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Crime has a new face: Twitter.
Political  extremists,  criminals  and
gang  members  are  advertising  their
wares,  aunting  their  exploits  and
recruiting new members in 140 char-
acters  or  less,  according  to  police,
criminologists and security experts.
The  most  shocking  example  oc-
curred  a  week  ago  when  the  extrem-
ist  group  al-Shabab  live-tweeted
about  the  mall  siege  in  Kenya,  de-
fending  the  mass  killing,  threatening
more  violence  and  taunting  the
military.
But  the  list  is  long    and  growing
 of  those  using  Twitter  and  other
social  media  venues  for  nefarious
purposes.
Extremists spread their propagan-
da  via  video.  Gangs  post  their  colors,
signs and rap songs to showcase their
criminal  enterprises.  Prostitutes  and
drug dealers troll  for new  customers.
Teens  trash  a  former  NFL  players
house  and  brag  about  it  with  photos
on Twitter.
But Twitter can be a double-edged
sword:  Public  boasting  about  illegal
deeds can serve as a road map for po-
lice and lead to arrests.
Extremist  groups,  domestic  and
international,  have  been  savvy  in
their  use  of  social  media,  says  Evan
Kohlmann,  a  senior  partner  with  the
security rm Flashpoint who special-
izes in the online communications of
extremist  groups.  Twitter
has  become  their  site  of
choice  because  it  is  easy  to
sign  up  and  remain  anony-
mous. 
These  groups  realize
they  need  to  reach  as  many
people  as  possible,  he  says.
And  Twitter  and  Facebook
is where you nd people.
In the beginning, extrem-
ist  groups  were  reluctant  to
use  social  media.  They  re-
lied  on  password-protected
online  forums,  Kohlmann
says.  As  social  sites  became  ubiqui-
tous,  the  groups  and  their  members
jumped in like everyone else, he says.
One  of  the  early  and  most  prolic
outts to  turn to Twitter  was al-Sha-
bab,  the  radical  Somali  group  with
links to al-Qaeda whose name means
The Youth in Arabic.
Al-Shabab  used  Twitter
during  the  hostage  siege  at
the Westgate shopping mall
in  Nairobi  to  ballyhoo  the
mayhem blow-by-blow.
Tweets  defended  the  at-
tack,  mocked  the  Kenyan
military  and  president,
posted  photos  of  members
inside  the  mall  and  threat-
ened more bloodshed.
Twitter  shut  down  at
least  ve  accounts  used  by
al-Shabab,  but  each  time
the  microblogging  site  sus-
pended  an  account,  the  group  creat-
ed  another  with  a  dierent  user
name.
Twitter  says  it  doesnt  comment
on  individual  accounts  for  security
and privacy reasons.
On Twitter, thugs at work in plain sight 
Extremist groups like
al-Shabab aunt crimes
and are tough to silence
Marisol Bello 
and Natalie DiBlasio 
USATODAY
vSTORY CONTINUES ON 2A
REWARDS FOR JUSTICE
Top al-Shabab
leader Ahmed
Abdi Godane. 
WASHINGTON Congressional Repub-
licans  showed  no  signs  Sunday  of  re-
lenting  on  their  eorts  to  dismantle
President Obamas health care law on
a stopgap  funding  bill,  setting  the
course for the rst government shut-
down in 17 years starting Tuesday. 
The  American  people  over-
whelmingly reject Obamacare. They
understand its not working. The only
people who arent listening to the ar-
gument  are  the  career  politicians  in
Washington, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas,
said on NBCs Meet the Press. 
Cruz,  who  led  a  21-hour  libuster-
style  speech  against  the  health  care
law, has been a leading GOP advocate
for  using  the  stopgap  measure  as  le-
verage  to  extract  concessions  on  the
Aordable  Care  Act,  which  begins
open  enrollment  for  the  health  care
insurance exchanges on Tuesday.
Cruz  joined  a  chorus  of  Republi-
can lawmakers on Sunday talk shows
who  sought  to  spread  the  political
blame  to  Obama  and  Senate  Demo-
crats  if  a  shutdown  occurs.  Demo-
crats  are  the  ones  playing  games.
They  need  to  act.  Theyre  the  ones
that  are  truly  threatening  a  govern-
ment  shutdown  by  not  being  here
and  acting,  said  Rep.  Cathy  McMor-
ris  Rodgers  of  Washington  state,  the
fourth-ranking House Republican.
The  Senate  voted  Friday  to  ap-
prove  a  stopgap  funding  measure
through  Nov.  15  after  a  week  of  de-
bate. On Saturday, the House
of  Representatives  made  a
second  attempt  at  disman-
tling  the  health  law  after  the
rst  attempt  to  remove
spending for it in the funding
bill failed. 
The  House  approved,  231-
192,  an  amendment  to  delay
implementation for one year,
as  well  as  an  amendment  to
repeal  a  2.3%  tax  on  medical
devices  enacted  to  help  pay
for  the  law.  The  medical  de-
vice  tax  is  expected  to  raise  $29  bil-
lion  over  10  years.  The  House  also
voted  to  extend  the  length  of  the
stopgap  bill  to  Dec.  15,  and  approved
a separate  bill  to  make  sure  U.S.
troops  continue  to  get  paid  in  the
event of a shutdown.
House  Speaker  John  Boehner,  R-
Ohio, released  a statement calling on
the  Senate  to  come  in  to  session  on
Sunday  to  act  on  the  House-passed
amendments.  The  Senate  is
scheduled  to  return  today  at
2 p.m. ET. 
Many  parts  of  the  2010
health  care  law  have  already
been implemented, including
discounts  for  prescription
medications  and  the  provi-
sion  allowing  children  under
26  to  remain  on  their  par-
ents  health  insurance  poli-
cies.  On  Tuesday,  the  state
websites  where  uninsured
Americans  can  shop  for  and
buy  health  insurance  will  open.
Those  without  health  insurance  will
be required to buy it or pay a penalty;
those whose income is up to 400% of
the poverty level will receive a federal
subsidy to help pay for the insurance.
Senate  Majority  Leader  Harry
Reid,  D-Nev.,  said  the  Houses  action
was  pointless  and  White  House
spokesman  Jay  Carney  said  it  was
reckless  and  irresponsible  because
Obama  has  already  said  he  will  veto
any  attempt  to  delay  or  defund  the
law  in  the  unlikely  event  it  reaches
his desk.
Senate  rules  allow  Reid  to  knock
down  the  two  amendments  with  one
motion  to  table,  which  needs  only  51
votes  and  which  Republicans  cant
stop. 
House  Majority  Whip  Kevin  Mc-
Carthy, R-Calif., said Sunday that Re-
publicans  were  readying  a  third
attempt  for  today  if  Reid  rejects  the
amendments, as expected. 
However,  House  Republicans  op-
tions  on  the  eve  of  a  shutdown  are
limited.  The  House  could  advance  a
stopgap  bill  that  keeps  the  govern-
ment open for a week to continue the
health care ght and the government
funded.  Republicans  could  also  at-
tempt  to  advance  another  provision
aecting  the  health  care  law,  but
there  is  no  sign  it  would  meet  a  dif-
ferent fate in the Senate. 
Boehner  could  put  the  clean
Senate-passed  funding  bill  on  the
House  oor,  where  it  would  likely
pass  on  the  support  of  House  Demo-
crats  with  some  Republicans,  but  he
is  under  pressure  from  conservative
lawmakers  and  outside  groups  to
hold the line.
Senate  Majority  Whip  Dick  Dur-
bin,  D-Ill.,  told  CBS  Face  the  Nation
the Senate will reject the Houses lat-
est  eort  and  that  he  expects  a  shut-
down will occur.
Durbin said  Democrats were ame-
nable to changing the health care law,
and  he  acknowledged  that  many
Democrats support proposals such as
the  medical  device  tax  repeal,  but  he
said  the  debate  should  happen  inde-
pendent  of  a  bill  to  fund  the
government.
CLOSING TIME? 
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, AP
Literally and metaphorically, dark clouds hang over the U.S. Capitol on Saturday. 
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Q&A on how the
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BEYOND
POLITICS
Q&A on how the
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ALSO:
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hurt stocks 1B
Dems accused
of playing
games; GOP of
being reckless
Susan Davis
USATODAY
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MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 NEWS 2A
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Corrections & Clarifications
Al-Shabab currently has a working
feed  on  the  site.  Since  Wednesday,
the  group  posted  audio  statements
by  its  leader,  Ahmed  Abdi  Godane,
also  known  as  Mukhtar  Abu  Zubair,
justifying  the  siege  and  threatening
more attacks. It posted a tweet accus-
ing  the  Kenyan  government  of  de-
molishing the mall intentionally: To
cover  their  crime,  the  Kenyan  govt
carried out a demolition to the build-
ing,  burying  evidence  and  all  hos-
tages  under  the  rubble  #Westgate.
The Associated Press reported Friday
that the military  caused  the collapse,
citing  an  unnamed  senior  Kenyan
police  ocial  who  said  Kenyan
troops  red  rocket-propelled  gre-
nades  inside  the  mall.  The  ocial
would  not  say  what  caused  the  col-
lapse or whether it was intentional.
NO GATEKEEPER ON HATE
Agrowing number of homegrown ex-
tremists are also turning to Twitter.
A May  2013  report  on  digital  hate
speech  from  the  Simon  Wiesenthal
Center  says  Twitter  helped  spur  a
30%  growth  in  online  forums  for
hate and terrorism over the past year.
The  study  says  more  than  20,000
hate-spewing hashtags and handles
appeared  on  Twitter  in  2012,  up
5,000  from  the  year  before.  The
group  identied  Twitter  as  a  chief
oender  among  social  media  sites
because  of  a  lack  of  monitoring  of
hate and terrorist content.
Those who monitor extremists on-
line  say  that  as  the  site  of  choice  for
extremists,  in  their  view,  Twitter
needs a clear, transparent policy as to
what  content  is  o-limits,  and  it  has
to enforce that policy vigorously. 
They  respond  to  abuse  reports,
but  their  criteria  for  suspension  is
very  limited,  says  J.M.  Berger,  a  se-
curity  analyst  who  is  editor  of  Intel-
wire, an  online  magazine  that
monitors extremist activity. He spot-
ted  al-Shababs  tweets  during  the
mall siege and notied Twitter.
They  are  broadly  permissive  of
extremist content in a way that other
services, like Facebook and YouTube,
are  not,  he  said  in  an  e-mail
interview.
Twitter,  through  spokesman  Nu
Wexler, would not make anyone from
the  company  available  for  an  inter-
view. He directed a reporter to a blog
post by the companys head of safety,
Del Harvey, who wrote that manually
reviewing  every  tweet  is  simply  not
possible.  Users  post  up  to  500  mil-
lion  tweets  a  day  in  more  than  35
languages.
We use both automated and man-
ual systems to evaluate reports of us-
ers  potentially  violating  our  Twitter
Rules,  Harvey  wrote.  These  rules
explicitly  bar  direct,  specic  threats
of  violence  against  others  and  use  of
our service for unlawful purposes, for
which users may be suspended when
reported.
INTERNET-BANGING AMPLIFIED
Closer  to  home,  gangs  in  the  United
States  have  been  adding  Twitter  and
Facebook  accounts  to  their  arsenals
for years in what University of Michi-
gan  social  work  professor  Desmond
Patton calls Internet-banging.
If  we  think  about  violence  as  a
disease,  one  particular  host  of  that
disease is social media, he says.
Historically,  displaying  pictures  of
the  gang  or  recording  jump-ins,  an
initiation  rite  in  which  recruits  en-
dure  a  severe  beating  by  gang  mem-
bers to demonstrate their toughness,
or other acts of violence, required ex-
pensive  equipment  and  lots  of  time,
Patton says. 
With  the  advent  of  smartphone
technology,  youth  can  upload  pic-
tures and videos to social media sites
quickly, he says. 
A March  study  by  Arizona  State
Universitys  School  of  Criminology
and  Criminal  Justice  found  that
nearly 20% of gang members report-
ed  that  their  gang  had  a  website  or
social  networking  page  and  50%  said
that their gang posts video online.
Eleven  percent  said  their  gang  or-
ganized  activities  online,  often  using
code.  A  gang  member  in  St.  Louis
said  he  posted  on  Facebook,  We  got
a baseball  game  to  call  the  gang  to-
gether  for  a  ght.  A  member  in  Fres-
no  said  his  gang  avoided  organizing
drug business online but used the In-
ternet to set up meetings, parties and
even  fundraisers  for  bail  or  other
emergencies.
Scott  Decker,  a  professor  of  crimi-
nology  and  criminal  justice  at  ASU
who  conducted  the  study,  says  gang
members used to proclaim their alle-
giance via grati or by taunting their
rivals.
Now the kind of things that result
in ghting take place online, he says.
Challenges  to  manhood,  challenges
to  how  tough  the  gang  is.  ...  It  could
be YouTube videos, posting on some-
ones Facebook site.
He  says  gangs  involved  in  drug
dealing  use  Twitter.  Because  police
know  where  transactions  generally
take  place,  gang  members  tweet  out
an  address.  The  context  is  unclear  to
an outsider, but the person on the re-
ceiving  end  understands  the
message.
DECIPHERING THE CODE
Rob  DOvidio,  a  Drexel  University
criminologist,  says  gang  members
use  code  to  boast  about  their  deeds.
For  example,  he  says,  they  use  bis-
cuit  or  clickety  for  a  gun,  food,
seashells  or  gas  for  bullets  and
rock to sleep early for murder.
But the braggadocio can backre.
In January 2012 in New York City,
police  arrested  43  gang  members
from  rival  gangs  and  linked  them  to
six  killings,  32  shootings,  36  robber-
ies  and  other  crimes.  The  arrests
came  about  because  of  members
posts  on  Twitter  crowing  about  what
they had done.
Criminal  activity  online  has  led
more  than  2,600  police  departments
from New York City to Seattle to cre-
ate  social  media  units  to  monitor
sites. Urban schools in Chicago mon-
itor  social  media  because  ghts  that
start online often spill into hallways.
Cincinnati  police  ocer  Dawn
Keating  was  one  of  the  rst  to  track
gangs  on  social  media.  In  2007,  she
began  tracking  a  gang  calling  itself
the  Taliband  that  was  on  the  now
nearly  forgotten  MySpace.  The  gang
posted photos of members, rap songs,
its colors and signs. The posts helped
Keating  gather  intel  about  the  mem-
bers  and  their  connections.  The  on-
line  surveillance  eventually  led  to
5,000  pieces  of  evidence  and  90  in-
dictments of gang members, she says.
She  says  drug  dealers  use  Twitter
to  advertise  their  wares  and  their  lo-
cations,  and  petty  criminals  brag  by
posting  photos  of  themselves  with
cash  or  stolen  items  on  Facebook.
She tells the story of a thief who com-
mitted  ve  robberies  in  downtown
Cincinnati.  Police  knew  him  only  by
a nickname,  which  they  found  on
Facebook,  along  with  photos  of  the
man  with  cash  and  other  items  he
had stolen. That led to his arrest.
Prostitutes  use  Twitter  to  attract
new  customers  or  post  their  loca-
tions,  daily  specials  and  rates,  the
way lunch trucks let customers know
where  to  nd  them,  DOvidio  says.
He  says  they  use  hashtags  such  as
#Vegas,  #escort,  #services  and
#callgirl.
Some  bad  actors  do  it  just  for  the
attention  of  a  large  audience.  Take
the  partying  teens  who  broke  into
the  vacation  home  of  former  NFL
player  Brian  Holloway  in  Upstate
New  York,  causing  $20,000  in  dam-
age. The teens posted photos of their
antics  on  Twitter.  Six  people  have
been  arrested  so  far  and  police  ex-
pect dozens more arrests.
With  criminals,  its  one  thing  to
brag on the street, Cincinnati ocer
Keating  says.  But  now,  with  social
media,  they  brag  and  get  credibility
worldwide.
And  sometimes,  they  also  get  ar-
rested.
More extremists turning to Twitter 
vCONTINUED FROM1A
JONATHANKALAN, AP
Awoman runs for cover at Westgate Mall during the siege in Nairobi. 
To cover their crime, 
the Kenyan govt carried
out a demolition to 
the building, burying
evidence and all
hostages under the
rubble #Westgate.
A tweet from Al-Shabab
To cover their crime, 
the Kenyan govt carried
out a demolition to 
the building, burying
evidence and all
hostages under the
rubble #Westgate.
A tweet from Al-Shabab
JERUSALEM Analysts  say  Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
has  little  chance  of  convincing  Presi-
dent  Obama  and  the  international
community  that  stepped-up  sanc-
tions,  not  diplomacy,  is  the  way  to
stop  Iran  from  developing  nuclear
weapons,  but  that  wont  stop  him
from pleading his case as he visits the
U.S. this week. 
Convinced  that  Iran,  which  has
long  called  for  Israels  destruction,
will  capitalize  on  last  weeks  thaw  in
its relations with the U.S. to develop a
nuclear  bomb  while  non-prolifera-
tion  talks  are  underway,  Netanyahu
vowed  to  deliver  his  message  during
his  visit  today  with  Obama  and  a
Tuesday  address  before  the  United
Nations General Assembly.
I  will  tell  the  truth  in  the  face  of
the  sweet  talk  and  the  onslaught  of
smiles. ... Telling the truth today is vi-
tal  for  the  security  and  peace  of  the
world and, of course, it is vital for the
security of the state of Israel, Netan-
yahu  said  just  prior  to  ying  to  the
U.S.  on  Saturday  night,  a  day  after
Obama  held  a  15-minute  ice-break-
ing  conversation  with  Iranian  Presi-
dent Hasan Rouhani.
It was the highest-level interaction
between  the  U.S.  and  Iran  in  three
decades. 
Israeli  pundits  spent  the
weekend  discussing  what
promises  to  be  an  uphill  bat-
tle  for  Netanyahu,  who  must
balance  his  alarm  over  Iran
with  a  show  of  respect  for
what  the  U.S.  is  hailing  as  a
major diplomatic victory. 
Writing  in  the  Israeli
newspaper  Haaretz,  U.S.  cor-
respondent  Chemi  Shalev
said  that  what  many  Israelis  see  as
Obamas  dangerous  trip  in  la  la
land  is  perceived  in  the  White
House  as  the  realization  of  Obamas
chief  goals,  including  the  judicious
use  of  Americas  military  power  and
diplomatic  clout  to  enlist  the  inter-
national  community  against  rogue
regimes;  and  the resolute prevention
of  proliferation  of  weapons  of  mass
destruction. 
Given  the  sunny  and
optimistic  atmosphere  at
the  White  House  over  these
developments,  Netanyahu
runs  the  risk  of  being  por-
trayed  as  a  perennial  party-
pooper, Shalev wrote. 
The  timing  of  his  visit  also
isnt  ideal.  Netanyahus  usu-
ally  reliable  pro-Israel  law-
maker allies will likely be too
distracted  by  government  shutdown
talks  and  Obamacare  to  lobby
against  what  he  surely  views  as  the
administrations  nave  complacency
towards Damascus and Tehran, Sha-
lev wrote.
Efraim  Inbar,  director  of  the  Be-
gin-Sadat  Center  for  Strategic  Stud-
ies  at  Bar  Ilan  University,  said  he
believes several Arab countries share
Israels concerns over what they con-
sider  American  appeasement  of
Iran  and  Syria,  even  if  these  nations
are reluctant to say so publicly. 
Even if Iran complies with U.S. de-
mands  to  halt  its  development  of  a
nuclear arsenal, Inbar said, it will still
be considered a great threat by coun-
tries in the Middle East. 
Iran  is  a  state  sponsor  of  terror-
ism.  Its  a  state  with  an  extreme  reli-
gious  ideology  whose  intention  is  to
dominate  the  region  and  spread  its
very  radical  version  of  Islam  to  the
rest of the world, he said. 
Despite  what  he  calls  a  clear  will-
ingness  on  the  part  of  Arab  coun-
tries  to  interact  with  Israel  on  the
Iranian and Syrian threats, Inbar said
he doesnt expect to see such cooper-
ation displayed at the U.N. 
If  it  happens,  it  will  be  under  the
table, he said.
Israel will make case against Iran 
PM Netanyahu
heads to U.S. 
to tell the truth
Michele Chabin
Special for USATODAY
POOL PHOTO
Netanyahu 
POTISKUM,  NIGERIA Suspected  Is-
lamic extremists attacked an agricul-
tural  college  early  Sunday, gunning
down  dozens  of  students  as  they
slept  in  dorms  and  torching  class-
rooms,  the  schools  provost  said.  Its
the  latest  violence  in  northeastern
Nigerias ongoing Islamic uprising.
Provost  Molima  Idi  Mato  of  Yobe
State  College  of  Agriculture  in  Gujba
said  there  were  no  security  forces
protecting  the  campus.  Two  weeks
ago,  the  state  commissioner  for  edu-
cation  had  begged  schools  and  col-
leges  to  reopen  after  a  deadly  July  6
attack  on  a  Mamudo  school  and  had
promised protection, he said.
Idi  Mato  said  as  many  as  50  stu-
dents  may  have  died  in  the  assault
that  began  at  about  1  a.m.  Sunday.
They  attacked  our  students  while
they  were  sleeping.  ... They  opened
re at them, he said. Most of the vic-
tims were ages 18 to 22.
Soldiers  recovered  42  bodies  and
transported  18  wounded  students  to
a hospital, said a military ocial who
requested anonymity because he was
not authorized to speak to the press.
Two  of  the  wounded  later  died,
said  Adamu  Usman,  a  survivor  who
was helping at the hospital.
President Goodluck Jonathan con-
demned  the  attack,  which  he  blamed
on  the  Boko  Haram  extremist  group,
in a TV appearance Sunday night.
Jonathan  likened  the  assault  to
that  on  a  Nairobi  shopping  mall  last
week, where Islamic extremists from
Somalias al-Shabab movement killed
67  civilians.  Boko  Haram  has  said
some  of  its  ghters  trained  with  al-
Shabab in Somalia.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar She-
kau  has  said  in  video  addresses  that
his group wants to end democracy in
Nigeria  and  allow  education  only  in
Islamic  schools.  Boko  Haram  means
Western education is forbidden.
Its uprising poses the biggest secu-
rity  challenge  in  years  to  this  coun-
try. 
Nigeria  is  Africas  biggest  oil  pro-
ducer  and  its  most  populous  nation
with more than 160 million people 
almost  equal  numbers  of  which  are
Muslims and Christians.
Boko  Haram  militants  have  killed
more than 1,700 people since 2010.
Gov.  Ibrahim  Gaidam  of  Yobe
state,  where  the  killings  occurred,
questioned  the  eectiveness  of  the
military crackdown.
The  gunmen  rode  into  the  college
in  two  double-cabin  pickup  all-ter-
rain  vehicles  and  on  motorcycles,
some  dressed  in  Nigerian  military
uniforms,  a  surviving  student,  Ibra-
him Mohammed, told the AP. He said
they  appeared  to  know  the  layout  of
the  college,  attacking  the  four  male
hostels  but  avoiding  the  one  hostel
reserved for women.
Militants kill dozens at college in Nigeria
Islamic extremists
blamed in massacre
The Associated Press
WORLD
CALIF. HANGAR BURNS DOWN
AFTER SMALL PLANE CRASHES
A small  jet  that  took  o  from  Ida-
ho  crashed  into  a  storage  hangar  and
started  a  large  re  after  landing  Sun-
day  night  at  a  Southern  California
airport, ocials said.
The  twin-engine  Cessna  Citation
that took o from Hailey, Idaho, went
o  the  right  side  of  the  runway  at
Santa  Monica  Municipal  Airport
about  6:20  p.m.  and  struck  the  hang-
ar,  Federal  Aviation  Administration
spokesman Ian Gregor said.
The re destroyed the hangar, San-
ta  Monica  Fire  Department  spokes-
woman  Bridgett  Lewis  said.  It  was
not  immediately  clear  how  many
people  were  on  the  plane  or  inside
the  hangar.  There  was  no  immediate
word on any injuries or deaths. INVESTIGATION CITES MISSTEPS 
IN DEATHS OF 19 FIREFIGHTERS 
Nearly  every  detail  leading  up  to
the  June  deaths  of  19  Arizona  re-
ghters was painstakingly spelled out
by investigators, from the triple-digit
temperatures  the  day  before  to  the
winds that kicked up in a few hours. 
Families  of  the  Granite  Mountain
Hotshots,  Arizona  Gov.  Jan  Brewer
and  others  are  asking  that  lessons  be
learned  from  the  deaths.  One  lesson,
experts  say,  is  to  invest  in  GPS  track-
ing technology for reghters.
Real-time  information  on  the  lo-
cation  of  crews  and  the  location  of
the  re,  if  those  two  things  had  been
known, this accident could have been
prevented,  said  Bill  Grabbert,  a  re-
tired  wildland  reghter,  re  man-
agement ocer and author.
The  three-month  report  released
Saturday outlines a series of missteps
by  the  crew  and  commanders  ght-
ing  the  Yarnell  Hill  Fire,  but  it  found
no  indication  of  negligence,  reck-
lessness  actions  or  violations  of  poli-
cy or protocol. 
ITALIAN CABINET MEMBERS BALK
AT BERLUSCONIS POWER PLAY
Former Italian premier Silvio Ber-
lusconi  appeared  to  backpedal  on
Sunday  in  his  strategy  aimed  at  col-
lapsing  the  fragile  coalition  govern-
ment  and  triggering  early  elections,
after  some  key  supporters  chafed  at
his order to quit the Cabinet.
Berlusconi  had  demanded  those
resignations  in  a  show  of  solidarity
ahead of a Senate vote to strip him of
his seat because of his tax-fraud con-
viction and prison sentence.
But  at least three of his ve minis-
ters  in  Premier  Enrico  Lettas  gov-
ernment  said  they  would  only
reluctantly  comply  with  that  order
because  Berlusconi  had  picked  them
for  their  ministry  posts.  The  three
ministers  indicated  they  might  help
Letta  survive  the  condence  vote  he
has called for Parliament.
I thoroughly understand his (Ber-
lusconis)  state  of  mind,  but  I  cannot
justify or share the strategy that the
ministers  quit,  Health  Minister  Be-
atrice Lorenzin said. 
ASTRONAUT SCOTT CARPENTER
RECOVERING FROM STROKE
Astronaut  Scott  Carpenter,  88,  the
second  American  to  orbit  Earth,  is
recovering  from  a  stroke.  Patty  Car-
penter said her husband had a stroke
last  week  and  was  moved  to  a  reha-
bilitation center. She hopes he will be
up and around in a few weeks. 
Scott Carpenter is remembered for
his  radio  call  Godspeed,  John
Glenn,  when  Friendship  7  lifted  o
and Glenn became the rst American
to orbit Earth on Feb. 20, 1962. 
Compiled fromstaand wire reports.
NASA-TV
The Cygnus spacecraft successfully
attaches onto an arm of the Interna-
tional Space Station on Sunday as shown
on NASA-TV. Cygnus is delivering food,
clothing and experiments. 
WILL OLIVER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Awoman tends to her ock Sunday as
Liverymen and Freemen of the City of
London re-enact their right to drive
sheep tax-free across London Bridge. 
SPECIAL DELIVERY IN SPACE BAA-CK FOR A RE-ENACTMENT
IN BRIEF
As  of  Sunday,  2,142  U.S.  service-
members  and  three  Defense  Depart-
ment  civilians  had  been  reported
killed in the Afghanistan War. 
The latest death identied: 
uArmy  Sta  Sgt.  Thomas  A.
Baysore  Jr.,  31,  of  Milton,  Pa.,  died
Thursday  in  Paktiya  province  from
enemy  small-arms  re  during  com-
bat  operations;  101st  Airborne
Division.
Source: Defense Department
U.S. death toll 
F
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 NEWS 3A
NATION
uNEWS Today is the last day
for Congress to agree on a
stopgap funding bill or the
federal government partially
shuts down at midnight. The
Senate convenes this after-
noon but is expected to kill
the latest measure from the
House of Representatives.
Follow the brinkmanship at
usatoday.com/news.
uNEWS President Obama
meets today with Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu at the White
House. Iran and Syria could
well top the list of their talk.
Learn more about their meet-
ing at usatoday.com/news.
uNEWS The retrial of Amer-
ican student Amanda Knox,
accused of the murder of a
roommate, begins today in
Italy, but she wont attend.
Italys highest court threw out
her 2011 acquittal. Check it out
at usatoday.com/news.
uNEWS Pope Francis could
announce today the date for
canonizing Popes John
Paul II and John XXIII  to
make them saints. See more
at usatoday.com/news.
uSPORTS Alex Rodriguez
begins his appeal hearing
today with Major League
Baseball, as the Yankees
third baseman fights his 211-
game suspension for links to
the Biogenesis clinic and
allegations of performance-
enhancing drug use. Go to
mlb.usatoday.com.
uLIFE Breaking Bad is over
and a new season of Home-
land just
began. Talk
about both
shows  and
other ones 
with USA
TODAY TV
critic Robert Bianco. His on-
line chat starts at 2 p.m. ET
today at usatoday.com/life.
Whats popular online:
uWave goodbye to these
vehicle models
uWalk-off, wild pitch no-
hitter for Marlins 
uUSC fires football coach
Lane Kiffin 
Online
TODAY
What were following
Alook ahead to news,
features, photos and
videos well be posting today at
usatoday.comand on our free
apps for all mobile devices.
PETER KRAMER, AP
GREGM. COOPER, USA TODAY SPORTS
POOL PHOTOBY HEIDI LEVINE
Healthy U.S. cities
Metropolitan statistical areas, including
suburbs, with healthiest housing:
1. San Jose
2. Indianapolis
3. Anaheim-Santa Ana, Calif.
3. Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater,
Fla.
3. Phoenix
6. Sacramento
6. San Bernardino-Riverside, Calif.
6. Miami
6. Minneapolis-St. Paul
10. Charlotte
10. New York
12. Milwaukee
12. Atlanta
12. San Diego
12. Seattle
16. Columbus, Ohio
16. Washington
16. San Francisco
16. St. Louis
16. Portland, Ore.
16. Oakland
22. Cleveland
22. Northern New Jersey
24. Denver
24. Fort Worth-Arlington, Texas
24. Hartford, Conn.
24. Norfolk-Virginia Beach
24. Pittsburgh
29. Chicago
30. Providence
30. Kansas City, Mo.-Kan. 
32. New Orleans
32. Cincinnati
34. Buffalo
34. Baltimore
34. Los Angeles
37. Boston
37. Dallas
39. Detroit
39. Houston
39. Philadelphia
42. Oklahoma City
43. San Antonio
44. Birmingham, Ala.
45. Memphis
Source National Center for Healthy Housing,
basedon U.S. Census data
Fire  departments  across  the  na-
tion  are  establishing  paid  positions,
increasing  stipends  and  seeking  as-
sistance  from  government  grants  as
they  face  challenges  attracting  and
keeping volunteer personnel.
Ken  Willette,  division  manager  of
Public Fire Protection at the Nation-
al  Fire  Protection  Association
(NFPA),  said  recruiting  and  main-
taining  volunteers  in  re  depart-
ments  is  an  ongoing  challenge
nationwide  by  large  and  small  de-
partments across the country.
We  are  seeing  communities  can-
not  attract  the  number  of  volunteers
they need anymore, Willette said.
Two  major  challenges,  Willette
said, are time and location. The train-
ing  for  volunteer  reghters  is  equal
to  the  training  of  career  reghters,
making  it  dicult  for  individuals  to
t that into their schedules, he said.
Most volunteers, he said, no longer
regularly work where they live, so the
possibility  of  businesses  allowing
employees  to  leave  and  ght  a  re
has  greatly  diminished.  Plus,  they
dont  have  the  time  for  routine  tasks
such as maintaining trucks.
Of  the  nations  approximately
1.1 million reghters, 31% were paid
career reghters in 2011, leaving the
majority  of  re  departments  to  be
staed  by  volunteers,  according  to
the NFPAs latest statistics.
John Hall, division director of Fire
Analysis  and  Research  at  the  NFPA,
said  there  was  an  8.6%  decrease  in
volunteer  reghters  from  2008  to
2011. Hall said not-yet-released num-
bers  for  2012  show  that  downward
trend  stopped  last  year,  but  he  cau-
tioned that may be temporary.
Though replacement of volunteers
with  paid  positions  is  a  growing  na-
tional  trend,  Willette  said  it  is  not
happening in great numbers. He said
he  has  seen  re  departments  across
the  nation  start  by  giving  stipends  to
volunteers,  then  gradually  transition
to career fully paid positions.
Recent examples include:
uThe  Red  River  Parish  Fire  Dis-
trict  in  Louisiana  plans  to  move  to
about 14 paid full-time reghter po-
sitions  (in  addition  to  about  70  vol-
unteers) starting early next year, said
Shane  Felts,  Red  River  Parish  re
chief.  Under  a  trial  run,  the  district
has  four  paid,  part-time  reghters.
The  plan  is  expected  to  be  ocially
approved in November, Felts said.
uThis  month,  North  Liberty,
Iowa,  approved  a  plan  replacing  a
yearly  $500  stipend  for  volunteer
reghters  with  a  at  stipend  per
call,  which  depends  on  years  of  ser-
vice,  City  Administrator  Ryan  Heiar
said. If one responds to less than 18%
of  the  calls  during  a  quarter,  he  will
receive  $7-$13  per  call.  If  the  volun-
teer goes on 18% or more of the calls,
he will receive $8-$14 per call.
uSeveral  re  departments  in  Vir-
ginia receive assistance from govern-
ment  grants  to  help  them  recruit
volunteers  through  the  Volunteer
Workforce Solutions program funded
by the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security,  said  Nick  Caputo,  program
manager  for  the  Virginia  Fire  Chiefs
Association.
uOver the past 10 years, Davidson
County,  N.C.,  has  seen  more  paid  po-
sitions  created  in  its  re  depart-
ments,  said  Danny  Ward,  the
countys re marshal. He said that al-
though  volunteer  numbers  were
good,  participation  was  low.  Twenty-
three of the 26 volunteer re depart-
ments  in  the  county  have  paid  posi-
tions of some type, he said.
Contributing: Vickie Welborn, The (Shreve-
port, La.) Times
Fire departments try to extinguish stang crisis
Paid positions created 
as volunteer reghters
become harder to attract
Olga Hajishengallis
USATODAY
VICKIE WELBORN, THE (SHREVEPORT, LA.) TIMES
Red River Parish reghters, from left,
Joe Tarver, Ryan Smith, Jeremy Neal
and Chief Shane Felts. 
It  can  be  one  of  the  most  dicult
conversations an adult child ever has
with  an  aging  parent:  The  discussion
about  Mom  or  Dad  giving  up  the  car
keys because of declining health.
The  dilemma  is  one  that  many
adult children will face in the coming
years:  The  number  of  people  65  and
older  in  the  U.S.  will  increase  from
47.6 million in 2015 to 72.7 million in
2030,  according  to  the  Census
Bureau.
In  2011,  17%  of  all  trac  deaths  in
the U.S. involved people 65 and older,
a group  that  made  up  13%  of  the
overall  population,  according  to  the
National  Highway  Trac  Safety
Administration.
Apparently,  many  simply  arent
having that conversation.
More than half of adult children of
senior drivers, 55%, say they are con-
cerned  about  their  parents  driving
habits,  but  only  23%  have  had  a  dis-
cussion  with  their  parents  about
driving  abilities  as  they  age.  In  fact,
adults  ages  40-65  are  more  con-
cerned  about  aging  parents  driving
than  they  are  about  family  members
driving while intoxicated.
Thats  according  to  a  new  nation-
wide telephone survey of 1,007 adults
ages  40-65  with  at  least  one  parent
who  drives.  The survey  was  conduct-
ed  May  14-20  for  insurer  Liberty
Mutual.
They  really  are  avoiding  the  con-
versation, says David Melton, Liber-
ty  Mutuals  managing  director  of
global  safety.  We  feel  very  strongly
that families know best, and its really
critical  that  Boomer  children  not
wait until they see a possibly danger-
ous  decline  in  their  parents  driving.
These are conversations  that need  to
be had early and often.
In  the  survey,  just  38%  of  adult
children  of  senior  drivers  thought
their  parents  would  understand  and
be  open  to  a  discussion  about  giving
up driving. 
Families  with  older  drivers  should
keep  an  eye  out  for  signs  that  could
indicate its time to talk, experts say. 
These include: Noticing scrapes on
a parents  car  or  bumper,  or  on  a  ga-
rage  door  or  mailbox.  Also,  we  sug-
gest  the  person  who  is  concerned
actually  ride  with  the  person  to  get
that  birds-eye  view,  says  Julie  Lee,
vice  president  and  national  director
for driver safety at AARP. 
When  it  is  time  for  the  conversa-
tion, the child has to choose the right
time  (not,  for  instance,  during
Thanksgiving dinner) and choose the
right  person  to  initiate  it    it  might
be  a  family  friend  or  someone  out-
side  the  family,  such  as  a  doctor.
Driving is such an important part of
peoples  lives,  so  you  need  to  go  into
it with respect and dignity, Lee says. 
Lisa  Callahan,  58,  of  Faireld,
Conn.,  began  talking  with  her  moth-
er,  Jean  Winton,  now  93,  every  six
months or so about her driving. After
Winton inadvertently stepped on the
gas pedal while stopped at a mailbox,
she  decided  it  was  time  to  stop  driv-
ing.  She  was  very  gracious,  Call-
ahan  says.  She  said,  Ive  been
looking for a sign, and that was it. 
Its  a  hard  conversation,  Call-
ahan  says.  Its  like  telling  your  kid
the facts of life. Its something youve
got  to  do,  but  nobody  looks  forward
to that conversation.
Seniors behind the wheel:
Few adult kids have the talk
Insurer says families
know best when older
parent shouldnt drive
Larry Copeland
USATODAY
BOB RIHA JR., USA TODAY
Signs that it may be time for an older driver to give up the car keys
may include scrapes on the car, garage door or mailbox. 
Mice,  rats  and  water  leaks  are
among  the  problems  plaguing  a  ris-
ing  number  of  inner-city  and  subur-
ban  homes,  40%  of  which  now  have
at  least  one  health  or  safety  hazard,
says a ranking to be released today of
45 U.S. metropolitan areas. 
Harmed  by  the  nations  foreclo-
sure  crisis  and  economic  downtown,
35  million  metro-area  homes  pose
potential  risks    up  from  30  million
(35%)  in  a  similar  report  four  years
ago, according to the National Center
for Healthy Housing, a non-prot re-
search group.
Its  a  worrisome  trend,  says  Re-
becca  Morley,  the  groups  executive
director. She notes poor housing con-
ditions  have  been  linked  to  asthma,
lead  poisoning  and  cancer.  Morley
says  the  deterioration,  however,  is
hardly  surprising,  because  many
foreclosed  properties  sat  vacant  for
long  periods,  and  people  had  less
money for home maintenance. 
The  most  common  problem?  Wa-
ter  leaks  from  the  outside,  which  af-
fected  11%  of  metro-area  homes,
followed  by  signs  of  mice (10%)  inte-
rior  water  leaks  (9%)  as  well  as  roof-
ing problems, damaged interior walls
and foundation problems (each 5%.)
Nationwide, rental properties have
more problems than owner-occupied
dwellings,  and  inner-city  housing
does  worse  than  suburban  apart-
ments  and  homes.  A  big  factor:  age.
Inner-city rentals are typically older. 
The  ve  metro  areas that  had  the
least  problems    San  Jose;  Indian-
apolis;  Anaheim-Santa  Ana,  Calif.;
Tampa-St.  Petersburg-Clearwater;
and  Phoenix    tend  to  have  newer
homes.  The  three  with  the  least
healthy  conditions  were  San  Anto-
nio; Birmingham, Ala.; and Memphis.
The  report  documents  that
healthy  homes  remain  elusive  for  far
too  many,  Nicolas  Retsinas,  a  hous-
ing  expert  at  Harvard  Business
School, said in a statement.
The  scorecard  is  based  on  20
health-related  housing  characteris-
tics in the Census Bureaus American
Housing  Survey.  The  list  also  in-
cludes  rats,  peeling  paint,  holes  in
walls  and  broken  toilets.  The  Census
surveys  were  done  between  2004
and 2011.
In  December,  Morley  says,  her
group  will  release  the  National
Healthy  Housing  Standard,  which
others can adopt as a property main-
tenance  code.  She  says  that  Depart-
ment  of  Housing  and  Urban
Development  properties  have  codes
and  are  often  in  better  condition
than similar non-HUD housing.
MICE,  LEAKS,  HOLES:
40%  OF  METRO  HOMES
HAVE  SOME  HAZARD
Bad housing conditions
are worrisome trend
and pose health risks
Wendy Koch
@wendykoch
USATODAY
About 130,000 commuters in Con-
necticut will wake up this morning to
marginally  improved  rail  service  to
New  York  after  ocials  wrestling
over  the  weekend  with  a  power  out-
rage  managed  to  restore  what  they
hope  will  be  about  50%  of  normal
operations.
There will be noticeable improve-
ment in the frequency of trains, Aar-
on  Donovan,  a  Metro-North
spokesman, said about the commuter
railways  New  Haven  line.  The  line
feeds  passengers  from  38  stations  in
23  towns  to  New  Yorks  Grand  Cen-
tral Station. 
Metro-North  is  the  nations  sec-
ond busiest commuter rail line (after
the  Long  Island  Rail  Road)  and  o-
cials  were  anticipating  that  those
trains available would be jammed to-
day.  They  encouraged  commuters  to
avoid rush hour if possible. 
Highways  were  jammed  last  week
with  people driving  to  work  after  the
power  outage  Wednesday  slashed
Metro-North  commuter  service  to
about a third of usual capacity. 
Amtrak  trains  running  between
Boston  and  New  York  were  delayed
up  to  90  minutes.  Amtrak  ocials
said  Sunday  that  the  New  York-to-
Boston  Acela  Express  will  resume
service this morning. 
Meanwhile,  regional  Amtrak
trains  through  that  corridor,  which
switched  to  diesel    a  process  that
has  caused  delays  of  up  to  90  min-
utes    will  continue  to  operate  that
way  and  delays  may  continue,  Am-
trak spokesman Craig Schultz said. 
Con  Ed  spokesman  Allan  Drury
said  the  cause of  the  power  failure  to
the  rail  line  has  not  yet  been  deter-
mined. Right now, the focus is on re-
storing power to the tracks, he says. 
Crews  set  up  a  temporary  power
substation  in  Harrison,  N.Y.,  to  allow
Metro-North to increase capacity for
today, he said.
The  stricken  8-mile  section  of
track  is  between  Harrison  and
Mount Vernon, N.Y. 
Full  power  should  be  restored  by
Oct.  7  and  full  train  service  the  day
after,  a  week  ahead  of  what  Con  Ed
had planned, Drury said Sunday. 
Contributing: The Associated Press
Metro-North rail service at 50% 
Ocials still urge riders
to steer clear of travel
during rush hour
Gregg Zoroya
USATODAY
LINDSAY PERRY, THE CONNECTICUT POST, VIA AP
Riders board a train in Stamford, Conn.
F
4A NEWS
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON It has been 17 years
since the federal government last
faced a partial shutdown because
Congress and the president couldnt
agree on a spending bill. A lot has
changed in that time, leaving federal
employees, citizens and even govern-
ment decision-makers confused
about what a shutdown would mean.
Every shutdown is dierent. The
politics that cause them are dierent.
Because of technology and structural
overhauls, the way the government
functions has changed since 1996.
Much of what will happen is
unknown.
Heres what we do know about
Tuesdays looming shutdown:
THE BASICS
1. What causes a shutdown?
Under the Constitution, Congress
must pass laws to spend money. If
Congress cant agree on a spending
bill  or if, in the case of the Clinton-
era shutdowns, the president vetoes
it  the government does not have
the legal authority to spend money.
2. Whats a continuing resolu-
tion? Congress used to spend money
by passing a budget rst, then 12
separate appropriations bills. That
process has broken down. Congress
uses a stopgap continuing resolution,
or CR, that keeps spending at current
levels for all or part of the year.
3. Why cant Congress agree?
The GOP-controlled House has
passed a spending bill that maintains
spending levels but does not provide
funding to implement the Aordable
Care Act, or Obamacare. The Dem-
ocratic Senate insists that the pro-
gram be fully funded and that
Congress pass what they call a
clean CR.
4. What is a clean CR? A
continuing resolution without policy
changes.
5. Why is this happening now?
The government runs on a scal year
from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30. Shutdowns
can happen at other times of the year
when Congress passes a partial-year
spending bill.
6. Could government agencies
ignore the shutdown? Under a
federal law known as the Anti-De-
ciency Act, it can be a felony to spend
taxpayer money without an appro-
priation from Congress.
7. When will a shutdown be-
gin? When the scal year ends at
midnight today. Most federal work-
ers would report to work Tuesday,
but unless theyre deemed essen-
tial, they would work no more than
four hours on shutdown-related
activities before being furloughed.
8. When will the shutdown
end? Immediately after the presi-
dent signs a spending bill. As a prac-
tical matter, it could be noon the
following day before most govern-
ment oces that were shut down
would reopen their doors.
9. How many times has the
government shut down in the
past? Since 1977, there have been 17
shutdowns, according to the Con-
gressional Research Service.
10. How long do shutdowns
usually last? Most last no more
than three days. Some less than a day.
11. When was the longest shut-
down in history? The longest was
also the most recent: from Dec. 16,
1995, through Jan. 5, 1996. 
12. Will this shutdown be dif-
ferent from those in the 1990s?
Yes. When the 1995 shutdown start-
ed, Congress had already passed
three of 13 appropriations bills.
(They funded military construction,
agriculture, and energy and water
projects.) Also, more government
services are automated.
THE DEBT LIMIT
13. Whats the dierence be-
tween a shutdown and a debt
crisis? In a shutdown, the govern-
ment lacks the legal authority to
spend money on non-essential ser-
vices. In a debt crisis, the govern-
ment is mandated to spend money 
but doesnt have the legal authority
to borrow the money to spend it.
14. Are the two related? Only by
timing, which is somewhat
coincidental.
15. When will the government
run out of borrowing authority?
Secretary of the Treasury Jacob Lew
says it could come as soon as Oct. 17.
16. Has the United States ever
defaulted on its debt before? No.
17. If the nation hits the debt
limit, will government shut
down? Thats a big unknown ques-
tion. The Treasury Department has
said the most likely scenario is that it
would delay payments, paying only
those bills it can aord, using daily
tax revenue.
GOVERNMENT SERVICES
18. Will I still get my mail? Yes.
The U.S. Postal Service functions as
an independent business unit.
19. Can I get a passport? Maybe,
but hurry. The State Department
says it has some funds outside the
annual congressional appropriation.
Consular operations domestically
and overseas will remain 100% oper-
ational as long as there are sucient
fees to support operations, the de-
partment says.
20. Can I visit national parks?
No. The National Park Service says
day visitors will be told to leave
immediately. Entrances will be shut. 
21. What about campers al-
ready in the parks? They will be
given two days to leave.
22. Will Washington museums
be open? The Smithsonian, the
National Zoo and the Holocaust
Museumwould be closed. Private
museums, such as the Newseum, the
Spy Museum and Mount Vernon,
would stay open. Rule of thumb: If
its usually free, its probably closed.
23. What about the Kennedy
Center for the Performing Arts?
The Kennedy Center does receive an
annual appropriation from Congress,
but also runs on ticket revenue and
endowment funds. The center ex-
pects to stay open.
24. What about the National
Archives? All archives and most
presidential libraries will be closed,
unless theyre operated by a private
foundation  as all pre-Herbert
Hoover presidential museums are.
The Federal Records Center Pro-
gram, which supports other agencies,
would continue to operate because it
uses a revolving fund.
25. Will the District of Colum-
bia shut down? The district does
not have complete autonomy and
relies on an appropriation from Con-
gress to operate. So during the shut-
downs in the 1990s, trash went
uncollected, and many city depart-
ments closed. In a departure from
past shutdowns, Mayor Vincent Gray
has informed the Oce of Manage-
ment and Budget that he has deemed
all city employees essential. The
districts own attorney general has
declared the mayors plan illegal.
26. Will the Patent and Trade-
mark Oce be open? Yes. The
oce can continue to operate o
user fees and other funds for at least
four weeks before having to close.
