1948 Buick Roadmaster 2 dr, clean original title, hasn’t been driven since 1956, no deep rust, all original, doesn’t run, hurry won’t last! $6500, 918-409-4907
Monday, September 2, 2019
Motorcycles
1965 Cushman Eagle. Restored with only 186 miles. Custom paint, chrome, & seats. Same owner for 35 years. $6,500. 918-855-9999, Robert.
1951 Mercury Sport Sedan 35k actual miles. Original unmolested car, auto trans., int. like new, ext. excellent, car runs & drives great. $22,500. Jerry Admire 918-481-6611. 1955 LeMans Austin-Healey $30K to partnership/restoration. Will buy 50s & 60s European Sports cars.Pro track/ concours specialists. Appts. Call 918-437-9302
• 1998 BMW R1200C Classic Cruiser • 16,600 miles & several riding accessories. It has been garage kept. I have all service records since I have owned it. I also have a complete service manual on CD, which is also included. Can no longer ride due to health issue, motivated to sell. $4,475 OBO. 918-760-1542.
1956 Chevy Belair 4 dr Hardtop New GM crate 350 eng., rebuilt turbo 400 trans., New frnt pwr disc brks, new rear brks, 2in. drop spindles, new fuel tank, $22,500. Call Ray, 918-693-5885.
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Scooters-Mopeds
1993 250 Honda Helix Scooter. 5000 mi., excellent cond., new tires, filters & so forth, $1800. No text, Call 918-638-8411
Truck-Bus-Tractor-Trailer
1993 Chevy Cab Over flatbed, bad motor, $2500, will trade for land or lots. Call 918-250-5050
2001 GMC Bucket Truck, 8.1L 3500HD. V8 auto. 11 locking fiberglass compartments, 4kW Onan. Trade motorhome truck etc. $12,250 OBO, 918-664-5811. 2002 Honda Goldwing GL-1800 ABS, 51k mi., AM/FM radio, 6 band weather, 6 disc CD, intercom, CB, cruise, heated grips, new tires/brakes, extra lights, chrome, 1 owner, all svc records and manuals, $7295. Call 918-396-1717
1960 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Most perfect in Tulsa. Beautiful orig. car. With A&H. $25,000, 84k miles, 918-836-3617.
Safe Room Hauling Trailer $1495 Call (918)250-5050
Vans-All Types
2007 Suzuki Hayabusa GSX 1300R, 3111 mi., Yoshimara pipe, programer, black, exc. cond., $6800 obo, 918-694-4188 1965 Mustang GT convertible, 4 speed trans., excellent cond., A-Code engine, $29,900. Call 918-695-0281
1999 Chevrolet Express Wheelchair accessible Van with electric lift. Automatic lift easily loads person in wheelchair into the van. Interior is equipped to secure rider in a wheelchair with wheelchair locks and seat belts. 78K miles. $10,000. Call Trevin, 918-585-1519.
Boats
2009 Yamaha V-Star, only 880 miles! After-market pipes, windshield, gorgeous, $3995 Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com 1986 Arrow Glass Carisma 160 boat, 16’, 140hp, in/out-board Mercruiser, <100 hours since new, mint cond., w/ trailer, $5500 OBO. 918-685-0048 or 918-577-5566
1966 Chevy Corvette Conv. V8 327, 77K mi., restored, 300 hp, auto, extremely nice, number matching car, complete documentation, $57,500. 918-440-4545
2011 BMW F800 R.
5,000 miles, new battery, new tag, only 100 miles on tires, speedo says 150. $5495. 918-836-9552. 1966 Ford Mustang, 6 cyl. engine, standard trans., clean inside & out. $8,995. 918-835-5508.
1992 Dynasty Boat 18.5 ft. boat with trailer, 210 horse power. Yamaha inboard motor. Runs good, skis included. $2,895. 918-277-7941.
