Page 14 - Florida Sentinel 10-25-16 Online Edition
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Sports
Bucs Double Down On 49ers
Special Team Blunders Lead Cardinals/ Seahawks To 6-6 Tie
Chandler Catanzaro missed a 24-yard field goal late in over- time of the Cardinals' tie with Seattle, one of two missed field goals in OT.
Chandler Catanzaro, an avid golfer, knows what a gimme is.
Everyone inside University of Phoenix Stadium thought his 24-yard field goal attempt with 3:26 left in overtime Sun- day night was just that: an easy gimme. Just tap it in and the Arizona Cardinals could fist pump all night after beating the Seattle Seahawks at home for the first time since coach Bruce Arians was hired in 2013.
Instead, Catanzaro missed, hitting the left goal- post, compounding all of Ari- zona's special teams' issues Sunday into one description: Costly for the Cardinals. Seat- tle took possession, marched down field against a defense that all but shut down the Sea- hawks during regulation, and had their own special teams blunder when kicker Steven Hauschka missed a 28-yard field goal wide left.
The game ended in a 6-6 tie.
Russell Wilson And Ciara Reportedly Are Having A Baby
RUSSELL WILSON AND CIARA
Seattle Seahawks quarter- back Russell Wilson and his wife, Ciara, are having a baby.
And there may be more chil- dren in their future.
"Ciara is pregnant and is so excited to be a mom," a source said, pereonline.com. "Russell would like to have two to three children. They both would like a big family."
When Ciara showed up for an event for Revlon – a brand she endorses – at a New York City hotel Tuesday night wear- ing an “all-white Houghton suit with a loose fitting tuxedo jacket,” fans began speculating on social media that she may be pregnant, the report notes.
Wilson, 27, and Ciara, 30, said they abstained from sex until they were married in July.
This will be the singer/song- writer’s second child. She has a son with rapper Future. It will be Wilson’s first.
Lamar Jackson's Latest
Jameis Winston celebrates with Mike Evans on a touch- down.
The Tampa Bay Bucca- neers are returning home from their road trip with a dominating victory over the San Francisco 49ers.
The Bucs left the West Coast with a 34-17 victory and sole possession of second place in the NFC South.
Jameis Winston tossed three touchdown passes for the Bucs, and Jacquizz Rodgers ran for 154 yards.
The Bucs (3-3) started off falling behind by 14 points before putting up 27 straight points, leaving the 49ers with their longest losing streak since 2008.
Buccaneer wide receiver Mike Evans grabbed 8 passes for 96 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Also, Russell Shepard scored on a 19-yard pass from Winston, and in
Jacquizz Rodgers cuts loose for a long run.
the fourth quarter, Peyton Barber scored on a 44-yard run.
San Francisco quarterback, Colin Kaepernick, went 16-for-34 for 143 yards and turned the ball over twice.
The Bucs put up 249 rush- ing yards, and the defense came to play, with Gerald McCoy recovering a fumble.
Winston finished the game completing 21-of-30 passes for 264 yards and one interception.
Troubled Buccaneer kicker, Roberto Aguayo, missed his fifth field goal of the season, and is now 6-for- 11.
The Bucs get to stay home this Sunday as they will be hosting the Oakland Raiders in a 1 p.m. game at Raymond James.
After being held to a mere one score in a close win against Duke, Lamar Jack- son was probably itching to find the end zone by the time Saturday rolled around. Jackson scored four touch- downs (once rushing, three times passing) in a runaway 54-13 win for Louisville, which is now 6-1 still very much in the hunt for a College Football Playoff spot should some top teams start to lose.
And he scored all four touchdowns in the first half.
Jackson was accurate, hitting on 20-of-34 passing for the game, and he got some help from a defense that con- trolled the line of scrimmage, forced turnovers and shut down the run against an NC State team that took Clemson to overtime a week ago.
In stuffing the box score again, Jackson stayed on pace with the statistical com- parisons to Heisman Trophy winning quarterbacks Cam Newton and Johnny Manziel. As if the electrify- ing performances and Michael Vick endorsement aren't enough, Heisman vot- ers will have hard numbers to support the notion that Jack-
LAMAR JACKSON
son is having a one-of-a-kind season.
It's crazy to think that, one year ago, Jackson's career started with an interception on his first pass attempt and didn't really advance until he finally emerged as the team's starting quarterback at the end of the season.
Jackson had a great bounce back game passing the ball, throwing for 355 yards and three touchdowns in addition to his 76 rushing yards. That ups his touch- down total for the season to 34, which sets a new school record -- through only seven games! -- one that will con- tinue to be extended this sea- son. In true dual-threat fashion, Jackson also has a 10-game streak going of scor- ing both a passing and rush- ing touchdown.
Heisman Moment Comes
As He Sets A Record
Derrick Rose Rejoins
Knicks, Glad To Put Civil
Trial Behind Him
Derrick Rose rejoined the New York Knicks on Sat- urday, eager to put his civil trial behind him and get back to playing basketball.
Rose was with the team for the first time since Oct. 4, when he left for his trial in Los Angeles after a preseason game in Houston.
Rose and two friends were found not liable in a civil law- suit that accused them of gang-raping Rose's ex-girl- friend when she was incapac- itated from drugs or alcohol. Rose and his friends were being sued for $21.5 million.
"The issue was a huge issue. I took it very serious," Rose said after Saturday's practice. "I'm a grown man. I put myself in this situation and I had to get myself out. I was focused the entire time.
"Out of all of this, the only thing that really hurt me was missing my son's birthday party, missing his birthday. Those were the two things that I was worried about the most. Not being there with my family ... it hurt. And being there for my son. That
DERRICK ROSE
was the only thing."
Rose was asked whether
he felt vindicated after main- taining his innocence.
"A little bit," he said. "But at the same time, there was another person that was in- volved in this. So, if anything, I've just been praying for my- self and praying for her be- cause the issue is very big in the States and everywhere. So just praying for everyone that was involved and knowing that all this is out of my con- trol.
"The only thing I could work on is being a better per- son, being a better dad, brother, cousin, uncle. Being the best I could be so I could help others."
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