27. Will food safety inspec-
tions continue? Mostly. The Food
Safety and Inspection Service would
continue all safety-related activities.
The Grain Inspection, Packers and
Stockyards Administration would
continue inspections to the extent
theyre paid by user fees, but inabil-
ity to investigate alleged violations
could hamper corrective action in
the long term and could have an
immediate impact on members of
industry. The Food and Drug Ad-
ministration would limit its activities
but continue to monitor recalls and
conduct investigations.
28. Will the government still
release economic data? Probably.
The weekly unemployment claims
number would still come out, and the
September jobs report, due out Fri-
day, probably will, too. The Depart-
ment of Commerce reasons that
some of its data is so economically
sensitive that delaying it risks that it
will be leaked.
29. Will the government con-
tinue to enforce wage and
hour laws? The laws will still
be in eect, but the Depart-
ment of Labors Wage and
Hour Division would suspend
operations.
30. Will disaster re-
sponse be aected? No.
However, all non-disaster
grants  such as state and
local preparedness programs
would be postponed, the
Department of Homeland
Security says.
31. Will e-Verify be af-
fected? Yes. The government
system to allow companies to
voluntarily check the legal
work status of its employees
would be shut down.
GOVERNMENT BENEFITS
32. Will a shutdown put the
brakes on implementing the
Aordable Care Act, or Obama-
care? No. The state-run exchanges
for the uninsured would open as
scheduled Tuesday. The market-
places will be open on Tuesday, no
matter what, even if there is a gov-
ernment shutdown, President Oba-
ma said Friday.
33. Why not? Like Social Securi-
ty or Medicaid, Obamacare is a per-
manent entitlement that isnt subject
to annual funding by Congress.
Many of the core parts of the health
care law are funded through manda-
tory appropriations and wouldnt be
aected, Gary Cohen, the Health
and Human Services Department
ocial overseeing the health care
rollout, said last week.
34. Will seniors continue to
get Social Security benets? Yes.
Social Security is a mandatory spend-
ing program, and the people who
send those checks would continue to
work under a legal doctrine called
necessary implication.
35. Can I apply for Social Secu-
rity benets, appeal a denial of
benets, change my address or
sign up for direct deposit?Yes.
36. Can I get a new or replace-
ment Social Security card, bene-
t verication statement or
earnings record correction? No.
37. Will the government con-
tinue to pay unemployment
benets? Yes. The Employment and
Training Administration will con-
tinue to provide essential functions,
as occurred during the shutdown of
1995, according to the Department
of Labor contingency plan.
38. Will I be able to get food
stamps? Yes. The Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program
(SNAP) is funded through the Recov-
ery Act and from funds that dont
expire for another year, the U.S. De-
partment of Agriculture says.
39. What about WIC? No mon-
ey would be available to pay the
administrative costs of the Special
Supplemental Nutrition Program for
Women, Infants and Children. But
because its administered by states,
there may be state funds available.
40. And the federal school
lunch program? Schools are reim-
bursed for these costs on a monthly
basis and are allowed to carry over
funds from the previous scal year.
The USDA expects most schools will
be able to continue providing meals
through October.
41. What will happen to veter-
ans receiving compensation for
service- or combat-related
wounds and injuries? The Depart-
ment of Veterans Aairs said if the
shutdown continues into late Octo-
ber, it will run out of money for com-
pensation and pension checks to
more than 3.6 million veterans who
rely on the money to support
themselves.
42. Can I still get a federally
backed loan? Maybe not. Federal
loans for rural communities, small
business owners, families buying a
home will be frozen, Obama said
Friday.
43. Does that mean I cant get
an FHA mortgage? No. The Feder-
al Housing Administration says it
will endorse new loans under cur-
rent multi-year appropriation au-
thority in order to support the health
and stability of the U.S. mortgage
market.
44. Does that mean I cant get
a VA mortgage? No. The Depart-
ment of Veterans Aairs says loans
are funded via user fees and should
continue. However, during the last
shutdown, loan Guaranty certif-
icates of eligibility and certicates of
reasonable value were delayed.
45. Will deceased veterans still
be able to get a burial benet?
Yes. Burial benets, headstones and
death notices will still be available.
TAXES
46. Will the IRS continue to
collect taxes? Yes. All payments
would be processed.
47. Will my refund be delayed?
Possibly, especially if the taxpayer
les a paper return.
48. What about taxpayer assis-
tance? Walk-in assistance centers
and telephone hotlines would be
closed.
49. Im being audited by the
IRS. Will a shutdown aect me?
Yes. The IRS will suspend all audit
activities.
EMPLOYMENT
50. How many federal employ-
ees will be furloughed? The gov-
ernment has not given an ocial
estimate.
51. Does anyone have a guess?
J. David Cox, president of the Amer-
ican Federation of Government Em-
ployees, said that he expects the
number will be 800,000 to 1 million,
out of 2.1 million federal employees.
Thats consistent with a USA TODAY
analysis of 2011 shutdown contingen-
cy plans, which found that 59% of
non-defense government employees
would continue to work.
52. Why do some federal em-
ployees continue to work during
a shutdown? The law  or at least,
the Justice Departments interpreta-
tion of it  contains exemptions for
several classes of employees: The
biggest exemption is for employees
necessary to protect public health,
safety or property. But property
could include government data,
ongoing research experiments or
other intangibles. Political appoin-
tees are exempt because they cannot
be placed on leave by law. Employees
necessary for the president to carry
out his constitutional responsibilities
are exempt. Finally, employees
whose salaries are paid from sources
outside an annual spending bill can
still get paid and report to work.
53. Who decides which em-
ployees work and which go
home? Each agency is responsible
for coming up with its own con-
tingency plan, based on guidance
from the Oce of Management and
Budget and the Oce of Personnel
Management. Those plans are then
sent to the White House for review.
54. Will the president be paid
during a shutdown? Yes. The
presidents $400,000 salary is man-
datory spending. If furloughs begin
to aect the governments ability to
process payroll, his paycheck could
be delayed.
55. What about White House
sta? Some high-ranking presi-
dential appointees are exempt from
the Annual and Sick Leave Act of
1951, which means they can essen-
tially be made to work unpaid over-
time. Also, any employee necessary
for the president to carry out his
constitutional duties is exempt.
56. And the presidents per-
sonal aides? The White House has
90 staers who work in the resi-
dence. During a shutdown, 15 of
them would stay on the job.
57. Will Congress continue to
be paid during a shutdown? Yes.
The 27th Amendment to the Consti-
tution, ratied in 1992, holds that
No law, varying the compensation
for the services of the Senators and
Representatives, shall take eect,
until an election of representatives
shall have intervened. Intended to
prevent Congress from voting itself a
raise, it also prohibits a pay cut.
58. What about congressional
sta? Like other federal employees,
they would be deemed essential or
non-essential. Essential sta would
include those necessary to carry out
constitutional responsibilities, such
as the parliamentarians, or for pro-
tection of members, such as the
sergeants-at-arms. Sta of the appro-
priations committees may also be
needed to write the law that would
end the shutdown.
59. Will active-duty military
be furloughed? No. All active-duty
military are essential and should
report as scheduled Tuesday, the
Department of Defense said Friday.
60. Will civilian defense work-
ers be furloughed? About half of
them, or about 400,000, will be sent
home, according to the Defense
Departments contingency plan.
61. Will active-duty military
be paid during a shutdown? If a
shutdown lasts longer than a week,
the Pentagon might not be able to
process its payroll in time for the
Oct. 15 paychecks, Defense Depart-
ment Comptroller Robert Hale said
Friday. The House passed a separate
bill early Sunday that would appro-
priate money for active-duty and
reserve paychecks regardless of the
shutdown  and also pay for support
services to make sure they get paid.
That bill passed the House 422-0, but
still must go to the Senate.
62. Can federal employees
simply volunteer their services?
No. A 19th-century federal law for-
bids volunteers because the govern-
ment doesnt want them ling claims
for back pay after the shutdown is
over, according to a legal analysis by
Washington attorney Raymond
Natter.
63. Will federal workers get
paid retroactively, even if they
didnt work? Maybe. Congress
granted retroactive pay to furloughed
workers after shutdowns of the
mid-1990s; that wouldnt necessarily
happen again. I believe this time is
going to be much dierent. This is a
much dierent Congress than the
1995 Congress, said Cox, the federal
employee union president. 
THE LONG TERM
64. How much money will a
shutdown save taxpayers? Most
likely, it wouldnt. The Committee
for a Responsible Federal Budget
says shutdowns cost money in terms
of contingency planning, lost user
fees and back pay. A government
estimate after the shutdown in 1995-
96 estimated its cost at $1.4 billion.
65. What eect will a shut-
down have on the economy?
Economists say even a short shut-
down  of three or four days 
would begin to shave decimal points
o economic growth. A sustained
shutdown of three or four weeks
would do signicant economic dam-
age, economist Mark Zandi told
USA TODAY.
66. What about the stock mar-
ket? The Standard & Poors 500 fell
3.7% during the 1995-96 government
shutdown, according to S&P Capital
IQ. Stocks quickly rebounded after
the government got back to work,
rising 10.5% the month after the
shutdown ended.
Contributing: AdamShell, TimMullaney in
NewYork City; Gregg Zoroya in McLean,
Va.; Raju Chebiumof Gannett News Service;
Rick Maze and AndrewTilghman of Mil-
itary Times; Surae Chinn of WUSA-TVin
Washington; and the Associated Press
What will
happen if
stando cant
be resolved 
Gregory Korte
USATODAY
questions about the
government shutdown
ALEX BRANDON, AP
The National Air and Space Museum and other Smithsonian Institu-
tion museums would be closed during a federal shutdown. 
SHAHMARAI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Troops deployed in Afghanistan and
other active-duty servicemembers
would still report for duty Tuesday. 
KEVORK DJANSEZIAN, GETTY IMAGES
The Postal Service functions as
an independent business unit, so
mail delivery will continue if the
federal government shuts down. 
66
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 NEWS 5A
ALABAMAMontgomery: Maj. Gen.
Sheryl Gordon has retired after a
32-year career in the Alabama Army
National Guard during which she
became the rst and only female
general in the organizations history.
Gordon, 56, has also retired from a
long career as a teacher and adminis-
trator at Benjamin Russell High
School in Alexander City.
ALASKASitka: The Alaska Travel
Industry Association will hold its
annual conference here Oct. 8-10,
and the Sitka Convention and Visi-
tors Bureau needs volunteers to help
decorate the gym at the Sheldon
Jackson College campus for the nal
banquet. 
ARIZONATucson: Aswarm of bees
attacked people at a birthday party at
Fort Lowell Park. Fire crews found
about 20 people, including children,
with bee strings. All were treated at
the scene. 
ARKANSAS Texarkana: Interstate
49 from Texarkana to Shreveport,
La., is expected to be completed next
summer. The 36.25-mile stretch of
I-49 will extend from the Arkansas
border in Miller County to Interstate
220 in Shreveport. The overall pro-
ject connects Kansas City, Mo., with
Lafayette, La. 
CALIFORNIAAlpine: Asmall early-
morning earthquake rattled the area,
but there were no reports of damage
or injuries. The U.S. Geological Sur-
vey said the quake, with a prelimi-
nary magnitude of 3.5, struck just
before 1:41 a.m. local time Sunday
about 45 miles east of San Diego.
COLORADOFort Carson: This area
could experience a little more noise
this week as soldiers conduct gun-
nery exercises using live, large-cali-
ber weapons. Fort Carson
spokeswoman Dani Johnson said the
3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team,
4th Infantry Division will hold exer-
cises today through Thursday. 
CONNECTICUT Hartford: Police
are investigating a second acci-
dent in a month involving a
city-owned vehicle being used
after hours. City Corporation
Counsel and former city manager
Saundra Kee Borges and another
person were injured shortly after 2
a.m. Saturday when Borges take-
home, city-owned SUV was
struck by a hit-and-run driver
who ran a red light. 
DELAWARE Wilmington: Jakiya
McKoy, 7, the winner of the Little
Miss Hispanic Delaware contest, has
been stripped of her crown over
concerns that she is not Hispanic.
Pageant organizers require contes-
tants to be at least 25% Hispanic, and
she must prove that to have the
crown restored. 
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Howard
University reported enrollment is up
3% from last fall to 10,330. The uni-
versity is reporting the second largest
freshman class in 15 years, following
an overall decline last year of 5%. 
GEORGIAJekyll Island: The state
park will bring back free educational
classes on alligators next spring after
a trial run this summer drew 391
tourists. The classes were launched
to share with the public alligator
research conducted here.
HAWAII Hilo: The Na Pua Noeau
program at the University of Hawaii-
Hilo has received a half-million dol-
lar grant in support of its project to
increase the number of Native Ha-
waiian students entering health
elds. The three-year U.S. Depart-
ment of Education grant will help Na
Pua Noeau provide pathways to
health careers for students of Hawai-
ian ancestry. 
IDAHOBoise: ABureau of Land
Management smokejumper has died
in a parachuting accident while
training, the National Interagency
Fire Center said. Mark Urban died
when something went wrong with
the deployment of his parachute. 
ILLINOIS Arlington Heights: The
police department along with the
State Police and departments in
Chicago, Elk Grove Village, Lombard,
Schaumburg and Wineld will take
over from the FBI and run the in-
vestigation into the deaths of seven
people who swallowed cyanide-laced
Tylenol over three days in 1982. That
triggered a scare that prompted
stores nationwide to pull Tylenol
from their shelves. No one has been
charged in the deaths. 
INDIANAIndianapolis: New Gen-
eration Power of Chicago plans to
start work this fall on a 4-megawatt
solar array covering about 17 acres of
rooftop and parking lot at the former
Eastgate Consumer Mall. Alex Car-
roll purchased the mall in 2008 to
house Lifeline Data Centers, which
hosts data for regional companies. 
IOWADes Moines: State Agricul-
ture Secretary Bill Northey is en-
couraging residents to
visit apple orchards,
saying growers are
reporting apples
are maturing a
little ahead of
normal sched-
ule. A list of
apple growers
can be found on
the Iowa Depart-
ment of Agriculture
and Land Stew-
ardship website. 
KANSAS Wichita:
After years of drought, recent rainfall
in the far western part of the state
has bolstered topsoil moisture condi-
tions along with the hopes of farmers
as planting for the 2014 winter wheat
crop gets underway. 
KENTUCKYFrankfort: Repairs
began this month on the popular
Floral Clock at the Capitol. The
clock, which is 34 feet in diameter,
was placed on the grounds in 1961. 
LOUISIANANew Orleans: Only 2%
of toll violators on the Crescent City
Connection bridges have been ap-
proved for amnesty, meaning about
$16 million due in tolls and addition-
al charges will go to the attorney
generals oce for collection when
the amnesty oer expires Tuesday,
according to the state Department of
Transportation and Development.
About 6,400 violators had applied for
amnesty. 
MAINE Orono: Anew art studio
named for the Wyeth family of artists
was dedicated at the University of
Maine. The Wyeth Family Studio Art
Center honored the three genera-
tions of Wyeths whose paintings
have been inspired by Maine. 
MARYLANDFrederick: Police said
nearly $3.8 million in nes have been
issued through the citys red-light
camera system, which catches an
average of 17 violations every day.
The city has 12 cameras at nine in-
tersections. Violations at intersec-
tions with a camera fell by 55% from
July 2005 to July 2013. 
MASSACHUSETTS Boston: Com-
mercial developers seeking a resort
casino license in the southeastern
Massachusetts region have until the
end of today to submit preliminary
applications with the state gaming
commission. 
MICHIGANVienna Township: A
$60,000 park set to open today was
designed to be accessible to people
with disabilities. Among amenities
are benches, picnic tables, stainless
steel charcoal grills and cement
paths. The park also has two mon-
arch buttery gardens. 
MINNESOTAMinneapolis: Five
years after the state put restrictions
on teenagers driving licenses, the
Star Tribune reported, the number of
fatalities in crashes involving teen
drivers has been cut in half. The rules
restrict new drivers from driving
after midnight and limit the number
of teenage passengers they can carry. 
MISSISSIPPI Hattiesburg: Mayor
Johnny DuPree has won a fourth
term over challenger Dave Ware. The
nal margin was 202 votes. Ware
challenged a 37-vote loss in June; all
580 absentee ballots were thrown
out. The recount ended Saturday. 
MISSOURI Springeld: Potential
employees at hospital chain Cox-
Health will have to pass a nicotine
screening test that can detect nico-
tine from traditional sources, such as
cigarettes and chewing tobacco, as
well as newer products, including
e-cigarettes and nicotine patches. 
MONTANAKalispell: The U.S.
Forest Service has banned recre-
ational sport shooting, including the
discharge of rearms, air ries
and gas guns, in the Coram
Experimental Forest because of
public-safety concerns. The ban
does not apply to legal hunting
activities. The Coram Experi-
mental Forest is a research and
recreation area in the Hungry
Horse Ranger District of the
Flathead National Forest. 
NEBRASKAAshland: A2014
mountain lion permit will be
auctioned o during the Big
Game Societys fall meeting.
Along with the permit, the Big
Game Society oers to provide
a guide with dogs, territory to
hunt and up to four nights of
lodging for the winning bidder. 
NEVADAReno: The Department of
Justice awarded a $750,000 grant to
the city to hire six law enforcement
and school safety ocers. U.S. At-
torney for Nevada Daniel Bogden
said keeping schoolchildren safe is
of critical importance and the grant
will help provide Reno with the re-
sources to help accomplish that goal. 
NEW HAMPSHIRE Hanover: Dart-
mouth College is opening a new
center to help students become en-
trepreneurs in business and social
ventures. The Innovation Center and
New Venture Incubator is expected
to open early next year. Donors in-
cluding rms in information technol-
ogy, private equity and venture
capital provided $2.6 million in fund-
ing to open and run the center. 
NEW JERSEYNewark: Shaquille
ONeal is partnering with Boraie
Development to build a high-rise
apartment building downtown. The
NBA star and Newark native last year
opened a new movie theater after a
$7 million renovation. 
NEW MEXICOSanta Fe: The Santa
Fe River is owing again. City o-
cials said the river will likely ow for
at least another week thanks to re-
cent rains and planned upgrades to
the Nichols Reservoir. 
NEW YORKRochester: State At-
torney General Eric Schneidermans
oce is sponsoring a statewide gun
buyback program where people can
turn in weapons for debit cards.
Sites: Binghamton, Poughkeepsie,
Utica, Yonkers and Cheektowaga. 
NORTH CAROLINARaleigh: North
Carolina State University received
the largest single contribution in
school history, a $50 million gift
from the Park Foundation aimed at
funding its Park Scholarships pro-
grams. 
NORTH DAKOTAWishek: Theo-
dore Roosevelt National Park sold
more than 100 wild horses during a
weekend auction aimed at thinning
the herd to a size the park can ac-
commodate. Horses commanded as
much as $1,200 to $2,800, but most
sold for about $450. Proceeds after
commission go back to the park for
the horse program. 
OHIOColumbus: The speed limit
increased on more than 600 miles of
roads over the weekend in the states
second round of
increases this
year. The legisla-
tion raises the
speed limits to
70 mph on rural
freeways, 60
mph on rural
divided high-
ways and 65
mph on rural
expressways
that dont have
trac control
signals. 
OKLAHOMA
McAlester: The
Oklahoma State
Bureau of Investigation was asked by
Pittsburg County authorities to look
into the stabbing of a man. John
Edgar Oscar Young, 56, was
stabbed, then run over with a vehicle,
during a ght Saturday. Young sur-
vived the incident.
OREGONSalem: Aman was con-
victed for the third time in the death
of his daughter in 2002, the States-
man Journal reported. Terry Dean
Davis pleaded no contest to man-
slaughter and was sentenced to 10
years in prison. His rst two convic-
tions had been overturned. 
PENNSYLVANIABensalem: Police
said a reghter in training from the
Philadelphia suburbs faces arson
charges after he allegedly paid a
friend $200 to set a re in the laun-
dry room of an apartment building.
Authorities said Alberto Acevedo, 19,
was allegedly connected to a pair of
res in the building on Aug. 20. No
one was injured in the res. 
RHODE ISLANDProvidence: Three
people were injured in an early
morning shooting here. City police
told WPRI-TV that ocers were
called to Chalkstone Avenue at about
2:30 a.m. Sunday and found three
men who had been shot. No arrests
have been announced. 
SOUTH CAROLINACharleston:
Bennie, Carrie and Jerry, three black
bear cubs found abandoned in a box
in the mountains on March 1, will be
returned to the woods in November,
according to Appalachian Bear Res-
cue. No one knows who placed the
cubs, who have grown from from less
than 3 pounds each to 70 pounds
apiece, in the box. 
SOUTH DAKOTASioux Falls: Thou-
sands of runners wearing pink gath-
ered in support of trying to nd a
cure for breast cancer. Susan G. Ko-
men Race for the Cure relocated here
last year from Vermillion. 
TENNESSEE Memphis: The small,
historically black LeMoyne-Owen
College is trying to recruit more
non-black students to its campus.
About 2% of the 1,100 students are
from other races and ethics groups.
The college sprang from a makeshift
school for freed slaves 150 years ago. 
TEXAS Waco: The case of the pur-
loined barbecue pit has come to an
end. The 16-foot-long pit was found
in a back alley after being stolen
along with its trailer from a non-
prot group. The pit, valued at
$7,500, was being oered by the
Brazos Education Foundation as the
grand prize of a scholarship rae.
Thieves stripped it of the rims, cut-
ting boards and meat racks. 
UTAHRoosevelt: The Union High
School football team returned to the
eld after unique suspensions for
o-eld misconduct. Coach Matt
Labrum took away the entire teams
jerseys because of problems of skip-
ping classes, not doing homework,
bullying classmates over the Internet
and disrespecting teachers. The team
was ordered to pull weeds, wash
windows and visit two nursing
homes. Labrum reinstated most
players after they memorized and
recited a quote on how character is
much more important than talent. 
VERMONT Bethel: After being hit
hard by Tropical Storm Irene two
years ago, the town is stepping up its
emergency preparedness. A town
emergency management cadre is
visiting every home to provide in-
formation and guidance regarding
risk mitigation, personal preparation
and the basic elements of the towns
emergency management plan. 
VIRGINIANorfolk: The Virginia
Zoo is seeking volunteers and ven-
dors for Zoo Boo, an Oct. 26 event
that is designed to give kids a safe
environment for trick or treating. 
WASHINGTONTacoma: Saturdays
rain set records across the western
part of the state, from Olympia to
Bellingham. Record rainfall of
1.71 inches was recorded at Seattle-
Tacoma International Airport, more
than double the old record of 0.83 of
an inch set in 1948. A record rainfall
of 2.93 inches was set in Olympia,
breaking the 0.82 of an inch in 1971. 
WEST VIRGINIAHuntington: No
one would have blamed Sarah Toney
if she decided to take the year o
from pharmacy school at Marshall
University. She sustained critical
injuries in a May 2 accident on the
West Virginia Turnpike. But four
months later  with a cane, major
scars and an elbow that wont bend 
Sarah Toney returned to school for
the fall semester because she wanted
to remain with her classmates, all of
whom are part of the rst class to
attend Marshalls School of
Pharmacy.
WISCONSINMilwaukee: Garden
Fresh Foods recalled 19,000 pounds
of ready-to-eat chicken and ham
products distributed nationwide
because of possible Listeria bacteria
contamination. Aected products
were sold under the Market Pantry,
Archer Farms, DAmico and Sons,
Finest Traditions, Garden Fresh and
Weis brands. The problem was dis-
covered through testing; there are no
reports of illnesses.
WYOMINGCheyenne: Raymond A.
Johnson is the latest inductee into
the Aviation Hall of Fame. Johnson
did it all, from barnstorming and
crop dusting to testing military jets
and serving as one of the rst pilot
instructors for the U.S. Air Force. No
date has been set for his induction
ceremony.
Compiled fromstaand wire reports by
TimWendel, Fred Anklamand Dennis
Lyons. Design by George Petras. Graphics
by Alejandro Gonzalez.
News from across the USA
6A NEWS
  USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
STATE-BY-STATE
TITUSVILLE If shes ever confront-
ed in the darkness by a home invad-
er  or  parking-lot  prowler,  Holly
Young  is  determined:  She  does  not
want to be an easy target.
I  just  choose  to  carry  a  rearm
because  I  dont  want  to  be  a  vic-
tim,  said  Young,  founder  of  the
Brevard  County,  Fla.,  chapter  of  a
growing  organization  called  The
Well Armed Woman.
Riding  a  nationwide  trend  of  ris-
ing female gun ownership, The Well
Armed  Woman  introduces  women
to target practice and classroom in-
struction on rearm safety and per-
sonal self-defense techniques.
It  is  a  non-political  group.  We
make sure that we stress that its all
about  safety.  We  have  a  motto:
equip,  empower  and  educate  wom-
en  on  rearms,  said  Young,  who
owns a 9mm pistol and .380-caliber
handgun, among other weapons.
According  to  Gallup  Poll  data,
the percentage of American women
who  own  a  rearm  nearly  doubled
from  2005 to  2011,  rising  from  13%
to  23%.  Last  month,  the  National
Shooting  Sports  Foundation re-
ported  that  37%  of  new  target
shooters  are  female,  though  they
comprise  only  22%  of  the  estab-
lished target-shooting population.
The  Well  Armed  Woman  was
founded  in  2012  by  Carrie  Light-
foot,  a  Scottsdale,  Ariz.,  pistol  in-
structor  who  sells  female-themed
gun  accessories.  The  organization
has  about  3,000  dues-paying  mem-
bers  in  107  chapters  across  37
states.
With  nine  chapters  in  Florida,
The  Well
Armed
Woman  had
to  impose
member-
ship  caps  in  Yuma,  Ariz.;  Cherokee
County,  Ga.;  Macon  County,  Ill.;
and Wendell, N.C.
Florida  has  been  a  focal  point  in
debate  over  the  use  of  deadly  force
for  self-defense.  The  George  Zim-
merman  murder  trial  generated
sensational  headlines,  and  the
Stand  Your  Ground  debate  still  fo-
cuses  on  last  years  conviction  of
Marissa  Alexander,  a  Jacksonville
mother  of  three  who  received  20
years  in  prison  after  ring  a  warn-
ing  shot  during  a  dispute  with  her
then-husband. 
On  the  other  side  of  the  gun  is-
sue,  a  group  called  Moms  Demand
Action  for  Gun  Sense  in  America
was  founded  by  Shannon  Watts,  an
Indianapolis mother of ve, the day
after  the  Sandy  Hook  shootings  in
December.  Her  organization  has
more than 100,000 members across
the  country,  and  she  said  the  gun
industrys  marketing  to  women  is  a
ploy to boost sales.
Watts cited a report released last
week that shows women who live in
a home  with  a  gun  were  nearly
three  times  as  likely  to  be  mur-
dered than females without one.
We support the Second Amend-
ment  and  the  right  to  bear  arms  
but women shouldnt be fooled into
thinking  that  makes  them  safer,
Watts said. 
Neale also reports for Florida Today in
Melbourne.
Group caters to well-armed women
HIGHLIGHT: FLORIDA
Rick Neale
USATODAY
FLORIDA TODAY
Sylvia Kendrick res at a target with a pistol, as part of the Bre-
vard County chapter of The Well Armed Women.
in  America
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 NEWS 7A
8A NEWS
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
OPINION
Aaron Alexis, the nations most re-
cent mass  murderer,  had something
in  common  with  the  nations  most
prolic leaker of national security se-
crets,  Edward  Snowden.  Each  had  a
national  security  clearance    Alexis
to  his  killing  ground  at  the  Washing-
ton Navy Yard, and Snowden to a vast
collection of top secret data.
Its  enough  to  make  you  wonder
how easily a highly trained spy might
penetrate  the  government,  and  the
closer  you  look,  the  more  troubling
the  potential  appears.  Even  in  the
best light, the system for vetting peo-
ple appears slipshod.
Snowden,  a  high  school  dropout
who  worked  for  the  government  and
then  a  private  contractor,  had  his
top-secret clearance renewed in 2011
based  on  interviews  with  just  two
people: his mother and his girlfriend,
The Wall Street Journal reported. 
Alexis  won  his  security  clearance
in  2008  despite  lying  about  a  2004
arrest for  shooting  out  the  tires  of  a
man with whom he had been feuding
and getting caught in that lie. 
Two  cases,  no  matter  how  embar-
rassing,  dont  make  a  trend.  But
theres  ample  reason  to  see  them  as
evidence  of  deep  systemic  problems,
not aberrations: 
uThe  federal  Oce  of  Personnel
Management completed  an astound-
ing  87%  of  its  investigations  with  re-
quired documents missing, according
to  a  sampling  in  2008  by  Congress
Government  Accountability  Oce.
Just  as  alarming,  fewer  than  1%  of
les  were  sent  back  for  more  data  in
2007  by  the  Defense  Department,
which makes the clearance decisions.
uWhile OPM handles background
checks  and  Defense  grants  clear-
ances,  the  Director  of  National  In-
telligence  is  ultimately  in  charge of
policy  and  oversight. Which  means
that  when  something  goes  very
wrong    as  it  did  with  Snowden  and
Alexis  each agency has a scapegoat.
Its a recipe for no accountability.
uThe  number  of  people  with  se-
curity  clearances  is  unmanageably
huge.  About  4.9  million  people,  in-
cluding  employees  of  private  con-
tractors,  like  Snowden,  hold  some
level  of  security  clearance,  and  the
numbers  are  growing.  Last  year,
OPM did 50% more top-secret inves-
tigations  and  reviews  than  in  2005.
To cope with the overload, OPM out-
sources three of every four investiga-
tions  to  private  rms.  The  biggest
contractor,  USIS,  which  handled  the
Snowden  and  Alexis  checks,  is  itself
under investigation for allegedly fail-
ing  to  adequately  conduct  back-
ground investigations.
uClearances  like  the  one  held  by
Alexis  are  valid  for  a  decade   a  long
time to trust that nothing will change
in a persons life.
In all, it must sound like heaven to
a spy.  Clearance  is  readily  obtained,
vetting can be cursory, information is
loosely  secured  and  accountability  is
diuse. 
Since  the  Navy  Yard  shootings,  of-
cials  in  many  of  the  agencies  in-
volved  have  scurried  to  investigate
and promise reforms. But they have a
credibility problem. This mess had to
be  obvious  to  insiders,  who  ignored
it.  The  scale  also  suggests  it  cant  be
easily xed.
Meanwhile,  theres  no  telling  who
might  have  access  to  secret  informa-
tion. Most malefactors arent going to
shoot  up  a  Navy  yard  like  Alexis  or
give  it  to  the  public  like  Snowden.
Theyll  just  spirit  the  secrets  away.
TODAY'S DEBATE BACKGROUND CHECKS
Our view
Shooter and leaker expose
flaws in security clearances
Cursory vetting,
slipshod reviews
MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES
The front gate of the Washington Navy Yard.
The  senseless  attack  at  the
Washington  Navy  Yard  was  a  trag-
edy  deeply  felt  by  all  of  us  in  the
federal  government  and  around
the  nation.  On  behalf  of  the  Oce
of  Personnel  Management  (OPM)
and  the  federal  community,  our
deepest  sympathies  go  out  to  the
families,  friends  and  colleagues  of
the victims.
Anytime  such  tragedy  strikes,  it
is important to uncover how such a
thing  could  occur  and  determine
what  we  can  do  to  prevent  it  from
happening again.
Legitimate  questions  are  being
asked  about  the  suciency  of  the
standards  governing  investiga-
tions, how often individuals should
be  subject  to  reinvestigation,  and
what  should  be  done  when  new  is-
sues  arise  after  a  clearance  is
granted.
Some  have  also  raised  questions
about  the  adequacy  of  our  quality
control  process  and  the  extent  to
which  there  is  a  suciently  robust
exchange  of  information  among
federal,  state  and  local
governments.
Since  2005,  our  agency has
worked  in  conjunction  with  other
federal  agencies  to  improve  the
governments vetting processes.
The Government Accountability
Oce  has  recognized  our  progress
in  this  area,  as  well  as  continuing
areas for improvement, but we will
continue  to  work  closely  with  oth-
er  agencies  to  set  the  right  stan-
dards  for  quality,  while  meeting
congressional mandates for timeli-
ness  within  given  budget
constraints.
These  eorts  and  others  con-
tinue.  Last  week,  the  president  di-
rected  the  Oce  of  Management
and  Budget  to  conduct  a  review  of
our  security  processes.  We  look
forward  to  supporting  OMB  in
those eorts.
We will also continue working to
ensure  that  all  of  our  partners  in
the  investigations  program  adhere
to  our  high  standards  of  integrity.
OPM  does  not  tolerate  fraud  or
falsication.
Our  integrity  assurance  pro-
gram  identies,  investigates and
presents  all  potential  fraud  cases
to  the  U.S.  Attorney  for  prosecu-
tion. We also work closely with our
inspector  general  to  ensure  that
the  program  addresses  fraud  and
adheres to our standards.
We  plan  to  develop  recommen-
dations and put in place safeguards
that  address  these  issues.  This
process will help us learn from this
tragic  event  and  hopefully  put  re-
forms in place to prevent this from
ever happening again.
Elaine Kaplan is the acting direc-
tor  of  the  U.S.  Oce  of  Personnel
Management.
Opposing view
Were improving
the vetting process
Security review
will help us
learn from the
tragedy at the
Navy Yard
Elaine Kaplan
EDITOR IN CHIEF
David Callaway
EXECUTIVE EDITORS
Susan Weiss, David Colton, 
Beryl Love
EDITOR, EDITORIAL PAGE
Brian Gallagher
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT/GENERAL MANAGER
Derek Murphy
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT/MARKETING
Sandra Cordova Micek
VICE PRESIDENT/FINANCE
Susan Motiff
PRESIDENT, ADVERTISING PRESIDENT, OPERATIONS 
Mary Murcko Evan Ray
"USA TODAY hopes to serve as a
forum for better understanding
and unity to help make the USA
truly one nation."
Allen H. Neuharth,
Founder, Sept. 15, 1982
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER
Larry Kramer
This  morning,  the  justices  of  the
U.S.  Supreme  Court  will  gather  in
their  secluded  conference  room  to
outline the courts fall term. One task
before  them  involves  a  legal  Gordian
knot,  a  clash  of  institutional  good  in-
tentions. At stake is a mans life. 
The justices will decide whether to
accept  the  case  of  Warren  Lee  Hill,  a
condemned  Georgia  inmate  who  has
exhausted appeals to spare him from
execution on the grounds of his men-
tal  capacity.  After  two  trials,  theres
no doubt he is a killer. Theres also no
doubt  he  is  intellectually  disabled
and  should  be  protected  from  execu-
tion by a 2002 Supreme Court ruling. 
Unless  the  Supreme  Court  acts,
Hill  may  die  because  federal  courts
are  trying  to  do  a  better  job.  They
have  tightened  appeals  access,  se-
verely  limiting  the  admission  of  evi-
dence  and  claims,  in  an  attempt  to
weed  out  frivolous  cases.  The  rules
have  had  undeniably  benecial  ef-
fects  on  court  caseloads,  but  unin-
tended  and  grave  consequences  in
the Hill case.
BRUTAL MURDER
Hill  was  already  serving a  life  sen-
tence for the murder of his girlfriend
when  he  bludgeoned  a  fellow  inmate
to death with a nail-studded board in
1990.  His  court-appointed  lawyers
unknowingly missed vital evidence of
Hills mental incapacity at the time of
his  trial.  They  didnt  have  the  funds
to  send  an  investigator  to  Hills  ele-
mentary  school,  so  they  relied  on
records  mailed  to  them.  Those  rec-
ords did not include IQ tests showing
a score  of  70. The  jurors  who  sen-
tenced  Hill  to  die  heard  no  evidence
of retardation, the term used by the
courts. 
The  school  records  had  still  not
surfaced  at  the  time  of  a  2000  post-
conviction  hearing.  Hills  lawyers
made  a  mental  retardation  claim
bolstered  by  the  testimony  of  four
mental  health professionals who had
examined Hill, but three others testi-
ed that Hill was not retarded. 
Then this year, Hills defense team
unearthed  the  elementary  school
records  and  had  them  examined  by
the  experts  who  had  testied  at  the
2000 hearing. The three doubters re-
thought their conclusions in the light
of  the  test  results  and  access  to  bet-
ter  science in  the  intervening  years.
Now  the  tally  was  7  to  0  unani-
mous    but  not  good  enough  for  the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Cir-
cuit. In April, the court ruled that the
evidence  from  the  experts  might  be
new,  but  Hills  claim  of  retardation
was  not and  could  not  be  considered
again. 
NO MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE
Two  members  of  the  three-judge
panel said their hands were tied, both
by legal precedents closing the ood-
gates on appeals and by federal legis-
lation  designed  to  ensure  a  greater
degree  of  nality  in  death-penalty
convictions.  They  also  delivered  this
double-whammy: Hills new evidence
does  not  establish  a  miscarriage  of
justice  because  it  aects  only  his
sentence,  not  his  guilt  or  innocence.
Only his life, in other words.
When  the  Supreme  Court  justices
meet today, their challenge is to untie
this impossible legal tangle.
It  is  a  challenge  perhaps  best  ex-
pressed  by  the  lone  dissenter  on  the
11th  circuit  panel,  Judge  Rosemary
Barkett.  She  wrote,  The  idea  that
courts are not permitted to acknowl-
edge  that  a  mistake  has  been  made
which  would  bar  an  execution  is
quite  incredible  for  a  country  that
not  only  prides  itself  on  having  the
quintessential  system  of  justice  but
attempts to export it to the world as a
model of fairness.
Martin  Clancy  is  co-author  of  a
new  book  on  the  death  penalty,  Mur-
der  at  the  Supreme  Court:  Lethal
Crimes  and  Landmark  Cases.
Supreme Court Catch-22:
Evidence doesnt count
Obscure rules
undermine justice
Martin Clancy
A
recent  CNBC  poll  found
more  Americans  oppose
ObamaCare  than  oppose
the Aordable Care Act. But
more  Americans  support  Obama-
Care than the Aordable Care Act.
Confused? 
That would be understandable giv-
en  that  these  are  two  names  for  the
same law. CNBC polled two dierent
groups,  using  ObamaCare  for  one
and  Aordable  Care  Act  for  the
other.  Forty-six  percent  of  the  group
asked  about  ObamaCare  opposed
it. But only 37% of those asked about
the health law opposed it. 
Conversely,  ObamaCare  had  high-
er  support  than  the  law.  As  CNBC
put it, Obamas name raises the pos-
itives and the negatives.
As  a  rational  matter,  this  is  nuts.
An  informed  person  should  have  the
same opinions  positive or negative
about a piece of legislation regard-
less  of  what  its  called.  But  because
politics is so often driven by our atti-
tudes  toward  specic  personalities,
for  many  Americans,  their  attitudes
toward  a  monumentally  signicant
piece  of  legislation  are  driven  by
something  as  petty  as  whether  Oba-
ma is in the title.
But  its  worse  than  that.  The  same
poll  found  that  30%  of  respondents
didnt  know  what  the  Aordable
Care Act is  while only 12% didnt
know what ObamaCare is.
This  after  years  of  relentless  de-
bate,  and  both  a  midterm  and  presi-
dential election in which ObamaCare
was one of the central issues. 
ILL-INFORMED CITIZENS
Unfortunately,  public  ignorance  is
hardly  specic  to  ObamaCare,  nor  is
it merely the stu of Jay Lenos Jay-
walking  interviews,  in  which  he
nds  people  who  think  that  America
declared  our  independence  from
Greece and  that  Winston  Churchill
was  the  commander  of  the  Revolu-
tionary Army.
AHarris Poll for the American Bar
Association  in  2005  found  that  22%
of  respondents  thought  the  three
branches  of  government  were  Re-
publican,  Democrat  and  Indepen-
dent.  Two-thirds  of  Americans
couldnt  name  a  single  sitting  Su-
preme  Court  justice  in  2003,  and
fewer  than  1%  could  name  all  nine.
In  1987,  about  half of  Americans
thought  Karl  Marxs  dictum  from
each  according  to  his  ability  to  each
according  to  his  needs  was  in  the
U.S.  Constitution.  In  1964,  only  38%
of  the  American  people  were  certain
the Soviet Union wasnt in NATO. 
Regardless  of  partisan  agendas,
this  is  a  huge  problem,  but  we  dont
hear  much  about  it  because  one  of
the  drawbacks  of  democracy  is  that
politicians  will  never  insult  the  cus-
tomers.  Worse,  virtually  all  the  con-
ventional  wisdom,  not  to  mention
academic  and  media  gasbaggery,  is
that the biggest problem with our po-
litical  system  is  that  not  enough
Americans  are  participating,  even
though its a good bet that if you dont
know  anything  about  politics  or  cur-
rent events, youre less likely to vote.
On  the  other  hand,  its  important
to  recognize  that  ignorance  and  stu-
pidity  are  not  the  same  thing.  I  am
deeply  ignorant  about  the  mysteri-
ously dull game of cricket. That prob-
ably  means  I  shouldnt  vote  on  who
should be inducted to the cricket hall
of  fame  (assuming  such  a  thing  ex-
ists). But that doesnt mean Im igno-
rant about other things. 
VOTING AND KNOWLEDGE
Personally,  I  think  that  before  you
vote,  you  have  an  obligation  to  be-
come  knowledgeable  about  the  is-
sues.  But  I  also  think  theres  nothing
wrong,  in  principle,  with  not  voting
at  all.  Indeed,  for  much  of  U.S.  histo-
ry, people could live deeply enriching
and  productive  lives  without  know-
ing  or  caring  much  about  politics,
particularly at the national level. 
However,  over  the  course  of  the
20th    and  now  21st    century,  the
state,  and  therefore  politics,  has  en-
croached  deeper  and  deeper  into  ev-
ery nook and cranny of American life.
Many  on  the  right  say  low-infor-
mation  voters  are  a  bigger  problem
for  Republicans  because  ignorant
voters  tend  to  go  with  emotion,  and
Democrats  and  the  news  media  have
grown  adept  at  manipulating  the
public  to  think  that  the  only  good
vote  is  a  vote  for  more  government.
Theres a lot of truth to that.
But  public  ignorance  is  a  problem
for  Democrats,  as  well.  According  to
a Kaiser  Family  Foundation  poll last
week,  a  whopping  64%  of  Americans
didnt  know  that  ObamaCare  goes
into  eect  Tuesday.  This  is  despite
huge  news  coverage  and  massive  ef-
forts  to  educate  the  public.  If  people
dont  sign  up  for  the  program    and
soon  it will fall apart. 
It turns out that whipping up emo-
tions  around  election  time  is  a  lot
easier  than  holding  the  publics  at-
tention after the elections are over. 
Jonah  Goldberg,  fellow  at  the
American  Enterprise  Institute  and
National  Review  contributing  editor,
is  author  of The  Tyranny  of  Clichs,
now  out  in  paperback.  He  is  also  a
member  of  USA  TODAYs  Board  of
Contributors.
Jonah Goldberg
PUBLIC LACKS
GRASP OF
OBAMACARE
Unfortunately, voters ignorance is hardly
restricted to the Aordable Care Act.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, AP
In a CNBC poll, 46% asked about ObamaCare opposed it. But only
37% of those asked about the Aordable Care Act opposed it. 
We asked our Twitter followers
what theythought of thehistoric
phone  call   between  President
ObamaandIrans newleader.
TWITTER
@USATOPINION
I dont thinkit meansmuchof any-
thing. Iranis goingtotakeadvan-
tage of President Obamas weak
foreignpolicy, sameasbefore.
@stealthgun52e
Yes, this action was a signicant
advance because USA and Iran
needtoknoweachother more.
@EHSadeghi
I   hope  Iranian  President  Hasan
Rouhani   can  develop  a  thicker
skinquicklybecausehawkswill try
very  hard  to  drive  wedges  be-
tweenthesides.
@Sr0bi
Well, itll likely accomplish more
than grandstanding, threats and
empty  rhetoric.   Lets  see  where
thisgoes.
@SavvySongbird
Thecall is agoodbaby steptofu-
ture, more substantial meetings
facetoface.
@Alnhochs
For more of this discussion, fol-
low @USATOpinion or #tellusa-
todayonTwitter.
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013   NEWS 9A
Have Your Say at letters@usatoday.com, facebook.com/usatodayopinion and @USATOpinion
on Twitter. All comments are edited for length and clarity. Content submitted to USATODAY
may appear in print, digital or other forms. For letters, include name, veriable address and phone
number. Letters may also be mailed to 7950 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA, 22108. TO COMMENT
BOB GORRELL, CREATORS SYNDICATE
TOON TALK
YOUR SAY   Tracking the nations conversation
Legal pharmaceuticals
also carry health risks
Does Irans effort to warm
up to the West ring true?
Some skepticismgreets Rouhanis overtures
Why has USATODAY
joined the witchhunt
against natural supplements? Your
article Pain pills mask deadly
whodunit is not the rst such
article I have read (News, Wednes-
day). While there is a need to nd
those who are harming people,
what about the pharmaceutical
companies?
Drug overdose deaths, mostly
fromlegal pharmaceuticals sup-
posedly vetted by the Food and
Drug Administration, have sur-
passed auto accidents as a cause of
accidental death in this country.
There is more of a need to revamp
the FDAand to rein in the phar-
maceutical companies.
Carolyn Carr
Newport Beach, Calif.
USATODAYs article on
painpills highlightsthe
dangers of Reumofan, an illegal
drug product that is unlawfully
marketed as a dietary supplement.
The article misleadingly identies
this tainted product as a dietary
supplement. However, it is un-
lawful for Reumofan and other
drug adulterated products to be
marketed as dietary supplements.
The Food and Drug Association
accurately refers to these products
as tainted products that masquer-
ade as dietary supplements.
The article also suggests that the
FDAneeds product registration
authority to prevent already-illegal
products such as Reumofan from
entering the U.S. marketplace.
However, companies involved in
these types of unlawful activities
are actively evading current laws
and regulations. Continuing en-
forcement of current laws and
regulations, including criminal
prosecution, would most efective-
ly address these situations.
The American Herbal Products
Association fully supports enforce-
ment of current laws and reg-
ulations to protect consumers
fromtainted products marketed as
dietary supplements.
Michael McGuffin, president
American Herbal Products Association
(AHPA); Silver Spring, Md.
LETTERS
LETTERS@USATODAY.COM
Charles M. Blow, The NewYork
Times: There is nothing between the
House and the president but a table
of cease-re and surrender at which
no one will sit. The House Republi-
can caucus is full of Captain Ahabs,
and President Obama is their Moby
Dick. ... Is the drive to destroy the leg-
acy of one president worth endanger-
ing the health of a nation? ... Around
the  last  time  the  Republicans  held
the economy hostage over the raising
of the debt ceiling in 2011, the Pew
Research Center found that only 18%
of Americans said they understood
very well the implications of not rais-
ing the limit. ... Congressional Repub-
licans are banking on that confusion.
They just might use Americans con-
cerns about the economy to destroy
the economy.
Barbara Anderson, Newbury-
port (Mass.) Daily News: Obama and
Democratic leaders want bipartisan
compromise,   i.e.,   they   want   it   all
done their way. They seem to think
that  our  Founding  Fathers  made  a
mistake ingiving the House the pow-
er of the purse. ... Should Republi-
cans roll over, fund the train wreck,
uncomplainingly   agree   to   another
unbalanced budget, borrow until the
national debt doubles again?
Joshua   Green,   The   Boston
Globe:   Congress   cant   operate
smoothly, and even a conclusive na-
tional election wont break the cycle
of dysfunction. Thats why Im root-
ing for a shutdown, and you should
be, too. At this point, its the safest
way to jolt Washington back to its
senses. ... The severity of budget cri-
ses has steadily intensied as Con-
gress has stopped working the way it
is supposed to. It no longer operates
as   civic  textbooks   describe,   where
committees in both chambers study
issues, pass bills and then reconcile
them in a formal negotiating confer-
ence. Instead, party leaders began re-
sorting   to   last-minute,   back-room
deals.
Paul Begala, CNN: As a matter
of rhetoric and positioning, (Obama)
would be better served to state his
position this way: I will gladly listen
to any idea to improve the Afordable
Care Act, or reduce the decit, or any
other  ideas  my  Republican  friends
might have. But rst we have to avoid
default. That means paying the bills
that Congress has already incurred.