2011 Yamaha FZ8
1966 Olds Toronado, Ultimate Original "CODE RED" (8 Year GM Project Car) $40K (nada #1) OBO. 99% orig., factory autumn bronze lacquer, matching deluxe interior. Bill of sale Protectoplate, Records. In Master Restorers collection at Rolling Art. (9 yrs US Nationals Champs of Rolls-65 US firsts) “Right Stuff” Restorations, appraisals for show, Concours, etc. SCCA-Vintage Race Prep, etc. Appts. 918-437-9302
1972 Chevelle SS, 2 door hard top. Matching #’s car w/ many options (air, power, etc.) original paint & upholstry, 383 stroker w/ fuel inj., original 350 SS engine to go w/ car, $29,900 OBO, might take older classic truck as partial trade 918-857-2441
1973 Eldorado Elegant Convertible, St.Tropez blue fire mist w/original white leather, $27K in restoration with NLANOS, 30 yrs in storage. $30,000 OBO. Appts. 918-437-9302
2000 miles, 1 owner, $4967. 918-625-5490
• 2002 Sea Ray 220 VR • With trailer. Excellent conidition, everything works, always covered, 5.0L, dual prop, cover, hydro-hoist avail. 918-740-4966. $21,500.
Consult the
Service Directory for service and repairs.
tulsamarketplace.com
2013 HD Super Dyna Glide, Immaculate FXDC, garage kept, 13000mi.- new tires @ 10k NADA $10k- asking $9k OBO. Only 1 owner, 918-625-8645
Beautiful 1940 Chriscraft Barrellback, 19’ new reproduction (2009) of a classic boat. $22,500. Call Ron 316-393-3017 Boat is on Beaver Lake, AR
Newport 28ft- $7850 OBO. At Grand Lake S.C., Wheel, diesel, microwave, sleeps 5. Joel 918-766-2989 (Grove) or Roger 918-853-2728 (Tulsa).
Sailboats
2013 HD Ultra Classic, red, immaculate, 14K mi., NADA price $14,770, my price $11,995, or $1500 down, $275 mo., 48 mos., WAC. Mannford 918-865-8399 www.6dsautosales.com
2015 H-D 3 Wheeler, low miles -7897 mi., very clean, 1300cc 6 speed, good tires, back rest, $17,000 call or text 918-260-3775
Seidelmann 25’ $4500 obo. Bottom & interior paint, dock box, lots of extras, trailer optional cost, 9 hp Evinrude motor will sell separately. 918-625-8200
Campers-Travel Trailers
1973 Mustang Mach 1 1 owner. All orig. $24,000. 351 Cleveland, all numbers match, new upholstery, tires, shocks, paint, flowmaster. 918-425-8437 or 918-694-8276.
2016 Harley-Davidson FLSTC Heritage Softail Classic Excellent condition. Never wrecked. 11,000 miles. Hines Pipes & many extras. $12,900. 918-991-8242.
2002 Keystone Cougar 5th Wheel w/gooseneck hitch, 29’, 1 Slide Out, Rear Living, Front Queen Bdrm, Clean. $8900. (918) 342-5451, (918) 344-3719
2017 Can-Am Spyder F3TM, 3 Cyl. 1330 CC, 5 speed with reverse. 7,400 miles. Prestine burgundy color. $14,995 OBO. (918) 694-7100.
2013 Big Country Fifth Wheel 37’, 4 slides, auto level, (camp kitchen), W/D, king bed, huge kitchen, $36,900. (918) 344-3719, (918) 342-5451
1974 Mercury Comet 2 door, 78,000 original miles, as is, must see $3995 obo 918-378-5054
Motorcycles 1985 BMW 1000CC 4cyl, 36k mi, $1,500. 918-855-9322.
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TULSA WORLD
Monday, September 2, 2019
Administration-Office Work
Administration-Office Work
Administration-Office Work
Campers-Travel Trailers
Motor Homes-RVs
Cemetery Lots-Relate 2 Burial plots, Rose Hill Memorial Park and Mausoleum, Sec. 26, Lot 87, $1295/each, call 918-871-1084
Found 2013 Forest River All Season 40 ft. Fifth Wheel, 4 slide outs, 2 bathrooms, outdoor kitchen, Stroud, OK, $38,000 OBO. Call 918-290-0673 or 918-290-0674
2013 Class A Hurricane Thor 32’. Sleeps 8. 2 Slides. 23,000 Miles. $64,900. 918-342-5451, 918-344-3719. Auto Leveling and gasoline.
FOUND MALE YORKIE MIX IN BROKEN ARROW/COWETA on 8/24/19 on E. 121st St., between S. 193rd East Ave and S. 209th East Ave. Must provide proof of ownership to claim. Call (918) 637-5009. 2014 37’ Montana High Country 343RL, 5th wheel, 4 slides, 12’ fridge, 2 ACs, 2 tvs, fireplace, extended warranty, like new condition. $31,500. 918-740-4445
2014 Forest River Georgetown, 34’, V10, 7kmi, Fireplace, 2 Slideouts, 2 TV’s, L-Shaped Sleeper Sofa, Good Condition! $76,000. 918-720-9686.