Once weve done that, we can negoti-
ate  on  anything.   Same  substantive
position:   Negotiations   on   policy
come only after the nation avoids de-
fault.   But  this  formulation  empha-
sizes the presidents willingness to be
exible   on   improving   the   (health
care  law)  and  other  Obama  priori-
ties.
Stephen F. Hayes, The Weekly
Standard: Two cheers for Ted Cruz
and for Mike Lee, Rand Paul, Mar-
co Rubio and their fellow crusaders.
They  succeeded  in  one  crucial   re-
spect: Everyone is talking about Oba-
maCare. And the more it gets talked
about, the clearer its aws are to an
already   skeptical   public.   ...   Who
knows exactly how this all plays out.
But the ght on these indefensible
provisions is a good one to have. 
The   Topeka   Capital-
Journal, editorial: The law cer-
tainly has its aws, but the president
is not going to sign any legislation
that abandons it, and threats to shut
down the government or force it into
default wont change that. It is time
for Republicans and Democrats alike,
including   Obama,   to  crawl   out   of
their entrenched positions and begin
working  together   in  good  faith  to
amend  the  (law)  and  x  its  worst
aws  as soon as they take steps to
keep the government running.
OPINIONLINE
Whos to blame for a
government shutdown?
DOUGMILLS, AP FILE PHOTO
In 1995-96, government contracts went on hold,
National Parks and passport ofces were closed,
benets for 3 million veterans were threatened and
close to a million federal workers went without pay.
Big difference
between this
shutdown
threat and
one in the
1990s, the
GOP leaders
were running
the show in
the 90s. Not
this time.
@chucktodd
TWITTER
If I like my
government
shutdown,
can I keep my
government
shutdown?
@JoanOfArgghh
Iranian President Hasan Rouhani
attempted to reset the tone of
Irans relations with the West last
week, saying his country is willing
to talk about its nuclear program.
Iran has been fooling the West
for 10 years already.
Hasan Rouhani was elected
president because thats what Irans
supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Kha-
menei, wanted  a change of tac-
tics while Irans goals are
unchanged.
HaimKadman
The Iranians saw President Oba-
mas weakness when dealing with
Syria. The Syrians will never give up
all of their chemical weapons be-
cause that arsenal is their main
deterrent to Israels nuclear weap-
ons. Bashar Assad gets to stay in
power because the U.N. resolution
has no threat of force.
With Iran, its all about delay. Iran
may be holding out one hand, but it
has a knife in the other.
Ron Erke
Whats wrong with Obama talk-
ing with the new Iranian president if
Rouhani is willing to open the coun-
trys nuclear facilities for inspection?
Iran has been devastated by the
Western sanctions regarding its
nuclear program. There is a large
group of middle-class individuals in
Iran who are not happy. Iran has to
do something to get its economy
back on track. Lets just wait and
see what happens.
Remember it was just a few
months ago when some people
said more sanctions against Iran
wouldnt work. Apparently, the U.S.
was right to put sanctions on Irans
oil exports. Give peace a chance.
Willie Courthers
If people think Iran is coming to
the table to bargain, then they are
very misguided. These latest words
are meant to string everyone along
while the country continues bomb-
making.
Iran will launch bombs as soon as
it is able. It does not care what
happens to its own people.
Sandy Pappas Zeek
I dont know what motivations
Iran has or how seriously it is in-
terested in change.
Before 1979, I often conversed,
dined and had a few drinks with
Iranian business folks. They had
many thoughts and interests consis-
tent with our own views.
I have to think there is a large
percentage of their population that
would like to resume productive
and open relations.
Max Fornwalt
FACEBOOK
FACEBOOK.COM/USATODAYOPINION
69%
Unfavorable
16%
Favorable
15%
Dont know
Source PewResearch Poll taken March 4-18 of
1,002 adults; margin of error is 3.5 percentage
points
FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY
Do you have a favorable or
unfavorable opinion of Iran?
MOST NEGATIVE ONIRAN
FRANK FRANKLINII, AP
Iranian President Hasan Rouhani ad-
dresses the United Nations last week.
10A NEWS
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
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AM
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PM
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PM
NATIONAL FORECAST
WORLD FORECAST
AQI AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI
AQI AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI
AQI AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI   AQI
PRECIPITATION FORECAST
Alaska
Hawaii
Puerto Rico
WEATHER CLOSE-UP AND AIR QUALITY INDEX (AQI)
TODAYS FORECAST
Rain Showers Snow Snow  flurries Ice / wintry mix Thunderstorms
Note: AQI forecasts ozoneor fine-particlepollution. s/g denotes SensitiveGroups. Details: www.airnow.gov. Source: Environmental ProtectionAgency
Note: Theforecast highs arefor the24-hour period of that day. 
Low-temperatureforecasts arefor theupcomingnight.
c Cloudy 
dr Drizzle
f Fog
h Haze
r Rain
s Sunny
w Windy i Ice
pc Partly cloudy
i Ice
pc Partly cloudy
sf Snowflurries
sh Showers
sn Snow
t Thunderstorms
EXTREMES
Possible travel delays at major airports 10s Below 10 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110+
Note: For contiguous 
48 states through
4p.m. ET yesterday
Forecasts and
graphics providedby 
AccuWeather Inc. 
2013
WEATHER
Albany, N.Y.  c c
Albuquerque
Allentown, Pa.  c / c
Anchorage c
Atlantic City  c c
Augusta, Ga.  c c
Austin c c
Bakersfield, Calif.   
Baton Rouge  
Birmingham, Ala.  c
Bismarck, N.D.  c
Boise   c
Buffalo   c
Cedar Rapids 
Charleston, S.C.    c
Colorado Springs   
Columbia, S.C.  c
Columbus, Ohio c
Dayton, Ohio c
Daytona Beach c
Des Moines   
Duluth, Minn.   
El Paso
Fort Myers, Fla.  c
Fresno  
Grand Rapids  c
Greensboro, N.C.  c c
Greenville, S.C.  c c
Harrisburg, Pa.  c c
Hartford, Conn.  c c
Huntsville, Ala.  c c
Islip, N.Y.  c c
Jackson, Miss. 
Jacksonville c
Knoxville, Tenn.    c
Lexington, Ky.   
Little Rock 
Louisville  
Lubbock, Texas   
Madison, Wis.
McAllen, Texas 
Mobile, Ala. 
Myrtle Beach, S.C.    c
Nags Head, N.C.    c
Norfolk, Va.    c
Oklahoma City    c
Omaha   
Palm Springs  /  
Pensacola, Fla.   
Portland, Maine c c
Providence  c c
Raleigh, N.C.    c
Reno c
Richmond, Va.    c
Rochester, N.Y.    c
Sacramento 
San Jose, Calif.   
Sarasota, Fla.  c
Savannah, Ga.    c
Shreveport, La.   
South Bend, Ind.  c
Spokane, Wash.  h
Springfield, Mo.  c c
Syracuse, N.Y.  c c
Toledo, Ohio c
Tucson  
Tulsa  c
Wichita   
Berlin  
Bogota  c
Bridgetown c c
Brussels  /   c
Budapest c
Buenos Aires 
Cabo S. Lucas, Mex.  c
Cairo  
Calgary  h
Cancun, Mexico   c
Caracas, Ven.  c c
Copenhagen c
Cozumel, Mexico   c
Dublin, Ireland  h
Edmonton   c
Frankfurt  c
Freeport, Bhms.  c
Geneva  / c
Guatemala City   
Hagatna, Guam 
Halifax, Canada  /
Hamilton, Berm.  h
Havana  c
Ho Chi Minh City   
Hong Kong
Istanbul
Jakarta  h
Jerusalem   
Johannesburg c
Kabul  
Kingston, Jam.
Lagos, Nigeria 
Lima, Peru c c
Lisbon  
London  
Madrid    h
Managua   
Manila
Melbourne h h
Mexico City    c
Milan, Italy  h c
Monterrey, Mex.    c
Montevideo c
Montreal c c
Moscow
Mumbai, India  h
Munich  
Nairobi, Kenya  c c
Nassau, Bahamas 
NewDelhi
Oslo c
Panama City 
Paris  c
Prague  
Puerto Vallarta   
Quebec c c
Quito, Ecuador
Rio de Janeiro
Rome  
San Jose, C.R. 
San Juan, P.R.   
San Salvador
Santiago, Chile c
Santo Domingo, D.R.   
Sarajevo, Bosnia   
Seoul, Korea   
Shanghai  c
Singapore
St. Petersburg c
St. Thomas, V.I.  h h
Stockholm   
Suva, Fiji   / h
Sydney   
Taipei, Taiwan h c
Tegucigalpa   
Tokyo h
Toronto c
Vancouver h
Vienna  h c
Warsaw c
Winnipeg c c
Zurich    c
Acapulco, Mexico
Amman, Jordan  
Amsterdam   
Athens, Greece c
Auckland   
Baghdad   
Bangkok    h
Beijing   h
Beirut   
Belmopan, Belize  c c
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
MON
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sun
75/52
Sunny
94/69
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sunny
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sunny
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sunny
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cloudy
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sun
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breezy
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sunny
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sunny
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Mostly 
cloudy
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Partly 
sunny
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Mostly 
cloudy
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T-storm
90/71
Partly 
sunny
87/69
Mostly 
sunny
73/61
Plenty of
sun
84/50
Mostly 
cloudy
71/56
Partly 
sunny
72/54
A little
rain
59/49
Showers
88/71
Shower,
t-storm
89/73
T-storm
87/69
Partly 
sunny
77/62
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
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TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
TUE
Partly 
sunny
80/56
Sunny
95/71
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sunny
83/63
Partly 
sunny
79/60
Partly 
sunny
72/61
Partly 
sunny
74/57
Partly 
sunny
82/59
A little
rain
61/47
Sunny,
warm
81/61
Partly 
sunny
83/66
Mostly 
cloudy
80/61
Mostly 
sunny
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Mostly 
sunny
75/61
Partly 
sunny
91/73
Partly 
sunny
91/73
Mostly 
sunny
72/62
Mostly 
sunny
78/49
Sunny
67/54
Mostly 
sunny
76/60
Spotty 
showers
59/48
Showers
88/72
A P.M. 
t-storm
90/73
T-storm
89/71
Partly 
sunny
82/65
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
WED
Mostly 
sunny
86/57
Sunny,
warm
94/70
Partly 
sunny
85/64
Sunny
84/60
Mostly 
sunny
80/60
Partly 
sunny
80/58
Partly 
sunny
85/62
A little
rain
61/47
Mostly 
sunny
81/62
Partly 
sunny
84/66
Partly 
sunny
83/62
Not as 
warm
69/46
Mostly 
sunny
78/60
Partly 
sunny
90/73
Partly 
sunny
91/73
Turning
sunny
70/61
Mostly 
sunny
75/46
Mostly 
sunny
71/55
Mostly 
sunny
79/59
A little
rain
59/48
Some
sun
87/73
T-shower
90/74
T-shower
87/71
Mostly 
sunny
86/66
MON MON   MON   MON   MON   MON   MON   MON   MON   MON   MON   MON
Sunny,
nice
79/60
Partly 
sunny
76/58
Sunny
86/65
Mostly 
sunny
72/61
Spotty 
showers
79/67
Shower,
t-storm
87/78
Mostly 
sunny
73/55
Mostly 
sunny
78/58
Mostly 
cloudy
79/63
T-storms
82/71
Partly 
sunny
73/58
Shower,
t-storm
87/70
TUE TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE   TUE
Mostly 
sunny
82/62
Partly 
sunny
80/62
Sunny
90/69
Mostly 
sunny
71/60
Shower,
t-storm
85/69
Shower,
t-storm
88/78
Mostly 
sunny
80/58
Mostly 
sunny
76/51
Shower,
t-storm
85/63
T-storm
85/72
Partly 
sunny
76/61
A P.M. 
t-storm
88/72
WED WED   WED   WED   WED   WED   WED   WED   WED   WED   WED   WED
Mostly 
sunny
84/64
Partly 
sunny
83/64
Sunny
86/66
Turning
sunny
70/59
T-shower
88/70
T-storms
86/77
Mostly 
sunny
75/59
Mostly 
sunny
73/54
Partly 
sunny
85/63
T-storm
86/71
Mostly 
sunny
82/63
Partly 
sunny
88/72
Moderate
Good 
Moderate
Good
Moderate
Moderate
Good
Good
Good
Good
Moderate
Good
Good
Good
Good
Moderate 
Good 
Good 
Good
Good
Good
Good 
Good
Good 
Good Good Moderate Moderate Good Good  Good Good Good Good Good Good 
TODAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
HOTTEST: 95
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INDEX CLOSE CHG
DowJones industrials 15,258.24 y 70.06
Dowfor the week   y 192.85
Nasdaqcomposite 3781.59 y 5.84
S&P 500 1691.75 y 6.92
T-bond, 30-year yield 3.69% y 0.01
T-note, 10-year yield 2.63% y 0.02
Gold, oz. Comex $1338.40 x 14.80
Oil, light sweet crude $102.87 y 0.16
Euro(dollars per euro) $1.3515 x 0.0026
Yen per dollar 98.30 y 0.51
SOURCES USATODAYRESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM
uGotousatoday.com/money for updateddata
FRIDAY MARKETS 
MONEYLINE
PHOTOABOVE BY PATRICK T. FALLON, BLOOMBERGNEWS; PHOTOABOVE LEFT BY JETBLUE
Aground crew member prepares a JetBlue plane for takeoff at Long Beach Airport in California. The airline plans to
launch a premium section, dubbed Mint, with lie-flat seats, a tapas-style menu and customized amenity kits, above left.
JETBLUE  LURES
PREMIUM  FLIERS 
AIRLINE UNVEILS MINT
TO COURT HIGH-FARE
PASSENGERS.
PAGE 2B
Bank fees rose for the 15th straight
year, with fees for overdrafts and out-
of-network ATM usage hitting record
highs, according to Bankrate.com. 
The  average  overdraft  charge  rose
3% in 2013, to a record $32.20, Bank-
rate  says.  The  average  cost  for  using
another  banks  ATM  rose  2%,  to
$4.13  also a record. 
Overdraft  and  out-of-network
ATM fees are the low-hanging fruit in
terms  of  raising  fees,  says  Greg
McBride,  senior  nancial  analyst  for
Bankrate.com. 
Overdraft  fees  have  risen  so  far
that  a  recent  study  by  Moebs  Ser-
vices  says  that  its  cheaper  to  borrow
$100  from  a  payday  lender  than  it  is
to  bounce  a  $100  check.  The  median
price  for  a  $100  loan  from  a  payday
lender is $18, Moebs says. 
The  fees  in  both  cases  are  entirely
avoidable, McBride says. 
Overdraft  fees  were  steepest  in
Milwaukee,  where  they  average
$34.16,  and  lowest  in  San  Francisco,
where they average $27.18. 
Out-of-network  ATM  fees  were
highest  in  Denver,  where  they  aver-
age  $4.70,  and  lowest  in  Baltimore,
where  they  average  $3.59.  The  calcu-
lation includes the fee from the own-
er  of  the  ATM  and  from  your  bank.
The  charge  for  using  another  banks
ATM  rose  4%,  to  $2.60,  while  the  av-
erage  fee  from  your  bank  for  using
another banks ATM fell 3%, to $1.53.
Afew bank products became more
aordable, according to the Bankrate
survey of 10 banks in each of 25 large
U.S.  markets.  The  average  minimum
balance  to  oer  a  no-interest  check-
ing  account  fell  19%  to  $60.27  
about where its been since 1998. 
Good  luck  nding  a  free  interest-
bearing  checking  account:  Just  3%
were  free  to  all  customers,  un-
changed from 2012. But 95% of all in-
stitutions surveyed would waive a fee
if  you  kept  an  average  balance  of
$5,802,  down  5%  from  last  year.  Av-
erage  monthly  service  fees  fell  1%  to
$14.65;  average  monthly  service
charges  for  a  non-interest-bearing
checking  account:  $5.54,  up  1%  from
last  year.  So  far,  fewer  than  1%  of
banks charge for using a debit card. 
Fees  continue  to  go  up,  and  its
best  to  spend  time  strategizing  how
to  avoid  them,  McBride  says.
Theres  always  room  for  consumers
to shop around. 
Banks  do  take  notice  when  you
leave,  particularly  when  you  take  a
big  balance  with  you,  McBride  says.
Seventy  percent  of  consumers  con-
sider switching banks when checking
account  fees  get  too  high,  and  those
who  are  most  likely  to  do  so  often
have  the  highest  balances. 
Bank
fees up
again for
15th year
Overdraft charges
especially onerous
John Waggoner
@JohnWaggoner
USATODAY
NEW YORK How  vulnerable  is  your
portfolio if the scal brinkmanship in
Washington spins out of control? 
Its  tough  to  quantify  the  risk  with
precision,  given  the  unknown  out-
come  of  the  current  congressional
budget  ght.  Investors  dont  know  if
lawmakers  will  fund  the  government
beyond today and avoid a shutdown.
Its  also  unclear  if  Congress  will
raise the debt ceiling in mid-October
before the U.S. runs out of cash to pay
its  bills    a  deal  needed  to  avoid  the
nations rst-ever default.
But  history  can  serve  as  a  guide.  A
look back at how the stock market re-
acted  to  past  budget brawls  in  Con-
gress  provides  a  useful  template,  or
road  map,  as  to  how  trading  might
play  out  this  time,  and  how  much  -
nancial pain investors might endure.
Investor  nervousness  is  on  the
rise,  witnessed  by  the  price  action  of
the  Dow  Jones  industrial  average,
which closed down 70 points Friday. 
Wall  Street  cites  three  episodes  of
scal  brinkmanship  dating  to  1995
that  oer  a  glimpse  of  how  the  mar-
ket prices in this type of political risk. 
First,  a  look  at  the  current  scal
saber  rattling.  The  base  case,  or  Wall
Street  consensus,  is  that  Congress
avoids a shutdown and a default.
But  if  a  shutdown  occurs,  its  not
likely to  cause much  long-term dam-
age  unless  it  drags  on  for  weeks,
which is unlikely. Each week the gov-
ernment is shut down, quarterly eco-
nomic  growth  will  be  cut  by  0.1
percentage  points,  says  Michael  Ga-
pen and Michael Gavin of Barclays. 
Not  raising  the  debt  ceiling,  how-
ever, would likely be far more desta-
bilizing,  they  say.  It  would  require
an  immediate  cut  in  spending  equal
to more than 4% of GDP, or compara-
ble  in  size  to  the  scal  cli  hit.  But
spending  cuts  would  not  rule  out  a
default.  In  this  scenario,  a  recession
is possible, as are signicant disrup-
tions  in  markets.  How  have  stocks
reacted in prior scenarios?
u1995-96  government  shut-
down.  The  Standard  &  Poors  500
fell  3.7%  during  the  shutdown  from
mid-December 1995 to early January
1996,  says  S&P  Capital  IQ.  The  good
news  is  stocks  rebounded  after  the
government  got  back  to  work,  rising
10.5% in the subsequent month.
uDebt ceiling ght in summer
2011.  Stocks  took  a  big  hit  despite
Congress  deal  announced  by  Presi-
dent  Obama  on  July  31.  The  damage
was  already  done.  From  the  time
Moodys  Investors  Service,  a  credit-
rating  agency,  put  the  USAs  triple-A
rating  on  negative  watch  on  July
13,  to  the  actual  downgrade  from
Standard  &  Poors  on  Aug.  5  and
through  the  Aug.  10  low,  the  Dow
tumbled  1,700  points,  or  nearly  14%.
The  Dow  didnt  make  back  those
losses until ve months later.
uFiscal  cli  fears  Decem-
ber  2012. After  Obama  won  a  sec-
ond term, Wall Street shifted focus to
the  scal  cli.  From  the  Dec.  18
high  to  the  Dec.  28  low,  the  Dow  fell
more  than  400  points,  or  3.1%.  But
after Congress reached a Jan. 1, 2013,
deal,  the  Dow  soared  more  than  300
points the rst trading day of 2013. 
If  a  shutdown  occurs,  Gapen  says
stocks will see a temporary setback.
However, a default and adverse credit
event  for  the  U.S.  could  be  immea-
surably  more  disruptive,  he  warns.
Stocks get hurt in scal ght
Shutdowns of
past oer clues
Adam Shell
@adamshell
USATODAY
Shutdowns and the Dow
Dows performance during and one-
month after shutdown:
During shutdown  y3.5%
1
1-mo. after end of shutdown   x10.1%
2
1- PEAK TOTROUGHLOSS AROUNDSHUTDOWN
12/13/951/10/96 ; 2- 1/10/96 CLOSE THROUGH2/9/96
CLOSE
SOURCE USATODAY RESEARCH; S&P CAPITAL IQ
SAN FRANCISCO Events
playing  out  in  Hong
Kong  suggest  that  any
initial  public  oering  of
Twitter  shares  in  the
U.S.  will  come  sooner,  rather  than
later.
As  noted  in  this  column  in  July,
the biggest Internet IPO on the hori-
zon will come not from the San Fran-
cisco-based social media start-up but
from  Alibaba  Group  Holding,  a  fast-
growing  e-commerce  company  with
headquarters on mainland China.
Earlier  this  year,  Alibaba  signaled
it  would  oer  its  shares  on  the  Hong
Kong  Stock  Exchange,  which  last
month celebrated 20 years of accept-
ing  such  listings  from  mainland
companies.
But  Alibabas  plans  for  a  listing  in
the  former  British  colony  have  hit  a
major  snag,  as  exchange  ocials
there  rejected  its  proposed  owner-
ship structure, saying it violates rules
that  protect  the  rights  of  ordinary
shareholders.
The  companys  failure  to  get  the
rules  exemption  it  asked  for  in  Hong
Kong  makes  it  more  likely  Alibaba
will  list  its  IPO  shares  in  New  York
instead.
Such  a  move  would  very  likely
push a U.S. listing by Alibaba into the
rst  or  second  quarter  of  next  year,
as  it  would  take  time  for  the  compa-
ny to clear regulatory hurdles and ad-
just its accounting to conform to U.S.
rules.
It  would  also  put  the  oering  in
competition  with  Twitters    if  the 
Alibaba could spell trouble for Twitter
Chinese companys IPO
could end up on NYSE,
a rival to U.S. company
John Shinal
@johnshinal
USATODAY
THE NEW
TECH
ECONOMY
EVERY
MONDAY
vSTORY CONTINUES ON 3B
AP
Alibaba headquarters in Hangzhou, China. The Hong Kong Stock
Exchange rejected the companys proposed ownership structure.
Fridays government report on Sep-
tember employment tops this weeks
economic releases. Its expected to
show a net gain of 180,000 jobs  the
most since April and up from Augusts
169,000  while the unemployment
rate held steady at 7.3%, according to
the median forecast of 60 economists
surveyed by Bloomberg News. Other
reports this week: Tuesday, construc-
tion spending, motor vehicle sales,
ISM manufacturing index; Wednes-
day, ADP employment report; Thurs-
day, ISM non-manufacturing index. 
WHAT TO WATCH
IN THE ECONOMY
The third quarter ends today for
many companies, which means a
downpour of earnings results starting
next week. Analysts latest estimates
point to earnings growth of 3.2% for
the S&P 500, led by the nancial sec-
tor, with 9.3% growth, says FactSet. The
health care sector is forecast to show
the weakest performance, with a 1.5%
decline in earnings. Among compa-
nies reporting this week: Tuesday,
Walgreen; Wednesday, Monsanto;
Friday, Levi Strauss.
EARNINGS AHEAD
WALGREEN, MONSANTO ON TAP
WALGREENBY SCOTT OLSON, GETTY IMAGES
Germanys Siemens says it will cut up
to 4% of its 370,000 jobs worldwide by
the end of 2014 as new CEO Joe Kaes-
er moves to boost prots at the giant
engineering company. Siemens said it
wants to cut 5,000 jobs in Germany
and 10,000 more abroad. Details of
planned cuts outside Germany were
not disclosed. Kaeser, the companys
former chief nancial officer, replaced
Peter Loescher, who lost his job after
Siemens announced in July that it
would not meet its prot goal for next
year. 
15,000 JOB CUTS
AT GERMANYS SIEMENS
PETER KNEFFEL, EPA
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2013 SECTION B
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One less thing you
have to worry about
in your life.
JetBlue,  the  single-class  carrier
whose  brand  was  built  partly  on  the
idea  that  it  treats  all  its  passengers
equally,  will  launch  a  new  premium
class next summer.
Available  only  on  ights  between
New  York  and  San  Francisco  and
New  York  and  Los  Angeles,  the  new
premium  section,  dubbed  Mint,
will feature lie-at seats, a tapas-style
menu  and  customized  amenity  kits.
The  rst  ight  with  the  new  premi-
um  section  will  take  o  from  New
Yorks  JFK  to  Los  Angeles  Interna-
tional Airport on June 15, 2014.
JetBlues new premium class, to be
ocially  unveiled  today,  is  the  latest
volley  in  the  high-stakes  battle
among  U.S.  carriers  for  premium  i-
ers  who  pay  the  highest  fares  for  a
more  luxurious  ride  or  to  y  at  the
last  minute,  particularly  from  New
York to Los Angeles and New York to
San Francisco.
Its  almost  like  a  nuclear  arms
race  on  these  two  routes,  says  Jami
Counter, senior director of SeatGuru,
a website that oers information and
reviews  of  airline  seats,  services  and
amenities. In the last year, one carri-
er keeps outdoing the other carrier.
Though  JetBlue  will  ocially  an-
nounce  the  new  premium  oerings
prices  and  perks  today,  it  hinted  of
the  changes  to  come  last  month,
when  it  announced  its  new  lie-at
seats.  Travel-industry  watchers  say
its  smart  for  the  14-year-old  carrier
to  try  to  capture a larger  share  of the
iers  who  pay  the  highest  fares  to  y
coast to coast, but some warn that of-
fering  a  specialized  experience  to
passengers up front could undermine
JetBlues populist image.
This  is  seismic  because  now,  ad-
mittedly  only  on  the  transcontinen-
tal  routes  ...  JetBlue  is  saying  some
passengers  are  going  to  be  more  im-
portant  than  others,  says  Henry
Harteveldt,  a  travel  analyst  with
Hudson  Crossing.  This  move  is  not
one that comes with guaranteed suc-
cess, nor is it one that comes without
risk to the brand. ... There is a chance
that some customers may look at this
and say JetBlue is selling out.
But JetBlue CEO Dave Barger said
that  the  move  was  necessary  to  bet-
ter compete with others in the indus-
try,  and  emphasized  that  with  coach
also getting an upgrade, no passenger
is being left behind. 
The reason were doing this is our
travelers  were  migrating  over  to
American,  over  to  United,  over  to
Delta,  over  to  Virgin  America    (air-
lines  that)  had  a  premium  cabin  ex-
perience, Barger said. But as we put
forward  a  premium  experience,  it
cant be at the expense of our current
customer. 
JetBlues  premium  class  will  let  it
more  aggressively  pursue  premium-
paying  iers,  who  on  some  airlines
account  for  roughly  10%  of  travelers
while generating 30% of revenue.
JetBlue  says  it  is  particularly  key-
ing  in  on  travelers  who  might  y
their airline from Boston to Orlando,
but prefer to travel from New York to
Los  Angeles  or  San  Francisco  on  a
larger  network  carrier  such  as  Delta,
United  or  American,  where  they  can
enjoy  the  comforts  of  business  or
rst class. 
The most important customer we
want  are  the  customers  who  weve
lost  to  the  other  airlines,  who  love
JetBlue  but  they  just  wont  y  us  to
these  markets,  says  Martin  St.
George,  JetBlues  senior  vice  presi-
dent  of  marketing  and  commercial
strategy. 
THE PREMIUM ROUTES
The  routes  between  New  York  and
Los  Angeles  and  New  York  and  San
Francisco are especially lucrative, in-
dustry  experts  say.  On  those  ights,
most of the iers lling the premium
cabins  have  actually  paid  top  dollar
to  be  there  rather  than  grabbing
those  seats  through  loyalty  program
upgrades. 
The competition for those passen-
gers has gotten erce. 
American  is  planning  to  become
the  only  U.S.  airline  that  oers  both
rst-  and  business-class  cabins  on
transcontinental  ights.  The  new
three-cabin  jets,  which  will  feature
lie-at  seats  in  both  premium  sec-
tions,  will  begin  ying  between  New
Yorks JFK and Los Angeles Interna-
tional  on  Jan.  7,  and  between  JFK
and San Francisco on March 6, 2014.
Our  New  York  and  Los  Angeles
hubs  are  very  important  to  Ameri-
cans  network  strategy,  says  Rob
Friedman, Americans vice president,
marketing.  And  we  know  many  of
our  high-value  customers  are  ying
into and out of these important busi-
ness markets on a daily basis.
Meanwhile, United is upgrading its
premium  service  eet  that  ies  be-
tween  New  York  and  Los  Angeles
and  New  York  and  San  Francisco,
outtting  the  premium  cabins  with
lie-at seats, faster Wi-Fi, and on-de-
mand  entertainment  at  each  seat.
The updates are expected  to be com-
pleted by the end of this year.
Virgin  America,  a  smaller  carrier
that  like  JetBlue  has  become  known
for  quality  service  at  a  lower  price,
has had a rst-class cabin since it be-
gan  ying  in  August  2007.  It  has  VIP
concierges  at  JFK  and  LAX  and
opened its rst airport lounge at LAX
last  year,  particularly  to  appeal  to
business  travelers,  says  spokesman
Madhu Unnikrishnan. 
Theyre  enormously  important
routes  on  which  were  able  to  realize
signicant  prots,  Unnikrishnan
says.  Additionally,  the  airline  started
ying  from  Newark  to  San  Francisco
and Los Angeles in April. 
JetBlue  has  likely  taken  note  of  all
competitors moves, Harteveldt says.
It  has  seen  Virgin  America  be
successful  on  its  transcontinental
routes  from  New  York  to  California.
They have seen investment ... by oth-
er  network  airlines  such  as  United,
American and Delta, and JetBlue has
been  left  behind,  Harteveldt  says.
Now they are playing catch-up. 
Still,  he  thinks  JetBlue  can  be  a
contender,  particularly  if  it  sticks  to
its  model  and  gives  a  higher-end  of-
fering for a lower fare than its peers. 
Since  it  was  founded  in  1999,  Jet-
Blue has stood apart from many of its
peers,  becoming  the  rst  U.S.  carrier
to  oer  live  TV  and  continuing  to  al-
low passengers to check a rst bag for
free and have unlimited snacks when
the airline industry is reaping billions
charging  for  checked  luggage,  food
and other services.
But JetBlue has also begun to oer
some upgrades for a price, such as its
even  more  space  seats,  which  give
passengers  extra  legroom  along  with
the ability to board early. 
A SUITE WITH A DOOR
The new premium class will have lie-
at  beds  that  JetBlue  says  are  the
longest  and  widest  being  own  do-
mestically,  as  well  as  the  only
suites,  with  a  door  that  can  be  shut
for  privacy.  There  are  15-inch  at
screens,  along  with  buttons  that  let
ight  attendants  know  if  a  passenger
wants to be awakened for a meal. 
And  iers  can  have  a  drink  before
takeo,  and  a  cocktail  and  an  hors
doeuvre once the jet is in the air.
Passengers  will  also  be  able  to
choose  three  of  ve  tapas-style
plates.  And  there  will  be  amenity
boxes provided by Birchbox featuring
not  only  items  that  can  be  used  on
board, but samples of other products,
such as shampoo or lotion. 
But  its  not  just  the  front  of  the
plane getting new perks. So is the tra-
ditional coach cabin. 
While  JetBlues  coach  already  has
more legroom than any other domes-
tic  airlines,  starting  next  year,  there
will  be  new  softer,  even  roomier
seats.  Eventually,  every  ight  be-
tween  New  York  and  Los  Angeles  or
San Francisco will have a self-service
snack  bar  where  passengers  can  get
soft  drinks  and  bites  to  eat  through-
out their trip.
We  wanted  to  make  sure  every-
one  on  the  airplane  got  an  upgrade,
St. George said. 
By  the  fourth  quarter  of  next  year,
all  seven  daily  round-trip  ights  be-
tween  JFK  and  LAX  will  feature  the
new premium section, along with the
upgraded  amenities  and  oerings  in
coach.  Mint  will  also  make  its  debut
on  ights  between  JFK  and  San
Francisco before the end of next year,
with all ve daily ights featuring the
service by early 2015.
Alex  Wilcox,  a  founder  of  JetBlue
who is now CEO of private jet service
JetSuite,  says  his  onetime  airline
should  tread  carefully.  I  am  pleased
that  JetBlue  is  innovating,  he  says,
adding  that  JetBlues  low-cost  status
has  been  challenged  by  ultra-low-
cost  carrier  Spirit,  while  Virgin  is  vy-
ing  for  the  mantle  of  hippest  airline.
The  risk  is  the  new  cabin  will  make
those  in  the  back  feel  second  class,
which would be anathema to the Jet-
Blue experience.
But  St.  George  says  the  airline
knows  that  being  egalitarian  is  a  sig-
nature, and its going to hold onto it. 
Even  if  you  just  buy  a  $99  ticket
to  Florida,  St.  George  says,  and  sit
in  the  last  row  of  the  airplane,  you
will  have  the  best  experience  of  any
customer ying in economy cabin on
any  airline.
EVANEILE, USA TODAY
JetBlues new
Mint premium
brand launches
Airline courts
high-fare iers
Charisse Jones
@charissejones
USATODAY
PHOTOABOVE AND LEFT BY JETBLUE
JetBlues lie-at seats for
most transcontinental
ights, above. At left, the
Birchbox JetBlue ameni-
ty kit, which will feature
not only items that can be
used on board, but sam-
ples of other products,
such as shampoo or
lotion.
The most
important customer
we want are the
customers who ...
love JetBlue but
they just wont y
us to these
markets. 
Martin St. George, JetBlue senior vice
president of marketing and commercial
strategy
2B MONEY
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
TRAVEL
When  it  comes  to
travel,  is  sharing  good
for you?
If youre talking about
the  $3.5  billion-a-year
sharing economy, which turns con-
sumers  into  travel  providers,  youll
often hear a no.
Whether  youre  considering  a
home  rental  instead  of  a  hotel  or
driving someone elses car over hiring
a taxi,  experts  warn  you  to  beware
before you share.
The  poster  kids  for  the  perils  of
peer-to-peer  travel  include  Airbnb,
where  one  host  recently  ran  afoul  of
New  Yorks  law  banning  short-term
rentals,  and  RelayRides,  which  last
year  had a  fatality in one of  its  rental
vehicles.  Critics  also  point to  compa-
nies such as FlightCar, a start-up that
oers  o-airport  car  rentals,  which
they claim are skirting taxes and gov-
ernment regulation.
But ask travelers if sharing is good,
and  youre  more  likely  to  get  a  yes.
And they have the stories to prove it.
Karen Kinnane, a Shartlesville, Pa.,
antiques  dealer,  says  shes  had  great
success  using  Airbnb,  a  popular
website  that  connects  people  who
have  a  spare  bedroom  with  travelers
looking for a place to stay.
For  her,  it  didnt  just  oer  a  more
authentic  lodging  experience;  it  also
cut her lodging bill in half.
She  recently  needed  to  nd  ac-
commodations  near  an  antiques
market  in  Leipzig,  Germany.  Airbnb
set  her  up  with  a  woman  who  rented
her  a  room  for  about  $40  a  night,
about  $55  less  than  the  average  daily
hotel room rate in 2012.
The  place was  clean  as  a whistle,
she says. You could do brain surgery
on the oor. And we hit it o.
Now she returns to the same place
every  other  month,  has  her  own  key
to  the  apartment  and  pays  her  host
directly.
Dawn  Catteau  and  her  husband
used  a  service  called  Uber,  which
connects  travelers  with  professional
drivers.  Uber  has  experienced  more
than its fair share of legal roadblocks,
placed  there  by  other  transportation
interests  who  claim  the  company  is
circumventing  permitting  require-
ments.  But  for  Catteau,  an  executive
assistant  from  Chester  Springs,  Pa.,
Uber worked better than a taxi or the
Metro  when  she  visited  Washington.
Whenever  she  needed  a  ride,  she
used an iPhone app to hail a car.
The  cars  were  clean,  available
quickly,  and  I  didnt  have  to  fumble
around  for  cash  while  trying  to  keep
my kids contained, she says. I think
the  service  is  brilliant  and  will  use  it
again.
So  whats  with  the  dire  warnings
about  sharing?  Fearing  something
new is a normal human reaction, and
this is still pretty novel. Even Airbnb,
one of the breakout successes among
travel-sharing companies with a $2.5
billion  valuation,  remains  a  relative
unknown  for  some  travelers,  at  least
when  compared  to  the  more  estab-
lished lodging companies.
Yes,  Ive  added  to  the  hysteria  just
a little.  As  a  consumer  advocate,  I
havent  missed  an  opportunity  to
help  Airbnb  guests  who  didnt  get
what  they  thought  theyd  booked.
The  horror  stories  range  from  lost
refunds  to  substandard  facilities  and
unpleasant landlords. You cant make
this  stu  up,  but  even  so,  it  remains
relatively  rare,  and  Airbnb  usually
xes the problem promptly.
But  theres  something  else  at
work,  according  to  experts  on  the
emerging peer-to-peer economy. The
traditional incumbents  are  spinning
a clever  narrative  about  their  new
competitors.  They  caution  travelers
that  these  upstarts  are  a  risky,  pass-
ing fad.
The  story  you  read  in  the  media
 and  often  echoed  by  travel  indus-
try incumbents  is that its a Gener-
ation  Y  thing  for  price-sensitive
travelers,  says  Rachel  Botsman,  co-
author  of  Whats  Mine  Is  Yours,  a
book  about  the  sharing  economy.
Its a sweeping generalization. If you
look at the data, its simply not true.
Shes  right.  The  incumbents  are
nervous.  Whenever  I  write  about
sharing,  they  contact  me  to  make
sure  I  consider  a  follow-up  story
about  how  dangerous  and  unfair
sharing can be.
They did after I proled FlightCar,
which  faces  a  lawsuit  by  the  city  of
San  Francisco  for  operating  an  o-
airport  car  rental  service  without  a
license.  FlightCars  chief  executive,
Rujul  Zaparde,  says  his  company  has
met  all  the  permit  requirements,  but
understands  the  city  is  under  pres-
sure from other car rental companies
who would have to match FlightCars
lower prices.
Were  sure  theyre  not  happy
about  the  competition,  he  says  of
the airport car rental operators.
So,  what  is  going  on?  The  conven-
tional  wisdom  on  sharing  companies
is  completely  wrong.  The  world  of
travel is changing, and for the better.
Its  a  shift  from  institutional,  big-
brand  name  trust  to  peer  trust,  says
Botsman.
Of  course  established  travel  com-
panies  wont  go  out  of  business  as  a
result  of  this  sharing  revolution,  but
the way we travel will almost certain-
ly become more ecient.
Put  dierently,  your  next  hotel
may  be  someones  spare  bedroom,
your  next  ride  to  the  airport  might
be  in  another  persons  car,  and  you
might  rent  a  strangers  vehicle  when
you arrive.
But,  mostly,  it  means  your  mother
was  right  all  along:  Sharing  is  good.
Peer-to-peer travel unnerves traditional companies
But travelers stories
show it can work well
Christopher
Elliott
Special for USATODAY
ON
TRAVEL
EVERY
MONDAY
UBER
Online service Uber connects travelers with professional drivers.
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 MONEY 3B
www.avalara.com/usa
1-855-562-6880
Making sales tax less taxing.
Salestax
changes.
Dont risk it.
Automate it.
Get a year of free sales tax returns prep and ling.
(See website for details.)
Editors  complain.
Mostly,  in  my  experi-
ence,  about  writers,  of-
ten  about  newsmakers,
and  frequently  about
uncooperative  celebrities.  But  more
and  more,  they  complain  about
salesmen. As in, how come they cant
sell ads? 
For an editor of any stature  that
is,  one  theoretically  above  the  com-
mercial fray  ads are like the weath-
er.  They  aect  you  mightily,  and  you
worry  about  them  greatly,  and,  if
called  upon,  you  try  to  dress  appro-
priately to sell them, but you have no
control  over  them,  and  not  much
knowledge about why the day is sun-
ny or dark  and it is only, nowadays,
dark.
This past week in New York at Ad-
vertising  Week,  many  editors,
recruited to perform on various pan-
els,  could  be  found  wandering  the
venues, expressing angst and frustra-
tion  about  advertisers  and  vast  puz-
zlement about whatever happened to
this once-reliable relationship.
There  are,  of  course,  ever-fewer
newspaper and magazine ads. Hence,
there  are  ever-fewer  magazines  and
newspapers.  Even  still-thick  maga-
zines  are  giving  away  ads  or  dis-
counting  prices  far  more  than  they
used  to.  Many  publications,  if  you
know  how  to  count  the  ads,  obvious-
ly  lose  money  in  far  more  issues
than they make it.
Digital  versions  may  be  building
large  audiences,  but  the  ads  there
yield far less revenue.
Whos  to  blame  for  this  o-the-
cli  fall  in  advertising  in  almost  any
reading-based  venue  is  a  reasonable
and quite belated question.
The  no-fault  position,  most  re-
cently  pleaded  by  Newsweeks  for-
mer  editor,  Tina  Brown,  defending
herself  in  that  debacle,  is  that  the
entire  industry  is  challenged,  that  it
is  on  the  wrong  side  of  history,  that,
in  eect,  print,  or  even  words  them-
selves,  no  longer  have  a  commercial
value.
Then  again,  many  people  on  the
money-making side  the publishers
and  salesmen  charged  with  sucking
up  to  ad  agencies  and  media  buyers
and  marketing  executives    blame
Tina  Brown  and,  before  her,  the  edi-
tors  who  ran  Newsweek under  its
former owner, The Washington Post.
They  failed  to  make  a  magazine
that the salesmen could sell.
As  it  happens,  most  of  the  blame
for the decline of advertising support
falls on the product, or on the gener-
al  business  environment,  instead  of
on the people who are selling it.
Historically,  media  salesmen
hardly  had  to  sell  their  product.  If
you  had  to  advertise,  there  really
werent  all  that  many  places  to  do  it.
Brands  had  a  print  budget,  a  radio
budget  and  a  television  budget  
and they spent it.
At  The  New  York  Times,  whose
ever-declining  ads  I  count  every  day
 an  easy  job    there  is  still  a  real
estate department, and retail depart-
ment  and  classied  department,  all
waiting  at  their  phones  for  you  to
call and place an ad.
Beginning  in  the  1980s  came  the
explosion  in  media,  both  a  vast  ex-
pansion  in  targeted  print  media  and
the  rapid  growth  of  cable.  To  deal
with  this  cornucopia  of  choice,
media  buying  became  a  separate
marketing business, staed by entry-
level  marketing  program  graduates,
nearly  all  subliterate  and  TV-fo-
cused,  creating  an  immediate  prob-
lem for print.
Then  the  Internet.  To  deal  with
the  algebraic  leap  in  advertising  op-
tions,  new  automated  tools  grew  up
that  not  only  make  the  buying  deci-
sions,  but,  in  eect,  auction  o  pre-
dened  audiences,  at  an
ever-declining cost.
There  are  exceptions.  The  fashion
category  has  held  up  better  than
most,  in  part  because  the  fashion
business is dependent on the fashion
press  for  favorable  coverage.  The  re-
lationship  remains  symbiotic  (or  a
form of a modern protection racket). 
Extreme  sports,  especially  mixed
with  live-event  music  tie-ins,  inspire
a kind  of  extreme  salesmanship  that
has  made  Vice  Media,  whose  core
property  is  a  skateboard-lifestyle
magazine,  worth  a  billion  dollars,
and turned Red Bull, a caeine-drink
company,  into  a  publishing  power-
house  (i.e.  advertisers  are  becoming
their own publishers).
The industrywide imitation of this
aggressive  alignment  of  content  and
sales  is  now  called  branded  content,
but  it  is  a  pale  imitation  of  Vice-like
gusto  and  salesmanship,  and  the
price is already falling.
In  general,  newspaper,  magazine
and  even  digital  content  salesmen
are desperate to sell something other
than  what  they  are  supposed  to  be
selling  (digital  was  itself  once  that
something  else).  New  content  prod-
ucts.  Tablet  versions.  Video.  The
New  York  Post is  trying  to  sell  rides
on  a  Post-branded  tour  bus.  The
Sunday  New  York  Times  seems  to
have  given  up  trying  to  sell  space  in
its magazine, or book review or busi-
ness  sections,  in  lieu  of    they  are
trying to think that up. Stay tuned.
Nobody is  trying to sell, or at least
believably  trying  to  sell,  the  actual
proposition:  that  blank  space  adja-
cent  to  intelligent  content,  which
you  can  write  on  and  put  in  front  of
an  audience  demonstrably  seeking
information,  is  an  ecient  and  even
powerful tool for telling your story.
It  could  be  that  no  one  really  be-
lieves  such  a  focused,  open,  literate
audience exists anymore (or, anyway,
that  it  has  anybody  other  than  the
elderly  in  it).  Editors,  alas,  are  mak-
ing  a  dull  product  that  just  doesnt
move the quick, cool and young.
But  it  could  also  be  a  particular
kind  of  vicious  sales  circle,  wherein
the  most  talented  salesmen  always
run  to  whats  easiest  to  sell,  leaving
the less talented with the harder sell.
The  reading-matter  ad  salesman
is  an  existential  gure  of  the  age.
Where  Willy  Loman  tried  to  sell
stu  out  of  an  old  valise,  his  modern
counterpart  is  selling  New  Yorker
pages.
No advertising? Whose fault is it?
Print medias
bleeding red
Michael Wolff
@MichaelWolffNYC
Michael@burnrate.com
USATODAY
MEDIA
PETER FOLEY, EPA
EVANAGOSTINI, AP
Some blame Tina
Brown, ex-News-
week editor, and
others like her for
voiding prints rele-
vance. She pleads
no-fault, calling the
industrys slide
inevitable.
U.S.-based  rm  hasnt  executed  its
IPO by then.
Alibaba  is  at  least  several  times
the  size  of  Twitter,  as  measured  by
revenue.
According  to  gures  made  public
in  July  by  Yahoo,  which  owns  ap-
proximately 24% of Alibaba, revenue
for  the  China-based  rm  soared  71%
to $1.38 billion for the quarter ended
in March.
That  size  and  rate  of  growth  sug-
gest  the  company  will  post  2013  rev-
enue of more than $5 billion, though
we wont know for sure until Alibaba
discloses its nancial statements.
Twitter  also  hasnt  yet  disclosed
details  of  its  business,  choosing  in-
stead  to  le  its  initial  registration
statement  with  U.S.  securities  regu-
lators on a condential basis.
Yet  such  a  ling    made  possible
by  changes  to  U.S.  securities  laws
under  the  2012  Jobs  Act    is  avail-
able  only  to  companies  with  annual
revenue  of  less  than  $1  billion  in
their  most  recently  completed  scal
year.
Research  rm  eMarketer  esti-
mates  Twitters  advertising  revenue
will double this year to $583 million,
then  rise  63%  in  2014  to  $950
million.
That  makes  it  signicantly  small-
er  than  its  largest  rivals  in  the  mar-
ket  for  Internet  advertising  
namely, Google and Facebook, which
eMarketer  estimates  will  capture
33% and 5%, respectively, of the $118
billion market this year.
Twitters  smaller  size  points  up
the  risk  the  company  has  taken  by
signaling  its  IPO  intentions  in  a
tweet  on  its  own  site,  without  di-
vulging any details of its nancials 
or of its potential oering.
While the tweet regarding its con-
dential IPO ling has helped gener-
ate  interest    and  allows  Twitter  to
highlight pre-IPO shares to prospec-
tive  employees    a  delay  in  execut-
ing  the  oering  might  be  seen  by
investors  as  a  sign  of  potential
problems.
If  Twitter  plans  to  raise  money  to
help  it  compete  with  larger,  well-
funded  rivals,  doing  it  sooner  would
be better.
Thats  because  the  time  between
Thanksgiving and tax day on April 15
has  been  a  graveyard  for  previous
tech  IPOs.  Zyngas  lackluster  oer-
ing  in  December  2011  is  a  prime
example.
If  Alibaba  decides  to  list  its  IPO
on  the  New  York  Stock  Exchange,  as
Twitter  is  reportedly  considering,
any  signicant  delay  by  Twitter
could  put  its  share  sale  in  direct
competition  with  an  even  larger  one
in  the  minds  of  Internet-sector
investors.
For  all  of  these  reasons,  look  for
the  Twitter  IPO  to  be  priced  in  the
near future.
John Shinal has covered tech and nancial
markets for 15 years at Bloomberg, Busi-
nessWeek, the San Francisco Chronicle,
DowJones MarketWatch, Wall Street
Journal Digital Network and others.
Twitter should offer its IPO sooner rather than later
vCONTINUED FROM1B
Alibaba is at least
several times the
size of Twitter, as
measured  by
revenue.
4B MONEY
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
RICHMOND,  CALIF.  Gayle  McLaugh-
lin  looks  and  sounds  like  the  former
school teacher and data entry worker
she  was    down  to  her  sensible
brown walking shoes.
What  the  5-foot-4-inch  mayor  of
this working-class San Francisco Bay
Area  city  does  not  resemble  is  the
ready-to-march,  dogged  corporate
thorn she is.
Her latest opponent? Wall Street. 
McLaughlin, a member of the left-
ist  Green  Party,  is  leading  a  novel  ef-
fort  by  the  city  to  buy  624
underwater  mortgages  in  Richmond,
pay  the  investor-owners  some  of
what theyre owed and set the home-
owner up with a new mortgage closer
to the homes current value.
If  investors  dont  sell,  the  city  says
it  may  use  its  eminent-domain  pow-
ers  to  seize  the  mortgages  at  fair
market value.
The idea is to prevent foreclosures,
which  cause  blight,  and  help  home-
owners  still  stuck  with  mortgage
loans  far  greater  than  their  homes
value, McLaughlin says.
People  were  tricked.  They  were
sold  these  bad  loans.  This  is  a  ques-
tion    for  me    of  a  community  be-
ing  victimized,  says  McLaughlin,  61,
a longtime  renter  who  owned  a
trailer once. 
Richmonds  threat  to  use  its  emi-
nent-domain  powers,  which  allow
governments to take private property
for  public  use,  has  unleashed  a  tor-
rent of opposition.
Banks,  government  regulators,
mortgage  bankers,  Realtors,  inves-
tors  and  land  title  companies  say  the
plan  is  unconstitutional,  will  short-
change  investors  who  own  the  mort-
gages, and threaten mortgage lending
and property rights.
If  investors  get  ripped  o  today,
why  would  they  put  capital  to  work
tomorrow?  says  Tom  Deutsch,  CEO
of  the  American  Securitization  Fo-
rum, whose members include issuers
and investors in mortgage-backed se-
curities.  If  any  city  does  it,  itll  set
the precedent nationwide, he says.
Richmond, a city of 105,000 that is
70%  non-white,  was  hit  hard  in  the
housing bust. 
Home  values  tanked  66%  from
their  peak  in  2006  to  a  median  of
$156,000  at  the  end  of  2011,  Zillow
data  show.  Thats  led  to  thousands  of
foreclosures  and  millions  of  dollars
in  lost  property  tax  revenue,
McLaughlin  says.  Home  prices  have
climbed  back  to  a  median  of
$218,000,  but  four  of  10
mortgaged  homes  are  still
underwater. 
Many  of  those  are  at  risk
of  foreclosure,  McLaughlin
says.  Last  month,  she
marched  with  other  protes-
ters  to  Wells  Fargos  head-
quarters in San Francisco in
support of the plan.
It  is  not  an  option  to
stand on the sidelines, wait-
ing  for  the  next  wave  of
foreclosures,  McLaughlin
says. We are going to stand
up to Wall Street.
READY FOR A FIGHT 
The  second-term  mayor,
whose  career  in  govern-
ment started as a Richmond
City  Council  member  in
2004, is accustomed to tough ghts.
Growing  up  in  Chicago,  she  was
the  third  of  ve  daughters  born  to  a
union-carpenter father and a factory-
worker  mother.  Shes  spent  decades
on  the  other  side  of  the  powers  that
be  opposing the Vietnam War, sup-
porting  the  Central  American  soli-
darity  movement  and  numerous
environmental causes.
In  her  2010  mayoral  race,  she  sur-
vived  an  attack  by  the  citys  police
and re unions that exposed an earli-
er, unsuccessful attempt to shed per-
sonal  debts  by  ling  for  bankruptcy.
McLaughlin  says  the  smear  cam-
paign backred, and voters identied
with her ability to overcome nancial
challenges.
McLaughlin  has  also  repeatedly
clashed  with  Chevron,  the  citys  big-
gest  employer. Last  month,  the  city
sued  Chevron,  alleging  that  a  2012
re  at  the  local  renery  reected
years of neglect. The suit asks for -
nancial  compensation  for  economic
damages  and  punitive  ones  to  deter
similar future conduct.
Chevron,  which  agreed  to  pay  the
county  $2  million  stemming  from
the  re,  says  the  lawsuit  is  a  wrong-
headed attempt to take advantage of
the renery re.
McLaughlin  expects  it  to  force
Chevron to change its corporate cul-
ture so our community can be safe.
A MESSAGE FROM WALL STREET?
Not  everybody  applauds
McLaughlins tactics.
You dont bite the hand that feeds
you.  You sit down with them, says
Richmond City Councilman Nathan-
iel  Bates,  a  frequent  McLaughlin  op-
ponent.  He  says  Chevron  is  working
hard  to  modernize  a  111-year-old
plant that predates the city.
The  use  of  eminent  domain  wont
hurt Wall Street as much as
itll  hurt  Richmond,  Bates
says.
He  fears  that  investors
wont  buy  Richmonds
bonds  if  the  city  proceeds.
Richmond may have gotten
such  a  warning  shot  last
month  when  it  failed  to
nd  takers  for  a  $34  mil-
lion bond oering.
The  city  also  isnt  oer-
ing  enough  for  the  mort-
gages, Deutsch says.
For  the  624  home  loans,
Richmond  oered  a  fair
market  value  that  aver-
ages  52%  of  whats  owed,
shows  an  analysis  by  inde-
pendent  consulting  rm
PF2 Securities Evaluations.
Of the loans, 444 of them are current.
The  median  balance  owed  is  about
$380,000.
The  city  may  take  control  of  the
mortgages  by  eminent  domain  if  in-
vestors  dont  agree  to  sell,  though  it
would still have to compensate them.
Its  kind  of  like  an  oer  you  cant
refuse  a Godfather-like thing, says
Richmond  Realtor  Jerey  Wright,
who also opposes the plan.
He says the issue is less about pre-
venting  blight    especially  since
some of the homes would quickly re-
sell  if  foreclosed  on    and  more
about the mayors politics.
Its  a  social  justice  crusade,
Wright  says.  From  the  mayors  per-
spective,  the  banks  have  done  the
people wrong.
Heres  how  the  plan  would  work.
Assume  a  house  has  a  $300,000
mortgage.  The  city  might  argue  its
current  value  is  only  $160,000.  If  a
judge  agreed,  the  city  would  use
funds  from  investment  rm  Mort-
gage  Resolution  Partners  to  buy  the
loan.  The  homeowner  would  re-
nance  into  a  new  loan,  perhaps  for
$190,000.  Those  funds  would  pay  o
the  city.  The  $30,000  dierence  be-
tween what the city paid, and what it
got,  would  be  split  among  MRP,  its
investors and the city.
The  plans  implementation  is  far
from certain.
After  an  eight-hour  City  Council
meeting earlier this month, the coun-
cil  narrowly  approved  McLaughlins
proposal  to  take  the  next  step  with
the  plan  and  try  to  draw  in  more  cit-
ies.  The  council  will  have  to  vote
again to actually seize loans and get a
yes  vote  from  one  of  the  members
who voted no at the last meeting.
If  the  city  seizes  a  loan,  There
would  be  an  immediate  court  chal-
lenge,  Deutsch  says.  Whats  more,  if
sellers  arent  willing  to  sell,  the
courts  would  have  to  determine  fair
pricing for the mortgages.
A handful  of  other  cities  are  con-
sidering  the  same  strategy  as  Rich-
monds,  but  its  taken  the  idea  the
furthest,  says  Cornell  University  law
professor  Robert  Hockett,  a  chief
proponent.
Others  have  backed  o.  Those  in-
clude  North  Las  Vegas,  Chicago  and
San Bernardino County in California,
where opposition was also strong.
Richmond  has  enlisted  more
grass-roots  support  than  those  other
places,  supporters  say,  including
from  the  Alliance  of  Californians  for
Community Empowerment. 
What  else  is  dierent  about
Richmond?
The mayor, Deutsch says.
Calif. mayor
wages war on
foreclosures 
Critics denounce
threat of using
eminent domain
Julie Schmit
@julieschmit
USATODAY
ROHANSMITH, SANFRANCISCOCHRONICLE, VIA AP
Protesters march at Wells Fargo headquarters in San Francisco in August. Among them was Mayor Gayle
McLaughlin of Richmond, Calif. McLaughlin is pushing a plan to buy 624 underwater mortgages. 
MARTINE. KLIMEK, USA TODAY
This is a question ... of a community being victim-
ized, says Richmond Mayor Gayle McLaughlin. 
Oral  care,  to  the  ma-
jority  of  people,  is  a  task
completed  on  autopilot
morning and night.
Few  of  us  can  tell
much dierence between brands. We
dont  really  understand  which  paste
formulation  is  better  for  us
 whitening,  tartar  control
or  fresher  breath.  At  the
store, we often pick the tube
thats on sale, or the one our
mother used to buy.
But  when  commodities
trader-turned-entrepreneur
Craig Dubitsky thinks about
oral  hygiene,  he  sees  all
thats  wrong  with  the  sce-
nario I just described.
Dubitsky  sees  aggressive
brand messaging focused on fear and
shame.  If  you  dont  use  their  prod-
ucts,  you  wont  get  the  date  or  the
job. 
He  wonders  why  pretty  smiles
arent  as  common  in  advertisements
as  the  sterile  white  tooth  with  ex-
posed  roots,  and  why  brands  dont
mention  the  taste  of  something  you
put in your mouth.
He  questions  why  the  ingredients
are  always  killing  and  ghting  stu.
The  more  it  hurts,  the  better  it
works, many brands seem to say.
And  why  the  tube?  The  tube  looks
mangled  after  just  one  squeeze,  and
then  theres  the  argument  that  al-
ways  ensues  about the proper  way to
eke  out  the  last  bit.  Its  strange  shape
requires  it  be  placed  inside  a  card-
board box just to sit on shelves.
Why  not  create  something  about
friendly,  something  thats  delicious,
he says. And why not make it beauti-
ful? 
Dubitsky is the founder of a three-
year-old  Montclair,  N.J.,  start-up
called Hello Products, which is bring-
ing  to  market  a  line  of  oral
hygiene  products  that  are
designed,  formulated,  a-
vored,  manufactured,  pack-
aged  and  marketed  dier-
ently  than  others  like  it  on
store shelves.
He hired his rst employ-
ee slightly more than a year
ago    the  company  now
employs  seven    and
shipped  the  rst  tooth-
pastes,  brushes,  breath
sprays  and  mouth  rinses  to  Wal-
greens,  Duane  Reade  and  select  Tar-
get stores in March. Last week, Hello
hit  the  shelf  of  its  18,000th  store,
likely a Kroger or CVS.
It  might  seem  miraculous  for  a
start-up to take o so fast. But Dubit-
sky  is  convinced  his  suc-
cess  comes  from  not  just
doing  one  thing  dierent-
ly,  but  because  Hello  re-
thinks  everything  about
oral  care.  Many  of  his  les-
sons  were  gleaned  during
the  early  days  of  Method,
the  once  revolutionary
natural  cleaning  products
brand he invested in years
ago.
Instead  of  hiring  a  de-
sign  agency  with  experi-
ence  developing  products
and branding for consum-
er  packaged  goods,  he
went with BMWs Design-
worksUSA,  the  global  de-
sign  agency for  the luxury
car  brand.  He  wanted  de-
signers  who  understood  precision,
performance and engineering, as well
as beauty.
Rather  than  contracting  with  a
private-label  company  to  create  the
products,  he  hired  his  own  formula-
tor.  He  thought  dierently  about  the
formulations,  too,  using  only  natural
ingredients. 
Do  mouthwashes  really  require  so
much alcohol? What about creating a
wash  that  you  dont  have  to  spit  out?
Hello products are designed to do ev-
erything,  not  just  whiten  at  night  or
control tartar.
Dubitsky  took  pains  to  design
packaging  that  not  only  stood  out  on
the  shelf  but  t  well  in  consumers
hands  and  used  as  little  material  as
possible.  Flipping  open  a  Hello
breath  spray  was  de-
signed  to  have  a  cool  fac-
tor,  rather  than  make  a
user want to hide to spray.
The  toothpaste  container
has  cake-decorating  tips
on  the  end  so  it  looks  fun
as  it  hits  the  bristles  of  a
brush.  The  packaging  was
so  innovative  that  Dubit-
sky  had  to  build  tools  to
make many of the items. 
Everything is art, Du-
bitsky likes to say. 
That  should  be  the
mantra of more start-ups,
says Jason Snell, a design-
er who consults with con-
sumer-oriented  start-ups
and  brands  at  We  Have
Become  Vikings  in
Cincinnati.
Be cognizant of what competitors
are  doing,  but  think  of  everything  as
a fashion  brand,  Snell  says.  Even  if
youre  making  soap  or  toothpaste,
how would it look in the public eye?
Dubitsky  wanted  the  brand  to
seem  human,  not  corporate,  so  any-
one  can  Skype  him  directly  from  the
website.  Apples  principal  product
photographer  took  all  the  product
shots.
Even  his  investors  were  carefully
selected.  Theyve  helped  build  inno-
vative brands such as Seventh Gener-
ation,  Lego,  Benetton,  Puma  and
Bobbi Brown Cosmetics. 
One  investor  is  William  Morris
Endeavor,  a  talent  management
agency interested in treating the Hel-
lo brand as it would a celebrity client. 
Beth  Stiller,  Walgreens  division
vice  president  of  category  strategy
and innovation, calls Hello disruptive
to  the  category.  The  recycled  round-
ed  plastic  bottles  in  bright  colors
stand  out  on  shelves.  Consumers
have been attracted to its unusual a-
vors,  such  as  mojito  mint  and  pink
grapefruit  mint,  and  all-natural  in-
gredients. 
Craig  and  his  team  are  just  in-
credibly  passionate,  Stiller  says.
They  look  at  the  category  in  a  new
and  unique  way    not  with  category
convention in mind. 
Not all start-ups have the luxury of
nances  that  Dubitsky  lined  up  be-
fore  building  and  launching  his
brand.  But  they  can  think  dierently
about  every  aspect  of  the  product
theyre  building  and  not  be  conned
to the boundaries set by competitors.
Laura Baverman is a Raleigh, N.C.-based
business journalist covering start-ups and
entrepreneurship for regional and national
publications. She previously covered en-
trepreneurship for the Cincinnati Enquirer,
a Gannett newspaper. Baverman can be
reached via e-mail at lbaverman@gmail.co-
mor Twitter @laurabaverman.
Oral care products go extra mile for smiles
Craig Dubitsky
decided to think
outside the tube
Laura Baverman
Special for USATODAY
SMALL
BUSINESS
GANNETT
Hello toothpaste. Hey,
its not in a tube.
Craig Dubitsky
LOS ANGELES Last  week,  Apple
trumpeted  dizzying  adoption  of  its
new  iOS  7  mobile  operating  system,
with  a  whopping  200  million  down-
loads. 
But users arent totally happy. 
In fact, some are a little queasy. 
Apple customers have taken to Ap-
ple  message  boards  and  Twitter  to
complain  that  the  ashy  graphics  in
the  new  operating  system  for  the
iPhone,  iPad  and  iPod  Touch  are
making them light-headed. 
The iOS 7 update makes me dizzy
with the constant movement, writes
John  Isom  of  Huntsville,  Ala.,  on
Twitter. 
With  the  new  update,  navigation
between  screens  produces  an  eect
quite  dierent  from  the  static  swipe
of before. Now the icons zoom in, like
opening  credits  of  a  science-ction
movie. 
Additionally,  when  you  open  an
app,  it  feels  like  it  is  exploding  to-
ward you, Isom says. 
Elliott  Lockwood  of  Omaha writes
that  for  the  most  part  he  likes  the
new  OS  but  that  the  animations  are
a little  long  and  make  me  sick  after  a
while.
The  eects  are  so  intense  Eliza-
beth  Kerr  kept  her  12-year-old  son
Mitchell  home  from  school  on  Fri-
day. 
He  gets  motion  sickness  on  road
trips,  says  the  Chicago-area  resi-
dent.  The  phone  is  making  him  diz-
zy. 
Her  reaction:  Its  disappointing.
Its  too  bad  that  we  had  to  go  so  far
with animation that it has an ill eect
on people. 
Its  a  fact  of  life  in  consumer  tech-
nology  that  when  change  comes  to
familiar  services,  a  loud  group  com-
plains that they miss the old ways.
Its  happened  time  and  time  again
to  Facebook  and  Google.  And  each
Apple update usually produces a loud
discussion. 
Remember  Antenna-gate  when
the  iPhone  4  was  released  and  folks
complained about dropped calls? 
Or  the  howl  (and  more  real)  re-
sponse  to  the  release  of  Apple  Maps
in  2012,  when  Apple  ditched  Google
Maps  in  its  iOS  6  update  and  re-
placed it with its own, inferior service
that  caused  Apple  management  to
publicly apologize? 
Apple  didnt  respond  to  requests
for  comment  about  the  visual  eects
in iOS 7. 
Analyst  Greg  Sterling  of  Sterling
Market  Intelligence  believes  the  on-
line  comments  are  an  over-reac-
tion but that if it really develops into
a problem, Apple will x it. 
His  advice  to  consumers  who
havent  downloaded  the  update  yet:
Try it on a friends device rst. If you
like  it,  then  download  it.
Apples iOS 7 so ashy its making users dizzy?
Jefferson Graham
@jeffersongraham
USATODAY
LINTAOZHANG, GETTY IMAGES
ABeijing customer checks out an iPhone
on Sept. 20, launch day for the 5s and 5c.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Warrant   of   Title:   Anyone
having possession of original
warrants   of   title   to   certain
precious metals or any claim
of ownership to same, last in
the  possession  of   BENTON
R.   ERVINGTON   or   JOHN
DOE  or   in   New  York   City,
consisting of  fve silver bars
identifed  by  receipt   number
CS0164657,   please   contact
Leslie A. Blau, Esq., Attorney
at   Law,   Blau   &  Malmfeldt,
203 N. LaSalle Street, Suite
1620, Chicago Illinois, 60601,
phone number (312) 443-1600,
fax   (312)   443-1665,   email
b l a u l a w@g ma i l . c o m,
by   October   10,   2013,   or
any   such   claims   will   be
extinguished by operation of
law.
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 MONEY 5B
^LVLlSLMLN   5PCIAL ADVPTI5INC FATUP   ^LVLlSLMLN
Public gets Vault Bags of rarely
seen U.S. Gov`t minted coins
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rurel, seen ndiun eud coins
issued |, t|e U.S. 0ov't neurl,
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t|e next 48 |ours.
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|ecuuse ulter t|e, were lilled
wit| U.S. 0ov't issued coins,
t|e |uqs ure now seuled lor
qood," suid imot|, J. S|issler,
C|iel Numismutist ol t|e pri
vute World leserve.
Since  t|is   2du,   pu|lic
releuse unnouncement is |einq
so widel, udvertised, collectors
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ull t|e rurel, seen coins t|e,
cun qet t|eir |unds on. So u
strict limit |us |een imposed.
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tuininq neurl, u ouurter pound
ol coins per resident, pleuse.
|ut's   w|,   it's   impor
tunt   t|ut   reuders  cull   t|e
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precisel, 8:30um todu,.
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tinq t|e Vuult Luq ol old ndiun
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|uq u|solutel, lree.
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Gov't issued coins being snapped up
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w|,  t|ese Vuult  Luqs  mu|e
t|e  perlect  qilt.   You  ust
won't  |elieve  t|e  expres
sion on t|eir luces w|en ,ou
|und t|em t|ese |euv, Vuult
Luqs.
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impossi|le to lind in circulution
und w|en t|e,'re qone, t|e,'re
qone," suid S|issler.
|ut's w|, ever,one needs
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swered," |e suid. 
As  if  the  fast-food  industry  doesnt
have enough headaches, now its got a
new one: Its getting too slow. 
Never  mind  that  its  rst  name  is
fast.  The  amount  of  time  that  con-
sumers  are  spending  waiting  in  lines
at  fast-food  drive-thru  windows  is
getting  longer,  not  shorter,  mostly
due to the growing complexity of new
products  that  the  major  fast-food
chains are selling. 
This is according to the 2013 Drive-
Thru  Performance  Study  conducted
for  QSR magazine,  a  fast-food  indus-
try trade publication. The study, to be
released today, also says that industry
giant  McDonalds  posted  its  slowest-
ever  drive-thru  time  in  the  15-year
history  of  the  drive-thru  study    re-
quiring  an  average  189.5  seconds  for
the  typical  drive-thru  customer  to  go
from  order  to  pickup.  Thats  roughly
nine seconds longer than the industry
average,  reports  the  study  conducted
this summer by Insula Research. 
The  importance  of  the  drive-thru
business  to  the  $299  billion  fast-food
industry  cannot  be  overstated.  Many
major  chains  do  60%  to  70%  of  their
business at the drive-thru. Thats even
nudged  so-called  fast-casual  chains
like  Panera  to  move  into  the  drive-
thru  arena  and  increase  the  number
of drive-thrus it opens.
The  industry  issue  thats  slowing
down  service: menu  bloat.  Fast  foods
ongoing  market-share  battle  is  forc-
ing big chains to roll out more premi-
um and more complex products more
often.  The  operational  pressures  to
assemble  those  items  are  slowing
down  the  drive-thru,  says  Sam  Och-
es, editor of QSR.
For  example,  Taco  Bell  told  QSR
that its Cantina Bell bowls sometimes
have up to 12 ingredients  which are
much  more  complex  to  assemble
than, say, a Doritos Locos Taco. 
Theres another factor at work, too:
accuracy. The one thing that angers a
customer  most  is  to  not  get  the  right
food,  says  Oches.  Its  possible  to  be
too fast.
Consumers get so upset when they
nd the wrong kind of burger  or the
wrong  toppings    in  their  bags,  that
many fast-food sellers are either slow-
ing  down  the  process  or  adding  addi-
tional  order-accuracy  checks  to
ensure  correct  orders.  Some  chains
are doubling down on order accura-
cy, says Oches.
Customers  will  be  patient  if  you
give  them  hot,  accurate  orders,  says
Oches.
Even  then,  2013  has  not  been  the
industrys best year in order accuracy,
either.  Order  accuracy  for  drive-thru
meals  for  the  industry  was  at  87.2%
this year vs. 88.8% last year. The chain
ranking  highest  in  accuracy:  Chick-
l-A  at  91.6%.  The  lowest  was  Burger
King at 82.3%.
But  Chick-l-A  customers  paid  for
that  industry-leading  accuracy  at  the
other end  they waited in the drive-
thru  line  longer  than  anyone  this
year:  203.9  seconds,  on  average.  By
comparison,  Wendys  was  the  fastest
drive-thru,  at  an  average  133.6  sec-
onds, says Oches.
Fast-food drive-thrus are slowing down
Menus getting
more complex
Bruce Horovitz
@brucehorovitz
USATODAY
SAMHODGSON, AP
ACarls Jr. employee serves a
drive-thru customer.
When  autumn  comes,  the  auto  in-
dustry  lls  with  hope  about  new  and
refreshed  models.  But  as  the  sleek
new  cars  make  their  way  to  show-
rooms,  a  raft  of  familiar  names  are
headed to the automotive dustbin.
This  year,  the  Volkswagen  Routan
minivan  is  waving  goodbye.  So  is  the
Acura  ZDX  car  crossover,  the  com-
pact Volvo C30 car and C70 converti-
ble.  Others  have  quietly  faded  as
production  ended,  such  as  the  Chev-
rolet Avalanche sport pickup and the
Jeep  Liberty  SUV.  Why  do  models
die? If they are eliminating a model,
its  because  it  is  being  replaced  by  a
new  model  or  it  was  a  failed,  outra-
geous  try  at  something  new  that
didnt  work,  says  Jesse  Toprak,  sen-
ior analyst for TrueCar.com.
With  automakers  getting  bolder
and  taking  more  risks  in  designs,  To-
prak expects the disappearing act will
pick up speed in coming years.
The biggest proof that a model has
bombed  comes  when  it  cant  lure
buyers  from  other  brands,  says  Alex-
ander Edwards of consultants Strate-
gic  Vision.  The  Avalanche was  a  fun
sport  truck,  but  core  fans  were  al-
ready  Chevrolet  loyalists.  Half  of
them  come  from  a  previous  Chevro-
let, he says of Chevy buyers. 
Harder  to  explain  are  some  main-
stream-brand  models  that  are  living
on  despite  minuscule  sales  numbers.
Nissan sold 78 Murano CrossCabrio-
let  convertibles  in  August  and  977  so
far  this  year,  Autodata  reports.  And
the Volkswagen Eos steel-top conver-
tible  is  running  on  fumes,  with  382
sold in August, 3,160 through the rst
eight months this year.
Heres  a  look  at  models  that  will
vanish for the 2014 model year:
u Volvo  C30,  C70. Of  the  two,
the  C30  coupe  was  known  for  its
style.  The  C30  denitely  made  a
statement for us, says spokeswoman
Laura  Venezia.  But  both  it  and  the
C70  steel-top  convertible  are  being
shown the exit as part of a global de-
cision,  by  the  Swedish  brand  now
owned  by  Chinese  automaker  Geely.
Volvo  says  it  has  enough  C70s  to  last
through the end of the year, however.
u Chevrolet  Avalanche. When
Chevrolet  redesigned  its  full-size
pickups  for  2014,  Avalanche  got  bur-
ied.  The  novel  pickup-based  vehicle
became a cult favorite and was a con-
sistent top scorer in J.D. Power & As-
sociates  quality  surveys  and  Con-
sumer Reports truck rankings. But its
sales  popularity  had  shrunk  to  a
small, but passionate group of buy-
ers, says Chevys Tom Wilkinson. 
uJeep Liberty. The  sporty,  fun,
earnest-looking  Jeep  crossover  SUV
is  giving  way  to  the  sporty,  fun  but
decidedly  dierent-looking  Fiat-
based Jeep Cherokee. Its turned into
almost  a  gap  year  in  the  Jeep  lineup,
since  production  of  the  Liberty  end-
ed  last  August,  though  with  enough
built  to  remain  on  sale  into  this  year
as  a  2012  model.  Continuing  delays
for  the  Cherokee  mean  there  still  is
not  a  replacement  on  sale.  We  will
only  introduce  a  vehicle  to  consum-
ers  when  we  are  completely  satis-
ed, said Chrysler in a statement. 
But  Jeep  chief  Michael  Manley
says  the  new  Cherokee  will  far  out-
distance Liberty in gas mileage. 
u Volkswagen  Routan. The
minivan  was  made  by  Chrysler,  and
was based on the Dodge Caravan, but
with some exterior VW cues and with
the  interior  and  suspension  tweaked
to  make  it  feel  more  like  a  VW.  Ed-
wards  says,  however,  that  Routan
never  t  into  a  VW  lineup  heavy  on
sportiness and on cars.
uAcura ZDX. Its a car. No, its a
crossover. There was little agreement
on  that.  But  a  lot  of  folks  found  the
looks  of  the  tall,  all-wheel-drive,
hatchback,  four-door  coupe  a  little
odd    and  sales  were  minuscule. 
GMVIA WIECK
The Chevrolet Avalanche drew buyers from other Chevy brands.
ACURA
The Acura ZDX hatchback, four-door coupe saw slow sales.
Some autos
roll into sunset
Slow sales
doom most
Chris Woodyard
@chriswoodyard
USATODAY
VOLVO
Volvo C70 steel-top convertible.
IANMERRITT, CARS.COM
Volkswagen Routan minivan. 
Nissan  says  itll  keep  selling  the
current  version  of  the  Rogue  com-
pact  SUV  even  as  it  introduces  a  re-
designed Rogue.
The carryover model is continuing
to ow into U.S. dealerships from Ja-
pan as a 2013 model. Starting in Jan-
uary, it will be renamed Rogue Select
and designated a 2014 model.
The  price  of  that  2014  Select  will
be about $21,000, or slightly less than
the  $21,170  base  price  of  the  2013
Rogue.
The  redesigned  2014  Rogue  
meant to be a higher-level model  is
due  in  November,  with  starting
prices  ranging  from  $23,350  to
$30,280.
The  simple  explanation  for  the
overlap  of  old  and  new  models:  If
Nissan  didnt  keep  shipping  previ-
ous-generation  Rogues,  it  wouldnt
have enough to sell.
The  redesigned  model  is  being
built at Smyrna,  Tenn.,  instead  of Ja-
pan.  Itll  take  awhile  for  production
there to ramp up. Without continued
supplies,  via  the  carried-over  Select
(shipped  from  Japan),  dealers  would
run short.
Rogue is Nissans second-best-sell-
ing vehicle, so running low would an-
ger  customers,  dealers  and  Nissans
accountants,  left  wondering  what
happened to all the prots from such
a popular vehicle.
Sometimes  car  companies  keep
the  old  one  around  after  a  new  one
comes  out    easily  done  if  the  two
are built at dierent factories, as with
the Rogue.
The carried-over model becomes a
cheap  version  for  rental  eets  and
other  commercial  buyers  who  care
more  that  the  car  has  wheels,  brakes
and steering, and less about the high-
er  prices  that  come  with  the  new-
tech redesigns.
Chevrolets  Malibu  Classic  is  an
example.  And  Chevy  is  holding  over
the  outgoing  Impala  through  next
summer  even  as  the  completely  dif-
ferent, 2014 Impala makes its debut.
Ford kept its last version of the old,
oval-avored  Taurus  sedan  in  pro-
duction  as  a  eet  car  in  2005  and
2006  after  the  Taurus  replacement,
called the 500, went on sale.
But  Nissan  sells  few  Rogues  to
commercial  buyers.  Its  not  a  eet
play, says spokesman Dan Bedore.
Instead,  Nissan  intends  to  avoid
the so-called Marchionne Misstep.
Chrysler  and  Fiat  CEO  Sergio
Marchionne  shut  o  production  of
the  Jeep  Liberty  in  August  2012,  and
only  now  is  about  to  get  production
going  on  the  replacement,  called
Cherokee.  That  eliminated  70,000  to
90,000 sales.
Nissan  had  its  own  misstep  when
it  halted  the  Versa  hatchback  before
the  replacement  Versa  Note  was
ready.  We  lost  three  or  four  months
of  sales,  Bedore  says.
Two ways to go Rogue
Nissan to keep
older model on
lots as new arrives
James R. Healey and Fred Meier
USATODAY
NISSANVIA WIECK
This version of the Nissan Rogue will continue to be sold as the Rogue
Select alongside the redesigned 2014 Rogue, due in November. 
6B MONEY
  USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
chip cookies at check-in. For knowing that while Im out there taking care of business, people
are here to take care of me. Thats something you dont nd on a spreadsheet. countryinns.com
to put on the
One less thing
EXPENSE
2013 Country Inns & Suites By Carlson,
SM
Inc. All Rights Reserved.
MARKET TRENDS
A WEEKLY LOOK BEHIND THE USA'S STOCK MARKET MOVEMENT
Top-performing funds
for the three months
ended Thursday
Quarters best
mutual funds
VALUE
Small companies
Catalyst Vl;A 18.3%
Small CapVl Fd 16.5%
Perritt UltraMic 13.6%
Towle DeepVl 12.9%
CornerCap:SCV 12.7%
Midsize companies
SouthernSun;Inst 14.0%
LMOpportunity;C 13.1%
Cullen:SCV;I 11.6%
Mgrs AMG:Sys;I 10.1%
Transam:S/M;A 9.7%
Large companies
Chr Weil Core Inv 10.1%
Lyrical US Vl 9.7%
Natixis:VNSlct;Y 8.5%
WellsFargo:Co;Inv 8.2%
Touchstone:Foc;Y 8.2%
CORE
Small companies
Wegener Adpt Gr 43.5%
Satuit Cap:SC 14.9%
Glenmede:Eq;Adv 13.7%
PwrShrs DWATL 13.5%
Eaton Vnce TM;A 13.5%
Midsize companies
Satuit Cap:S/M 14.6%
Eaton Vnce Spec;A 11.9%
GggnhmSnOf ETF 11.7%
Needham:Agr Gr 11.5%
PutnamSptrm;A 11.5%
Large companies
iPath ETNS&P 10.9%
Johnson:Gro 10.8%
Glbl X TopGuru 10.4%
Longleaf Partners 10.1%
Amer'n Tr Allgnce 10.1%
GROWTH
Small companies
Meyers:CapAgr 21.2%
JacobSCG;Inst 21.0%
Oberweis:Micro 20.7%
Brown SmCo;Inv 19.7%
Oberweis:Opptys 18.9%
Midsize companies
EventideGilead;A 19.8%
Westcre:Slct;Rtl 17.7%
REN:GlbIpo Aftrmk16.2%
Driehaus:MCG 16.1%
Natixis:LS MCG;Y 15.9%
Large companies
Columbia:Slct;Z 19.2%
Transam:Cp;I2 18.3%
MorgStan I:Gro;I 18.3%
Calamos:Foc;I 15.1%
JPMorgn:Dyn;Sel 14.7%
SOURCE: LIPPER
Major index ETFs
Ticker Week Month Quarter
PowerShares QQQ QQQ 0.1% 4.9% 10.9%
S&P 500 SPY -1.0% 3.1% 5.3%
Dow Jones industrials DIA -1.4% 2.8% 2.4%
Sector ETFs
State Street S&P sector index funds
Telecom IXP 1.1% 8.1% 8.6%
Industrials XLI -0.7% 5.6% 9.6%
Consumer discretionary XLY -0.2% 5.3% 7.9%
Materials XLB -1.0% 4.4% 10.1%
Health care XLV -1.6% 2.8% 6.5%
Financials XLF -1.7% 2.8% 3.3%
Technology XLK -0.5% 2.7% 5.4%
Consumer staples XLP -1.9% 2.6% 1.3%
Energy XLE -0.5% 1.3% 6.7%
Utilities XLU -0.2% -0.2% -0.5%
ETFs by investment style
Vanguard Ticker Week Month Quarter
Small-cap growth VBK -0.1% 5.9% 11.4%
Midcap growth VOT -0.7% 5.3% 9.3%
Small-cap blend  VB unch. 5.2% 9.4%
Large-cap growth VUG -0.9% 4.8% 8.7%
Midcap blend VO -0.7% 4.7% 8.0%
Small-cap value VBR 0.1% 4.6% 7.8%
Midcap value VOE -0.7% 4.0% 6.9%
Large-cap blend VV -1.3% 3.4% 5.9%
Large-cap value VTV -1.8% 2.2% 3.9%
Other index ETFs
iShares
Emerging markets EEM -2.1% 10.3% 7.1%
International EFA -0.1% 7.1% 12.1%
Socially responsible KLD -1.1% 3.5% 5.2%
Real estate ICF -2.0% 2.6% -3.5%
Bonds AGG 0.5% 1.0% 0.1%
Gold IAU 0.5% -6.1% 8.0%
EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS
Note: iShares ETF SOURCE: STANDARD & POOR'S
The weeks top stocks
Top stocks in each industry group fromthe S&P 500, 400 and 600
1  INDUSTRY GROUPS %
CHANGES BASED ON S&P 1500
Live stock quotes
on your cellphone
Send text message to 4INFO4 (446364) with:
STOCKTICKER (DELL) or
FUNDS TICKER (AGTHX)
-6%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
-4% -2% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% 0
Energy
Industrials
Dow Jones
industrials
Consumer
discretionary
Emerging
markets
Consumer
staples
Materials
Nasdaq
Information
technology
Health
care
Financials
Quarterly change
Monthly change
Gained
in past 7 days
Declined
in past 7 days
Unchanged
in past 7 days
1  Other indexes include International: Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australasia, Far East Index; and 
Emerging markets: MSCI Emerging Markets. Source: Standard & Poors
International
Utilities
Telecom
International
MARKET LEADER
Investors are 
becoming more 
interested in foreign 
companies due to 
their depressed 
values and improving 
economic growth.
Sectors popular with 
investors looking for 
income, including 
telecom, are under 
pressure as investors 
fear higher interest 
rates might be coming
eventually.
Telecom
MARKET LAGGARD
S&P
W: -1.1%, 
M:  3.5% 
Q:  5.3%
JIM SERGENT AND ALEJANDROGONZALEZ, USA TODAY
Major market, S&P 500 sector and other indexes performance during the past four and 13 weeks.
FINANCIAL MARKETS AT A GLANCE
Dow Jones
industrial average
y1.2% week
x2.9%
month
x2.3%
3 months
Wilshire
5000
y0.8% week
x3.5%
month
x7.6%
3 months
S&P 500
Large companies
y1.1% week
x3.5%
month
x5.3%
3 months
S&P 600
Small companies
x0.2% week
x5.2%
month
x10.2%
3 months
Nasdaq
composite index
x0.2% week
x5.2%
month
x11.1%
3 months
.
Consumer
discretionary
W: -0.2%M: 5.5%Q: 7.9%
Autos
Month: 6.7% -0.7%
Quarter: 13.8% Week
Thor Indus. 8.5%
WinnebagoInd. 6.1%
DrewInd. 2.6%
Continental 2.3%
StandardMotor 1.6%
Consumer goods
Month: 8.4% 0.6%
Quarter: 7.5% Week
Universal Elect. 10.4%
Deckers Outdoor 7.4%
Blyth 6.4%
Nike 6.2%
Skechers 3.7%
Consumer services
Month: 3.1% -0.4%
Quarter: 5.8% Week
Outerwall 10.4%
CECEntmt 4.5%
Marcus 3.7%
OPAP 3.5%
ITT Edu. Svcs. 3.5%
Media
Month: 6.5% 0.4%
Quarter: 8.4% Week
EWScripps 8.6%
Live Nation Entmt 7.6%
NewYork Times 7.3%
Washington Post 5.3%
Gannett 4.5%
Retailing
Month: 4.9% -0.4%
Quarter: 7.6% Week
AscenaRetail 17.8%
OfficeMax 11.3%
Office Depot 10.8%
Zale 6.9%
MonroMuf./ Brke 6.3%
.
Consumer
staples
W: -2.1%M: 2.8%Q: 1.2%
Foodretailing
Month: 5.7% -1.3%
Quarter: 5.8% Week
Safeway 2.7%
Supervalu 2.6%
Caseys General 1.2%
Whole Foods Mkt. 0.9%
Nash Finch 0.6%
Food&beverage
Month: 1.9% -2.3%
Quarter: -0.2% Week
DiamondFoods 9.8%
Cal Maine Foods 2.4%
Annies 2.2%
CalavoGrowers 2.2%
Ass. British Foods 1.8%
Householdgoods
Month: 1.6% -2.2%
Quarter: 0.7% Week
Medifast 3.8%
Inter Parfums 1.0%
WD-40 0.8%
CentralGarden&Pet -0.1%
Clorox -0.5%
.
Energy
W: -0.8%M: 1.4%Q: 5.4%
Energy
1
Month: 1.6% -0.7%
Quarter: 6.0% Week
Geospace Tech. 8.5%
Denbury Resources 7.2%
Approach Res. 6.8%
Northern Oil/Gas 6.8%
Cimarex Energy 5.4%
.
Financials
W: -1.9%M: 3.2%Q: 3.2%
Banks
Month: 0.2% -1.9%
Quarter: 1.6% Week
East West Bancorp 4.7%
SVB Financial 3.7%
Simmons 1st 3.6%
First Niagara 3.4%
Financials
1
Month: 3.3% -2.4%
Quarter: 4.5% Week
HFF 6.8%
Mediobanca 1.9%
MarketAxess 1.8%
WorldAcceptance 1.6%
Insurance
Month: 5.5% -0.4%
Quarter: 6.7% Week
eHealth 8.9%
Genworth Financial 6.4%
First Amer'n Fin. 5.2%
Hanover Insurance 5.0%
StanCorpFin. 2.1%
Real estate
Month: 3.7% -0.9%
Quarter: -2.4% Week
Segro 3.9%
Forestar 2.6%
Nat'l Retail Props. 2.5%
PS Business Parks 2.5%
Hospitality Props. 2.2%
.
Industrials
W: -0.5%M: 5.9%Q: 9.0%
Capital goods
Month: 6.3% -0.3%
Quarter: 10.1% Week
Vestas WindSys. 9.7%
Amer'n Sci. &Eng. 4.9%
BAE Systems 4.2%
Hyundai Hvy Ind. 3.7%
Fiat Industrial 3.5%
Business services
Month: 5.0% -0.4%
Quarter: 9.0% Week
Towers Watson 5.0%
FTI Consulting 3.5%
Heidrick &Strug. 3.4%
UnitedStationers 3.1%
Hays 2.9%
Transportation
Month: 4.9% -1.1%
Quarter: 6.9% Week
Allegiant Travel 8.3%
AP Moller-Maersk 4.8%
Deutsche Lufthansa 4.4%
PostNL 2.9%
Int'l Cons. Air 2.7%
.
Information
technology
W: -0.5%M: 3.3%Q: 6.7%
Software
Month: 5.2% -0.9%
Quarter: 5.6% Week
Yahoo 8.5%
Forrester Research 8.0%
Higher One 7.1%
Take-Two 6.7%
SAIC 6.0%
Techhardware
Month: 0.7% 0.3%
Quarter: 11.0% Week
Checkpoint 6.0%
Seagate Tech. 5.1%
Alcatel-Lucent 4.3%
AvidTech. 4.1%
Apple 3.3%
Semiconductors
Month: 6.1% -1.1%
Quarter: 3.6% Week
AppliedMaterials 10.5%
Entropic Comm. 6.4%
Supertex 4.9%
Cirrus Logic 4.4%
First Solar 4.3%
.
Health Care
W: -1.6%M: 3.3%Q: 6.6%
Healthcare
1
Month: 1.5% -1.4%
Quarter: 4.1% Week
Centene 10.4%
SurModics 7.7%
Cantel Medical 6.6%
Cerner 5.6%
BioRef. Lab. 4.5%
Pharmaceuticals
Month: 4.3% -1.5%
Quarter: 8.4% Week
Arqule 13.2%
Actavis 6.5%
The Medicines 4.5%
Celgene 3.2%
Questcor Pharma. 2.8%
.
Materials
W: -1.1%M: 4.8%Q: 10.1%
Materials
1
Month: 4.7% -0.9%
Quarter: 9.9% Week
SSAB 14.5%
H.B. Fuller 7.4%
Flotek Indus. 5.3%
Headwaters 4.3%
.
Telecom
W: -1.1%M: 1.0%Q: -4.9%
Telecom
1
Month: 1.1% -1.0%
Quarter: -4.6% Week
NTELOS 17.2%
Lumos Networks 12.9%
Cbeyond 8.3%
.
Utilities
W:-0.5%M:0.4%Q:-0.7%
Utilities
1
Month: 0.3% -0.3%
Quarter: -0.4% Week
Elec.e de France 7.3%
Gas Natural SDG 4.3%
Amer'n States Wtr 4.2%
Questar 3.6%
Northwestern 3.5%
From on-deck circle,
Marlins Henderson
Alvarez sees gem
come to fruition, 5C
Unusual
no-hitter
STEVE MITCHELL, USA TODAY SPORTS
F
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2013 SECTION C
USA SNAPSHOTS
Active coaches in 
NHL with most 
regular-season wins
Source Hockey-Reference.com
KEVIN GREER AND ALEJANDROGONZALEZ, USA TODAY
660
605
571
519
461
Joel Quenneville
Ken Hitchcock
Lindy Ruff
Barry Trotz
Darryl Sutter
Baseball/American League u4C
Tampa Bay 7, Toronto 6 
Baltimore 7, Boston 6 
Kansas City 4, Chicago 1 
Cleveland 5, Minnesota 1 
N.Y. Yankees 5, Houston 1 (14)
Texas 6, L.A. Angels 2 
Oakland 9, Seattle 0
National League u4C
Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 2 
N.Y. Mets 3, Milwaukee 2 
Atlanta 12, Philadelphia 5 
St. Louis 4, Chicago Cubs 0 
San Francisco 7, San Diego 6 
Colorado 2, L.A. Dodgers 1
Arizona 3, Washington 2 
Interleagueu4-5C
Miami 1, Detroit 0 
Football/NFLu6-9C
Kansas City 31, N.Y. Giants 7 
Seattle 23, Houston 20 (OT) 
Buffalo 23, Baltimore 20 
Arizona 13, Tampa Bay 10 
Indianapolis 37, Jacksonville 3 
Cleveland 17, Cincinnati 6 
Detroit 40, Chicago 32 
Minnesota 34, Pittsburgh 27 
Tennessee 38, N.Y. Jets 13 
Washington 24, Oakland 14
San Diego 30, Dallas 21 
Denver 52, Philadelphia 20 
New England 30, Atlanta 23
SPORTSLINE
FIRST WORD
I WAS READY TO GO OUT
THERE FOR THE 10TH. BUT
ILL TAKE THAT WILD PITCH.
Marlins starter Henderson Alvarez,
whose no-hitter vs. the Tigers wasnt
over until his team scored in the
bottom of the ninth inning  on a
wild pitch  to win the game 1-0
TWEET OF THE DAY
@ovi8
SO SICK!!!!!!!BEST MOMENT IN
MY LIFE!!!THX @COCACOLA AND
SOCHI 2014 !!!!
Capitals star Alex Ovechkin, who was
the first Russian to carry a Sochi
Olympic torch Sunday, receiving the
flame at the traditional lighting cere-
mony in Greece
MAGIC NUMBERS
16, 0
Broncos quarterback Peyton Man-
nings TD pass and interception totals
through four games
MAGIC NUMBER II
2:03.23
The winning time, a world record, for
Kenyas Wilson Kipsang, 31, in Sun-
days Berlin Marathon
LAST WORD
OUR HISTORY HAS BEEN GREAT,
AND WE NEED TO BE GREAT
AGAIN.
Southern Cal athletics director Pat
Haden, after firing coach Lane Kiffin
Edited by Joe Fleming
DIMITRI MESSINIS, AP
Alex Ovechkin rejoins team Tuesday.
LOS ANGELES Lane Kins ring the
morning  after  a  disastrous  night  in
Tempe,  Ariz.    a  62-41  loss  to  Arizo-
na  State  that  gave  Kin  and  South-
ern California a 3-2 record and seven
losses  in  their  last  11  games    made
clear  that  whatever  was  left  of  the
Pete Carroll glory years is long gone.
The  Trojans  newest  coach  is  an
interim  choice.  USC  athletics  direc-
tor  Pat  Haden  announced  Sunday
that Ed Orgeron, the teams assistant
head  coach,  defensive  line  coach  and
recruiting  coordinator,  would  take
over for the rest of the season.
In  one  sentence,  Haden  also
summed  up  that  one  of  college  foot-
balls most storied programs is not at
the top of its game.
Our  history  has  been  great,  Ha-
den said. We need to be great again.
For  now,  that  starts  with  Orgeron
trying  to  salvage  a  successful  season
while Haden courts a coach. 
Haden, a former USC star quarter-
back,  tried  to  put  the  focus  on  the
current players as he declined to dis-
cuss  candidates  for  a  permanent
coach to lead the Trojans out of their
mediocrity.
Well  try  to  nd  the  best  coach,
but  I  dont  want  to  talk  about  the
search  now,  Haden  said.  We  have
some  really  great  kids,  and  its  about
them now.
The  struggling  Trojans  are  taking
two  days  o  before  they  return  to
practice  to  prepare  for  their  next
game,  at  home  against  Arizona  on
Oct. 10.
The  pressure  now  shifts  to  Orge-
ron  to  nd  a  way  to  avoid  what,  for  a
program such as USCs, is shaping up
as another lost campaign  following
the  collapse  of  2012,  when  the  Tro-
jans  opened  the  season  ranked  No.  1
and stumbled to a 7-6 nish.