Administration-Office Work
2014 Forest River Grey Wolf Bunkhouse 27’, 1/2 Ton Easy Tow, Auto Awning & Jacks, No Smoke/Pets & Never Lived In. $12,500. (918) 342-5451, 344-3719
OFFICE CLERK NEEDED Bank Teller or Cashier experience preferred. FT, Mon-Fri, Day shift. We offer competitive wages and benefits. Please apply in person at Borg Compressed Steel 1032 N. Lewis Ave, Tulsa. or send resume to: ccale@yaffeco.net
Estate Sales 56 Hickory Lane, Sand Springs Fri 10-3 Sat 10-3 Sun 12-3 www. rememberwhenok.com Estate Sale • 3207 E 44th St. Sat 11-5, Sun 11-5, Mon 11-5 Antique furniture, tons of dishes, lift chair, and much more!
Sales
Build Maintenance-Domestic Hiring F/T Maintenance Tech and P/T Media/Marketing/IT Coordinator for local church. Info and/or apply online at arrowheights.org No phone calls 2016 Open Range (Light), 3 Slides, 2 BR, All Season, extra clean, camp kitchen, no pets/smoking, 1/2 ton towable, $26,900. (918)344-3719, 342-5451
General Homemaker Needed! Bixby, call Tom 918-261-4085 Karen’s Concessions
NOW HIRING
2017 E-Pro 14’ trailer, tow w/small SUV, clean as new, fully equipped, $10,900. 918-344-3719
Motor Homes-RVs
Cooks & General Labor for the Tulsa State Fair. Sept. 26th- Oct. 6th. If interested please attend meeting On Sept. 17th in the Exchange Building on the fairgrounds from 10am-12pm & 1pm-6pm. Please bring 2 forms of ID & 1 needs to be a picture. SELF STORAGE MANAGER Shadow Mountain area. Full-time. Great for couples! Seniors encouraged to apply. Send resume to: AsburyManagement@ gmail.com
Transportation SIGN ON BONUS!! 1995 Newmar Kountry Star - 38’ & 1 Slide, 330HP Cummins w/ Jake brake, Air Ride/Air brakes, 7.5 Onan diesel, $15,900 - Make an offer! (918) 344-3719
ATTENTION
Class A CDL DRIVERS! Now Hiring OTR flatbed positions. Great pay, home often, vacation and benefit package. 1 year exp. Wehunt Contract Hauling 918-793-4871 www.wehunttrucking.com
Build Maintenance-Domestic
2002 Winnebago Journey DL, 39’ & 2 slides, 300HP Cat turbo diesel w/air ride & Jake Brake, 7.5kw Onan, fiberglass roof, A/C, W/D, $36,900. (918) 344-3719
2003 Holiday Rambler Imperial 40’ & 2 slides, 400HP Cummins 8 Kw Onan, fiberlass roof, king bed, dual vanity, clean, 4 dr refrig. W/D, $59,900. 918-344-3719
2008 HOLIDAY RAMBLER
Ambassador, 40’. With canopy, 2 bath, 4 slides, Satellite, deep freeze, slide out trays, keyless entry, 360 Cummins, loaded, only 1,500 mi. Like new. Payoff $117,000. Call, 479-785-4049.
Build Maintenance-Domestic
tulsamarketplace.com
TULSA WORLD
General
General
General
Estate Sales
Dogs
Dogs
Monday, September 2, 2019
CLASSIFIED
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Estate Sale 3766 S. 82 E. Ave. Sat. 9-6, Sun. 12-6, Mon. 9-6. Old, new, used, collectibles, Jewelry, etc. Something for Everyone Don’t Delay - See It Today
Chihuahuas, 2 female, brindle, 8 weeks, very tiny, very loving, first shots, $350/each, no papers, 918-729-4974 Estate Sale of Mid-Century Design • Thurs, Fri, Sat Sept. 5th, 6th, & 7th • 9AM-6PM Sale will be conducted at Generations Antique Mall 4810 E. 11th Street, S/W corner 11th & Yale on historic route 66. Lighting, paintings, sculpture, furniture. Artists & makers include: Berndt Friberg, Torok Janos, Alessandro Albrizzi, Curtis Jer’e, Eugene Bavinger, Carlos Nason, Etta Benjamin Cien, Arthur Umanoff, Verner Panton, Bruce Goff, Karl Springer, George Nelson, Victor Vasarely, Albert Feinauer, W.E. Fager, Wayne Husted, Laurence Kupferman, Blenko, Gustavberg, Vista of California, Zolnay, Mazzega, Howard Miller, Laurel & more.