Seeking return to glory, USC starts over 
MATT KARTOZIAN, USA TODAY SPORTS
Lane Kin was red after USCs sev-
enth loss in 11 games dating to 2012.
David Leon Moore
@DavidLeon_Moore
USATODAYSports
uNo changes at top of coaches poll, 10C
uAnalysis: Southern California job just got better, 10C
vSTORY CONTINUES ON10C
LONDON Christian  Pon-
der  smiled  as  he  slapped
hands  with  Matt  Cassel
on  the  sideline,  but  the
Minnesota  Vikings  in-
jured  quarterback  had  to  know  what
he was watching.
Cassel  had  just  thrown  a  16-yard
touchdown  pass  to  Greg  Jennings  in
the  third  quarter  of  the  previously
winless  Vikings  34-27  triumph
against  the  Pittsburgh  Steelers  at
Wembley Stadium  and put himself
in  position  to  stay  the  starter  after
next weeks bye.
In  terms  of  me  being  ready  to
play,  Ill  always  take  the  same  ap-
proach:  Ill  be  ready,  Cassel  said.
My  job  is  to  be  accountable  to  my
teammates,  and  whatever  Coach
says, thats what Ill do.
The market for No. 2 quarterbacks
was  more  lucrative  than  ever  in
March, with Cassel among six to sign
contracts  worth  at  least  $3  million  a
year. 
The Vikings got an up-close look at
the  jolt  a  change  at  the  most  impor-
tant  position  can  make  a  week  earli-
er,  when  Brian  Hoyer    starting  in
place  of  injured  Brandon  Weeden  
threw three touchdown passes in the
Cleveland  Browns  upset  victory  at
the Metrodome.
Hoyer, 27, was even better Sunday,
throwing  for  269  yards  and  two
touchdowns  without  a  turnover  as
the  Browns  whipped  the  Cincinnati
Bengals 17-6. Left for dead when they
traded  running  back  Trent  Richard-
son  on  Sept.  18,  the  Browns  (2-2)  are
tied for the AFC North lead.
Certainly, hes been the spark that
I had  hoped  for,  Browns  coach  Rob
Chudzinski said of Hoyer.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers looked
for  a  spark  by  benching  Josh  Free-
man  and  starting  rookie  Mike  Glen-
non,  who  had  them  in  position  for 
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS
Matt Cassel stepped in to lead the Vik-
ings to victory against the Steelers.
Cassel shows value of capable No. 2 QB 
Tom Pelissero
@TomPelissero
USATODAYSports
MORE NFL INSIDE
Greenwood, member of famed Steel Curtain, dead at age 67, 2C
Steelers, Giants, Jaguars and Buccaneers remain winless, 6C
Bell: New quarterback, same result for Tampa Bay, 7C
Manning throws four TD passes as Broncos crush Eagles, 7C
vSTORY CONTINUES ON 6C
GAME
CHANGE:
BACKUP
QBS
Nick  Swisher  thrust  his  arms  high
into  the  air,  looked  into  the  sky  and
proclaimed  that  he  has  never  felt  so
proud to be a Clevelander.
Hopefully  this  changes  the  per-
ception  of  what  people  think  of  this
city  and  this  organization,  Swisher
said  Sunday.  People  in  the  216,  get
ready yall, its time to party.
The  Cleveland  Indians,  who  lost
94  games  in  2012,  are  back  in  the
playos  for  the  rst  time  since  2007,
earning  an  American  League  wild-
card home game.
For  the  rst  time  in  21  years,  the
Pittsburgh Pirates are joining them.
The  Detroit  Tigers  are  returning,
too, as well as the Cincinnati Reds.
This  isnt  a  Major  League  Baseball
postseason. 
Its a Rust Belt renaissance.
These  four  cities,  devastated  over
the  years  by  economic  woes  and,  in
some  cases,  downtown  desolation,
suddenly  have  baseball  teams  to  at 
HANNAHFOSLIEN, GETTY IMAGES
Jason Kipnis, left, and Nick Swisher of the Indians celebrate Sundays win, which clinched Clevelands rst postseason berth since 2007.
RESURGENCE IN RUST BELT
JOHNE. SOKOLOWSKI, USA TODAY SPORTS
Rays second
baseman Ben
Zobrist, left,
and shortstop
Yunel Escobar
were up in the
air over their
victory Sunday
that enables
their season to
last at least
another day.
Midwestern teams lock up playo berths
vSTORY CONTINUES ON 5C
Bob Nightengale
bnighten@usatoday.com
USATODAYSports
TODAY
AL one-game playoff
Tampa Bay Rays at 
Texas Rangers, 8:07 ET, TBS
TUESDAY
NL wild-card game
Cincinnati Reds at 
Pittsburgh Pirates, 8:07 ET, TBS
WEDNESDAY
AL wild-card game
Rangers-Rays winner at 
Cleveland Indians, 8:07 ET, TBS
THURSDAY
NL Division Series
Los Angeles Dodgers at
Atlanta Braves, TBA
Reds-Pirates winner at 
St. Louis Cardinals, TBA
FRIDAY
AL Division Series
Detroit Tigers at 
Oakland Athletics, TBA
Wild-card winner at Boston
Red Sox, TBA
F
2C SPORTS
USA TODAY
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2013
FORMER STEELERS LINEMAN
GREENWOOD DIES AT 67
Former Pittsburgh Steelers defensive
end L.C. Greenwood, who won four
Super  Bowls  as  a  member  of  the
Steel  Curtain  defense,  has  died.  He
was  67.  The  Allegheny  County  (Pa.)
Medical  Examiners  oce  said
Greenwood died Sunday from undis-
closed  causes  at  Presbyterian  Hospi-
tal  in  Pittsburgh.  Greenwood  was  a
six-time  Pro  Bowler  and  two-time
all-pro during his career from 1969 to
1981  and  was  honored  on  the  NFLs
All-Decade  team  for  the  1970s.  Fam-
ous  for  wearing  gold  cleats  when  he
played,  Greenwood  joined Joe
Greene, Ernie  Holmes  and
Dwight White to  form  the  line  that
served as the linchpin for the defense
that  helped  the  Steelers  win  four  Su-
per Bowls in a six-season span.
NBA CONSIDERING CHANGE
TO FINALS FORMAT
The competition committee will rec-
ommend a change in the NBA Finals
from  a  2-3-2  format  to  a  2-2-1-1-1  as
it  is  in  the  other  playo  series,  ac-
cording  to  a  person  familiar  with  the
situation.  The  person  spoke  on  the
condition  of  anonymity  because  the
league  hadnt  made  the  matter  pub-
lic. The league has used the 2-3-2 for-
mat  since  1985,  when  it  was  decided
that  the  travel  from  coast  to  coast
was too long for one game. One argu-
ment for  going back  is  that the lower
seed  has  a  disadvantage,  but  that
hasnt seemed to be the case. The Mi-
ami  Heat  were  the  higher  seed  this
year, but the Oklahoma City Thunder
were  the  higher  seed  in  2012  when
the  Heat  won.  Miami  was  the  higher
seed  in  2011  when  the  Dallas  Maver-
icks  won.  The  team  with  the  home-
court  advantage  has  won  the  Finals
about  70%  of  the  time.  The  owners
will  vote  on  the  proposal  at  next
months meetings.  Sam Amick
KEMPS SEASON OVER 
BECAUSE OF ANKLE INJURY
The  Los  Angeles  Dodgers  wont  have
center  elder  Matt  Kemp for  the
postseason  because  of  swelling  in  a
bone  in  his  left  ankle.  He  left  the
clubhouse  on  crutches  after  a  2-1
home win vs. the Colorado Rockies in
Sundays  regular-season  nale.  An
MRI  taken  during  the  game  showed
microscopic  evidence  of  swelling  in
one  of  the  major  weight-bearing
bones  in  Kemps  sprained  ankle.  The
announcement  came  as  a  surprise,
because a few days ago Kemp said he
felt  good.  Kemp  missed  52  games
over  the  last  two  months  while  on
the disabled list because of the ankle.
He  was  scratched  from  Saturdays
lineup  in  a  precautionary  move  after
starting the previous six games while
trying  to  accumulate  at-bats  before
the  playos.  The  Dodgers  open  the
National  League  Division  Series  on
Thursday at the Atlanta Braves.
HADLEY WINS TOURNAMENT,
WILLIAMS EARNS CARD
Chesson  Hadley  won  the  Web.com
Tour  Championship  on  Sunday  in
Ponte  Vedra  Beach,  Fla.  He  closed
with  a  1-under  69  for  a  two-shot  vic-
tory  in  the  nal  event  of  the  series
that  determines  PGA  Tour  cards.  A
late  bogey  by  Scott  Gardiner kept
Hadley  from  winning  the  special
money  list  and  getting  full  status  on
the PGA Tour and a spot in The Play-
ers  Championship  next  year.  John
Peterson  won  the  special  money
list.  Perhaps  the  biggest  winner  was
Lee  Williams. Needing  a  birdie  on
the  18th  hole  at  TPC  Sawgrass,  he
rolled  in  a  55-foot  putt  over  a  ridge
and into the cup to earn a tour card.
BRIEFLY ...
Tim  Cahill  scored  in  the  76th  min-
ute  Sunday,  lifting  the  visiting  New
York  Red  Bulls  into  a  1-1  tie  with  the
Seattle  Sounders  that  put  them  back
atop  the  Major  League  Soccer  stand-
ings.  ...  Oregon  junior  running  back
DeAnthony  Thomas, who  injured
his right ankle on the opening kicko
of  Saturdays  55-16  home  victory  vs.
California  and  missed  the  rest  of  the
game,  said  he  was  uncertain  if  he
would  be  able  to  play  Saturday  at
Colorado.  ...  Shanghai  Bobby, last
years undefeated 2-year-old champi-
on,  was  retired  from  horse  racing  af-
ter suering a lower leg injury Friday
in winning the Aljamin Stakes at Bel-
mont  Park.  The  race  marked  Shang-
hai  Bobbys  return  from  a  pelvic
fracture  that  caused  him  to  miss  the
Triple  Crown  races  after  he  got  hurt
in the Florida Derby in March. 
Compiled by John Tkach fromsta, wires
Where Josh Freeman might land
explored in 10 things we learned
from Week 4 in the NFL.
BRAD PENNER, USA TODAY SPORTS
The Bucs have benched Josh Freeman.
NFL.USATODAY.COM
ANYONE 
NEED A QB?
IN BRIEF
SPORTS PHOTOS
QR READER
Scan with a QR reader;
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JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA, USA TODAY SPORTS
Dodgers center elder Matt Kemp will
miss the postseason.
1977 AP PHOTO
L.C. Greenwood helped the Steelers win
four Super Bowls in six seasons.
NASCAR
drive the (stu) out of that thing. 
Thats  because  Hendrick  Motor-
sports  teammate  Dale  Earnhardt  Jr.
was  behind  him  on  the  nal  restart
with four fresh tires to Johnsons two
the result of pit strategy.
Knaus  knew  taking  two  tires
would eventually be trumped by four
but  gured  there  would  be  enough
time  to  hold  o  Earnhardt.  Busch
took the lead with two tires earlier in
the race and was overtaken in 27 laps,
Knaus  observed;  on  Sundays  nal
run, there were 26 laps left.
We  worked  hard  and  tried  to  un-
derstand  what  we  needed  to  do  for
strategy,  and  fortunately  it  paid  o
for us, he said.
Thats  not  a  surprising  develop-
ment  considering  the  history  of  the
No.  48  team.  Johnson  and  Knaus
have  been  a  formidable  pair  unlike
any  the  sport  has  seen  over  the  last
decade.
And  though  it  was  mildly  surpris-
ing  not  to  see  better  results  from
Johnson  in  the  rst  two  Chase  races
 he  nished  fth  at  Chicagoland
Speedway  and  fourth  at  New  Hamp-
shire  Motor  Speedway    Knaus  said
DOVER, DEL. Theres usually nothing
that  can  distract  laser-focused  Jim-
mie  Johnson  during  the  10  weeks  of
NASCARs Chase for the Sprint Cup.
He has won ve championships af-
ter retreating into his mental bubble,
thinking  only  about  what  it  takes  to
go fast week after week.
But when he crossed the nish line
of  Sundays  AAA  400  at  Dover  Inter-
national Speedway, Johnson said, his
rst  thought  wasnt  about  the  Chase.
Instead,  he  reected  on  the  history
he had just achieved: A record eighth
Dover  win,  breaking  a  tie  with  Rich-
ard Petty and Bobby Allison.
Im  not  sure  Ive  ever  done  what
Richard  Petty  hasnt,  Johnson  said.
To  get  this  eighth  win  here  is  very,
very special.
Then, of course, his thoughts were
back on the Chase.
After  he  stumbled  into  the  title
run  with  the  worst  four-race  stretch
of  his  career,  Johnsons  consecutive
top-ve  results  were  overshadowed
in the rst two events by one-two n-
ishes  from  Joe  Gibbs  Racing  team-
mates Matt Kenseth and Kyle Busch.
Not anymore.
Johnson  is  eight  points  behind
Kenseth    worth  eight  track  posi-
tions  and showed he was in typical
autumn  form  despite  a  quiet  two
months  by  his  standards.  This  was
his rst win since July at Daytona In-
ternational Speedway.
I  think  Jimmie  is  probably  the
most  underrated  champion  we  have
in  this  industry,  crew  chief  Chad
Knaus  said.  He  is  by  far  and  away
the  most  powerful  driver  over  the
course  of  the  last  25  to  35  years  in
this sport. Its pretty fun being able to
work with him.
Johnson, sitting adjacent to Knaus
during the postrace news conference,
allowed himself a smile.
Thanks, man, he said.
To  win,  Johnson  said,  he  had  to
the  team  was  capable  of  winning  the
rst two races.
At Chicagoland, a NASCAR ocial
delayed  a  pit  stop  with  an  incorrect
call  about  a  missing  lug  nut  before
correcting  himself;  at  New  Hamp-
shire,  Knaus  said,  Johnson  was  bot-
tled  up  on  a  couple  of  restarts  and
couldnt  get  the  track  position  he
needed.
But  entering  Dover,  the  team  felt
extremely  condent.  Johnson  had  a
chance to win the June race here un-
til  NASCAR  penalized  him  for  jump-
ing  a  late  restart  (the  restart  rule  has
since  been  changed),  and  Knaus
brought the same car back.
We  are  just  trying  to  establish  a
foundation  and  set  ourselves  up  for
the  second  half  of  the  Chase,  Knaus
said. As long as we do that, were go-
ing to be where we need to be.
With  seven  races  left  before  a
champion  is  determined,  Johnson,
Kenseth  and  Busch  have  separated
themselves  from  the  rest.  They  were
running  rst  to  third  near  the  races
midpoint, and the trio nished in the
top  seven.  The  top  10  was  made  up
entirely  of  Chase  drivers  for  the  rst
time in the title runs 10-year history. 
When you look up (at the scoring
pylon),  everybody  that  nished  in
front  of  you    its  all  cars  that  youre
racing  for  points,  Kenseth  said  after
nishing  seventh.  Certainly,  I  want-
ed to do better than that.
Johnson  said  he  was  well  aware
Kenseth  and  Busch  were  going  to  be
leading  laps  and  posting good results
every  week.  At  Kansas  Speedway  
where  the  series  travels  next  week  
Kenseth has won the last two races.
I  was  thinking  about  (the  compe-
tition)  when  I  was  in  the  car,  John-
son  said.  My  whole  thought  process
was  just  how  tough  this  champion-
ship is going to be.
Youve  got  to  deliver. 
How the 13 Chase for the Sprint
Cup drivers stack up after three of
10 races (wins in Chase):
Pos. Driver Wins
Pts./ 
back
1 Matt Kenseth 2 2,149
2 Jimmie Johnson 1 -8
3 Kyle Busch 0 -12
4 Kevin Harvick 0 -39
5 Jeff Gordon 0 -39
6 Greg Biffle 0 -41
7 Ryan Newman 0 -48
8 Clint Bowyer 0 -51
9 Kurt Busch 0 -55
10 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 0 -57
11 Carl Edwards 0 -65
12 Joey Logano 0 -66
13 Kasey Kahne 0 -78
KENSETH
STILL LEADS
JOHNSON MAKING HIS MOVE
Driver gets closer to sixth title
with record eighth Dover win 
Jeff Gluck
@jeff_gluck
USATODAYSports
MATTHEWOHAREN, USA TODAY SPORTS
To get this eighth win here is very, very special, says Jimmie Johnson, celebrating after the AAA 400.
IN THE DRIVERS SEAT
WITH JIMMIE JOHNSON
See the ve-time champion through
the years at nascar.usatoday.com
DOVER,  DEL. Junior  Nation  was
ready  to  explode  with  adulation  for
its  hero  and  NASCARs  most  popular
driver  as  Dale  Earnhardt  Jr.  snied
victory  lane  late  Sunday  in  the 
AAA  400  at  Dover  International
Speedway.
The  scent  was  lost,  however,  and
Earnhardt  fell  short  by  0.44  of  a  sec-
ond to teammate Jimmie Johnson as
Chase  for  the  Sprint  Cup  drivers
dominated  the  third  race  of  the  title
run.
Earnhardt had one of the best cars
he  has  had  this  season  and  led  80
laps.  But  despite  the  advantage  of  a
four-tire  change  vs.  two  for  Johnson
on the nal pit stop, he couldnt catch
the ve-time champion over the clos-
ing laps.
Earnhardt,  who  started  on  the
pole,  had  two  pit-road  miscues  he
said  also  cost  him.  He  failed  to  slow
down  enough  during  an  early  round
of  green-ag  stops  and  missed  the
pit-road  entrance.  He  drove  around
the track again to pit, falling from the
lead  to  eighth  in  the  process.  Later,
he  checked  up  behind  Mark  Martin
at  the  entrance,  costing  him  time
again.
Earnhardt  said  of  the  early-race
pit-road miscue, (It was) a big factor
in  us  not  nishing  one  spot  ahead  of
where we are. 
We  came  really  close  today,  he
said.  I  dont  feel  like  today  was  a
highlight for us. I think this is how its
supposed  to  be  every  week.  I  know
that  competitions  dicult  and
tough,  Jimmie  being  one  of  the  best
drivers  the  sport  has  ever  seen.  Run-
ning at one of his better racetracks, it
was going to be a challenge, but I felt
like  we  had  enough  car  and  tires  for
sure to beat him.
On  the  nal  pit  stop,  crew  chief
Steve  Letarte  opted  for  four  tires
while  the  top  three  drivers  at  the
time    Johnson,  Matt  Kenseth  and
Je  Gordon    opted  for  two.  It
seemed  the  call  would  give  Earn-
hardt  the  edge,  and  on  the  nal  re-
start  he  jumped  from  fourth  to
second, nestling behind Johnson.
I  thought  if  I  could  get  to  him  I
could  get  by  him,  Earnhardt  said.
Just couldnt do it.
It  sucks  to  lose  regardless  of  who
wins.  Its  probably harder  to  run  sec-
ond  than  fth  or  10th.  You  dont  get
good cars every week, so youd like to
capitalize.  It  doesnt  bother  me  that
its  Jimmie.  I  wasnt  hoping  he  was
going to blow a tire or anything at the
end. I was trying to catch him.
Over  the nal  miles,  with Johnson
holding a relatively comfortable lead,
Earnhardt adjusted his driving line in
an  attempt  to  cut  the  decit,  but
Johnson was too strong. 
It was Earnhardts best nish since
March,  when  he  was  second  at  Auto
Club  Speedway. He also  was  the run-
ner-up in the season-opening Dayto-
na 500  to Johnson.
Earnhardt  jumped  one  spot  in  the
standings  to  10th. 
MATTHEWOHAREN, USA TODAY SPORTS
Its probably harder to run second than fth or 10th, says Dale
Earnhardt Jr., leading the eld Sunday at the start of the AAA 400. 
Earnhardt falls 0.44-second short
Mike Hembree
@mikehembree
Special for USATODAYSports
KYLE BUSCH STILL SEEKS
CHASE BREAKTHROUGH
He has three top-ve nishes but no
wins, at nascar.usatoday.com
F
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 SPORTS 3C
The Miami Heats Erik Spoelstra
has  signed  a  contract  extension.  He
has  been  their  coach  for  ve  seasons
and  has  a  record  of  260-134.  His
teams have gone to the playos every
season and the NBA Finals in each of
the  last  three,  winning  the  title  in
2012  and  2013.  Last  season,  the  Heat
had  the  second-longest  regular-sea-
son  winning  streak  in  NBA  history
(27 games) and nished with a record
of  66-16.  They  won  the  champion-
ship  in  seven  games  against  the  San
Antonio  Spurs.  Spoelstra  has  been
able  to  keep  LeBron  James,
Dwyane  Wade and  Chris  Bosh
playing  together  after  they  signed
three years ago.   Je Zillgitt
LILES WAIVED, DROUIN
RETURNED TO JUNIOR TEAM
The  Toronto  Maple  Leafs  waived  de-
fenseman John-Michael  Liles  and
the  Tampa  Bay  Lightning  returned
Jonathan  Drouin to  his  junior
team as NHL rosters got in shape for
the  opening  of  the  season.  Liles  is
making  $4.25  million  this  season  as
part of a four-year, $15.5 million con-
tract  he  signed  in  2012.  The  Maple
Leafs  would  get  $925,000  in  relief
from  his  $3.825  million  cap  hit  if  he
cleared  waivers  and  went  to  the
American  Hockey  League.  Drouin,
drafted third overall in June, had one
assist  and  four  shots  in  four  presea-
son  games.  He  will  return  to  Halifax
(Nova  Scotia)  of  the  Quebec  Major
Junior  Hockey  League.  Among  oth-
ers put on waivers: Cory Emmerton
(Detroit  Red  Wings),  Je  Schultz
(Los  Angeles  Kings),  Philip  Larsen
(Edmonton  Oilers)  and  Adam  Par-
dy (Winnipeg  Jets).  Also,  the  Ana-
heim  Ducks  acquired  Washington
Capitals  center  Mathieu Perreault
for a minor leaguer and a draft pick.
FORCE WINS NHRA
MIDWEST NATIONALS
John  Force  raced  to  his  record
136th  career  victory  and  moved  into
position  for  a  16th  Funny  Car  season
title Sunday in the NHRA Mello Yello
Drag Racing Series Midwest Nation-
als in Madison, Ill. Force, 64, won for
the second time this year, beating de-
fending champ Jack Beckman with
a 4.097-second run at 310.13 mph in a
Ford  Mustang.  Beckman  had  a  4.127
at  309.84  in  a  Dodge  Charger.  Force
is six points behind leader Matt Ha-
gan with  three  events  left.  Antron
Brown  won  Top  Fuel,  Erica  En-
ders-Stevens  Pro  Stock  and  Matt
Smith Pro Stock Motorcycle.
TITANS LOCKER SENT 
TO HOSPITAL WITH HIP INJURY
After  suering  a  right  hip  injury,
Tennessee  Titans  quarterback  Jake
Locker was carted o the eld in the
third  quarter  of  Sundays  38-13  win
vs. the visiting New York Jets. He was
taken  to  a  nearby  hospital,  where  he
was admitted. The Titans had no o-
cial  update  on  Lockers  condition
Sunday  evening,  other  than  coach
Mike  Munchak  saying  Locker  did
not  need  immediate  emergency  sur-
gery.  Titans  oensive  coordinator
Dowell Loggains indicated after the
game  that  Locker  could  be  out  of  ac-
tion for at least a few weeks.
John Glennon, 
The (Nashville) Tennessean
Compiled by John Tkach fromsta, wires
UPDATE
Heats Spoelstra
gets extension
STEVE MITCHELL, USA TODAY SPORTS
Erik Spoelstra has led the Heat to back-
to-back NBA championships.
NICK TURCHIARO, USA TODAY SPORTS
John-Michael Liles has played the last
two years with the Maple Leafs.
MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS
John Force is in position for a 16th
Funny Car season championship.
HOUSTON Everywhere  you  turn  in
Houston,  theres  no  mistaking  the
fact that Dwight Howard has ocial-
ly arrived.
His Godzilla-sized likeness is plas-
tered  on  a  four-story-tall  poster  just
outside  the  Toyota  Center  that  reads
Legacy  of  Bigs,  with  Howard  over-
looking  the  likes  of  Yao  Ming,  Ha-
keem  Olajuwon,  Ralph  Sampson,
Elvin  Hayes and  Moses  Malone.  The
real-life version of Howard has made
plenty  of  appearances,  too,  none
more  unexpected  than  his  visit  with
teammate  Chandler  Parsons  to  a
high  school  football  game  late  last
week  that  sent  the  locals  into  a
frenzy.
But when it comes to the path that
brought  him  here,  the  July  5  an-
nouncement  that  he  had  decided  to
leave  the  Los  Angeles  Lakers  and  an
extra  $30  million  behind  in  Los  An-
geles,  he  wants  to  make  one  thing
clear that wasnt on that day: He nev-
er waed.
Howard,  whose  infamous  indeci-
siveness  during  the  accurately
dubbed  Dwightmare  in  Orlando
added to the decline of his once-spar-
kling  image,  was  on  a  plane  from  As-
pen,  Colo.,  to  Los  Angeles  when
reports  surfaced  saying  that    de-
spite a USA TODAY Sports report re-
vealing  his  decision  to  join  the
Rockets    he  was  having  second
thoughts.  The  news  sparked  the  lat-
est  public  bashing  of  Howard  in  the
social  media  world,  with  fans  and
media  alike  criticizing  him  for  what
appeared  to  be  another  dose  of  un-
necessary drama. The problem, How-
ard said, is it never happened.
That  was  not  the  case,  Howard
told  USA  TODAY  Sports.  I  was  very
upset  about  it  when  all  that  stu
started  to  come  out,  because  thats
not  what  was  going  on.  I  decided  
the  night  before  it  came  out,  and  my
thinking was, Let me get back to L.A.
and  sit  in  front  of  (Lakers  general
manager)  Mitch  (Kupchak)  and  give
the  Lakers  that  respect.  I  wanted  to
tell them in person. 
There  was  no  (thought  of ),  Oh
man, hold up, let me think about this
again.  The  night  before,  when  I  had
decided, I sat down with everybody 
my  agent,  my  best  friend  who  was
there  and  my  bodyguard,  and  we
talked.  I  said  this  is  where  I  want  to
go.  I  told  my  Dad  that  this  is  where  I
want to go. I said, Tomorrow, when I
get  home,  were  going  to  talk  to  the
Lakers.  Im  going  to  tell  the  other
teams  on  the  phone,  and  thats  what
I did.
As  for  why  he  didnt  take  the  op-
portunity  to  continue  playing  for  the
Lakers,  time    or  Father  Time,  to  be
more precise  played as big a part as
any. Howard, 27, clearly saw 24-year-
old  James  Harden  as  a  more  worthy
running  mate  than  35-year-old  Kobe
Bryant. And while the notion that the
Lakers  kingdom  could  eventually  be
his  after  Bryant  retired  years  from
now  and  fellow  superstars  were
brought to town was appealing, How-
ard  learned  last  season  that  he  had
no time to wait.
A  lot  of  people  say,  Well,  if  you
wouldve  waited  a  couple  years,  then
this  couldve  been  yours  (with  the
Lakers).  And  Im  like,  In  a  couple
years, Im 30,  Howard said. I dont
want  to  wait.  Ive  been  in  the  league
10  years.  I  dont  want  to  wait  for
things to happen. I want to be aggres-
sive, to make things happen. 
And Im looking at all these young
guys  who  are  just  ready,  and  theyre
missing  one  piece.  And  Im  like,  I
could  be  that  piece,  and  I  dont  want
to miss my chance.
James  Harden  doesnt  come  by
every 10 years. It doesnt happen. Its
no  knock  on  other  players  who  I
played  with,  but  youre  talking  about
all  these  guys  who  are  young  and  are
going  this  way,  going  up,  so  Im  like,
Man,  this  is  a  great  spot  for  me.  A
great  town,  great  organization.
Theyre going this way (points up).
Even  with  all  the  mystique  that
came with the Lakers and their 16 ti-
tles, Howard went with the franchise
that t him now.
Other  teams  have  more  history,
but  yesterdays  scores  dont  win  to-
days  games,  he  said.  Youve  got  to
look  at  the  now.  Whats  in  the  now?
What can we do now? 
Nobody  cared  about  what  I  did
eight  years  ago,  they  want  to  know
what  I  can  do  now,  and  its  the  per-
fect  team  for  me. 
HOWARD NEVER WAFFLED 
Center was
certain about
Rockets move
Sam Amick
@sam_amick
USATODAYSports
TROY TAORMINA, USA TODAY SPORTS
Dwight Howard, right, didnt want to miss out on the opportunity to play alongside James Harden, left. 
Other teams have
more history, but
yesterdays scores
dont win todays
games. Youve got
to look at the now.
Dwight Howard
PARK CITY, UTAH It was a big day for
Lolo  Jones,  who  was  literally  burst-
ing at the seams.
Im  the  heaviest  ever  in  my  life,
Jones  said  Sunday  after  proudly
weighing in at 157 pounds. It took so
much  work.  Im  3  pounds  away  from
my ultimate goal.
As  a  two-time  Olympic  hurdler,
Jones  is  more  accustomed  to  count-
ing her calories. As an aspiring Olym-
pic  bobsledder,  shes  downing  9,000
calories  daily  to  build  the  muscle  to
power a 400-pound sled.
Two  weeks  ago  her  speed  suit  t
just ne. But a few days ago when she
put  the  suit  on  for  a  commercial
shoot,  it  ripped  down  the  middle  of
her  stomach.  She  couldnt  have  been
happier. But its not as if she has a few
spare tires around her midsection.
Im  pumped  about  this  muscle
weight,  Jones  told  USA  TODAY
Sports.  My  abs  are  still  there.  Im
still cut, just super solid.
As  the  U.S.  Olympic  Committee
kicked  o  its  media  summit  with
many  of  the  top  hopefuls  for  the  So-
chi Games, Jones is among the group
vying for a spot on a deep team.
After  nishing  fourth  in  the  100-
meter  hurdles  in  the  London  Olym-
pics  in  2012,  Jones  didnt  know  how
she  would  pick  herself  up  from  the
disappointment.
Encouraged  by  Olympic  bobsled-
der  Elana  Meyers,  Jones  gave  the
sport  a  try.  In  her  rst  World  Cup
event,  she  won  the  silver  medal  with
pilot Jazmine Fenlator.
When Fenlator rst saw Jones, she
didnt  recognize  the  hurdler.  Jones
said  after  London  she  was  depressed
and  her  track  weight  of  133  dipped
into  the  120s.  Who  is  this  skinny
girl? Fenlator said.
Thirty pounds later, the skinny girl
downs  two  protein  shakes  (1,365  cal-
ories  each)  and  makes  McDonalds
runs  at  10  p.m.  for  double  bacon
cheeseburgers.  That  is  quite  a  shift
from  a  sport  in  which  you  eat  an
M&M  and  you  think  your  career  is
over, Jones said.
In  bobsled,  the  mantra  is  mass
pushes mass.
Pilots  dont  like  these  skinny
brakemen,  so  they  feel  like  theyre
pushing  more  weight  than  they  have
to, Jones said. 
Team  trials  begin  Oct.  12  in  Lake
Placid, N.Y., and the Olympics kick o
in  130  days.  But  Jones  has  a  lot  of
tweeting  to  do  before  her  369,000
followers understand whats ahead. 
People  are  just  so  confused,
Jones  said.  Bobsled  brings  a  lot  of
confusion  in  itself  because  really  the
only  informative  thing  we  have  out
there  is  Cool  Runnings  (a  movie
about  the  Jamaican  bobsled  team),
and thats not quite accurate.
Another  misconception  is  about
her  future  in  track.  She  plans  to  do
both  sports  and  is  aiming  for  the
2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro.
Though  she  dreams  about  reach-
ing 160 pounds, she really would love
to hit 170. Jones tried to bet Fenlator
about  reaching  that  magic  number,
but  her  track  and  bobsled  coaches
weighed in. 
They  said  if  I  got  to  170,  I  would
be done with track, Jones said.
Athletes  from  other  sports  who
have  tried  bobsled  did  so  after  they
nished  competing.  The  most  nota-
ble  past  converts:  Heisman  Trophy
winner  Herschel  Walker,  hurdlers
Renaldo  Nehemiah and  Edwin  Mo-
ses and  Super  Bowl  champ  Willie
Gault.  Only  Walker  competed  in  the
Olympics (1992).
Fenlator  and  Aja  Evans,  both  for-
mer  college  track  athletes,  and  Lau-
ryn  Williams,  a  2004  Olympic  silver
medalist  in  the  100  meters,  also  are
vying  for  spots  on  the  Sochi  team.
Jones bulking up for bobsled 
Hurdler making 
big push to be on
U.S. Sochi team
Kelly Whiteside
@KellyWhiteside
USATODAYSports
KEVINJAIRAJ, USA TODAY SPORTS
Lolo Jones, who competed in hurdles in the 2012 London Olympics,
has gained 30 pounds in her bid to make the U.S. bobsled team. 
Im pumped about
this muscle weight.
My abs are still
there. Im still cut,
just super solid.
Lolo Jones
4C SPORTS
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
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MLB SCORES
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East   W   L   Pct.   GB   Strk.
Last
10   vs. Div.   Home   Away
x-Boston 97 65 .599  L-2 5-5 44-32 53-28 44-37
TampaBay 91 71 .562 6 W-1 8-2 43-33 51-30 40-41
Baltimore 85 77 .525 12 W-2 4-6 36-40 46-35 39-42
NewYork 85 77 .525 12 W-3 5-5 37-39 46-35 39-42
Toronto 74 88 .457 23 L-1 4-6 30-46 40-41 34-47
Central   W   L   Pct.   GB   Strk.
Last
10   vs. Div.   Home   Away
x-Detroit 93 69 .574  L-3 5-5 47-29 51-30 42-39
y-Cleveland 92 70 .568 1 W-10 10-0 44-32 51-30 41-40
Kansas City 86 76 .531 7 W-1 6-4 44-32 44-37 42-39
Minnesota 66 96 .407 27 L-6 1-9 29-47 32-49 34-47
Chicago 63 99 .389 30 L-1 3-7 26-50 37-44 26-55
West   W   L   Pct.   GB   Strk.
Last
10   vs. Div.   Home   Away
x-Oakland 96 66 .593  W-1 7-3 44-32 52-29 44-37
Texas 91 71 .562 5 W-7 8-2 53-23 46-35 45-36
Los Angeles 78 84 .481 18 L-4 4-6 32-44 39-42 39-42
Seattle 71 91 .438 25 L-1 4-6 36-40 36-45 35-46
Houston 51 111 .315 45 L-15 0-10 25-51 24-57 27-54
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East   W   L   Pct.   GB   Strk.
Last
10   vs. Div.   Home   Away
x-Atlanta 96 66 .593  W-1 6-4 47-29 56-25 40-41
Washington 86 76 .531 10 L-1 5-5 43-33 47-34 39-42
NewYork 74 88 .457 22 W-1 6-4 34-42 33-48 41-40
Philadelphia 73 89 .451 23 L-1 2-8 37-39 43-38 30-51
Miami 62 100 .383 34 W-4 6-4 29-47 36-45 26-55
Central   W   L   Pct.   GB   Strk.
Last
10   vs. Div.   Home   Away
x-St. Louis 97 65 .599  W-6 8-2 46-30 54-27 43-38
y-Pittsburgh 94 68 .580 3 W-3 7-3 45-31 50-31 44-37
y-Cincinnati 90 72 .556 7 L-5 4-6 40-36 49-31 41-41
Milwaukee 74 88 .457 23 L-1 6-4 34-42 37-44 37-44
Chicago 66 96 .407 31 L-3 3-7 25-51 31-50 35-46
West   W   L   Pct.   GB   Strk.
Last
10   vs. Div.   Home   Away
x-Los Angeles 92 70 .568  L-2 5-5 37-39 47-34 45-36
Arizona 81 81 .500 11 W-1 4-6 36-40 45-36 36-45
San Diego 76 85 .472 15
1
/2 W-1 5-5 35-41 45-36 31-49
San Francisco 75 86 .466 16
1
/2 L-1 5-5 44-32 41-40 34-46
Colorado 74 88 .457 18 W-2 5-5 38-38 45-36 29-52
x-division champion; y-wild-cardwinner
AMERICAN LEAGUE 
Tampa Bay 7, Toronto 6 Baltimore 7, Boston 6 
Cleveland 5, Minnesota 1 Texas 6, L.A. Angels 2
N.Y. Yankees 5, Houston 1 (14) Oakland 9, Seattle 0
Kansas City 4, Chicago White Sox 1 
NATIONAL LEAGUE 
N.Y. Mets 3, Milwaukee 2  Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 2
Atlanta 12, Philadelphia 5  St. Louis 4, Chi. Cubs 0 
San Francisco 7, San Diego 6  Arizona 3, Washington 2
Colorado 2, L.A. Dodgers 1
INTERLEAGUE
Miami 1, Detroit 0 
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
RESULTS
Friday   Saturday
American League American League
BOS 12, BAL 3 CLE 5, MIN1
TR 6, TB 3 TOR 7, TB 2
TEX 5, LAA3 SEA7, OAK 5
KC6, CWS 1 BAL 6, BOS 5
CLE 12, MIN6 CWS 6, KC5
NYY3, HOU2 NYY2, HOU1
OAK 8, SEA2 TEX 7, LAA4
National League National League
PIT 4, CIN1 PIT 8, CIN3
MIL 4, NYM2 SD9, SF 3
ATL 1, PHI 0 MIL 4, NYM2
STL 7, CHC0 PHI 5, ATL 4
WAS 8, ARI 4 STL 6, CHC2
LAD11, COL 0 WAS 2, ARI 0
SF 7, SD3 COL 1, LAD0
Interleague Interleague
MIA3, DET 2 MIA2, DET 1
Royals 4, White Sox 1
Kansas City   000  200  200  4
Chicago   000  100  000  1
Kansas City   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Lough lf 5 0 1 0 0 1 .286
Giavotella2b 3 1 2 0 2 0 .220
Perez 1b 4 1 3 2 0 0 .292
Butler dh 4 0 0 0 0 2 .289
Cain cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .251
Maxwell rf 3 1 0 0 1 1 .252
Hayes c 4 1 1 2 0 0 .278
Ciriacoss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .210
Falu 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .250
Totals   35  4   9   4   3   5
uBatting 2B: Giavotella(3). HR: Pe-
rez (13); Hayes (1). RBI: Perez 2 (79);
Hayes 2 (2). GIDP: Butler. TeamLOB: 7.
uFielding E: Perez (8). DP: 2.
Chicago   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
De Azalf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .264
Ramirez ss 3 1 2 1 1 0 .284
Konerko1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .244
Gillaspie 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .245
A. Garciarf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .283
Danks cf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .231
Viciedodh 3 0 1 0 1 1 .265
Beckham2b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .267
Semien 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .261
Phegley c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .206
Totals   31  1   6   1   4   8
uBatting  HR: Ramirez (6). RBI: Ra-
mirez (48). TeamLOB: 7.
uFielding DP: 1.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bb so   era
Kansas City
Chen W,9-4 6
2
/3 4 1 1 3 4 3.27
HerreraH,20
1
/3 0 0 0 0 0 3.86
Hochevar H,9 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.92
HollandS,47 1 2 0 0 1 2 1.21
Chicago
QuintanaL,9-7 7 6 4 4 2 4 3.51
Petricka 1 1 0 0 1 1 3.26
Troncoso 1 2 0 0 0 0 4.50
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Chen
25; 81-56; Herrera1; 5-2; Hochevar 3; 11-
10; Holland 6; 21-16; Quintana 28; 102-
71; Petricka5; 22-12; Troncoso5; 16-12.
uUmpires  HP: Conroy; 1B: Darling;
2B: Meals; 3B: Emmel.
uGame data T: 2:34. Att: 22,633.
Rays 7, Blue Jays 6
TampaBay   600  100  000  7
Toronto   000  003  120  6
TampaBay   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
DeJesus cf-lf 5 0 0 0 0 3 .255
Myers rf 4 1 2 1 0 2 .295
Loney 1b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .300
Longoria3b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .266
Zobrist 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .275
D. Youngdh 3 1 2 1 1 0 .271
Joyce lf 3 1 0 0 1 1 .235
Fuldcf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .194
Lobaton c 4 1 1 2 0 2 .249
Escobar ss 4 1 2 1 0 0 .257
Totals   35  7   9   7   2  10
uBatting 2B: Myers 2 (23); Longoria
(38); Lobaton (15). RBI: Myers (53); Loney
(75); Longoria (86); D. Young (6); Lobaton
2 (32); Escobar (56). TeamLOB: 3.
uFielding DP: 2.
Toronto   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Reyes ss 4 1 2 1 1 0 .296
Gose cf 4 0 2 1 1 1 .259
Lawrie 3b 3 1 2 1 2 0 .254
Sierrarf 3 1 1 0 2 1 .290
DeRosadh 3 1 2 2 0 1 .235
Lindph-dh 2 0 1 0 0 0 .288
Rogers pr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Langerhans 1b 4 1 1 0 1 1 .273
Arencibiac 2 0 0 1 0 1 .194
Kawasaki ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .229
Thole c 1 0 0 0 0 1 .175
Goins 2b 5 0 0 0 0 1 .252
Pillar lf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .206
Totals   36  6  12  6   7   7
uBatting  2B: Lawrie (18); DeRosa
(12). SF: Arencibia. RBI: Reyes (37); Gose
(12); Lawrie (46); DeRosa2 (36); Arencibia
(55). GIDP: Gose; Lind. TeamLOB: 11.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bbso   era
TampaBay
Moore W,17-4 5
1
/3 6 3 3 3 4 3.29
McGee 1 2 1 1 1 0 4.02
PeraltaH,41 1
1
/3 1 2 2 2 1 3.41
Rodney S,37 1
1
/3 3 0 0 1 2 3.38
Toronto
RedmondL,4-3
2
/3 4 5 5 1 1 4.32
Wagner 2 2 1 1 1 2 3.79
Perez 1 1 1 1 0 1 5.40
Jenkins
1
/3 1 0 0 0 0 2.70
Jeffress 2 1 0 0 0 2 0.87
Oliver 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.86
Delabar 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.22
Santos 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.75
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Moore
24; 93-55; McGee 6; 28-19; Peralta 6; 20-
10; Rodney 8; 33-20; Redmond 7; 29-17;
Wagner 8; 34-17; Perez 4; 23-18; Jenkins
2; 8-6; Jeffress 7; 33-21; Oliver 3; 11-8; De-
labar 3; 8-5; Santos 3; 10-8.
uUmpires  HP: Schrieber; 1B: Kel-
logg; 2B: Cooper; 3B: Fairchild.
uGame data T: 3:22. Att: 44,551.
Braves 12, Phillies 5
Philadelphia   000  400  100  5
Atlanta   302  023  02x  12
Philadelphia   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Hernandez cf 5 0 1 1 0 1 .289
Rollins ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .252
Utley 2b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .284
Brown lf 3 1 1 0 0 0 .272
De Fratus p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Savery p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Mayberry ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .227
Cloydp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .111
Frandsen 1b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .234
Asche 3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .235
Galvis 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .234
Kratz c 3 2 1 3 1 1 .213
Bernadinarf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .181
Miner p 1 0 1 0 0 0 .333
Ramirez p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Jimenez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Martinez lf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .175
Totals   36  5  10  5   1   6
uBatting  HR: Kratz (9). RBI: Her-
nandez (10); Frandsen (26); Kratz 3 (26).
GIDP: Brown. TeamLOB: 5.
uFielding E: Hernandez 2 (6). DP: 3.
Atlanta   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Heywardcf-rf 4 1 0 0 2 0 .254
J. Upton rf-lf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .263
Freeman 1b 5 2 2 1 0 0 .319
Terdoslavich 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .215
Gattis lf 5 2 3 2 0 0 .243
B. Upton cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .184
Lairdc 4 4 4 0 1 0 .281
Simmons ss 4 3 3 1 1 0 .248
Janish ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .171
Johnson 3b 3 0 2 5 1 0 .261
Uggla2b 2 0 0 0 3 1 .179
Teheran p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .224
Constanzaph 1 0 1 2 0 0 .258
Avilan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
R. Johnson ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .244
Ayalap 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Woodp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Carpenter p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Bethancourt ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Kimbrel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   361217 11   9   5
uBatting  2B: Simmons 2 (27). 3B:
Johnson (2). HR: Gattis (21). SF: Johnson.
RBI: Freeman (109); Gattis 2 (65); Sim-
mons (59); Johnson 5 (10); Constanza 2
(3). GIDP: Heyward; J. Upton; Johnson.
TeamLOB: 10.
uBaserunning SB: Simmons (6). CS:
Johnson (2).
uFielding E: Uggla(14). DP: 2.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bb so   era
Philadelphia
Miner L,0-2 2
1
/3 7 5 5 3 1 4.40
Ramirez 2
1
/3 4 2 2 2 2 7.50
Jimenez
2
/3 3 3 3 2 1 3.71
De Fratus
2
/3 0 0 0 2 0 3.86
Savery 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.15
Cloyd 1 3 2 2 0 1 6.56
Atlanta
Teheran W,14-8 5 6 4 4 0 3 3.20
Avilan H,27 1 1 0 0 0 0 1.52
Ayala
2
/3 2 1 1 1 0 2.90
Wood
1
/3 0 0 0 0 1 3.13
Carpenter 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.78
Kimbrel 1 1 0 0 0 0 1.21
WP: Jimenez. IBB: Uggla (by Ramirez).
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Miner
15; 61-33; Ramirez 12; 43-24; Jimenez 7;
32-18; De Fratus 3; 21-11; Savery 3; 10-7;
Cloyd 6; 17-12; Teheran 20; 66-45; Avilan
3; 13-8; Ayala 5; 17-9; Wood 1; 3-3; Car-
penter 4; 15-12; Kimbrel 4; 19-10.
uUmpires  HP: Everitt; 1B: T. Welke;
2B: Bellino; 3B: Dreckman.
uGame data T: 3:27. Att: 42,194.
Cardinals 4, Cubs 0
Chicago   000  000  000  0
St. Louis   001  200  01x  4
Chicago   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Castross 4 0 0 0 0 1 .245
Watkins 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .211
Rizzo1b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .233
Schierholtz rf 3 0 2 0 0 0 .251
McDonaldph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .302
Sweeney cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .266
Murphy 3b 2 0 0 0 0 2 .255
Bogusevic lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .273
Boscan c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .222
Samardzijap 2 0 0 0 0 1 .113
Rondon p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Lake ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .284
Stropp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Rosscupp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   31  0   5   0   0   5
uBatting 2B: Watkins (1); Rizzo (40);
Schierholtz 2 (32). GIDP: Bogusevic.
TeamLOB: 5.
uFielding DP: 1.
St. Louis   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Carpenter 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .318
Jay cf 3 1 2 1 1 1 .276
Beltran rf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .296
Chambers rf-lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .154
Adams 1b 4 1 2 0 0 2 .284
Molinac 0 0 0 0 0 0 .319
Cruz c 4 0 1 1 0 1 .203
Descalsoss 3 1 1 1 0 0 .238
Kozmaph-ss 1 0 0 0 0 1 .217
Robinson lf-rf 3 0 1 1 0 0 .250
Wong2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .153
Westbrook p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .176
Kelly p 2 1 1 0 0 0 .152
Choate p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Peterson ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .077
Martinez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   31  4   9   4   2   8
uBatting  2B: Adams (14); Cruz (6);
Descalso (25); Kelly (1). RBI: Jay (67); Cruz
(13); Descalso (43); Robinson (16). GIDP:
Cruz. TeamLOB: 5.
uBaserunning CS: Jay (5).
uFielding DP: 1.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bbso   era
Chicago
Samardzija
L,8-13
6 8 3 3 0 4 4.34
Rondon 1 0 0 0 1 2 4.77
Strop
2
/3 1 1 1 1 1 2.83
Rosscup
1
/3 0 0 0 0 1 1.35
St. Louis
Westbrook 1 1 0 0 0 0 4.63
Kelly W,10-5 5
1
/3 3 0 0 0 5 2.69
Choate H,15
2
/3 0 0 0 0 0 2.29
Martinez H,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 5.08
Siegrist 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.45
HBP: Murphy (by Kelly). Batters faced;
pitches-strikes: Samardzija 24; 95-59;
Rondon 4; 22-12; Strop 4; 23-13; Rosscup
1; 5-4; Westbrook 4; 14-9; Kelly 20; 67-47;
Choate 1; 1-1; Martinez 3; 10-6; Siegrist 4;
18-13.
uUmpires  HP: Iassogna; 1B: Davis;
2B: Knight; 3B: Carlson.
uGame data T: 2:34. Att: 44,808.