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS Pure bred, black & tan, 5 boys, 2 girls, $500 each We are not Breeders. Call 918-510-8313, 918-841-3650
Dogs
Chihuahua Teeny Tiny Pups Variety of colors, 2-4
lbs. grown, 1st shots & dewormed, home raised. Priced $300 and up. Call 918-287-1939
Dogs
German Short Haired Pointer Pups • AKC Reg.
All shots & wormed. Males & females, $300. 620-515-3243.
Lab pups, adorable, healthy, AKC, 7 wks olds, chocolate & black, M&F, shots & wormed, dad is a duck hunter, $650. Text for pics 405-464-9150.
•Corgi Puppies For Sale• 3 males, 1 blue merle w/ 2 blue eyes, $400 1 tri color & 1 tan & white $400. 1st shots/ wormed Farm raised 918-606-0571.
•Pomeranian Puppies• Registered, S&W, POP, $550. Calls only, 918-387-4216 or Text, 405-612-9943.
$7500 OBO, 11 head Dexter cattle, 918-299-4427, 918-859-3129
GOLDENDOODLES, Mini M&F, red, white, apricot, sweet, loving, shots, chipped, tested-vet check $1500. Will deliver, 918-533-7878, 918-533-7751
Dogs
Anatolian/Rottwiler mix, will be big, great guard dog/family pet, free to a good home, 918-606-0571.
CORGI PUPS - AKC Males & Female, beautiful, tri & red, vet checked, shots, wormed, dew claws, $700. Call 918-623-6612
Great Pyrenees/Anatolian puppies, pure white, 2 females DOB 6/28, 1st shots/worming, $300 or 2/$500. Livestock guard, raised around chickens. 20 yrs. breeder. 918-716-4191
Dachshund Puppies - AKC
Anatolian Shepherd Puppies AKC Reg. • Born
Miniature, variety of colors, short & long, hair up to date on S&W. $600. Call or text. 918-521-2006
12/29/18. All shots given. $400. (918) 625-6045.
Australian Shepherds • AKC Champion Bloodlines, all sizes. Like us on Facebook at: Sunrise Aussies, 918-633-8368.
BOXER PUPPIES - AKC
male & female, brindle & fawn, shots & wormed. 9 wks. $500 firm. Call 918-373-6640
Keystone lakefront w/5000 sf 3+ bdrm home, outbuilding w/ licensed commercial kitchen, Cambro boxes, hot wells, chafers, pans, etc. 5’ commercial smoker. Serious inquiries only, $450K negotiable. 918-242-3306
Claremore-For Sale
Horses-Cattle
AKC Labrador Retriever Puppies AKC Silver and Charcoal Labrador Retriever puppies. Call/Text (580)890-8135 or (580)890-8136 and/or our website https://pawsnclawsnhooves.com 5808908136
Waterfront-For Sale
Doberman Pinscher Puppies, AKC, European & American line, great family pet, S&W, $800. 479-221-7010. raysprotectiondogs.com
Labradoodles & Goldendoodles, Registered, health tested & ch. lines, 2 yr health hip guarantee, vet checked, shots, chipped. $1400 & up 918-791-8800
Poodles • Price Reduced, APRI, S&W, UTD, Different colors, New haircut, 4 males, 1 female. Also, 1 female Yorkie. Call 918-616-7326
Labradoodle Standard puppies, cream & apricot, 2nd generation, female, registered, UTD S&W, $475. Credit cards ok. 918-781-2503
Yorkies • Adorable! 1 male, $600 cash only. Reg. S&W, vet checked, 14 wks old, ready for new home! 918-226-1510.
Office-Desk Space Lab / Labrador Retriever AKC Labrador Retriever Puppies. 1 Black Female, 2 Yellow Females and 1 Yellow Male. Dew Claws Removed. Wormed. Shots up to date. Vet checked. Both parents on site. Ready to go to their new homes August 22. Please Call or Text. 918-937-2335
Jenks-For Sale 50% of mkt., 81st & Harvard, 3/3/2, 3600SF $189K. 918-324-7023
• Morkie Babies • S&W, Health Guarenteed. $500-$600. 918-285-0144.