Indians 5, Twins 1
Cleveland   200  002  100  5
Minnesota   000  000  100  1
Cleveland   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Bourn cf 5 1 2 0 0 0 .263
Stubbs cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .233
Swisher 1b 5 1 2 2 0 0 .246
Kipnis 2b 4 1 2 0 1 1 .284
Santanadh 5 1 1 1 0 0 .268
Raburn rf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .272
Carson rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .636
Cabrerass 3 0 1 0 0 0 .242
Brantley lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .284
Gomes c 3 0 1 1 0 1 .294
Aviles 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .252
Totals   37   5  10   4   1   5
uBatting  2B: Swisher (27); Santana (39).
HR: Swisher (22). S: Cabrera. SF: Gomes. RBI:
Swisher 2 (63); Santana(74); Gomes (38). Team
LOB: 8.
uBaserunning  SB: Kipnis (30). CS: Bourn
(12).
Minnesota   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Presley cf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .283
Dozier 2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .244
Plouffe 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .254
Doumit dh 4 0 0 0 0 2 .247
Parmelee 1b 4 0 0 0 0 4 .228
Herrmann rf 4 1 1 0 0 2 .204
Thomas lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .214
Fryer c 3 0 1 1 0 1 .385
Florimon ss 2 0 0 0 0 1 .221
Colabelloph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .194
Bernier ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .226
Totals   32   1   5   1   1   16
uBatting RBI: Fryer (4). TeamLOB: 6.
uBaserunning SB: Presley (1).
uFielding E: Plouffe (13); Florimon (18); Di-
amond.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er   bb  so   era
Cleveland
Jimenez W,13-9 6
2
/3 5 1 1 1 13 3.30
Rzepczynski H,6
2
/3 0 0 0 0 1 0.89
Masterson 1
2
/3 0 0 0 0 2 3.45
Minnesota
DiamondL,6-13 6 7 4 2 0 3 5.43
Tonkin 1 1 1 1 1 0 0.79
Fien 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.92
Duensing 1 2 0 0 0 0 3.98
WP: Duensing. HBP: Dozier (by Masterson).
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Jimenez 26;
106-71; Rzepczynski 2; 7-5; Masterson 6; 23-13;
Diamond 28; 93-63; Tonkin 5; 18-10; Fien 3;
15-9; Duensing4; 14-9.
uUmpires  HP: Gibson; 1B: Gorman; 2B:
Randazzo; 3B: Vanover.
uGame data T: 2:48. Att: 30,935.
Marlins 1, Tigers 0
Detroit   000  000  000  0
Miami   000  000  001  1
Detroit   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Kelly cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .222
Dirks rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .256
Fielder 1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .279
Tuiasosopo1b 2 0 0 0 0 2 .244
Peraltalf-ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .303
Infante 2b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .318
Perez 2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .197
Penac 3 0 0 0 0 0 .297
Iglesias ss 2 0 0 0 0 0 .303
Castellanos lf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .278
Santiago3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .224
Verlander p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Fister p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .400
Porcellop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333
Avilaph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .227
Putkonen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   28  0   0   0   1   4
uBatting TeamLOB: 3.
uFielding E: Verlander (2).
Miami   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Pierre lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .247
Lucas 2b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .256
Ruggianocf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .222
Stanton rf 4 1 1 0 0 3 .249
Morrison 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .242
Hechavarriass 4 0 0 0 0 1 .227
Coghlan 3b 2 0 1 0 2 1 .256
Hill c 3 0 0 0 0 2 .155
Dobbs ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .228
Alvarez p 3 0 0 0 0 2 .300
Totals   32  1   6   0   2  13
uBatting TeamLOB: 7.
uFielding E: Hechavarria(15).
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bbso   era
Detroit
Verlander 6 3 0 0 1 10 3.46
Fister 1 1 0 0 0 1 3.67
Porcello 1 0 0 0 0 2 4.32
Putkonen L,1-3
2
/3 2 1 1 1 0 3.03
Miami
Alvarez W,5-6 9 0 0 0 1 4 3.59
WP: Putkonen (2). HBP: Fielder (by Alva-
rez). Batters faced; pitches-strikes:
Verlander 22; 80-56; Fister 4; 13-7; Porcel-
lo 3; 10-7; Putkonen 5; 23-12; Alvarez 30;
99-66.
uUmpires  HP: Kulpa; 1B: Guccione;
2B: Hallion; 3B: Barksdale.
uGame data T: 2:06. Att: 28,315.
Mets 3, Brewers 2
Milwaukee   000  200  000  2
NewYork   100  000  02x  3
Milwaukee   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Aoki rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .286
Bianchi ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .237
Lucroy c 4 1 2 0 0 0 .280
Gomez cf 3 1 1 0 1 0 .284
Betancourt 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .212
Halton 1b 3 0 0 1 0 1 .238
Ramirez ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .283
Schafer lf 3 0 1 1 0 2 .211
Gennett 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .324
Estradap 2 0 0 0 0 1 .206
Gindl ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .242
Kintzler p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   30  2   6   2   3   6
uBatting  RBI: Halton (17); Schafer
(33). GIDP: Betancourt. TeamLOB: 4.
uBaserunning SB: Gomez (40).
uFielding  E: Bianchi (10); Lucroy
(10).
NewYork   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Younglf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .249
Duda1b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .223
Germen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Black p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Turner ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .280
Franciscop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Wright 3b 2 0 0 1 0 0 .307
Murphy 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .286
Baxter rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .189
Lagares cf 3 1 0 0 0 2 .242
Centenoc 3 0 1 0 0 1 .300
den Dekker pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .207
Recker c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .215
Tovar ss 2 0 0 0 0 0 .200
Niese p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .205
Satin ph-1b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .279
Totals   27  3   3   2   0   8
uBatting  S: Tovar. SF: Wright. RBI:
Young(32); Wright (58). TeamLOB: 2.
uBaserunning  SB: Young 2 (46);
Murphy (23).
uFielding E: Black (1). DP: 1.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bbso   era
Milwaukee
Estrada 7 2 1 1 0 8 3.87
Kintzler
L,3-3; BS,4
1 1 2 0 0 0 2.69
NewYork
Niese 6 6 2 2 2 2 3.71
Germen 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.93
Black W,3-0 1 0 0 0 1 0 3.71
FranciscoS,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 4.26
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Estrada
23; 100-64; Kintzler 6; 14-10; Niese 23;
80-50; Germen 3; 15-10; Black 4; 11-6;
Francisco3; 16-9.
uUmpires  HP: Reyburn; 1B: Buck-
nor; 2B: Scott; 3B: Tichenor.
uGame data T: 2:23. Att: 41,891.
Pirates 4, Reds 2
Pittsburgh   110  100  010  4
Cincinnati   000  000  020  2
Pittsburgh   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Pie cf 5 0 0 0 0 3 .138
Tabatalf 3 1 2 0 0 0 .282
Lambolf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .233
Snider rf 5 0 0 0 0 1 .215
Alvarez 3b 1 0 0 0 1 0 .233
G. Sanchez 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .254
Buck c 4 0 1 1 0 1 .219
Jones 1b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .233
Mercer ss 4 2 3 1 0 0 .285
Harrison 2b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .250
Cumpton p 0 0 0 0 1 0 .000
Pimentel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gomez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .077
T. Sanchez ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .233
Farnsworth p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   34  4  10  4   2   6
uBatting  3B: Mercer (2). HR: Jones
(15); Mercer (8). S: Cumpton 2. RBI: Buck
(62); Jones (51); Mercer (27); Harrison
(14). GIDP: Jones; Harrison. Team LOB:
8.
uFielding DP: 2.
Cincinnati   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Choocf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .285
Hamilton cf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .368
Ludwick lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .240
Paul lf 1 0 0 0 1 0 .244
Duke p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.00
Votto1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .305
Soto1b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Bruce rf 1 0 0 0 1 1 .262
Heisey pr-rf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .237
Frazier 3b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .234
Hannahan 3b 2 0 0 0 0 0 .216
Cozart ss 2 0 1 0 0 0 .254
Rodriguez pr-2b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .111
Mesoracoc 2 0 0 0 0 0 .238
Partch p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Christiani p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Robinson ph-lf 1 1 1 0 0 0 .255
Izturis 2b-ss 3 1 2 0 0 0 .209
Reynolds p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143
Hanigan ph-c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .198
Miller c 1 0 1 2 0 0 .257
Totals   30  2   6   2   2   5
uBatting  2B: Cozart (30); Izturis (8);
Miller (5). S: Hamilton. RBI: Miller 2 (8).
GIDP: Soto; Hannahan. TeamLOB: 4.
uFielding E: Cozart (15). DP: 2.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bbso   era
Pittsburgh
Cumpton W,2-1 5 2 0 0 1 3 2.05
Pimentel H,1 2 0 0 0 0 1 1.93
Gomez 1 3 2 2 1 0 3.35
Farnsworth S,2 1 1 0 0 0 1 1.04
Cincinnati
Reynolds L,1-3 5 7 3 3 1 4 5.52
Partch 2 0 0 0 1 1 6.17
Christiani 1 2 1 1 0 0 2.25
Duke 1 1 0 0 0 1 6.03
HBP: Alvarez (by Reynolds). Batters
faced; pitches-strikes: Cumpton 18;
65-44; Pimentel 6; 23-18; Gomez 6; 18-9;
Farnsworth 3; 15-10; Reynolds 24; 90-58;
Partch 7; 25-14; Christiani 4; 14-9; Duke 4;
13-9.
uUmpires  HP: Winters; 1B: Diaz;
2B: Wegner; 3B: Timmons.
uGame data T: 2:53. Att: 40,142.
ARLINGTON,  TEXAS A
spot  in  the  American
League  wild-card  game
represented  purgatory
for  the  Texas  Rangers  a
year  ago.  This  season,  its
a path to redemption.
The  Rangers  6-2  vic-
tory  against  the  Los  An-
geles  Angels  on  Sunday
afternoon  completed  a
four-game  series  sweep
nishing a 7-0 homestand
that  allows  Texas  to  host
a wild-card  tiebreaker
game  tonight  against  the
Tampa Bay Rays.
And  Game  163  will  in-
clude  the  return  of  out-
elder  Nelson  Cruz,  the
clubs  top  power  hitter
this  season,  to  the  active
roster.  Cruzs  50-game
suspension  connected
with  the  Biogenesis  scan-
dal  ended  with  Sundays
game.  Neither  manager
Ron Washington nor gen-
eral manager Jon Daniels
would  say  Cruz  would
denitely  be  in  tonights
lineup.
Its  gonna  be  special
to  be  back,  said  Cruz,
who  last  played  in  a  big-
league  game  Aug.  4.  He
was  the  team  leader  at
the  time  in  home  runs
(27) and RBI (76).
The  Rangers  stumbled
into  the  2012  wild-card
game  after  appearing
headed for a third consec-
utive  AL  West  title.  They
were  swept  in  three
games  by  the  Oakland  As
to  end  the  regular  season
and lost the division title.
Rangers sweep into wild-card tiebreaker
Jeff Miller
Special for USATODAYSports
Dbacks 3, Nationals 2
Washington   000  002  000  2
Arizona   100  000  02x  3
Washington   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Kobernus lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Rendon 3b 3 0 2 0 1 0 .265
Hairston rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .191
Moore 1b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .222
Walters ss 4 1 1 1 0 0 .375
Lombardozzi 2b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .259
Solanoc 4 0 0 0 0 1 .146
Perez cf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .125
Leon ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Roark p 3 0 1 0 0 1 .286
Mattheus p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Cedenop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Brown ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .167
Totals   35   2   8   2   1   5
uBatting 3B: Walters (1). RBI: Walters (1);
Lombardozzi (22). GIDP: Solano. TeamLOB: 7.
uBaserunning SB: Lombardozzi (4).
uFielding E: Rendon (16); Roark (1).
Arizona   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Bloomquist ss 4 1 1 0 0 2 .317
Eaton lf 3 1 1 0 0 0 .252
Goldschmidt 1b 3 0 1 1 0 1 .302
Campanapr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .261
Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Prado3b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .282
Hill 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .291
Pollock cf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .269
Parrarf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .268
Gosewisch c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .178
Miley p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .133
Nieves ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .297
Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Chavez 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .281
Totals   31   3   7   3   1   4
uBatting  S: Eaton. SF: Goldschmidt. RBI:
Goldschmidt (125); Prado (82); Pollock (38).
TeamLOB: 7.
uFielding  E: Bloomquist (1); Prado (10).
DP: 2.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er   bb  so   era
Washington
Roark 7 3 1 0 1 3 1.51
Mattheus L,0-2;
BS,3
2
/3 4 2 2 0 1 6.37
Cedeno
1
/3 0 0 0 0 0 1.50
Arizona
Miley 7 8 2 1 1 2 3.55
Hernandez W,5-6 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.48
Ziegler S,13 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.22
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Roark 27; 95-
70; Mattheus 6; 19-11; Cedeno 1; 2-1; Miley 30;
101-65; Hernandez 3; 8-7; Ziegler 3; 8-7.
uUmpires  HP: Gibson III; 1B: McClelland;
2B: Foster; 3B: Bell.
uGame data T: 2:29. Att: 30,420.
Orioles 7, Red Sox 6
Boston   220  100  001  6
Baltimore   000  052  00x  7
Boston   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Ellsbury cf 5 1 2 1 0 1 .298
Bogaerts ss 4 0 0 0 1 3 .250
Ortiz dh 5 2 2 0 0 0 .309
Napoli 1b 4 0 2 1 1 2 .259
Bradley Jr. pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .189
Carplf 5 0 2 1 0 0 .296
Middlebrooks 3b 5 0 0 0 0 1 .227
Saltalamacchiac 2 1 1 0 0 0 .273
Lavarnway ph-c 2 0 0 0 0 0 .299
McDonald2b 2 1 2 0 1 0 .133
Gomes ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .247
Holt 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .203
Berry rf 4 1 2 2 0 1 .625
Totals   39  6  13  5   3   8
uBatting 2B: Napoli (38); Carp(18).
HR: Ellsbury (9); Berry (1). RBI: Ellsbury
(53); Napoli (92); Carp (43); Berry 2 (4).
GIDP: Middlebrooks. TeamLOB: 9.
uBaserunning SB: Berry (3).
uFielding DP: 1.
Baltimore   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Roberts dh 4 1 1 0 1 2 .249
Markakis rf 3 1 1 0 2 0 .271
Hardy ss 5 1 1 2 0 1 .263
Davis 1b 0 0 0 0 1 0 .286
Flaherty 1b 3 1 2 2 0 0 .224
Pearce lf 2 0 0 0 2 0 .261
McLouth cf 4 0 1 2 0 2 .258
Valencia3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .304
Clevenger c 4 1 1 0 0 0 .267
Schoop2b 4 2 2 0 0 0 .286
Totals   33  7  10  6   6   6
uBatting 2B: Roberts (12); Markakis
(24); Hardy (27); Flaherty (11); McLouth
(31). RBI: Hardy 2 (76); Flaherty 2 (27);
McLouth 2 (36). GIDP: Clevenger. Team
LOB: 8.
uFielding E: Clevenger (1). DP: 1.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er   bbso   era
Boston
Webster 3 0 0 0 3 2 8.60
Doubront 1
1
/3 5 5 5 3 2 4.32
De LaRosaL,0-2
2
/3 1 1 1 0 0 5.56
Thornton
1
/3 1 1 1 0 0 3.74
Dempster
2
/3 1 0 0 0 0 4.57
Breslow 1 1 0 0 0 1 1.81
Uehara 1 1 0 0 0 1 1.09
Baltimore
Tillman 5 8 5 4 1 5 3.71
McFarland
W,4-1
1 1 0 0 2 0 4.22
Hammel H,1 2 1 0 0 0 2 4.97
J. Johnson S,50 1 3 1 1 0 1 2.94
R.De La Rosa pitched to 1 batter in the
6th. WP: Thornton; Tillman; J. Johnson.
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Web-
ster 12; 49-31; Doubront 12; 55-35; De La
Rosa 3; 15-10; Thornton 2; 3-2; Dempster
3; 10-7; Breslow 3; 15-10; Uehara 4; 12-
11; Tillman 24; 88-52; McFarland 6; 24-
11; Hammel 7; 27-18; J. Johnson 5; 20-15.
uUmpires  HP: ONora; 1B: Cul-
breth; 2B: Johnson; 3B: B. Welke.
uGame data T: 3:23. Att: 44,230.
Rangers 6, Angels 2
Los Angeles   100  001  000  2
Texas   000  021  12x  6
Los Angeles   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Shuck dh 4 0 2 0 0 1 .293
Aybar ss 4 1 1 0 0 0 .271
Trout cf 3 1 1 1 1 1 .323
Hamilton lf 4 0 1 1 0 1 .250
Kendrick 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .297
Calhoun rf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .282
Trumbo1b 3 0 0 0 0 3 .234
Conger c 2 0 0 0 0 2 .249
Cowgill ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .231
Iannettac 0 0 0 0 0 0 .225
Romine 3b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .259
Totals   31  2   7   2   2  11
uBatting  HR: Trout (27). RBI: Trout
(97); Hamilton (79). GIDP: Shuck; Aybar
2. TeamLOB: 4.
uBaserunning SB: Calhoun (2).
uFielding E: Vargas. DP: 1.
Texas   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Kinsler 2b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .275
Andrus ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .271
Rios rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .278
A. Beltre 3b 4 2 2 1 0 1 .316
Pierzynski dh 4 1 2 0 0 0 .275
Sotoc 3 2 2 2 1 1 .245
Moreland1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .231
Gentry lf 3 1 2 2 1 1 .280
Martin cf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .262
Totals   32  6  10  6   2   6
uBatting  2B: Rios (32); Pierzynski
(24); Soto (9). HR: A. Beltre (30); Soto (9).
S: Martin. RBI: Kinsler (71); A. Beltre (92);
Soto 2 (22); Gentry 2 (22). GIDP: Martin.
TeamLOB: 5.
uBaserunning SB: Gentry 2 (24).
uFielding DP: 3.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er   bbso   era
Los Angeles
Vargas L,9-8 6
1
/3 7 4 3 2 4 4.02
Gutierrez
1
/3 1 0 0 0 0 4.23
De LaRosa
1
/3 0 0 0 0 0 2.86
Frieri 1 2 2 2 0 2 3.80
Texas
Darvish 5
2
/3 4 2 2 2 8 2.83
Cotts W,8-3
1
/3 1 0 0 0 1 1.13
Ross H,15 1 1 0 0 0 2 3.03
Scheppers H,27 1 1 0 0 0 0 1.90
Nathan 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.39
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Vargas
27; 98-58; Gutierrez 2; 7-5; De La Rosa 1;
6-3; Frieri 5; 27-18; Darvish 21; 84-52;
Cotts 2; 9-7; Ross 4; 20-13; Scheppers 3;
9-9; Nathan 3; 9-6.
uUmpires  HP: Marquez; 1B: Bar-
rett; 2B: DiMuro; 3B: Barry.
uGame data T: 2:57. Att: 40,057.
Yankees 5, Astros 1
NewYork   000  000  010  000  04  5
Houston   100  000  000  000  00  1
NewYork   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Nunez 3b 7 2 3 2 0 1 .260
Murphy c 7 0 1 1 0 3 .154
Granderson cf 7 0 2 1 0 2 .229
Wells lf 6 0 0 0 0 1 .233
Reynolds 1b 6 1 1 1 0 0 .220
Overbay 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .240
Hafner dh 4 0 0 0 0 1 .202
Adams 2b 6 0 1 0 0 5 .193
Ryan ss 6 1 2 0 0 1 .197
Almonte rf 6 1 2 0 0 2 .236
Totals   55   5  12   5   0   16
uBatting  2B: Nunez 2 (17); Granderson
(13). 3B: Adams (1). HR: Reynolds (21). RBI: Nu-
nez 2 (28); Murphy (1); Granderson (15); Rey-
nolds (67). TeamLOB: 10.
Houston   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Villar ss 6 1 1 0 0 1 .243
Altuve 2b 5 0 0 0 1 0 .283
Dominguez 3b 6 0 1 1 0 2 .241
Carter 1b 4 0 0 0 1 3 .223
J. Martinez rf 5 0 1 0 0 3 .250
Lairddh 4 0 0 0 0 2 .169
Wallace ph-dh 1 0 0 0 0 1 .221
Crowe cf 5 0 0 0 0 2 .218
Corporan c 5 0 1 0 0 2 .225
Elmore lf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .242
Krauss ph-lf 3 0 0 0 0 2 .209
Totals   46   1   4   1   2   19
uBatting  2B: Villar (9). RBI: Dominguez
(77). TeamLOB: 5.
uFielding E: Villar (16).
Pitching   ip   h   r   er   bb  so   era
NewYork
Huff 5 3 1 1 0 7 5.50
Marshall 2 1 0 0 1 3 4.50
Betances 2
1
/3 0 0 0 0 4 10.80
Claiborne
2
/3 0 0 0 0 1 4.11
Phelps 1 0 0 0 1 2 4.98
Daley W,1-0 2 0 0 0 0 2 0.00
Robertson 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.04
Houston
Bedard 7 3 0 0 0 9 4.59
ZeidH,6
2
/3 1 1 1 0 2 3.90
Chapman BS,3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1.77
Cruz
1
/3 0 0 0 0 0 3.38
Fields 1 1 0 0 0 1 4.97
Harrell L,6-17 4
2
/3 5 4 4 0 4 5.86
De Leon
1
/3 1 0 0 0 0 5.40
K.Chapman pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. WP:
De Leon. HBP: Hafner (by Bedard); Hafner (by
Bedard). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Huff
18; 71-49; Marshall 8; 31-20; Betances 7; 40-27;
Claiborne 2; 8-6; Phelps 4; 16-10; Daley 6; 24-
19; Robertson 3; 9-5; Bedard26; 103-69; Zeid3;
9-8; Chapman 1; 2-2; Cruz 1; 1-1; Fields 4; 15-
10; Harrell 20; 68-49; De Leon 2; 10-6.
uUmpires HP: Miller; 1B: Cederstrom; 2B:
Danley; 3B: Carapazza.
uGame data T: 3:52. Att: 40,542.
Athletics 9, Mariners 0
Oakland   040  040  001  9
Seattle   000  000  000  0
Oakland   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Youngcf 3 1 1 2 0 1 .200
Choice cf-rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .278
Smith lf 5 2 3 1 0 0 .253
Donaldson 3b 0 0 0 0 1 0 .301
Weeks pr-2b-cf 4 1 1 0 0 3 .111
Moss dh 2 0 1 1 0 1 .256
Vogt ph-dh 2 1 0 0 1 1 .252
Callaspo2b-3b 3 1 1 1 2 0 .258
Reddick rf 3 1 1 1 0 1 .226
Parrinoss 2 0 1 1 0 0 .118
Norris c-1b 4 1 0 0 1 1 .246
Barton 1b 2 1 1 2 1 0 .269
Suzuki c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .303
Sogardss-2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .266
Totals   37  9  10  9   6   9
uBatting  2B: Smith 2 (27); Moss
(23); Reddick (19); Parrino (2). RBI: Young
2 (40); Smith (40); Moss (87); Callaspo
(58); Reddick (56); Parrino (1); Barton 2
(16). TeamLOB: 7.
Seattle   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Miller ss 4 0 2 0 0 1 .265
Franklin 2b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .225
Seager 3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .260
Morales dh 3 0 0 0 1 1 .277
Ibanez lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .242
Almonte lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .264
Smoak 1b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .238
M. Saunders rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .236
Zuninoc 4 0 0 0 0 1 .214
Ackley cf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .253
Totals   32  0   5   0   4  10
uBatting TeamLOB: 9.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bbso   era
Oakland
Gray W,5-3 5 3 0 0 3 8 2.67
Chavez 1 0 0 0 0 2 3.92
Figueroa
2
/3 1 0 0 0 0 12.00
Otero
1
/3 0 0 0 0 0 1.38
Cook 1 0 0 0 1 0 2.54
Balfour 1 1 0 0 0 0 2.59
Seattle
Ramirez L,5-3 1
1
/3 3 4 4 4 3 4.98
Noesi 3 4 4 4 1 2 6.59
LaFromboise 2
2
/3 1 0 0 0 3 5.91
Capps 1 0 0 0 0 0 5.49
Wilhelmsen 1 2 1 1 1 1 4.12
WP: Wilhelmsen. Batters faced; pitch-
es-strikes: Gray 21; 79-50; Chavez 3;
16-9; Figueroa 3; 11-8; Otero 1; 6-3; Cook
4; 12-7; Balfour 4; 13-12; Ramirez 11; 58-
33; Noesi 14; 54-36; LaFromboise 9; 35-
25; Capps 3; 10-5; Wilhelmsen 6; 25-15.
uUmpires  HP: Hudson; 1B: Layne;
2B: Wendelstedt; 3B: Porter.
uGame data T: 3:08. Att: 17,081.
Giants 7, Padres 6
SanDiego   001  140  000  6
SanFran.   100  110  202  7
SanDiego   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Denoracf-rf 5 1 3 0 0 1 .279
Guzman lf 3 1 0 0 1 2 .226
Forsythe lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .214
Gyorko2b 4 1 1 4 0 0 .249
Headley 3b 2 1 0 0 2 0 .250
Medica1b 4 0 1 1 0 2 .290
Kotsay rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .194
Fuentes cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .152
Hundley c 4 1 1 1 0 1 .233
Amaristass 3 1 0 0 1 0 .236
Ross p 3 0 0 0 0 1 .182
Stauffer p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Vincent p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gregerson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Venable ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .268
Alonsopr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .281
Street p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   33  6   7   6   4   8
uBatting  2B: Denora (21); Medica
(2). 3B: Venable (8). HR: Gyorko (23);
Hundley (13). RBI: Gyorko 4 (63); Medica
(10); Hundley (44). GIDP: Gyorko. Team
LOB: 4.
uBaserunning CS: Headley (4).
uFielding  E: Hundley (10). PB: Hun-
dley (4). DP: 1.
SanFrancisco   ab  r   h   bi   bbso   avg
Blancocf-lf 2 2 0 0 2 1 .265
Peguerolf 1 1 1 1 0 0 .207
Abreu 2b 5 2 2 0 0 2 .268
Belt 1b 3 1 2 2 1 0 .289
Posey c 3 0 1 0 2 0 .294
Pence rf 5 0 2 3 0 1 .283
Sandoval 3b 4 0 2 1 0 0 .278
Crawfordss 2 0 0 0 0 1 .248
Adrianzass 2 0 1 0 0 0 .222
Perez lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .258
Pagan ph-cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .282
Moscosop 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Dunningp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Kieschnick ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .202
Kontos p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Monell ph 0 1 0 0 0 0 .125
Hembree p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Zitop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .147
Sanchez ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .248
Romop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   34  7  11  7   5   8
uBatting 2B: Abreu (12); Belt 2 (39).
HR: Peguero (1). RBI: Peguero (1); Belt 2
(67); Pence 3 (99); Sandoval (79). GIDP:
Crawford. TeamLOB: 10.
uBaserunning SB: Blanco(14).
uFielding E: Sandoval (18). DP: 2.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er  bbso   era
SanDiego
Ross 6 7 3 3 1 7 3.17
Stauffer H,7
2
/3 0 2 2 2 0 3.75
Vincent H,10
1
/3 1 0 0 0 0 2.14
Gregerson H,25 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.71
Street L,2-5; BS,2 0 3 2 2 2 0 2.70
SanFrancisco
Moscoso 4
1
/3 4 5 5 4 4 5.10
Dunning
2
/3 1 1 1 0 0 2.84
Kontos 2 1 0 0 0 1 4.39
Hembree
2
/3 0 0 0 0 1 0.00
Zito
1
/3 0 0 0 0 1 5.74
RomoW,5-8 1 1 0 0 0 1 2.54
H.Street pitched to 5 batters in the 9th.
WP: Street; Moscoso. IBB: Posey (by
Street). HBP: Monell (by Stauffer); Belt (by
Ross). Batters faced; pitches-strikes:
Ross 26; 95-63; Stauffer 5; 19-8; Vincent 2;
6-5; Gregerson 3; 13-10; Street 5; 23-11;
Moscoso 20; 84-47; Dunning4; 11-8; Kon-
tos 6; 16-13; Hembree 2; 13-8; Zito 1; 4-4;
Romo4; 14-10.
uUmpires HP: Wolcott; 1B: Fletcher;
2B: Drake; 3B: West.
uGame data T: 3:17. Att: 41,495.
Rockies 2, Dodgers 1
Colorado   100  100  000  2
Los Angeles   000  010  000  1
Colorado   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Blackmon cf 4 1 2 1 1 1 .309
Rutledge 2b 4 0 1 0 1 1 .235
Helton 1b 4 0 1 0 1 1 .249
Tulowitzki ss 4 0 1 1 1 2 .312
Cuddyer rf 5 0 1 0 0 3 .331
Arenado3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .267
Culberson lf 3 1 1 0 1 0 .293
Pachecoc 4 0 2 0 0 1 .239
Francis p 1 0 1 0 0 0 .071
Herreraph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .292
Oswalt p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333
Ottavinop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .111
Wheeler ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .220
Bettis p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Brothers p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Totals   35   2  11   2   5   10
uBatting  2B: Francis (1). S: Francis. RBI:
Blackmon (22); Tulowitzki (82). GIDP: Arenado;
Wheeler. TeamLOB: 12.
uBaserunning SB: Rutledge (12).
uFielding PB: Pacheco(2). DP: 1.
Los Angeles   ab   r   h   bi   bb  so   avg
Puigrf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .319
Capuanop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .042
Butera1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143
Crawfordlf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .283
Nolascop 0 0 0 0 0 0 .120
Castellanos ph-rf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .167
M. Youngss-3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .279
Gonzalez 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .293
Withrowp 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Gordon ss 1 0 0 0 0 1 .234
M. Ellis 2b 3 1 1 0 1 1 .270
Uribe 3b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .278
Wilson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Howell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Jansen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Buss ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .105
A. Ellis c 2 0 1 0 0 1 .238
Federowicz c 2 0 0 0 0 2 .231
Schumaker cf 4 0 1 1 0 2 .263
Ryu p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .207
Van Slyke lf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .240
Totals   31   1   5   1   4   13
uBatting  2B: A. Ellis (17). RBI: Schumaker
(30). TeamLOB: 7.
uBaserunning CS: Van Slyke (1).
uFielding DP: 2.
Pitching   ip   h   r   er   bb  so   era
Colorado
Francis W,3-5 5 3 1 1 2 6 6.27
Oswalt H,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 8.63
OttavinoH,8 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.64
Bettis H,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 5.64
Brothers S,19 1 1 0 0 2 3 1.74
Los Angeles
Ryu L,14-8 4 8 2 2 1 4 3.00
Nolasco 1 1 0 0 0 1 3.70
Capuano 1 2 0 0 0 1 4.26
Withrow 1 0 0 0 1 1 2.60
Wilson
1
/3 0 0 0 1 1 0.66
Howell
2
/3 0 0 0 0 0 2.03
Jansen 1 0 0 0 2 2 1.88
Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Francis 20;
84-52; Oswalt 3; 13-10; Ottavino3; 16-11; Bettis
3; 11-7; Brothers 6; 26-14; Ryu 21; 76-51; Nolas-
co 3; 17-11; Capuano 5; 18-10; Withrow4; 13-8;
Wilson 2; 10-5; Howell 1; 2-2; Jansen 5; 21-11.
uUmpires  HP: Davidson; 1B: Hirschbeck;
2B: Hoye; 3B: Reynolds.
uGame data T: 3:08. Att: 52,396.
Rockies rst baseman Todd Helton wrapped up his
17-year career with a 2-1 win against the Dodgers.
GARY A. VASQUEZ, USA TODAY SPORTS
OUT ON A WINNING NOTE
F
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 SPORTS 5C
BASEBALL
With  the  hearing  for  Alex  Rodri-
guezs  211-game  suspension  levied 
by  Major  League  Baseball  scheduled
to  begin  today  in  New  York,  USA
TODAY  Sports  Bob  Nightengale  ex-
amines  the  key  questions.  So  as  the
New  York  Yankees  third  baseman
says, Lets get it on.
HOW LONG WILL THE HEARING
TAKE?
It is  expected  to  last ve days,  Rodri-
guez  says,  with  mountains  of  evi-
dence  presented  by  both  sides.  MLB
insists  that  Rodriguez  has  been  dop-
ing  for  the  last  three  years  and  will
have  Biogenesis  founder  Anthony
Bosch provide testimony. Rodriguezs
team says the investigation is nothing
more than a witch hunt and the Yan-
kees are in cahoots with MLB to keep
from  paying  Rodriguez  all  of  what  is
remaining on his contract.
WHEN WILL A RULING BE ISSUED?
Arbitrator  Fredric  Horowitz  is  ex-
pected  to  announce  his  decision
within  25  days  of  the  hearings  com-
pletion.  Horowitz  has  the  option  of
upholding  the  suspension,  overturn-
ing it or reducing it. Yet even if Horo-
witz  is  ready  to  rule  before  the  25
days  have  passed,  an  announcement
will  wait  until  the  rst  week  of  No-
vember  because  MLB  does  not  want
to  disrupt  the  postseason,  much  less
the World Series. 
WHATS AT STAKE FOR
RODRIGUEZ?
Rodriguez  says  hes  ghting  for  his
life  and  his  legacy.  He  not  only
would  lose  about  $31  million  in  pay,
but  the  outcome  also  might  deter-
mine  whether  Rodriguez  ever  plays
again.  If  Rodriguezs  suspension  is
upheld in full, he wont be allowed to
play  again  until  May  2015.  It  would
mean  an  18-month  layo  for  a  guy
who  would  be  nearly  40  when  he  re-
turns.  His  baseball  skills  likely  will
have  severely  deteriorated  after  that
long  of  a  layo  and  certainly  would
end  any  chance  of  breaking  Barry
Bonds home run record.
WHATS AT STAKE FOR
THE YANKEES?
The  ruling  will  impact  how  the  Yan-
kees  approach  player  personnel
moves this  winter.  If Rodriguez loses
his  appeal,  the  Yankees  can  save  his
$31  million  salary  in  2014,  allowing
them  to  reach  their  goal  of  slipping
below the $189 million luxury-tax g-
ure  without  severely  damaging  their
playo  hopes  next  season.  If  Rodri-
guez wins, theyre on the hook for the
entire  salary,  meaning  they  couldnt
be  major  players  in  the  free  agent
market,  and  it  could  adversely  aect
their  chances  of  bringing  back  free
agent  second  baseman  Robinson
Cano.
WHATS AT STAKE FOR
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL?
Its reputation. It thinks its investiga-
tion  was  handled  professionally  and
fairly and that everyone who cheated
was  caught  and  punished  according-
ly.  If  the  suspension  sticks,  MLB  in-
vestigators  can  stick  their  chests  out
and  let  the  world  know  they  were
right. If Rodriguez wins his appeal, it
would not only create the perception
that  the  process  was  severely  awed
but  also  that  the  13  others  snared  in
the Biogenesis case might have blun-
dered by accepting their suspensions.
WHATS THE MOST LIKELY
OUTCOME?
It  seems  far-fetched  that  Rodriguez
will  simply  get  o  or  even  that  the
entire  suspension  is  upheld.  Even  if
MLB thinks Rodriguez has been dop-
ing  for  years,  he  has  passed  all  of  its
drug  tests,  so  how  can  he  receive  a
penalty  four  times  as  severe  as  any-
one  else?  Rodriguez  will  be  suspend-
ed,  but  it  likely  will  be  reduced  to
about  100  games. 
BRAD PENNER, USA TODAY SPORTS
Alex Rodriguez faces a 211-game suspen-
sion for his part in the Biogenesis bust.
Judgment
time has
arrived 
for A-Rod
The Cleveland Indians roll into the
playos  as  one  of  baseballs  hottest
teams.  But  when  they  play  their  rst
postseason game  in  six  years
Wednesday, theyll meet a team on at
least an emotional high.
The  Tampa  Bay  Rays  and  Texas
Rangers play today in Arlington, Tex-
as, for the chance to meet the Indians
in  the  American  League  wild-card
game after  tying  for  the second  wild-
card spot. 
Todays  game  is  baseballs  rst
play-in  game  since  the  Minnesota
Twins  beat the Detroit  Tigers  for  the
2009  AL  Central  championship.
Reigning AL Cy Young Award winner
David  Price  will  start  for  the  Rays.
The  Rangers  plan  to  pitch  rookie
Martin Perez.
The Rays  narrowly averted a nal-
weekend  meltdown  at  the  Toronto
Blue Jays, while the Rangers, coming
o  seven  consecutive  and  necessary
victories, carry several seasons worth
of postseason baggage with them to a
home game.
They  can  only  hope  they  can  use
real  suitcases  to  get  to  Wednesdays
wild-card game in Cleveland.
Whoever  goes  to  Cleveland  could
be emotionally spent after a wild n-
ishing week.
We  never  do  things  seemingly
easy,  says  Rays  manager  Joe  Mad-
don,  who  was  ejected  for  arguing  in
the seventh inning Sunday.
This time of year has been particu-
larly  dicult  for  the  Rangers.  Texas
forced  the  playo  by  completing  a
four-game  sweep  of  the  Los  Angeles
Angels  with  a  6-2  victory  Sunday.  If
the  Rangers  could  get  past  the  Rays,
it  would  set  up  a  matchup  of  two  hot
teams, but Texas past is signicant.
The  Rangers  lost  last  years  AL
West  on  the  nal  day  of  the  season,
then the inaugural wild-card game at
home  to  the  Baltimore  Orioles,  a
quick  exit  added  to  their  crushing
2011  World  Series  defeat  when  they
were one out from the championship
in  Game  6  at  the  St.  Louis  Cardinals.
They  also  lost  the  2010  Series  to  the
San Francisco Giants.
The  Rangers  played  desperate
down  the  stretch  this  year,  maybe
even  saving  manager  Ron  Washing-
tons job.
The  Rays  had  looked  just  as  hot  as
the Indians until a few days ago, win-
ning  seven  in  a  row  and  12  of  15.  But
losses  Friday  and  Saturday  at  Toron-
to  and  Sundays  scare  leaves  them
looking a bit more vulnerable.
The  Indians,  meanwhile,  complet-
ed a 15-2 nish to their season with a
5-1  victory  Sunday  at  the  Minnesota
Twins  and  are  positioned  to  be  the
latest  October  Cinderella  story.  Only
once  in  the  last  11  years  has  there
been  a  postseason  without  a  wild-
card team  winning  at  least  one  play-
o  round.  Four  wild  cards  have  won
the  World  Series  in  that  span,  and
four other have lost the Series.
The  Indians  resemble the  2007
Colorado  Rockies,  who  nished  the
regular  season  14-1,  including  a  play-
o  against  the  San  Diego  Padres  to
decide  the  wild  card,  then  swept
through seven playo games to reach
the  World  Series.  Thats  where  the
Boston  Red  Sox  ended  the  streak
with a four-game sweep.
The  last  wild  card  to  win  a  World
Series  was  the  2011  Cardinals,  who
nished  the  season  16-5,  upset  the
Philadelphia  Phillies  in  the  division
series and beat the Milwaukee Brew-
ers and Rangers, coming from behind
in each series.
The Indians are now one win from
a division  series  matchup  with  the
AL  East  champion  Red  Sox.  That
would  pit  Cleveland  manager  Terry
Francona  against  Boston,  the  team
he led to that 07 championship.
In  fact,  Franconas  Red  Sox  got  to
that  World  Series  by  rallying  from
down  3-1  in  games  against  Cleveland
in the ALCS, the last time the Indians
were in the postseason.
They  might  face  a  Rays  team  that
counts  on  its  pitching,  led  by  Price
and Alex Cobb, who has emerged as a
strong  No.  2  down  the  stretch.  The
Rangers have a club-record 50 come-
from-behind wins this year and dont
rely  on  one  oensive  star.  Adrian
Beltre  leads  a  group  of  six  players
with 60-plus RBI. Texas can nish o
tight  games  with  closer  Joe  Nathan
and  a  bullpen  that  has  the  best  ERA
among  AL  teams  still  playing.
RANGERS, RAYS EXTEND
SEASONS AT LEAST ONE DAY
Indians stay hot,
clinch wild card,
wait for opponent
Paul White
@PBJWhite
USATODAYSports
TIMHEITMAN, USA TODAY SPORTS
The Rangers A.J. Pierzynski reacts to his fth-inning double Sunday.
Texas will play the Rays to determine the ALs second wild card.
Henderson  Alvarez  pitched  a  no-
hitter Sunday.
He  didnt  get  to  jump  into  his
catchers  arms  like  most  pitchers  do
in that situation.
Instead,  he  had  to  wait  until  his
teammates  scored  an  unlikely  run  in
the bottom of the ninth inning to give
the  Miami  Marlins  a  1-0  victory
against the Detroit Tigers.
Alvarez held the playo-bound Ti-
gers  and a pretty much representa-
tive  lineup  for  an  otherwise
meaningless game on the nal day of
the  regular  season    without  a  hit.
But Justin Verlander and two Detroit
relievers kept the game scoreless into
the bottom of ninth.
Tigers reliever  Luke Putkonen en-
tered  in  the  ninth  and  gave  up  con-
secutive singles to Giancarlo Stanton
and  Logan  Morrison,  plus  a  two-out
walk  to  load  the  bases,  then  threw  a
wild  pitch  to  make  the  no-hitter
ocial.
Alvarez  was  waiting  to  bat  in  the
on-deck circle.
But  instead  of  having  to  pitch  the
10th,  Alvarez  ran  to  the  plate  to  join
the walk-o celebration, which even-
tually  oated  over  toward  the  stands
where he hugged his pregnant wife.
I  was  ready  to  go  back  out  there
for  the  10th  inning,  but  Ill  take  that
wild pitch, he said through an inter-
preter.  He  said  he  threw  his  hands
into  the  air  after  striking  out  Matt
Tuiasosopo  to  end  the  top  of  the
ninth,  thinking  momentarily  that  he
had  a  1-0  lead.  With  the  emotion
and  nerves,  I  didnt realize we hadnt
scored a run yet, Alvarez said.
By  rule,  a  no-hitter  must  be  a  full
game, however long it lasts.
In  1995,  Pedro  Martinez  pitched
nine perfect innings for the Montreal
Expos  against  the  San  Diego  Padres.
That  game  was  scoreless  until  Mon-
treal scored in the top of the 10th, but
Martinez allowed a double in the bot-
tom  of  the  10th  so  did  not  get  credit
for a no-hitter or perfect game.
There  was  no  suspense  about  a
perfect  game  for  Alvarez  because  he
hit  Prince  Fielder  with  a  pitch  with
two  outs  in  the  rst  inning.  The  only
other  Detroit  baserunners  were  Jose
Iglesias,  who  reached  rst  with  two
outs  in  the  fth  on  an  error  by  Mar-
lins  shortstop  Adeiny  Hechavarria,
and  Andy  Dirks,  who  reached  on  a
two-out walk in the ninth.
The  only  big  name  missing  from
the Detroit lineup was third baseman
Miguel Cabrera, given a day o in an-
ticipation  of  the  Tigers  American
League  Division  Series  that  begins
Friday at the Oakland Athletics.
Alvarez,  23,  was  acquired  last  o-
season  in  a  12-player  deal  with  the
Toronto  Blue  Jays  to  launch  another
rebuilding  phase  in  Miami.  He  went
5-6 and is 15-23 lifetime.
The  last  Marlins  no-hitter  was  in
2006 by current Tigers starter Anibal
Sanchez.
Alvarezs no-hitter veers from usual script
Paul White
@PBJWhite
USATODAYSports
STEVE MITCHELL, USA TODAY SPORTS
Marlins owner Jerey Loria, left, hugs
pitcher Henderson Alvarez on Sunday.
least provide a distraction.
The impact of professional sports
to a city is such a life, a sense of pride
to  the  community,  said  Indians  vice
president  Bob  DiBiasio,  who  has
been  with  the  organization  for
34 years. Its almost an inspirational
thing.  Nothing  can  bring  a  town  to-
gether more than sports.
The  Indians,  who  averaged  19,661
fans  a  game  this  year  (29th  in  the
major  leagues),  sold  out  their
Wednesday  wild-card  game  before
the  team  charter  even  landed  in
Cleveland on Sunday.
Ive  got  to  tell  you,  this  day  is  as
rewarding as anything Ive ever expe-
rienced, DiBiasio said. Its a heck of
a day around here.
It  was  a  magnicent  day  in  Mil-
waukee,  too,  home  of  Commissioner
Bud Selig. There are nine teams alive
for  the  postseason,  four  of  them
among  the  games  ve  lowest-reve-
nue clubs.
While  the  New  York  Yankees  are
at  home,  the  Tampa  Bay  Rays,  Oak-
land  Athletics,  Pirates  and  Indians
are  still  playing.  The  Rays  and  Texas
Rangers  play  a  tiebreaker  today,  the
winner  playing  the  Indians  in  the
wild-card game.
Oh,  and  those  fat  cats  among  the
top ve revenue-producing teams?
The  Boston  Red  Sox  are  the  lone
team that qualied, with the Yankees,
Philadelphia  Phillies,  Chicago  Cubs
and  San  Francisco  Giants  nishing  a
combined 82 games out of rst place,
no one nishing higher than fourth.
Yeah,  baby,  after  20  consecutive
losing  years,  even  the  Pirates  can
mock  the  Yankees,  evoking  1960  and
Bill Mazeroski, if so inclined.
Theres  no  more  negativity,  says
center  elder  Andrew  McCutchen,
the likely National League MVP win-
ner.  We  dont  have  to  think  about  it
anymore or be a part of it.
Considering  fans  in  this  football-
crazed town are numb that the Steel-
ers  are  0-4,  their  success  couldnt
have come at a better time.
Ive  been  around  a  lot  of  playo
atmospheres  growing  up  in  Pitts-
burgh,  Walker  told  news  reporters
in Cincinnati. I watched the Steelers
win  two  Super  Bowls.  I  saw  the  Pen-
guins play home playo games.
I  always  wanted  to  be  a  part  of
something like that.
Now, on Tuesday against the Reds,
the  Pirates  will  nally  have  a  playo
game at gorgeous PNC Park, the rst
in Pittsburgh since Oct. 11, 1992.
People are going to be out of their
minds,  Walker  said.  Im  imagining
its going to be Steeler-esque.
The  As  and  Rays  face  dierent
challenges. Oaklands ballpark stinks.
There  have  been  two  sewage  leaks
this  season  in  45-year-old  O.co  Coli-
seum,  Selig  recently  calling  it a  pit
and an unfortunate mess.
And  it  could  be  the  site  of  the
World  Series,  a  nation  wondering  if
the  sewage  system  holds  up  with  the
place  packed  with  fans  and  news
media.
At  least  Selig  is  convinced  the  As
will  have  fans  show  up  for  the  post-
season, with the upper-deck tarps al-
ready  planning  to  be  removed.  In
Tampa  Bay,  there  is  no  guarantee  of
sellout  crowds,  with  Selig  calling  the
Rays attendance disgraceful.
This  is  why  Tigers  manager  Jim
Leyland  wept  during  his  clubs  AL
Central Division title celebration last
week,  humbled  that  3.1  million  fans
in baseballs most economically trou-
bled  city  would  support  the  Tigers
this  season.  This  was  about  the 
3 million,  said  Leyland,  whose  Ti-
gers havent won a World Series since
1984.  Probably  a  lot  of  them  who
couldnt  aord  to  come,  and  didnt
show  up,  but  were  with  us  in  spirit
every  night.  Theres  a  passion  thats
unbelievable.
There  are  other  droughts  in  this
years  eld.  The  Indians  havent  won
since  1948.  The  Dodgers  since  1988.
The Pirates last won the World Series
in 1979, and the Braves in 1995.
The  Rangers  and  Rays  have  never
won.  Only  the  St.  Louis  Cardinals
and  Red  Sox  have  been  recent
champs,  winning  a  combined  four
World Series titles since 2004.