Tulsa South-For Sale 6019 South 66th East Avenue (Lease) or Purchase (150-900 sq.ft.) up to 3250 sq. ft. ($250 mo. & up & utilities paid) 918-639-1248
SELLING A CAR? French Bulldog puppies, 10 wks., 1 male, 2 females, parents on site, AKC, $800 ea., 918-363-7210 baker65384@gmail.com
0 down 100% financing, 10252 S Maple Ave. 4/3/2, 2600 sq.ft. w/ deluxe master, loaded: steam shower, 2 kitchens, mother-inlaw plan, $1150/mo. 918-691-7317
LABOR DAY LABRADOODLES 5 males and 5 females born on 07-14. All chocolate, some with white markings. Vet checked and ready for their new home. Parents on-site and located in midtown Tulsa. Starting at $400. Please call or text 918-344-9083
Morkie & Yorkie Puppies, From $500-$700. Small adorable, Reg., S&W & Vet checked, 3rd generation pedigree, ready for forever homes. 918-978-7115 •Yorkie Puppies For Sale• Small & some tiny! Pocket Puppies! $500 & Up, S&W, Reg. Gold/Silver/Copper/ Black & Tan 918-606-0571.
Drive more business your way. tulsamarketplace.com
Remodeled Country Home mins from Tulsa Hills. 3 bed, 2 bath, 2055sf, 1.3 acres. Clean & move in ready! Reduced to $238,900! Call or Text, 918-600-8678. 5468 W. 85th St. S. Tulsa.
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CLASSIFIED
Monday, September 2, 2019
Wagoner-For Sale
Apartments Unfurnished
tulsamarketplace.com
Condo-Town Home-Resort Rent
Houses-Unfurnished
TULSA WORLD
Houses-Unfurnished
Broken Arrow Rental
COZY 2 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT. Great Location for immediate occupancy, Sec 8 welcome. Call, 918-933-1113.
0 Down, 100% Financing, 3/2 505 SE 3rd St. Wagoner, large living, furnished, FP, elec. & plumb. redone, new CH/A, 1700 sq.ft., $875/mo. 918-691-7317
Apartments Unfurnished Catoosa- 1&2 bed Apts., on-site laundry Aug. Special. SapulpaStudio, 1&2 bed apts. Tulsa- 1 bedroom Condo on Cherry St. Call 918-257-9156 for pricing
•Riviera West Apartments• Great Location on the River, lots of trees. 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath & 2 Bdrm, 2 baths. All bills paid option, nice big balconies, central heat & air. $399 MOVE IN SPECIAL! Pets acceptable. Immediate occupancy. 4811 S. Jackson Ave 918-638-0861 or 918-378-6851.
For Lease • Midtown Nicely updated 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath townhome 2521 S Florence Ave #2. Pool. $850/mo. Pets negotiable. 918-232-3264
Country Combo in Beggs
3320 Happy Camp Rd. Great for extended family, 2/2/2 brick home 1900sf + 4/2 Mobile 3200sf w/large add-on & double carport. No smoking/No indoor pets. Deposit $1,000/ea. $2,200/mo. 918-636-6162.
Home for rent. 2831 E 103rd Pl. Jenks schools, 5/3.5/2, fenced yard, appl. inc., FP, vaulted ceilings, 3 year old home, $4400/mo. 662-822-8662
AVAILABLE NOW! Brick home in Broken Arrow! 3 bedrooms; 2-car garage; bath and half. Fresh paint and new vinyl plank flooring. New 5-burner, self-cleaning gas range. Fenced yard and quiet neighborhood. Don’t pass this one by! Security deposit required. 1212 W. Jackson Street $900 918630-3206
Liberty Towers, downtown, 24 hr. sec., view, pool, indoor parking. 1 bdrm., 1 bath, $800 mo, $400 dep. Remodeled 2 bdrm, 2 bath, $1100 mo., $575 dep. No smoking. 918-605-7571, 918-447-0411
Special! Special! Special! STARTING AT $199 Fiesta Apartments. Five Great Locations! Stay Cool inside our large 1 & 2 Bdrm, CH/A. Call 918-638-0888 or 918-378-6851
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