There  are  no  overwhelming  favor-
ites,  but  Americas  darlings  will  be
the Rust Belt teams, where a champi-
onship  will  be  so  much  more  signi-
cant than claiming hardware.
For  this  city,  after  everything  its
been  through,  Indians  President
Mark  Shapiro  said,  it  would  mean
absolutely  everything.
Playoff berths boost morale in cities
vCONTINUED FROM1C
FRANK VICTORES, USA TODAY SPORTS
Jordy Mercer, left, Josh Harrison and the Pirates will participate in
the teams rst home playo game since Oct. 11, 1992.
FOLLOW NIGHTENGALE
ON TWITTER
@BNightengale for breaking news,
analysis and insight
PELISSEROS TAKEAWAYS
SUNDAYS
RESULTS
Cincinnati 6 This should have been a game Bengals D-line could control. Instead: three sacks, no turnovers forced.
CLEVELAND 17 Dont look now, but tight end Jordan Cameron is approaching Gronk-like unguardability in red zone.
Chicago 32 It turns out bad Jay Cutler is still in there. Four turnovers low-lighted his worst game under Marc Trestman. 
DETROIT 40 Theres never been a question about its talent. Next weekend at Green Bay will test how far Lions have come.
Seattle 23 Only QB Russell Wilson still hasnt hit his stride. Good thing Seahawks defense might be NFLs best.
HOUSTON 20 J.J. Watt is angry, and why not? Matt Schaub and Texans cant crumble like that on their home eld.
Indianapolis 37 Winning consecutive road games by 54-point margin is rare. Big test awaits next week: Seahawks in Indy.
JACKSONVILLE 3 Four down, 12 to go. Will Blaine Gabbert throw TD pass before hes nished?
N.Y. Giants 7 Eli Manning is on pace to throw 36 interceptions  and hes not even Giants biggest problem.
KANSAS CITY31 All of a sudden, Chiefs seem to have weapons to spare. It took four weeks to double their win total from 2012.
Pittsburgh 27 RB LeVeon Bells debut provided hope for future. But present is a dark place at 0-4.
MINNESOTA 34 Lost in Matt Cassels turnover-free start and Adrian Petersons big day was a defense that nally got late stop.
Arizona 13 Scoreless drought ended at a shade over 99 minutes. Carson Palmer continues to struggle, though.
TAMPA BAY10 Sooner Buccaneers can end Josh Freeman saga, the better. But theyre awed well beyond that.
N.Y. Jets 13 Itll be long season if Geno Smith becomes turnover machine. At least hes avoiding his linemens backsides.
TENNESSEE 38 Timing of Jake Lockers hip injury couldnt be worse for a team that seemed to be gaining condence.
Philadelphia 20 Forget slowing down Chip Kellys offense. Its just allowing opponents more chances to exploit Eagles D.
DENVER 52 How many quarterbacks have even come close to having a month like QB Peyton Manning (16 TDs, no INTs)?
Washington 24 Did defense x something or just roast a bad offensive line? Itll nd out in two weeks in Dallas. 
OAKLAND 14 Darren McFadden is out again with hamstring injury, putting more pressure on Terrelle Pryor when he returns.
New England 30 Tom Brady and retooled receiving corps have made huge strides in last two games.
ATLANTA 23 Good news: Tony Gonzalez is playing great. Bad news: 37-year-old tight end is most durable skill position player.
THURSDAY: San Francisco 35, St. Louis 11
Byes: Carolina, Green Bay. HOME team; winner
Baltimore 20
uJoe Flaccos fth intercep-
tion stopped a rally on a day
Ray Rice only got ve carries.
BUFFALO 23
uThe Fred Jackson-C.J. Spill-
er platoon should help both.
Dallas 21
uCowboys have no TDs in
10 second-half road drives.
SAN DIEGO 30
uPhilip Rivers is playing like a
guy who has nothing guar-
anteed beyond this season.
KEVINHOFFMAN, USA TODAY SPORTS
The Bills Fred Jackson had 16 carries
for 87 yards and a touchdown.
CHRISTOPHER HANEWINCKEL, USA TODAY SPORTS
Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers
threw for 401 yards and three TDs.
F
6C SPORTS
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
NFL: WEEK
East   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
NewEngland 4 0 0 1.000 89 57
Miami 3 0 0 1.000 74 53
Buffalo 2 2 0 .500 88 93
N.Y. Jets 2 2 0 .500 68 88
North   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
Baltimore 2 2 0 .500 91 87
Cincinnati 2 2 0 .500 81 81
Cleveland 2 2 0 .500 64 70
Pittsburgh 0 4 0 .000 69 110
South   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
Indianapolis 3 1 0 .750 105 51
Tennessee 3 1 0 .750 98 69
Houston 2 2 0 .500 90 105
Jacksonville 0 4 0 .000 31 129
West   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
Denver 4 0 0 1.000 179 91
Kansas City 4 0 0 1.000 102 41
San Diego 2 2 0 .500 108 102
Oakland 1 3 0 .250 71 91
AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
East   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
Dallas 2 2 0 .500 104 85
Philadelphia 1 3 0 .250 99 138
Washington 1 3 0 .250 91 112
N.Y. Giants 0 4 0 .000 61 146
North   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
Chicago 3 1 0 .750 127 114
Detroit 3 1 0 .750 122 101
Green Bay 1 2 0 .333 96 88
Minnesota 1 3 0 .250 115 123
South   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
NewOrleans 3 0 0 1.000 70 38
Carolina 1 2 0 .333 68 36
Atlanta 1 3 0 .250 94 104
TampaBay 0 4 0 .000 44 70
West   W  L   T   Pct   PF   PA
Seattle 4 0 0 1.000 109 47
Arizona 2 2 0 .500 69 89
San Francisco 2 2 0 .500 79 95
St. Louis 1 3 0 .250 69 121
NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
6
Seasons in which Denver Broncos
quarterback Peyton Manning has led
his team to a 4-0 start  two more
than any other quarterback in NFL
history. Fran Tarkenton did it four
times.
3
Consecutive games in which Hous-
ton Texans quarterback Matt Schaub
has thrown an interception that has
been returned for a touchdown.
12
Field goals of 50 yards or more for
Minnesota Vikings kicker Blair
Walsh, who broke Ryan Longwells
career team record Sunday in only
his second season. Walsh has yet to
miss from 50 yards and beyond.
8
Consecutive games in which New
Orleans Saints quarterback Drew
Brees has thrown for at least 300
yards, one shy of matching his NFL
record entering todays game against
the Miami Dolphins.
83.3
Completion percentage Sunday for
San Diego Chargers quarterback
Philip Rivers, an NFL record for a
400-yard game. 
STATISTICALLY SPEAKING
Buffaloat Cleveland, 8:25(Thu.)
NewEnglandat Cincinnati, 1
Detroit at GreenBay, 1
Seattleat Indianapolis, 1
Baltimoreat Miami, 1
NewOrleansat Chicago, 1
Philadelphiaat N.Y. Giants, 1
KansasCityat Tennessee, 1
Jacksonvilleat St. Louis, 1
Carolinaat Arizona, 4:05
Denver at Dallas, 4:25
SanDiegoat Oakland, 4:25
Houstonat SanFrancisco, 8:30
N.Y. Jetsat Atlanta, 8:40(Mon.)
Byes: Minnesota, Pittsburgh, TampaBay, Washington
Timesp.m. andEastern
Week5lineswill appear inTuesday'seditions
NEXT WEEKS GAMES
NFL: WEEK 4
Tom Pelissero goes deep in breaking down Week 4 and looking ahead
Tom Pelissero
tpelissero@usatoday.com
USATODAYSports
SINKING FEELING
their  rst  win  Sunday  before  an  in-
terception  set  up  Arizonas  tying  TD
late in the Cardinals 13-10 victory.
The  Oakland  Raiders  started  Matt
Flynn  in  place  of  concussed  starter
Terrelle  Pryor  against  the  Washing-
ton  Redskins,  and  the  Tennessee  Ti-
tans  turned  to  another  $3  million
backup,  Ryan  Fitzpatrick,  after  Jake
Locker  was  carted  o  and  taken  to
the  hospital  with  a  right  hip  injury
against the New York Jets.
Cassel,  31,  knows  well  how  impor-
tant  a  backup  quarterback  can  be.
Not  that  the  New  England  Patriots
needed  something  more  than  they
were  getting  from  Tom  Brady  in
2008,  but  Cassel  made  the  most  of
his  opportunity  after  Brady  suered
a season-ending  knee  injury  in
Week 1.
This  time,  Cassels  opportunity
came  because  of  a  broken  rib  for
Ponder,  who  entered  the  week  30th
in  the  NFL  with  a  65.9  passer  rating.
Cassels  passer  rating  Sunday  against
the  Steelers  struggling  defense  was
123.4,  with  a  pair  of  touchdown
passes to Jennings.
I rmly believe this oense can be
reckoned  if  we can  get  it  going  in  the
passing game like we did today, Jen-
nings said
Vikings coach Leslie Frazier reiter-
ated that Ponder is the Vikings quar-
terback but qualied that it would be
premature to discuss any decision.
The  decision  seems  obvious.  Cas-
sel  played  well,  the  Vikings  won  and
nothing  about  Ponders  performance
to  this  point  suggests  he  has  a  stran-
glehold on the job.
What  you  think?  Vikings  run-
ning  back  Adrian  Peterson  said.
They have a tough (decision). Its go-
ing  to  be  tough  for  them.  Its  a  good
thing we have a battle coming up.
Calls  for  other  quarterbacks  jobs
might  come  soon    perhaps  even  in
Houston,  where  Matt  Schaubs  latest
pick-six  helped  complete  a  fantastic
collapse in a 23-20 loss to the Seattle
Seahawks.
The  Texans  have  been  under-
whelming  during  their  2-2  start.
Schaub hasnt been much better. And
his  two  backups,  T.J.  Yates  and  Case
Keenum, lit it up in the preseason.
Theres  more  to  lose  for  a  title
hopeful  such  as  Houston  than a
Cleveland team restarting its rebuild-
ing  process.  But  it  worked  out  well
last  year  for  the  San  Francisco  49ers,
who  reached  the  Super  Bowl  after
swapping  Alex  Smith  for  Colin
Kaepernick.
KENBLAZE, USA TODAY SPORTS
Brian Hoyer is 2-0 since taking
over as the Browns quarterback.
Backup
plans 
tested 
vCONTINUED FROM1C
LONDON This  isnt  sup-
posed  to  happen  to  the
Pittsburgh  Steelers,  as
stable an organization as
there is in the NFL.
Theyre 0-4 for the rst time since
1968  after  Sundays  34-27  loss  to  the
Minnesota  Vikings  at  Wembley  Sta-
dium  and  might  come  up  empty  as
they  search  for  answers  during  their
bye week. 
Right now you could say were the
worst  team  in  the  league.  That
hurts,  quarterback  Ben  Roethlis-
berger  said.  We  are  in  uncharted
territory,  and  the  water  is  dangerous
right  now.  It  stings.  I  have  to  hope
and  believe  we  can  turn  it  around.
Thats the approach Im going to take
this week and next week. Im going to
do the best I can to lead these guys.
Theyre  not  the  only  winless  team
in the NFL. The Jacksonville Jaguars,
New  York  Giants  and  Tampa  Bay
Buccaneers all fell to 0-4 Sunday. 
But  theres  something  dierent
about  seeing  this  from  the  Steelers,
who  havent  nished  below  .500  in  a
decade and have made the playos in
14 of the last 21 years.
I  feel  like  its  a  story.  Jacksonville
nothing against them  they arent
getting the same questions that were
getting, safety Ryan Clark said. The
feeling around the city isnt the same
feeling.  Its  to  the  point,  its  like  
youre  noticeable  in  Pittsburgh  and
you  hate  being  noticed,  because  you
feel  like  youre  not  doing  or  uphold-
ing  the  tradition  that  not  only  the
greats have set but ourselves. 
Its  sad.  Its  embarrassing.  We
need to nd a way to get out of it.
Theyre  only  two  games  back  in
the  AFC  North,  which  became  fur-
ther muddled Sunday with the Cleve-
land  Browns  upset  of  the  Cincinnati
Bengals  and  the  Baltimore  Ravens
loss at the Bualo Bills.
But  the  Steelers  look  old  on  de-
fense,  where  they  havent  recorded  a
takeaway  all  season.  They  look  dis-
jointed  on  oense,  where  Roethlis-
berger is under siege behind a patch-
work  oensive  line.  And,  unlike  last
season,  they  dont  have  the  excuse  of
an injury to their quarterback.
Only one team, the 1992 San Diego
Chargers,  started  0-4  and  made  the
postseason.
Were  just  not  a  good  team,  safe-
ty  Troy  Polamalu  told  USA  TODAY
Sports.  And  weve  got  to  do  some-
thing to get better.
uIs  it  too  soon  for  the  Detroit  Li-
ons  to  give  tailback  Reggie  Bush  a
raise?  He  looks  refreshed  at  28  and
ripped  apart  the  Chicago  Bears  in  a
40-32  win,  with  173  yards  on  22
touches. The Lions are so much more
dangerous  now  that  they  have  a
ground  threat  and  at  a  bargain  price
$4 million guaranteed on the four-
year, $15.5 million deal Bush signed.
Winless Steelers
grasp for answers
Miami at New Orleans, 8:40 p.m. ET, ESPN
The Saints are 3-0 in coach Sean Paytons return from suspen-
sion and havent lost at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome with
Payton on the sideline since the 2010 nale. The Dolphins
need to run more effectively than they have to keep quarter-
back Drew Brees off the eld and extend their unbeaten run.
TODAY: 
PAIR OF 
PERFECT
TEAMS
HOT
READS
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS
I have to hope and believe we can turn it around, says Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, being pressured by Vikings linebacker Erin
Henderson on Sunday. Thats the approach Im going to take this week and next week. Im going to do the best I can to lead these guys.
F
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 SPORTS 7C
NFL: WEEK 4
HOUSTON Houston  Texans  quarter-
back Matt Schaub stepped to the Re-
liant  Stadium  podium  Sunday  long
after his third consecutive game with
a pick-six  cost  his  team  in  a  23-20
overtime loss to the Seattle Seahawks
on Sunday.
Schaubs sports jacket matched his
mood:  gray,  after  the  Seahawks  ral-
lied from a 20-3 halftime decit.
Welcome  to  another  week  in
sports talk  radio hell for the quarter-
back having a recurring nightmare.
This  time  it  was  third-and-4  from
the Seattle 41-yard line with the Tex-
ans  up  20-13  with  2:51  left  in  the
fourth quarter.
Instead  of  taking  a  sack,  Schaub
lofted  a  pass  intended  for  tight  end
Owen  Daniels  over  blitzing  safety
Kam  Chancellor.  But  Seahawks  cor-
nerback  Richard  Sherman  knew  it
was  coming,  based  on  practicing
against  the  same  look  against  the
Seahawks scout team Friday.
Sherman  beat  Daniels  to  the  ball
and took it 58 yards for the score.
It  hurts;  it  hurts  bad,  a  shell-
shocked  Schaub  said  after  his  sev-
enth  consecutive  game  dating  to  last
season,  including  the  playos,  with  a
pick.  Im  the  quarterback  of  this
team. I had the ball in my hands. This
one hurts real bad.
Coach  Gary  Kubiak  partially
blamed  himself,  saying  he  should
have  called  a  run  on  the  ill-fated  in-
terception that tied the score. Kicker
Steven  Hauschkas  45-yard  eld  goal
with  3:19  remaining  in  overtime
completed  Seattles  come-from-be-
hind victory.
Though  third-year  backup  T.J.
Yates and second-year pro Case Kee-
num  played  well  in  the  preseason,
Kubiak  isnt  considering  replacing
embattled Schaub.
No,  we  have  a  lot  of  things  we
have  to  x,  Kubiak  said.  Ive  got  to
x me. Ive got to do better.
Obviously,  we  have  to  protect  the
ball. But I  put him in a bad  situation,
not  running  the  ball,  trying  to  be  ag-
gressive,  trying  to  make  a  play,  and
we didnt. And it ended up killing us.
Daniels concurred with his coach.
I  believe  weve  got  to  just  run  the
ball  there,  but  we  run  the  plays  that
are  called  and  we  have  to  make  good
decisions, Daniels said. 
Schaub  is  1-5  in  his  last  six  games
against 2012 playo teams.
Texans  defensive  end  J.J.  Watt,
who needed six stitches on the bridge
of  his  nose  after  the  game,  wasnt
about to sack his own quarterback.
He  is  going  through  a  tough
time,  Watt  said  of  Schaub.  People
are going to come after him. But foot-
ball  is  a  team  game.  It  is  not  (about)
one player.
We  are  going  to  show  up  tomor-
row and get every single thing we are
doing  wrong  corrected.  We  have  just
got to nish.
Second-year  Seahawks  quarter-
back  Russell  Wilson  took  over  the
game  in  the  second  half,  scrambling
for  46  yards,  including  one  run  for 
7 yards  on  the  eight-play,  42-yard
winning drive.
Wilson,  who  has  led  the  Seahawks
to  their  rst  4-0  start,  completed  12
of 23 passes for 123 yards.
Wilson  sparked  the  comeback
with  his  feet  on  a  14-play,  98-yard,
fourth-quarter  drive  capped  by  Mar-
shawn  Lynchs  3-yard  scoring  run
that pulled  Seattle to  20-13  with  7:43
left.  Wilson  keyed  the  drive  with
scrambles of 24, 13, 11 and 14 yards.
Russell  was  o  the  charts,  coach
Pete  Carroll  said.  You  had  to  watch
this  game  to  see  the  things  that  he
did to give us a chance.
In other words, Wilson was the an-
ti-Schaub.  Three  Houston  turnovers
led to 13 Seattle points on a day when
the  Texans  outgained  the  Seahawks
476 yards to 270. 
Another
Schaub
ub costs
Texans
Jim Corbett
@ByJimCorbett
USATODAYSports
TROY TAORMINA, USA TODAY SPORTS
The Texans J.J. Watt required six
stitches to his nose after the game.
TAMPA This  was  one  loss  that  could
not be pinned on Josh Freeman.
The  deposed  Tampa  Bay  Bucca-
neers  quarterback,  further  demoted
when  he  was  deactivated  for  Sun-
days  game  against  the  Arizona  Car-
dinals,  was  not  the  one  who  threw
the game-swinging interception Sun-
day at Raymond James Stadium.
That  was  the  fate  of  rookie  Mike
Glennon,  who  crash-landed  in  his
NFL  starting  debut  while  Freeman
watched from a suite.
Glennons  most  glaring  blunder
came deep in Bucs territory with 3:23
to  play,  when  his  pass  over  the  mid-
dle for Vincent Jackson was a tad be-
hind  the  receiver    allowing
cornerback  Patrick  Peterson  to  un-
dercut  the  route  for  an  interception.
Bad timing. Bad location.
I  just  had  to  put  the  ball  about  a
foot  in  front  of  Vincent,  and  thats
the dierence, Glennon said.
Dierent quarterback, same result
 this  time  a  13-10  loss.  The  Bucs
(0-4) remain winless.
After  the  interception,  the  rst  of
two  by  Glennon  and  one  Peterson
maintained  was  telegraphed,  it  took
one  play  for  Carson  Palmer  to  con-
nect with Larry Fitzgerald for a tying
13-yard  TD  strike.  And  it  took  one
breath  to  wonder  whether  Freeman
would have made the same mistake.
It  starts  with  me,  and  its  our
coaching  and  our  playing    and  the
quarterbacks  a  part  of  that,  second-
year Bucs coach Greg Schiano said. 
Schiano  pushed  the  button  on  the
boldest  switch  in  the  NFL  last  week
when  he  benched  Freeman  three
days  after  declaring  the  under-
performing quarterback still gave the
team its best chance to win.
For  much  of  Sundays  game,  it  ap-
peared  the  switch  would  not  burn
Schiano,  because  the  Bucs  defense
forced  three  turnovers  and  kept  the
Cardinals  out  of  the  end  zone.  But
typically  in  the  NFL,  games  are  de-
cided by a handful of plays.
And when the Bucs could not build
on  a  10-0  lead  after  halftime,  they
were one play away from a problem.
Weve got to play more consistent
the  whole  game,  said  star  corner-
back  Darrelle  Revis,  who  was  beaten
by Fitzgerald for the touchdown.
Revis,  obtained  in  an  oseason
trade  with  the  New  York  Jets  and
signed  to  a  six-year,  $96  million  con-
tract,  said  he  would  have  laughed
someone out of the room had it been
suggested  a  few  weeks  ago  that  the
Bucs  would  be  0-4.  Now  hes  coming
to  grips  with  reality.  The  Bucs  sea-
son seems in the tank. Since the NFL
playo  eld  was  expanded  in  1990,
one  team  has  earned  a  playo  berth
after starting 0-4.
Weve got to stick together, Revis
said.
The  teams  chemistry  will  be  test-
ed not only by the results on the eld
but  also  by  the  switch  from  Freeman
to  Glennon,  a  towering  third-round
rookie from North Carolina State.
Until his late interceptions (Peter-
son victimized him for a second time
in the closing seconds), Glennon pro-
tected  the  football  well  as  he  com-
pleted  24  of  43  passes  for  193  yards
and  a  TD.  He  lacked  consistent  accu-
racy,  but  some  of  the  misres  were
caused  by  pressure  as  the  Cardinals
dialed up a heavy array of blitzes.
Teammates  gave  Glennon  a  pass
after  Sundays  game.  Revis  said  that
while  he  and  Jackson  walked  o  the
eld,  they  agreed  Glennon  had  per-
formed  well.  Guard  Carl  Nicks  said
the  oensive  line  shared  blame  for
the  late-game  issues  because  of  pro-
tection breakdowns.
Defensive  tackle  Gerald  McCoy
put the onus on the defense for blow-
ing  the  lead.  Clearly,  no  one  dared
bash  the  rookie.  That  would  have
been unfair. 
But as long as Freeman  who said
he wanted to be traded  remains on
the  roster,  the  potential  for  distrac-
tion will remain.
I can see why you say that, safety
Dashon  Goldson  said.  But  I  think
were mature enough to handle it.
Goldson  was  a  member  of  the  San
Francisco  49ers  last  season  when
quarterback Alex Smith was benched
for  Colin  Kaepernick.  Smiths  han-
dling  of  his  demotion  was  never  an
issue  for  the  49ers.  Goldson  can
sense how  Freeman, who declined to
comment  to  news  reporters  Sunday,
could be similarly challenged. 
Now the Bucs must decide what to
do  with  Freeman    keep  him,  trade
him  (with  Jake  Locker  hurt,  will  the
Tennessee  Titans  call?),  release  him
or  suspend  him  (if  he  skips,  or  has
skipped, additional meetings).
Goldson said he chatted with Free-
man after the demotion.
I told him not to lose his head and
to  stay  focused,  Goldson  said.
Think  positive.  You  can  be  called
upon any day, even if its not here.
Whether  Freeman  remains
through  the  season,  he  is  central  to
the teams story: Since a 6-4 start last
season,  the  Bucs  are  1-9.  The  switch
to  Glennon  might  ultimately  be
Schianos  make-or-break  moment. 
ROB FOLDY, USA TODAY SPORTS
Rookie quarterback Mike Glennon, pressured by the Cardinals defense in his rst start, threw two late interceptions in the Buccaneers loss. 
STILL NO BANG FOR BUCS
Jarrett Bell
jbell@usatoday.com
USATODAYSports
FOLLOW JARRETT BELL
@JARRETTBELL
For in-depth analysis, commentary
and breaking news on the NFL
I told him not to lose his head and
to stay focused. Think positive. You
can be called upon any day, even if
its not here.
Buccaneers safety Dashon Goldson, on benched QB Josh Freeman
DENVER Peyton Manning is just toy-
ing with opponents.
For  the  third  time  in  four  games,
Manning  and  the  Denver  Broncos
went  into  halftime  in  a  close  game
Sunday  against  the  Philadelphia  Ea-
gles. For the third time in four games,
the  third  quarter  belonged  to
Manning.
Manning  threw  three  touchdown
passes  and  only  one  incompletion  in
the  quarter  as  the  Broncos  pulled
away from the Eagles and went on to
win  52-20.  Denvers  oense  didnt
need  to  convert  a  third  down  on  its
three  80-yard  touchdown  drives  in
the third quarter. 
Im  enjoying  it.  That  was  a  good
team, Manning said. We were moti-
vated to be on top of our game oen-
sively,  score  points    touchdowns,
not  eld  goals.  I  thought  we  did  that
today, and you certainly enjoy that.
It  was  perhaps  the  rst  admission
from Manning this  year  that,  indeed,
this historic pace and four-game win-
ning streak are even a little bit fun.
When  the  Broncos  added  a  spe-
cial-teams  touchdown  early  in  the
fourth  quarter  to  take  a  36-point
lead,  coaches  sent  Manning  to  the
bench  and  gave  second-year  backup
Brock  Osweiler  the  rst  signicant
regular-season action of his career. 
It  was  another  historic  day  for
Manning.  He  threw  for  one  touch-
down  in  the  rst  half  and  has  16
touchdowns  and  no  interceptions
this  season,  passing  Kurt  Warner
(1999)  and  Don  Meredith  (1966)  for
the  most  touchdowns  through  four
games  and  tying  Milt  Plum  for  the
longest  TD  streak  without  a  pick  to
begin a season in NFL history. Plums
feat  stretched  over  the  rst  10  games
of the 1960 season.
Manning, an NFL history bu, was
tipped  o  before  his  postgame  news
conference about his link to Plum. 
Im  throwing  16  out  as  his  num-
ber,  is  that  right?  Manning  said,
quickly  receiving  armation  from  a
Broncos  team  ocial.  My  brother
Cooper and I used to play a lot of tri-
via  when  we  took  road  trips  with  my
dad.  Cooper  will  be  proud  that  I
knew Milt Plum.
The Broncos also set a single-game
team  record  with  52  points  and  are
averaging 44.75 points a game.
Defensive  players  from  both
teams,  meanwhile,  acknowledged
how  taxing  it  was  to  play  in  such  a
high-tempo game in which the teams
combined for 922 total yards (472 for
Denver,  450  for  Philadelphia)  and
140 oensive plays (71 for Denver, 69
for Philadelphia).
It  was  the  most  tired  Ive  ever
been  playing  football  in  my  life,
Broncos  defensive  end  Derek  Wolfe
said.  It  almost  made  me  throw  up,
and I dont ever throw up.
This  was  a  game  that  could  have
been  a  shootout,  with  two  up-tempo,
high-scoring  oenses    so  dierent
in scheme but so similar in speed.
But  from  the  rst  quarter,  the  Ea-
gles  couldnt  keep  pace.  When  Man-
ning  led  a  rst-quarter  touchdown
drive,  the  Eagles  settled  for  a  eld
goal.  When  speedy  Broncos  special-
teams  star  Trindon  Holliday  scored
on  a  105-yard  kicko  return,  the  Ea-
gles answered with another eld goal.
You  cant  trade  three  (points)  for
seven,  Eagles  coach  Chip  Kelly  said.
Thats not going to work.
Such has been the story of the rst
month of the season for the Eagles 
who  rack  up  yards  but  dont  score
enough  points.  Still,  Michael  Vick,
LeSean  McCoy  and  DeSean  Jackson
were able to keep the Eagles in games
against  the  San  Diego  Chargers  and
Kansas City Chiefs.
Not against the Broncos, who have
the NFLs top-ranked oense in total
yards,  total  points  and  passing  yards
and a quarterback in Manning who is
completing 75% of his passes.
The Eagles have lost three consec-
utive  games,  all  to  AFC  West  teams.
Sundays  blowout  raises  questions
about  how  much,  if  anything,  has
changed  for  the  Eagles  with  the
switch  from  Andy  Reid  to  Kelly  and
the overhauled oense.
Kelly  said  the  question  was  a  fair
one  but  he  wouldnt  be  able  to  gauge
any  change  until  his  team  returned
to practice in Philadelphia this week.
This  is  a  tough-ass  league,  Kelly
said. If we come out and are hanging
our  heads  and  feeling  sorry  for  our-
selves, then Ill say we didnt have any
progress.  ...  They  come  back  to  work
on Tuesday, then Ill be excited about
this group and we move forward. 
4-0 Broncos post points at rare clip
Mannings precision
befuddles Eagles
RONCHENOY, USA TODAY SPORTS
Peyton Manning had 327 passing yards with four touchdowns Sun-
day. He has 16 TD passes and zero interceptions this season.
Lindsay H. Jones
@ByLindsayHJones
USATODAYSports
F
8C SPORTS
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
NFL: WEEK 4
ATLANTA The  New  Eng-
land Patriots keep nding
ways  to  win and  players
to  make  it  happen.  But
this time, only barely.
Contributions  from
deep  down  the  roster,
plus the usual strong play
from  quarterback  Tom
Brady,  spurred  New  Eng-
land  to  a  30-23  win
against  the  Atlanta  Fal-
cons on Sunday night, but
the  Patriots  (4-0)  had  to
survive their own lax play
and  bad  hands  in  the
fourth quarter.
While trying to convert
a rst  down  on  a  fourth-
and-inches  late  in  the
game,  Brady  bobbled  the
snap,  giving  the  ball  
and  one  last  chance    to
the  Falcons  (1-3).  But
they  couldnt  convert,
with  Matt  Ryans  nal
pass falling incomplete in
the end zone.
Bradys  bobble  came
minutes  after  the  Patri-
ots, who nearly blew a 30-
13  lead,  couldnt  handle
an  onside  kick,  leading  to
a Falcons  eld  goal  that
cut  the  lead  to  seven
points.
Brady  threw  for  316
yards  and  two  touch-
downs.  Wide  receiver
Kenbrell  Thompkins,
playing for injured Danny
Amendola,  caught  six
passes  for  127  yards,  in-
cluding  an  18-yard  lung-
ing  touchdown  grab  in
the  fourth  quarter  that
put  the  Pats  up  by  14
points. 
Seldom-used  tight  end
Matthew Mulligan caught
Bradys  other  TD  pass,
and  Julian  Edelman  had
seven  catches  for  118
yards.
The  Falcons  cut  the
gap  to  30-20  with  a
fourth-quarter  TD  by
tight end Tony Gonzalez.
Patriots
hold o
Falcons
late rally
Robert Weintraub
Special for USATODAYSports
49ers 35, Rams 11
SanFrancisco 0 14 7 14  35
St. Louis 3 0 0 8  11
First quarter
St. Louis: 40 FG by Greg Zuerlein, 7:09.
Drive: 5 plays, 35 yards in 1:57. Rams
3-0.
Second quarter
San Francisco: 20 yd pass Colin Kaeper-
nick to Anquan Boldin (Phil Dawson kick),
6:22. Drive: 7 plays, 80 yards in 2:55.
49ers 7-3.
San Francisco: 34 yd run by Frank Gore
(Phil Dawson kick), 0:37. Drive: 8 plays, 80
yards in 3:19. 49ers 14-3.
Third quarter
San Francisco: 12 yd pass Colin Kaeper-
nick to Vernon Davis (Phil Dawson kick),
8:49. Drive: 11 plays, 88 yards in 5:03.
49ers 21-3.
Fourth quarter
San Francisco: 1 yd run by Anthony Dix-
on (Phil Dawson kick), 10:15. Drive: 2
plays, 3 yards in 0:48. 49ers 28-3.
St. Louis: 6 yd pass Sam Bradford to
Lance Kendricks (Benny Cunningham up
the middle for the two-point conversion),
5:44. Drive: 4 plays, 24 yards in 0:57.
49ers 28-11.
San Francisco: 29 yd run by Kendall
Hunter (Phil Dawson kick), 4:25. Drive: 4
plays, 42 yards in 1:19. 49ers 35-11.
TEAMSTATISTICS
SFX STL
First downs 19 14
Rushing 8 0
Passing 8 12
Penalty 3 2
3rd-down efficiency 6-15 3-17
4th-down efficiency 1-1 0-0
Total net yards 370 188
Total plays 65 65
Average gain 5.7 2.9
Net yards rushing 219 18
Rushes 40 19
Average per rush 5.5 0.9
Net yards passing 151 170
Completed-attempted 15-23 19-41
Yards per pass 6.0 3.7
Sacked-yards lost 2-16 5-32
Hadintercepted 0 1
Punts-average 7-54.7 11-44.5
Return yardage 0 93
Punts-returns 1-0 6-19
Kickoffs-returns 0-0 3-74
Interceptions-returns 1-0 0-0
Penalties-yards 10-85 8-82
Fumbles-lost 2-2 2-1
Time of possession 31:45 28:15
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals  San Francisco:
Dawson 53, 79.
San Francisco rushing: Dixon 3-6 (TD),
Gore 20-153 (TD), Hunter 11-49 (TD),
James 3-0, Kaepernick 3-11.
St. Louis rushing: Bradford 3-(-4), Cun-
ningham4-6, Richardson 12-16.
San Francisco passing: Kaepernick 15-
23 for 167, 0 INT, 2 TD.
St. Louis passing: Bradford 19-41 for
202, 1 INT, 1 TD.
San Francisco receiving: Baldwin 2-19,
Boldin 5-90 (TD), V. Davis 2-18 (TD), Hunt-
er 1-9, V. McDonald 1-9, Miller 3-22, Pat-
ton 1-0.
St. Louis receiving: Austin 2-6, Cook 4-
45, Cunningham 1-17, Givens 4-49, Ken-
dricks 1-6 (TD), Pettis 5-59, Quick 1-12,
Richardson 1-8.
San Francisco tackles-assists-sacks
(unofficial): Bowman 5-1-2, Brock 3-0-0,
Brooks 5-2-1, Brown 6-1-0, Dixon 1-0-0,
Dorsey 4-0-1, Jerod-Eddie 1-0-0, Lem-
onier 3-0-0, R. McDonald 1-1-0, Morris 1-
0-0, Reid 1-0-0, Skuta 1-1-0, J. Smith
0-1-, Stupar 2-0-0, Ventrone 1-0-0,
Whitner 3-0-0, Wilhoite 6-1-0.
St. Louis tackles-assists-sacks (unof-
cial): Armstrong 3-0-0, Bates 1-0-0,
Brockers 1-1-, Finnegan 1-0-0, Giorda-
no 1-0-0, Jenkins 3-2-0, Johnson 3-2-0,
Langford 1-1-0, Laurinaitis 9-3-0, C. Long
1-2-, McDonald 2-1-0, McLeod 2-2-0,
Ogletree 7-2-0, Quinn 2-0-1, Rivers 1-0-0,
Sims 1-1-0, Witherspoon 3-1-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: San Fran-
cisco: Whitner 1 for 0 yards. Fumbles
lost: San Francisco: Gore, Kaepernick; St.
Louis: Bradford. Opponents fumbles
recovered: San Francisco: Jerod-Eddie;
St. Louis: Armstrong, McLeod.
Officials  Referee: Triplette, Umpire:
Hannah, Line judge: Bergman, Side
judge: Wyant, Head linesman: McKin-
nely, Back judge: Freeman, Field judge:
Anderson
A: 56,640. T: 3:32
THURSDAYS
LATE GAME
Vikings 34, Steelers 27
Pittsburgh 7 3 7 10  27
Minnesota 101014 0  34
First quarter
Minnesota: 54 FGby Blair Walsh, 12:08.
Drive: 9 plays, 47 yards in 2:52. Vikings
3-0.
Minnesota: 70 yd pass Matt Cassel to
Greg Jennings (Blair Walsh kick), 8:06.
Drive: 3 plays, 76 yards in 0:56. Vikings
10-0.
Pittsburgh: 8 yd run by LeVeon Bell
(Shaun Suishamkick), 4:02. Drive: 8 plays,
75 yards in 4:04. Vikings 10-7.
Second quarter
Minnesota: 60 yd run by Adrian Peter-
son (Blair Walsh kick), 12:42. Drive: 1
plays, 60 yards in 0:10. Vikings 17-7.
Pittsburgh: 26 FG by Shaun Suisham,
3:39. Drive: 15 plays, 78 yards in 9:03.
Vikings 17-10.
Minnesota: 37 FG by Blair Walsh, 0:39.
Drive: 8 plays, 47 yards in 3:00. Vikings
20-10.
Third quarter
Pittsburgh: 1 yd run by LeVeon Bell
(Shaun Suisham kick), 11:28. Drive: 6
plays, 80 yards in 3:32. Vikings 20-17.
Minnesota: 7 yd run by Adrian Peterson
(Blair Walsh kick), 7:52. Drive: 6 plays, 75
yards in 3:36. Vikings 27-17.
Minnesota: 16 yd pass Matt Cassel to
Greg Jennings (Blair Walsh kick), 5:11.
Drive: 2 plays, 37 yards in 0:27. Vikings
34-17.
Fourth quarter
Pittsburgh: 15 yd pass Ben Roethlis-
berger to Jerricho Cotchery (Shaun Suish-
amkick), 12:42. Drive: 9 plays, 77 yards in
3:13. Vikings 34-24.
Pittsburgh: 28 FG by Shaun Suisham,
3:37. Drive: 9 plays, 54 yards in 3:12. Vik-
ings 34-27.
TEAMSTATISTICS
PIT MIN
First downs 29 16
Rushing 5 7
Passing 21 7
Penalty 3 2
3rd-down efficiency 8-15 4-11
4th-down efficiency 0-0 0-0
Total net yards 434 393
Total plays 77 51
Average gain 5.6 7.7
Net yards rushing 77 145
Rushes 21 25
Average per rush 3.7 5.8
Net yards passing 357 248
Completed-attempted 36-51 16-25
Yards per pass 6.4 9.5
Sacked-yards lost 5-26 1-0
Hadintercepted 1 0
Punts-average 4-35.8 4-41.8
Return yardage 95 144
Punts-returns 1-3 1-0
Kickoffs-returns 4-92 5-144
Interceptions-returns 0-0 1-0
Penalties-yards 4-50 5-89
Fumbles-lost 1-1 1-0
Time of possession 36:27 23:33
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals  Minnesota:
Walsh 44.
Pittsburgh rushing: Bell 16-57 (2 TD), A.
Brown 1-10, Dwyer 2-7, F. Jones 2-3.
Minnesota rushing: Cassel 2-5, Peter-
son 23-140 (2 TD).
Pittsburgh passing: Roethlisberger 36-
51 for 383, 1 INT, 1 TD.
Minnesota passing: Cassel 16-25 for
248, 0 INT, 2 TD.
Pittsburgh receiving: Bell 4-27, A.
Brown 12-88, Cotchery 5-103 (TD), D.
Johnson 1-8, F. Jones 1-4, Miller 6-70,
Sanders 4-57, Wheaton 3-26.
Minnesota receiving: Carlson 1-4, Ger-
hart 1-7, Jennings 3-92 (2 TD), Patterson
1-9, Rudolph 2-6, Simpson 7-124, Wright
1-6.
Pittsburgh tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Allen 2-1-0, Clark 5-1-0, Cro-
martie-Smith 1-0-0, Garvin 2-0-0, Gay
1-1-0, Hood2-0-0, J. Jones 1-0-0, Keisel 1-
0-0, McLendon 4-0-0, Polamalu 2-0-0,
Taylor 3-2-0, Thomas 1-0-0, Timmons 6-
0-0, Wheaton 1-0-0, Williams 5-0-0,
Woodley 3-0-1, Woods 1-0-0, Worilds
1-0-0.
Minnesota tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Allen 3-1-2, Bishop 1-0-0,
Blanton 1-0-0, Evans 1-0-0, Floyd 0-1-,
Greenway 10-0-1, Griffen 2-0-1, Hender-
son 9-0-0, Hodges 1-0-0, Mauti 2-0-0,
Raymond 3-1-0, Rhodes 3-0-0, Robinson
12-0-0, Robison 1-0-0, Sendejo 4-0-0,
Smith 6-1-0, Webb1-0-0, Williams 2-0-0.
Turnovers Interceptions: Minnesota:
Greenway 1 for 0 yards. Fumbles lost:
Pittsburgh: Roethlisberger. Opponents
fumbles recovered: Minnesota:
Williams.
Officials  Referee: Blakeman, Um-
pire: DeFelice, Line judge: Marinucci,
Side judge: Meyer, Head linesman:
Veteri, Back judge: Miles, Field judge:
Meslow
A: 83,518. T: 3:01
Seahawks 23, Texans 20
Seattle 3 0 3 14 3  23
Houston 0 20 0 0 0  20
First quarter
Seattle: 48 FG by Steven Hauschka,
11:11. Drive: 4 plays, 40 yards in 1:34.
Seahawks 3-0.
Second quarter
Houston: 31 yd pass Matt Schaub to
Garrett Graham (Randy Bullock kick),
14:55. Drive: 6 plays, 90 yards in 2:52.
Texans 7-3.
Houston: 5 yd pass Matt Schaub to Ari-
an Foster (Randy Bullock kick), 6:11. Drive:
10 plays, 80 yards in 5:10. Texans 14-3.
Houston: 22 FG by Randy Bullock, 3:51.
Drive: 7 plays, 15 yards in 2:13. Texans
17-3.
Houston: 42 FG by Randy Bullock, 0:01.
Drive: 12 plays, 67 yards in 1:12. Texans
20-3.
Third quarter
Seattle: 39 FGby Steven Hauschka, 3:54.
Drive: 4 plays, 0 yards in 0:25. Texans
20-6.
Fourth quarter
Seattle: 3 yd run by Marshawn Lynch
(Steven Hauschka kick), 7:43. Drive: 14
plays, 98 yards in 7:28. Texans 20-13.
Seattle: 58 yd interception return by
RichardSherman (Steven Hauschkakick) ,
2:40. 20-20.
Overtime
Seattle: 45 FGby Steven Hauschka, 3:19.
Drive: 8 plays, 42 yards in 3:27. Sea-
hawks 23-20.
TEAMSTATISTICS
SEA HOU
First downs 15 29
Rushing 6 7
Passing 6 20
Penalty 3 2
3rd-down efficiency 3-14 6-17
4th-down efficiency 1-1 0-0
Total net yards 270 476
Total plays 58 88
Average gain 4.7 5.4
Net yards rushing 179 151
Rushes 30 35
Average per rush 6.0 4.3
Net yards passing 91 325
Completed-attempted 12-23 31-49
Yards per pass 3.3 6.1
Sacked-yards lost 5-32 4-30
Hadintercepted 1 2
Punts-average 6-46.3 7-45.3
Return yardage 173 54
Punts-returns 4-60 1-1
Kickoffs-returns 3-55 2-52
Interceptions-returns 2-58 1-1
Penalties-yards 9-62 6-86
Fumbles-lost 3-1 2-1
Time of possession 31:48 39:53
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals: None.
Seattle rushing: Lynch 17-98 (TD), Turbin
3-4, Wilson 10-77.
Houston rushing: Foster 27-102,
Schaub1-5, Tate 7-44.
Seattle passing: Wilson 12-23 for 123,
1 INT, 0 TD.
Houston passing: Schaub 31-49 for
355, 2 INT, 2 TD.
Seattle receiving: Baldwin 3-39, Cole-
man 1-4, Lynch 3-45, Miller 1-7, Rice 1-11,
Tate 3-17.
Houston receiving: Daniels 6-72, Foster
6-69 (TD), Graham 5-69 (TD), Hopkins 2-
27, Johnson 9-110, G. Jones 1-1, Martin
1-6, Tate 1-1.
Seattle tackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Avril 2-0-1, Bennett 0-1-0, Browner
5-0-0, Bryant 3-1-0, Chancellor 7-0-0, Cle-
mons 3-2-1, Lane 1-0-0, Maxwell 4-0-0,
McDaniel 1-2-1, McDonald 5-0-1, Me-
bane 4-1-0, Sherman 4-0-0, M. Smith 6-
1-0, Thomas 7-0-0, Thurmond 2-0-0,
Wagner 6-2-0, Wright 4-1-0.
Houston tackles-assists-sacks (unof-
cial): Bouye 1-0-0, Braman 1-0-0, Cush-
ing 6-3-0, Griffin 1-0-0, B. Harris 1-0-0,
Jackson 4-0-0, Jefferson 0-1-0, Joseph 2-
0-0, Lechler 1-0-0, Manning 3-0-0, Mays
3-2-0, Mercilus 4-2-2, Mitchell 0-2-0,
Pleasant 1-0-0, B. Reed 3-1-1, E. Reed 2-
1-0, Sharpton 4-2-0, Smith 2-2-1, Swear-
inger 1-0-0, Tuggle 2-0-0, Watt 4-4-.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Seattle:
Sherman 1 for 58 yards, Thomas 1 for 0
yards; Houston: Joseph 1 for 1 yards.
Fumbles lost: Seattle: Lynch; Houston:
Tate. Opponents fumbles recovered:
Seattle: Wagner; Houston: McClain.
Officials  Referee: Corrente, Umpire:
Bryan, Line judge: Lewis, Side judge:
Tolbert, Head linesman: Hayward,
Back judge: Wilson, Field judge:
Cavaletto
A: 71,756. T: 3:29
Bills 23, Ravens 20
Baltimore 0 7 7 6  20
Buffalo 6 14 3 0  23
First quarter
Buffalo: 27 FG by Dan Carpenter, 6:11.
Drive: 11 plays, 64 yards in 4:43. Bills
3-0.
Buffalo: 27 FG by Dan Carpenter, 3:03.
Drive: 5 plays, 16 yards in 2:26. Bills 6-0.
Second quarter
Baltimore: 10 yd pass Joe Flacco to
Marlon Brown (Justin Tucker kick), 13:55.
Drive: 3 plays, 27 yards in 0:54. Ravens
7-6.
Buffalo: 42 yd pass EJ Manuel to Robert
Woods (Dan Carpenter kick), 8:40. Drive:
5 plays, 70 yards in 1:59. Bills 13-7.
Buffalo: 16 yd run by Fred Jackson (Dan
Carpenter kick), 6:52. Drive: 4 plays, 28
yards in 1:13. Bills 20-7.
Third quarter
Baltimore: 26 yd pass Joe Flacco to Tor-
rey Smith (Justin Tucker kick), 7:17. Drive: 4
plays, 80 yards in 1:31. Bills 20-14.
Buffalo: 22 FG by Dan Carpenter, 1:56.
Drive: 9 plays, 44 yards in 2:57. Bills
23-14.
Fourth quarter
Baltimore: 35 FG by Justin Tucker, 7:12.
Drive: 5 plays, 74 yards in 1:21. Bills
23-17.
Baltimore: 24 FG by Justin Tucker, 4:04.
Drive: 5 plays, 50 yards in 1:39. Bills
23-20.
TEAMSTATISTICS
BAL BUF
First downs 15 19
Rushing 0 10
Passing 13 7
Penalty 2 2
3rd-down efficiency 3-16 5-18
4th-down efficiency 1-1 0-0
Total net yards 345 350
Total plays 63 79
Average gain 5.5 4.4
Net yards rushing 24 203
Rushes 9 55
Average per rush 2.7 3.7
Net yards passing 321 147
Completed-attempted 25-50 10-22
Yards per pass 5.9 6.1
Sacked-yards lost 4-26 2-20
Hadintercepted 5 2
Punts-average 7-47.3 8-43.3
Return yardage 105 46
Punts-returns 4-31 4-34
Kickoffs-returns 3-73 0-0
Interceptions-returns 2-1 5-12
Penalties-yards 8-59 11-99
Fumbles-lost 0-0 4-1
Time of possession 23:34 36:26
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals: None.
Baltimore rushing: Pierce 4-7, Rice 5-17.
Buffalo rushing: Choice 3-11, Graham
1-14, Jackson 16-87 (TD), Manuel 11-1,
Spiller 23-77, Woods 1-13.
Baltimore passing: Flacco 25-50 for
347, 5 INT, 2 TD.
Buffalo passing: Manuel 10-22 for 167,
2 INT, 1 TD.
Baltimore receiving: M. Brown 4-34
(TD), Clark 4-34, Dickson 2-12, Doss 4-47,
Leach 1-2, Pierce 1-2, T. Smith 5-166 (TD),
Thompson 4-50.
Buffalo receiving: Chandler 2-28, Gra-
ham 2-32, Johnson 1-(-1), Smith 1-28,
Woods 4-80 (TD).
Baltimore tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): C. Brown 1-0-0, Bynes 4-4-0,
Canty 3-2-1, Dumervil 2-1-0, Elam 6-0-0,
Graham 7-2-0, Huff 2-1-0, Ihedigbo 5-
2-0, A. Jones 6-2-0, Levine 1-0-0, McClel-
lan 1-0-0, McPhee 3-1-0, Ngata 3-1-0, Si-
mon 1-0-0, D. Smith 4-8-0, J. Smith 4-1-0,
Spears 2-1-0, Suggs 9-8-1, Upshaw1-1-0,
Webb1-0-0.
Buffalo tackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Alonso 2-3-0, Bradham 1-1-0,
Branch 2-0-0, Burton 1-2-0, Dareus 5-2-2,
Easley 4-0-0, Lawson 5-0-1, Leonhard 3-
1-0, Moats 1-1-0, Robey 2-0-0, Rogers 6-
2-0, Searcy 6-0-0, A. Williams 2-0-0, M.
Williams 1-0-1.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Baltimore:
Graham 1 for 0 yards, D. Smith 1 for 1
yards; Buffalo: Alonso 2 for 6 yards, Leon-
hard 1 for 0 yards, A. Williams 2 for 6
yards. Fumbles lost: Buffalo: Manuel.
Opponents fumbles recovered: Balti-
more: B. Williams.
Officials Referee: Boger, Umpire: Mi-
chalek, Line judge: Stephan, Side
judge: Baynes, Head linesman: Camp,
Back judge: Steratore, Field judge:
Prioleau
A: 68,296. T: 3:34
Browns 17, Bengals 6
Cincinnati 0 3 3 0  6
Cleveland 7 0 3 7  17
First quarter
Cleveland: 2 yd pass Brian Hoyer to Jor-
dan Cameron (Billy Cundiff kick), 2:13.
Drive: 12 plays, 95 yards in 6:29. Browns
7-0.
Second quarter
Cincinnati: 25 FG by Mike Nugent,
10:48. Drive: 13 plays, 46 yards in 6:25.
Browns 7-3.
Third quarter
Cleveland: 51 FG by Billy Cundiff, 5:10.
Drive: 10 plays, 17 yards in 3:25. Browns
10-3.
Cincinnati: 43 FG by Mike Nugent, 0:37.
Drive: 10 plays, 62 yards in 4:33. Browns
10-6.
Fourth quarter
Cleveland: 1 yd pass Brian Hoyer to
Chris Ogbonnaya(Billy Cundiff kick), 4:54.
Drive: 12 plays, 91 yards in 6:37. Browns
17-6.
TEAMSTATISTICS
CIN CLE
First downs 16 18
Rushing 3 4
Passing 10 14
Penalty 3 0
3rd-down efficiency 4-14 9-18
4th-down efficiency 1-3 0-0
Total net yards 266 336
Total plays 64 71
Average gain 4.2 4.7
Net yards rushing 63 89
Rushes 20 30
Average per rush 3.2 3.0
Net yards passing 203 247
Completed-attempted 23-42 25-38
Yards per pass 4.6 6.0
Sacked-yards lost 2-3 3-22
Hadintercepted 1 0
Punts-average 4-38.8 5-42.8
Return yardage 75 72
Punts-returns 2-15 1-7
Kickoffs-returns 4-60 2-60
Interceptions-returns 0-0 1-5
Penalties-yards 3-25 5-80
Fumbles-lost 2-1 0-0
Time of possession 28:51 31:09
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals  Cleveland: Cun-
diff 37, 49.
Cincinnati rushing: Bernard 10-37, Dal-
ton 4-13, Green-Ellis 6-13.
Cleveland rushing: Hoyer 4-7, McGa-
hee 15-46, Ogbonnaya5-27, Rainey 6-9.
Cincinnati passing: Dalton 23-42 for
206, 1 INT, 0 TD.
Cleveland passing: Hoyer 25-38 for
269, 0 INT, 2 TD.
Cincinnati receiving: Bernard 6-38, Eif-
ert 3-39, Green 7-51, Gresham 3-53, Sa-
nu 3-19, Sanzenbacher 1-6.
Cleveland receiving: Barnidge 1-2,
Benjamin 1-39, Bess 2-25, Cameron 10-
91 (TD), Gordon 4-71, Ogbonnaya 5-21
(TD), Rainey 2-20.
Cincinnati tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Atkins 1-2-1, Burct 5-9-0,
Crocker 1-0-0, Dunlap 3-1-1, Ghee 2-
1-0, Harrison 1-3-0, Iloka 3-3-0, M. John-
son 1-1-0, A. Jones 1-2-0, Maualuga 4-
7-0, Mays 4-1-0, Newman 3-3-0, Peko 1-
3-0, Rey 0-1-0, Still 0-1-0, Thompson
3-0-0.
Cleveland tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Bademosi 1-0-0, D. Bryant 0-
4-0, Gipson 3-3-0, Haden 4-0-0, Jackson
7-3-0, Kruger 0-2-0, Magee 1-0-0, McFad-
den 1-0-0, Mingo 3-1-1, Owens 3-0-1,
Robertson 6-4-0, Rubin 4-0-0, Skrine 2-
0-0, Taylor 2-0-0, Ward4-1-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Cleveland:
Skrine 1 for 5 yards. Fumbles lost: Cin-
cinnati: Dalton. Opponents fumbles
recovered: Cleveland: Owens.
Officials  Referee: Winter, Umpire:
Paganelli, Line judge: Arthur, Side
judge: Hill, Head linesman: Howey,
Back judge: Steed, Field judge:
Steenson
A: 71,481. T: 3:04
Cardinals 13, Buccaneers 10
Arizona 0 0 0 13  13
TampaBay 7 3 0 0  10
First quarter
Tampa Bay: 8 yd pass Mike Glennon to
Mike Williams (Rian Lindell kick), 6:17.
Drive: 6 plays, 41 yards in 2:26. Bucca-
neers 7-0.
Second quarter
Tampa Bay: 50 FG by Rian Lindell, 0:27.
Drive: 13 plays, 61 yards in 4:23. Bucca-
neers 10-0.
Fourth quarter
Arizona: 42 FGby Jay Feely, 11:16. Drive:
6 plays, 26 yards in 2:14. Buccaneers
10-3.
Arizona: 13 yd pass Carson Palmer to
Larry Fitzgerald (Jay Feely kick), 3:06.
Drive: 1 plays, 13 yards in 0:06. 10-10.
Arizona: 27 FGby Jay Feely, 1:29. Drive: 5
plays, 29 yards in 0:27. Cardinals 13-10.
TEAMSTATISTICS
ARI TAM
First downs 17 20
Rushing 4 4
Passing 11 13
Penalty 2 3
3rd-down efficiency 1-10 7-18
4th-down efficiency 0-0 1-1
Total net yards 296 253
Total plays 59 76
Average gain 5.0 3.3
Net yards rushing 56 80
Rushes 20 31
Average per rush 2.8 2.6
Net yards passing 240 173
Completed-attempted 21-38 24-43
Yards per pass 6.2 3.8
Sacked-yards lost 1-8 2-20
Hadintercepted 2 2
Punts-average 7-45.7 8-40.3
Return yardage 21 94
Punts-returns 1-5 2-22
Kickoffs-returns 0-0 3-69
Interceptions-returns 2-16 2-3
Penalties-yards 10-90 8-73
Fumbles-lost 2-1 1-1
Time of possession 25:55 34:05
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals: None.
Arizona rushing: Ellington 4-29, Men-
denhall 12-21, Palmer 4-6.
Tampa Bay rushing: Demps 1-14, Glen-
non 2-(-1), Goldson 1-22, Martin 27-45.
Arizona passing: Palmer 21-38 for 248,
2 INT, 1 TD.
Tampa Bay passing: Glennon 24-43 for
193, 2 INT, 1 TD.
Arizona receiving: J. Brown 1-19, Dray
1-10, Ellington 3-22, Fitzgerald 6-68 (TD),
Floyd 5-87, Housler 1-23, Mendenhall 3-
13, Roberts 1-6.
TampaBay receiving: Demps 1-8, Jack-
son 2-27, James 1-2, Leonard 2-11, Lorig
1-20, Martin 3-16, Ogletree 5-30, Wil-
liams 4-38 (TD), Wright 5-41.
Arizonatackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Abraham 1-0-0, Arenas 1-0-0, Bell
5-3-1, Bethel 1-0-0, Brinkley 6-2-0, Camp-
bell 2-0-0, Dansby 9-0-0, Demens 4-0-0,
Dockett 2-0-0, T. Jefferson 6-1-0, Mathieu
6-0-0, Moch 3-0-1, Peterson 2-0-0, Powers
5-0-0, Rucker 1-1-0, Shaughnessy 4-0-0,
Taamu 1-0-0.
Tampa Bay tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Banks 1-0-0, Barron 1-1-0, Black
2-1-0, Bowers 0-1-0, Casillas 2-0-0, Clay-
born 3-0-0, David 4-2-0, Foster 5-0-0,
Goldson 3-2-0, Johnson 3-1-0, McCoy 1-
0-1, Revis 6-0-0, Spence 1-1-0, Tandy 1-
0-0, Teo-Nesheim1-0-0, Watson 6-0-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Arizona:
Peterson 2 for 16 yards; Tampa Bay:
Banks 1 for 0 yards, Revis 1 for 3 yards.
Fumbles lost: Arizona: Mendenhall;
Tampa Bay: Glennon. Opponents fum-
bles recovered: Arizona: Shaughnessy;
TampaBay: McCoy.
Officials Referee: Steratore, Umpire:
Schuster, Line judge: Seeman, Side
judge: Weatherford, Head linesman:
Mackie, Back judge: Paganelli, Field
judge: Waggoner
A: 44,956. T: 3:13
Chiefs 31, Giants 7
NewYork 0 7 0 0  7
Kansas City 0 10 7 14  31
Second quarter
Kansas City: 5 yd pass Alex Smith to
Sean McGrath (Ryan Succop kick), 14:47.
Drive: 11 plays, 98 yards in 5:38. Chiefs
7-0.
New York: 69 yd pass Eli Manning to
Victor Cruz (Josh Brown kick), 13:53. Drive:
2 plays, 74 yards in 0:54. 7-7.
Kansas City: 51 FG by Ryan Succop,
1:55. Drive: 5 plays, 31 yards in 1:53.
Chiefs 10-7.
Third quarter
Kansas City: 89 yard punt return by
Dexter McCluster (Ryan Succop kick),
1:34. Chiefs 17-7.
Fourth quarter
Kansas City: 2 yd pass Alex Smith to Ja-
maal Charles (Ryan Succop kick), 5:43.
Drive: 14 plays, 80 yards in 9:17. Chiefs
24-7.
Kansas City: 34 yd pass Alex Smith to
Dwayne Bowe (Ryan Succop kick), 3:06.
Drive: 3 plays, 35 yards in 1:25. Chiefs
31-7.
TEAMSTATISTICS
NYG KAN
First downs 11 21
Rushing 3 4
Passing 8 15
Penalty 0 2
3rd-down efficiency 1-14 9-16
4th-down efficiency 1-2 0-0
Total net yards 298 390
Total plays 61 70
Average gain 4.9 5.6
Net yards rushing 98 102
Rushes 21 28
Average per rush 4.7 3.6
Net yards passing 200 288
Completed-attempted 18-37 24-41
Yards per pass 5.0 6.9
Sacked-yards lost 3-17 1-0
Hadintercepted 1 2
Punts-average 8-49.9 5-44.6
Return yardage 105 152
Punts-returns 4-35 4-113
Kickoffs-returns 3-74 1-22
Interceptions-returns 2-(-4) 1-17
Penalties-yards 7-65 7-62
Fumbles-lost 3-2 1-1
Time of possession 24:04 35:56
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals NewYork: Brown
44.
New York rushing: Jacobs 1-5, Man-
ning2-12, Scott 5-26, Wilson 13-55.
Kansas City rushing: Charles 18-65,
Daniel 2-(-2), Davis 1-2, Al. Smith 7-37.
New York passing: Manning 18-37 for
217, 1 INT, 1 TD.
Kansas City passing: Al. Smith 24-41
for 288, 2 INT, 3 TD.
New York receiving: Cruz 10-164 (TD),
Jacobs 1-5, Nicks 3-33, Randle 1-7, Scott
1-0, Wilson 2-8.
Kansas City receiving: Avery 2-23,
Bowe 4-58 (TD), Brock 2-27, Charles 5-62
(TD), McCluster 5-48, McGrath 5-64 (TD),
Sherman 1-6.
New York tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Amukamara 2-1-0, Bradford 1-
0-0, Herzlich 7-1-0, Jenkins 1-0-0, Joseph
3-0-0, Kiwanuka 1-0-0, McBride 1-1-0,
Moore 2-0-0, Mundy 2-1-0, Patterson 3-
0-0, Paysinger 7-0-1, Pierre-Paul 1-0-0,
Rogers 1-0-0, Rolle 6-0-0, Ross 3-0-0,
Thomas 3-0-0, Tuck 1-0-0, Williams 2-0-0.
Kansas City tackles-assists-sacks
(unofficial): Bailey 3-0-1, Berry 2-0-0,
Catapano 1-0-0, Colquitt 1-0-0, Cooper
1-0-0, DeVito 1-0-0, Gray 1-0-0, Hali 4-
0-2, Hemingway 1-0-0, Houston 2-0-0,
Jackson 2-1-0, D. Johnson 8-1-0, Jordan
3-0-0, Lewis 1-0-0, Parker 1-0-0, Poe 2-
0-0, Robinson 5-0-0, Sherman 2-0-0, S.
Smith 4-0-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: New York:
Amukamara 1 for -4 yards, Rolle 1 for 0
yards; Kansas City: Demps 1 for 17 yards.
Fumbles lost: New York: Manning 2;
Kansas City: Hudson. Opponents fum-
bles recovered: New York: Paysinger;
Kansas City: Berry, Robinson.
Officials  Referee: McAuley, Umpire:
Dawson, Line judge: Symonette, Side
judge: Coleman, Headlinesman: Brad-
ley, Back judge: Dyer, Field judge:
Brown
A: 73,386. T: 3:13
Colts 37, Jaguars 3
Indianapolis 0 2014 3  37
Jacksonville 3 0 0 0  3
First quarter
Jacksonville: 53 FG by Josh Scobee,
8:14. Drive: 4 plays, 6 yards in 1:11. Jag-
uars 3-0.
Second quarter
Indianapolis: 22 FG by AdamVinatieri,
14:43. Drive: 11 plays, 54 yards in 3:43.
3-3.
Indianapolis: 41 yd interception return
by Darius Butler (Adam Vinatieri kick) ,
11:48. Colts 10-3.
Indianapolis: 1 yd run by Trent Richard-
son (Adam Vinatieri kick), 5:54. Drive: 6
plays, 81 yards in 3:28. Colts 17-3.
Indianapolis: 46 FG by AdamVinatieri,
1:34. Drive: 10 plays, 44 yards in 3:18.
Colts 20-3.
Third quarter
Indianapolis: 31 yd pass Andrew Luck
to Coby Fleener (Adam Vinatieri kick),
12:15. Drive: 2 plays, 63 yards in 0:37.
Colts 27-3.
Indianapolis: 5 yd pass Andrew Luck to
Reggie Wayne (Adam Vinatieri kick),
1:22. Drive: 12 plays, 72 yards in 8:35.
Colts 34-3.
Fourth quarter
Indianapolis: 28 FG by AdamVinatieri,
1:53. Drive: 7 plays, 37 yards in 2:56.
Colts 37-3.
TEAMSTATISTICS
IND JAC
First downs 26 14
Rushing 8 0
Passing 16 10
Penalty 2 4
3rd-down efficiency 6-13 2-11
4th-down efficiency 0-0 0-1
Total net yards 437 205
Total plays 70 54
Average gain 6.2 3.8
Net yards rushing 154 40
Rushes 29 18
Average per rush 5.3 2.2
Net yards passing 283 165
Completed-attempted 24-39 17-32
Yards per pass 6.9 4.6
Sacked-yards lost 2-14 4-14
Hadintercepted 1 3
Punts-average 3-46.0 6-48.3
Return yardage 112 98
Punts-returns 5-19 1-10
Kickoffs-returns 2-45 4-87
Interceptions-returns 3-48 1-1
Penalties-yards 7-58 9-65
Fumbles-lost 1-0 0-0
Time of possession 36:38 23:22
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals: None.
Indianapolis rushing: D. Brown 3-65,
Havili 3-0, Hilton 1-3, Luck 2-26, Richard-
son 20-60 (TD).
Jacksonville rushing: Forsett 1-3, Gab-
bert 2-10, Jones-Drew 13-23, Todman
2-4.
Indianapolis passing: Hasselbeck 2-3
for 37, 0 INT, 0 TD, Luck 22-36 for 260, 1
INT, 2 TD.
Jacksonville passing: Gabbert 17-32
for 179, 3 INT, 0 TD.
Indianapolis receiving: D. Brown 2-11,
Fleener 5-77 (TD), Havili 2-1, Heyward-
Bey 3-33, Hilton 5-48, Jones 1-21, Rich-
ardson 1-6, Wayne 5-100 (TD).
Jacksonville receiving: Ebert 1-5, For-
sett 2-10, Harbor 2-39, Jones-Drew 1-5,
Sanders 4-59, Shorts III 7-61.
Indianapolis tackles-assists-sacks
(unofficial): Angerer 3-0-0, Bethea 4-
0-0, S. Brown 3-0-0, Butler 6-0-0, Chap-
man 1-0-0, Davis 3-0-0, Franklin 1-0-0,
Freeman 4-0-0, Gordy 2-0-0, Guy 1-0-0,
Howell 2-0-0, Lefeged 1-0-0, Mathews 1-
0-0, Mathis 4-1-3, Redding 3-0-1, Reed 1-
0-0, Toler 1-0-0, Walden 1-1-0.
Jacksonville tackles-assists-sacks
(unofficial): Allen 5-2-1, Alualu 1-0-1, Ba-
bin 2-1-0, Ball 2-1-0, Blackmon 3-0-0,
Branch 1-0-0, Cyprien 4-1-0, Deaderick 1-
0-0, Evans 6-0-0, Harris 3-0-0, Hayes 7-
0-0, Marks 1-0-0, Miller 2-0-0, Mincey 1-
0-0, Posluszny 8-1-0, Prosinski 2-0-0, Rey-
nolds 2-0-0, Taufoou 1-0-0, Tinker 1-0-0,
Todman 1-0-0.
Turnovers Interceptions: Indianapo-
lis: Butler 1 for 41 yards, Davis 1 for 0
yards, Gordy 1 for 7 yards; Jacksonville:
Blackmon 1 for 1 yards. Fumbles lost:
None. Opponents fumbles recov-
ered: None.
Officials Referee: Parry, Umpire: Far-
rell, Line judge: Hill, Side judge: Larrew,
Head linesman: Bowers, Back judge:
Paganelli, Field judge: Edwards
A: 59,695. T: 3:08
Lions 40, Bears 32
Chicago 3 10 3 16  32
Detroit 3 27 7 3  40
First quarter
Chicago: 34 FG by Robbie Gould, 8:34.
Drive: 7 plays, 54 yards in 3:21. Bears
3-0.
Detroit: 23 FG by David Akers, 2:38.
Drive: 11 plays, 78 yards in 5:56. 3-3.
Second quarter
Detroit: 31 FG by David Akers, 14:28.
Drive: 5 plays, 18 yards in 1:46. Lions
6-3.
Chicago: 53 ydrun by Matt Forte (Robbie
Gould kick), 13:44. Drive: 2 plays, 80
yards in 0:44. Bears 10-6.
Detroit: 41 FG by David Akers, 10:19.
Drive: 8 plays, 61 yards in 3:25. Bears
10-9.
Detroit: 1 yd run by Matthew Stafford
(David Akers kick), 6:09. Drive: 4 plays, 22
yards in 2:03. Lions 16-10.
Detroit: 2 yd pass Matthew Stafford to
Calvin Johnson (David Akers kick), 5:47.
Drive: 1 plays, 2 yards in 0:04. Lions
23-10.
Detroit: 37 ydrun by Reggie Bush (David
Akers kick), 2:43. Drive: 2 plays, 51 yards
in 0:52. Lions 30-10.
Chicago: 28 FG by Robbie Gould, 0:00.
Drive: 4 plays, 36 yards in 0:20. Lions
30-13.
Third quarter
Chicago: 25 FG by Robbie Gould, 9:05.
Drive: 6 plays, 73 yards in 2:22. Lions
30-16.
Detroit: 4 yd fumble return by Nick Fair-
ley (DavidAkers kick) , 0:20. Lions 37-16.
Fourth quarter
Detroit: 43 FG by David Akers, 8:57.
Drive: 8 plays, 56 yards in 4:17. Lions
40-16.
Chicago: 14 yd pass Jay Cutler to Alshon
Jeffery (Jay Cutler pass to Alshon Jeffery
for the two-point conversion), 4:00. Drive:
12 plays, 77 yards in 4:57. Lions 40-24.
Chicago: 10 yd pass Jay Cutler to Earl
Bennett (Jay Cutler pass to Brandon Mar-
shall for the two-point conversion), 0:43.
Drive: 8 plays, 60 yards in 2:16. Lions
40-32.
TEAMSTATISTICS
CHI DET
First downs 18 23
Rushing 4 10
Passing 13 13
Penalty 1 0
3rd-down efficiency 1-13 2-10
4th-down efficiency 2-2 0-0
Total net yards 417 387
Total plays 66 66
Average gain 6.3 5.9
Net yards rushing 131 159
Rushes 16 30
Average per rush 8.2 5.3
Net yards passing 286 228
Completed-attempted 27-47 23-35
Yards per pass 5.7 6.3
Sacked-yards lost 3-31 1-14
Hadintercepted 3 1
Punts-average 5-40.2 3-50.0
Return yardage 172 163
Punts-returns 2-17 1-57
Kickoffs-returns 6-147 3-62
Interceptions-returns 1-8 3-44
Penalties-yards 4-30 3-25
Fumbles-lost 2-1 4-2
Time of possession 28:11 31:49
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals: None.
Chicago rushing: Cutler 1-9, Forte 14-95
(TD), Jeffery 1-27.
Detroit rushing: Bell 7-12, Bush 18-139
(TD), Stafford5-8 (TD).
Chicago passing: Cutler 27-47 for 317, 3
INT, 2 TD.
Detroit passing: Stafford 23-35 for 242,
1 INT, 1 TD.
Chicago receiving: E. Bennett 2-19 (TD),
M. Bennett 8-90, Forte 5-22, Jeffery 5-107
(TD), Marshall 7-79.
Detroit receiving: Bell 4-30, Bush 4-34,
Durham 3-58, Johnson 4-44 (TD), Petti-
grew7-54, Scheffler 1-22.
Chicagotackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Ja. Anderson 2-2-0, Bostic 1-0-0,
Bowman 3-0-0, Briggs 9-4-0, Collins 1-
2-0, Conte 6-0-0, Costanzo 1-0-0, Frey 2-
4-0, Jennings 2-1-0, Paea 2-0-0, Peppers
4-2-1, Podlesh 1-0-0, Rosario 1-0-0, Till-
man 2-0-0, Walters 1-0-0, Williams 3-1-0,
Wootton 4-0-0, Wright 3-3-0.
Detroit tackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Ansah 0-1-0, Bentley 2-2-0, Delmas
2-0-0, Green 1-1-0, Houston 2-0-0, Levy 4-
3-0, Lewis 2-0-0, Mathis 1-0-0, McIntosh
2-0-0, Mosley 1-2-0, Palmer 2-1-0, Quin 1-
0-0, Slay 6-1-0, Suh 4-0-2, Tulloch 10-4-1,
Wendling1-0-0, Whitehead2-0-0, Young
1-0-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Chicago:
Wright 1 for 8 yards; Detroit: Delmas 2 for
2 yards, Quin 1 for 42 yards. Fumbles
lost: Chicago: Cutler; Detroit: Bell, Staf-
ford. Opponents fumbles recovered:
Chicago: McClellin, Wootton; Detroit:
Fairley.
Officials  Referee: Carey, Umpire:
Brown, Line judge: Podraza, Side
judge: Rosenbaum, Head linesman:
Baltz, Back judge: Helverson, Field
judge: Weir
A: 64,552. T: 3:13
Broncos 52, Eagles 20
Philadelphia 3 10 0 7  20
Denver 14 7 2110  52
First quarter
Denver: 6 yd pass Peyton Manning to
Wes Welker (Matt Prater kick), 10:19.
Drive: 9 plays, 74 yards in 3:52. Broncos
7-0.
Philadelphia: 35 FG by Alex Henery,
6:03. Drive: 11 plays, 65 yards in 4:16.
Broncos 7-3.
Denver: 105 yd kickoff return by Trindon
Holliday (Matt Prater kick) , 5:50. Broncos
14-3.
Second quarter
Philadelphia: 25 FG by Alex Henery,
14:18. Drive: 15 plays, 73 yards in 6:32.
Broncos 14-6.
Philadelphia: 4 yd run by Chris Polk
(Alex Henery kick), 11:06. Drive: 7 plays,
64 yards in 2:10. Broncos 14-13.
Denver: 4 yd run by Knowshon Moreno
(Matt Prater kick), 5:05. Drive: 11 plays, 80
yards in 6:01. Broncos 21-13.
Third quarter
Denver: 1 yd pass Peyton Manning to
Demaryius Thomas (Matt Prater kick),
9:54. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards in 5:06.
Broncos 28-13.
Denver: 15 yd pass Peyton Manning to
Demaryius Thomas (Matt Prater kick),
5:10. Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards in 3:12.
Broncos 35-13.
Denver: 4 yd pass Peyton Manning to
Wes Welker (Matt Prater kick), 0:22.
Drive: 7 plays, 65 yards in 3:35. Broncos
42-13.
Fourth quarter
Denver: 17 yd blocked punt return by
Steven Johnson (Matt Prater kick) , 13:54.
Broncos 49-13.
Denver: 53 FG by Matt Prater, 6:53.
Drive: 7 plays, 30 yards in 3:49. Broncos
52-13.
Philadelphia: 6 yd pass Nick Foles to
Jeff Maehl (Alex Henery kick), 4:35. Drive:
7 plays, 80 yards in 2:18. Broncos
52-20.
TEAMSTATISTICS
PHI DEN
First downs 21 35
Rushing 9 11
Passing 12 19
Penalty 0 5
3rd-down efficiency 8-16 5-8
4th-down efficiency 0-0 0-0
Total net yards 450 472
Total plays 69 71
Average gain 6.5 6.6
Net yards rushing 166 141
Rushes 35 33
Average per rush 4.7 4.3
Net yards passing 284 331
Completed-attempted 17-31 30-37
Yards per pass 8.4 8.7
Sacked-yards lost 3-13 1-6
Hadintercepted 0 0
Punts-average 5-38.2 2-46.0
Return yardage 47 105
Punts-returns 1-21 2-0
Kickoffs-returns 1-26 1-105
Interceptions-returns 0-0 0-0
Penalties-yards 8-62 2-25
Fumbles-lost 0-0 0-0
Time of possession 26:38 33:22
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals  Philadelphia:
Henery 46.
Philadelphia rushing: Brown 8-19, Mc-
Coy 16-73, Polk 3-33 (TD), Vick 8-41.
Denver rushing: Ball 8-24, Hillman 11-
36, Moreno12-78 (TD), Osweiler 2-3.
Philadelphia passing: Foles 3-4 for 49,
0 INT, 1 TD, Vick 14-27 for 248, 0 INT, 0 TD.
Denver passing: Manning 28-34 for
327, 0 INT, 4 TD, Osweiler 2-3 for 10, 0 INT,
0 TD.
Philadelphia receiving: Avant 1-7,
Brown 2-41, Casey 1-12, Celek 3-57,
Cooper 2-25, Ertz 1-38, Jackson 2-34,
Maehl 2-43 (TD), McCoy 1-21, Polk 2-19.
Denver receiving: Caldwell 1-5, Decker
5-88, Green 1-5, Hillman 2-21, Moreno 1-
13, D. Thomas 9-86 (2 TD), J. Thomas 4-
43, Welker 7-76 (2 TD).
Philadelphia tackles-assists-sacks
(unofficial): Allen 8-1-0, Anderson 0-1-0,
Barwin 3-1-0, Boykin 3-1-0, Carmichael 2-
0-0, Cole 2-2-0, Cox 0-1-0, Curry 2-0-0,
Fletcher 0-1-0, Geathers 1-0-0, Goode 2-
0-0, Graham1-0-0, Kendricks 4-0-0, Knott
1-1-0, Logan 1-0-0, Ryans 10-2-0, Thorn-
ton 4-1-1, Williams 3-2-0, Wolff 6-1-0.
Denver tackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Ayers 5-1-, Brewer 1-0-0, Carter 2-
0-0, Harris 1-0-0, Ihenacho 9-0-0, Irving2-
1-0, Johnson 1-0-0, Knighton 0-1-0,
Moore 6-1-0, Phillips 4-0-1, Rodgers-Cro-
martie 2-0-0, Trevathan 9-1-0, Unrein 1-
0-0, Wolfe 2-0-1, Woodyard4-4-.
Turnovers  Interceptions: None.
Fumbles lost: None. Opponents fum-
bles recovered: None.
Officials  Referee: Morelli, Umpire:
Jenkins, Line judge: Johnson, Side
judge: Vernatchi, Head linesman:
McKenzie, Back judge: Shaw, Field
judge: Lucivansky
A: 77,002. T: 3:01
Chargers 30, Cowboys 21
Dallas 0 21 0 0  21
SanDiego 7 6 7 10  30
First quarter
San Diego: 26 yd pass Philip Rivers to
Danny Woodhead (Nick Novak kick),
7:05. Drive: 5 plays, 65 yards in 3:01.
Chargers 7-0.
Second quarter
Dallas: 5 yd pass Tony Romo to Dez Bry-
ant (Dan Bailey kick), 13:10. Drive: 9 plays,
85 yards in 3:58. 7-7.
San Diego: 36 FG by Nick Novak, 5:11.
Drive: 6 plays, 36 yards in 2:27. Chargers
10-7.
Dallas: 34 yd pass Tony Romo to Dez
Bryant (Dan Bailey kick), 2:36. Drive: 5
plays, 72 yards in 2:35. Cowboys 14-10.
Dallas: 52 ydinterception return by Sean
Lee (Dan Bailey kick) , 1:19. Cowboys
21-10.
San Diego: 42 FG by Nick Novak, 0:00.
Drive: 8 plays, 66 yards in 1:19. Cowboys
21-13.
Third quarter
San Diego: 13 yd pass Philip Rivers to
Danny Woodhead (Nick Novak kick),
9:32. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards in 5:28.
Cowboys 21-20.
Fourth quarter
San Diego: 23 FGby Nick Novak, 14:46.
Drive: 13 plays, 84 yards in 6:23. Char-
gers 23-21.
San Diego: 56 yd pass Philip Rivers to
Antonio Gates (Nick Novak kick), 6:54.
Drive: 6 plays, 80 yards in 3:08. Chargers
30-21.
TEAMSTATISTICS
DAL SDC
First downs 21 27
Rushing 3 5
Passing 15 20
Penalty 3 2
3rd-down efficiency 3-9 5-12
4th-down efficiency 0-0 0-0
Total net yards 317 506
Total plays 56 70
Average gain 5.7 7.2
Net yards rushing 92 112
Rushes 16 27
Average per rush 5.8 4.1
Net yards passing 225 394
Completed-attempted 27-37 35-42
Yards per pass 5.6 9.2
Sacked-yards lost 3-19 1-7
Hadintercepted 0 1
Punts-average 5-40.6 4-39.8
Return yardage 175 30
Punts-returns 1-38 1-12
Kickoffs-returns 3-85 1-18
Interceptions-returns 1-52 0-0
Penalties-yards 5-33 7-85
Fumbles-lost 2-1 0-0
Time of possession 25:57 34:03
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals Dallas: Bailey 56.
Dallas rushing: Dunbar 1-7, Murray 14-
70, Romo1-15.
San Diego rushing: R. Brown 1-7, Math-
ews 19-62, McClain 2-11, Woodhead
5-32.
Dallas passing: Romo 27-37 for 244, 0
INT, 2 TD.
San Diego passing: Rivers 35-42 for
401, 1 INT, 3 TD.
Dallas receiving: Beasley 3-16, Bryant
6-81 (2 TD), Harris 1-13, Murray 5-20, Wil-
liams 7-71, Witten 5-43.
San Diego receiving: Allen 5-80, Brown
7-41, Gates 10-136 (TD), Mathews 4-41,
Phillips 1-7, Royal 3-42, Woodhead 5-54
(2 TD).
Dallas tackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Allen 0-1-0, Carr 2-0-0, Carter 5-3-0,
Church 8-1-0, Claiborne 6-1-0, Durant 0-
1-0, Hatcher 3-1-0, Hayden 3-2-0, E.
Jones 1-0-0, Lee 15-3-0, Nevis 1-0-0,
Scandrick 4-1-0, Selvie 4-0-1, Sims 6-0-0,
Ware 1-1-0, Wilber 0-1-0, Wilcox 1-1-0.
San Diego tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Ajirotutu 1-0-0, Butler 0-1-0, But-
ler 8-0-0, Cox 2-0-0, Gilchrist 2-2-0, Green
1-0-0, Johnson 1-3-1, Lissemore 1-0-0, Liu-
get 3-2-1, Marshall 7-1-0, Patrick 5-0-0,
Reyes 2-0-1, Scifres 1-0-0, Teo 3-0-0,
Thomas 1-0-0, Walker 3-1-0, Weddle 5-
2-0, Wynn 1-0-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Dallas: Lee
1 for 52 yards. Fumbles lost: Dallas: Wil-
liams. Opponents fumbles recovered:
San Diego: Marshall.
Officials  Referee: Hochuli, Umpire:
Hall, Line judge: Hussey, Side judge:
Washington, Head linesman: Hittner,
Back judge: Carey, Field judge:
Wrolstad
A: 68,601. T: 3:02
Titans 38, Jets 13
NewYork 0 6 0 7  13
Tennessee 1014 0 14  38
First quarter
Tennessee: 1 yd pass Jake Locker to De-
lanie Walker (Rob Bironas kick), 11:57.
Drive: 5 plays, 18 yards in 2:19. Titans
7-0.
Tennessee: 26 FG by Rob Bironas, 4:20.
Drive: 11 plays, 67 yards in 6:04. Titans
10-0.
Second quarter
New York: 45 FG by Nick Folk, 14:55.
Drive: 10 plays, 63 yards in 4:25. Titans
10-3.
Tennessee: 4 yd pass Jake Locker to
Nate Washington (Rob Bironas kick),
6:46. Drive: 6 plays, 26 yards in 2:41. Ti-
tans 17-3.
New York: 47 FG by Nick Folk, 2:26.
Drive: 6 plays, 48 yards in 4:20. Titans
17-6.
Tennessee: 16 yd pass Jake Locker to
Justin Hunter (Rob Bironas kick), 0:02.
Drive: 7 plays, 46 yards in 1:26. Titans
24-6.
Fourth quarter
Tennessee: Karl Klug recovered fumble
in the end zone (Rob Bironas kick) , 11:45.
Titans 31-6.
New York: 34 yd pass Geno Smith to
Jeff Cumberland (Nick Folk kick), 8:49.
Drive: 8 plays, 82 yards in 2:56. Titans
31-13.
Tennessee: 77 yd pass Ryan Fitzpatrick
to Nate Washington (Rob Bironas kick),
7:06. Drive: 3 plays, 80 yards in 1:43. Ti-
tans 38-13.
TEAMSTATISTICS
NYJ TEN
First downs 16 17
Rushing 5 4
Passing 11 11
Penalty 0 2
3rd-down efficiency 4-13 10-18
4th-down efficiency 0-1 0-0
Total net yards 330 322
Total plays 62 65
Average gain 5.3 5.0
Net yards rushing 91 78
Rushes 23 31
Average per rush 4.0 2.5
Net yards passing 239 244
Completed-attempted 23-34 21-32
Yards per pass 6.1 7.2
Sacked-yards lost 5-50 2-13
Hadintercepted 2 0
Punts-average 5-49.0 7-41.9
Return yardage 53 75
Punts-returns 2-7 2-36
Kickoffs-returns 3-46 0-0
Interceptions-returns 0-0 2-39
Penalties-yards 10-66 4-30
Fumbles-lost 2-2 0-0
Time of possession 29:22 30:38
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals: None.
New York rushing: Bohanon 4-17,
Green 2-1, Powell 14-66, Smith 3-7.
Tennessee rushing: Battle 11-42, Fitz-
patrick 2-(-2), C. Johnson 15-21, Locker
3-17.
NewYork passing: Smith 23-34 for 289,
2 INT, 1 TD.
Tennessee passing: Fitzpatrick 3-8 for
108, 0 INT, 1 TD, Locker 18-24 for 149, 0
INT, 3 TD.
New York receiving: Bohanon 3-17,
Cumberland 1-34 (TD), Gates 3-24,
Green 1-1, Holmes 1-25, Kerley 4-65,
Obomanu 1-8, Powell 3-42, Winslow
6-73.
Tennessee receiving: Hunter 1-16 (TD),
C. Johnson 2-10, Mooney 1-3, Walker 3-
14 (TD), Washington 4-105 (2 TD), Wil-
liams 5-53, Wright 5-56.
New York tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Allen 2-0-0, Barnes 1-0-1, Bel-
lore 1-0-0, Coples 1-0-0, Cromartie 4-0-0,
Davis 8-1-0, Douzable 1-0-0, Ellis 1-1-0,
Harris 6-0-0, Harrison 2-0-0, Jarrett 2-0-0,
Landry 6-0-0, Lankster 1-0-0, Pace 3-0-1,
Richardson 0-3-0, Walls 5-0-0, Wilkerson
2-1-0, Wilson 1-0-0.
Tennessee tackles-assists-sacks (un-
official): Ayers 2-2-0, Brown 6-0-1,
Campbell 1-0-0, Casey 3-2-1, Fokou 4-
4-0, Gooden 1-0-0, Griffin 2-3-0, A. John-
son 2-1-0, Klug 1-1-1, Martin 1-1-0,
McCourty 4-1-0, Morgan 1-2-0, Pitoitua3-
0-2, Pollard 6-2-0, Sensabaugh 3-1-0,
Verner 0-2-0, Wilson 1-0-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Tennessee:
Verner 2 for 39 yards. Fumbles lost:
New York: Smith 2. Opponents fum-
bles recovered: Tennessee: Klug,
Verner.
Officials  Referee: Anderson, Um-
pire: Rice, Line judge: Boston, Side
judge: Banks, Head linesman: Stelljes,
Back judge: Smith, Field judge: Horton
A: 69,143. T: 3:06
Lions 27, Redskins 20
Detroit 7 10 0 10  27
Washington 7 7 3 3  20
First quarter
Washington: 17 yd interception return
by DeAngelo Hall (John Potter kick) , 9:23.
Redskins 7-0.
Detroit: 12 yd run by Joique Bell (David
Akers kick), 5:14. Drive: 8 plays, 85 yards
in 4:09. 7-7.
Second quarter
Detroit: 5 yd pass Matthew Stafford to
Joseph Fauria (David Akers kick), 14:47.
Drive: 10 plays, 92 yards in 3:52. Lions
14-7.
Washington: 30 yd run by Alfred Morris
(John Potter kick), 3:29. Drive: 7 plays, 72
yards in 3:24. 14-14.
Detroit: 32 FG by David Akers, 0:44.
Drive: 9 plays, 66 yards in 2:45. Lions
17-14.
Third quarter
Washington: 43 FG by John Potter,
12:11. Drive: 6 plays, 35 yards in 2:49.
17-17.
Fourth quarter
Detroit: 28 FG by David Akers, 11:08.
Drive: 6 plays, 65 yards in 1:30. Lions
20-17.
Detroit: 11 yd pass MatthewStafford to
Calvin Johnson (David Akers kick), 3:56.
Drive: 9 plays, 71 yards in 4:19. Lions
27-17.
Washington: 21 FGby John Potter, 1:40.
Drive: 13 plays, 72 yards in 2:16. Lions
27-20.
TEAMSTATISTICS
DET WAS
First downs 24 27
Rushing 4 2
Passing 18 21
Penalty 2 4
3rd-down efficiency 4-13 6-13
4th-down efficiency 1-1 0-0
Total net yards 441 420
Total plays 66 74
Average gain 6.7 5.7
Net yards rushing 63 120
Rushes 23 22
Average per rush 2.7 5.5
Net yards passing 378 300
Completed-attempted 25-42 32-50
Yards per pass 8.8 5.8
Sacked-yards lost 1-7 2-26
Hadintercepted 1 1
Punts-average 6-52.5 5-46.2
Return yardage 28 116
Punts-returns 2-9 2-11
Kickoffs-returns 1-15 4-88
Interceptions-returns 1-4 1-17
Penalties-yards 8-71 6-45
Fumbles-lost 0-0 3-1
Time of possession 28:48 31:12
PLAYERSTATISTICS
Missed eld goals: None.
Detroit rushing: Bell 20-63 (TD), Riddick
2-(-2), Stafford1-2.
Washington rushing: Garcon 1-10,
Griffin III 6-37, Morris 15-73 (TD).
Detroit passing: Stafford 25-42 for 385,
1 INT, 2 TD.
Washington passing: Griffin III 32-50
for 326, 1 INT, 0 TD.
Detroit receiving: Bell 4-69, Broyles 3-
34, Burleson 6-116, Durham1-33, Fauria
1-5 (TD), Johnson 7-115 (TD), Riddick 1-8,
Scheffler 2-5.
Washington receiving: Garcon 8-73,
Hankerson 3-21, Helu Jr. 3-35, Morgan 2-
19, Moss 7-77, Paulsen 4-51, Reed5-50.
Detroit tackles-assists-sacks (unoffi-
cial): Ansah 3-4-2, Bentley 1-0-0, Delmas
2-6-0, Fairley 0-3-0, Green 1-0-0, Hilliard
0-1-0, Houston 5-2-0, Levy 6-3-0, Mathis
7-0-0, Mosley 2-0-0, Palmer 1-0-0, Quin 6-
0-0, Suh 4-1-0, Tulloch 3-3-0, Young4-1-0.
Washington tackles-assists-sacks
(unofficial): Amerson 2-1-0, Barnett 1-
1-0, Bowen 0-3-0, Coeld 1-2-0, Fletcher
4-4-1, Golston 0-2-0, Hall 3-1-0, Kehl 1-
0-0, Kerrigan 3-4-0, Meriweather 7-2-0,
Merling 0-1-0, Murphy 1-0-0, Neild 1-1-0,
Orakpo 2-3-0, Paulsen 1-0-0, Riley Jr. 3-
7-0, Wilson 3-3-0.
Turnovers  Interceptions: Detroit:
Houston 1 for 4 yards; Washington: Hall
1 for 17 yards. Fumbles lost: Washing-
ton: Griffin III. Opponents fumbles re-
covered: Detroit: Quin.
Officials  Referee: Hochuli, Umpire:
Hall, Line judge: Hussey, Side judge:
Washington, Head linesman: Hittner,
Back judge: Carey, Field judge:
Wrolstad
A: 80,111. T: 3:21
Champions Tour
First Tee Open
Final round  Sunday 
uCourses: Pebble Beach Golf Links (par-72, 6,837 yards)
and Del Monte Golf Course (6,357 yards, par 72), Pebble
Beach, Calif.
uPurse: $1.8 million
Kirk Triplett (270), $270,000 .............67d-70p-68205 (-11)
Dan Forsman (144), $144,000............68d-70p-69207 (-9)
Doug Garwood (144), $144,000 .......67d-71p-69207 (-9)
Tom Lehman (107), $107,100 .............67d-67p-74208 (-8)
Russ Cochran (86), $85,500.................68d-67p-74209 (-7)
John Cook (68), $68,400......................70d-68p-72210 (-6)
Willie Wood (68), $68,400..................72p-69d-69210 (-6)
Bernhard Langer (58), $57,600...........63d-74p-74211 (-5)
Olin Browne (45), $45,000...................69d-72p-71212 (-4)
Craig Stadler (45), $45,000.................70d-69p-73212 (-4)
Esteban Toledo (45), $45,000.............69d-72p-71212 (-4)
Duffy Waldorf (45), $45,000...............72d-68p-72212 (-4)
Web.Com Tour
Web.ComTour Championship
Final round  Sunday 
uCourse: TPC  Sawgrass, Dyes  Valley  Course (par-70,
6,864 yards), Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
uPurse: $1 million
Chesson Hadley, $180,000..............65-66-70-69270 (-10)
Brendon Todd, $66,000......................71-67-69-65272 (-8)
Brad Fritsch, $66,000..........................70-68-68-66272 (-8)
John Peterson, $66,000 ......................66-71-68-67272 (-8)
Scott Gardiner, $66,000......................67-68-65-72272 (-8)
Andrew Loupe, $34,750......................68-69-67-69273 (-7)
Russell Knox, $34,750..........................67-69-68-69273 (-7)
Sean OHair, $23,333...........................70-70-67-67274 (-6)
Billy Hurley III, $23,333.........................66-70-70-68274 (-6)
Danny Lee, $23,333.............................71-69-66-68274 (-6)
Byron Smith, $23,333...........................67-70-69-68274 (-6)
Andres Gonzales, $23,333.................70-68-67-69274 (-6)
Ryo Ishikawa, $23,333........................69-68-68-69274 (-6)
Lee Williams, $23,333.........................69-67-69-69274 (-6)
Jamie Lovemark, $23,333...................70-67-66-71274 (-6)
Joe Durant, $23,333 ............................66-67-68-73274 (-6)
Tom Hoge, $14,000 .............................68-71-69-67275 (-5)
Heath Slocum, $14,000 .......................68-70-70-67275 (-5)
Paul Goydos, $14,000.........................72-68-68-67275 (-5)
Tim Petrovic, $14,000 ..........................69-70-68-68275 (-5)
Bud Cauley, $14,000............................70-69-65-71275 (-5)
Will MacKenzie, $10,800 ....................69-67-71-69276 (-4)
Robert Karlsson, $10,800....................64-74-69-69276 (-4)
Nick OHern, $8,480 ............................71-67-70-69277 (-3)
Roland Thatcher, $8,480 ....................69-69-68-71277 (-3)
Hudson Swafford, $8,480...................66-71-69-71277 (-3)
Rod Pampling, $8,480 ........................70-66-68-73277 (-3)
Andrew D. Putnam, $8,480.................68-67-67-75277 (-3)
Daniel Chopra, $6,867 ........................69-69-70-70278 (-2)
Tag Ridings, $6,867.............................71-68-68-71278 (-2)
Chad Campbell, $6,867......................70-68-67-73278 (-2)
Nick Flanagan, $5,600........................69-68-71-71279 (-1)
Glen Day, $5,600..................................70-70-68-71279 (-1)
Nathan Green, $5,600 .......................73-66-68-72279 (-1)
Aron Price, $5,600................................69-65-72-73279 (-1)
Andrew Svoboda, $5,600....................67-67-71-74279 (-1)
Jhonattan Vegas, $5,600....................66-69-70-74279 (-1)
Fabian Gomez, $5,600 .......................69-71-71-68279 (-1)
Chad Collins, $5,600............................69-71-73-66279 (-1)
Ben Kohles, $5,600...............................70-69-66-74279 (-1)
Ashley Hall, $4,220.................................63-76-70-71280 (E)
Jason Gore, $4,220 ...............................68-70-69-73280 (E)
Ryan Spears, $4,220..............................69-70-71-70280 (E)
Jim Renner, $4,220.................................69-70-71-70280 (E)
Dicky Pride, $4,220.................................66-74-70-70280 (E)
Troy Merritt, $3,630.............................73-64-70-74281 (+1)
Ben Martin, $3,630..............................68-71-70-72281 (+1)
Mark Anderson, $3,630 .....................64-71-74-72281 (+1)
Colt Knost, $3,630 ...............................69-71-70-71281 (+1)
Shane Bertsch, $3,630........................65-74-72-70281 (+1)
Adam Crawford, $3,450....................71-65-72-74282 (+2)
David Mathis, $3,375 .........................71-67-69-76283 (+3)
Kevin Kisner, $3,375............................72-68-73-70283 (+3)
PGA European Tour
Alfred Dunhill Links
Third round  Saturday
uCourses: s-St.  Andrews, Old  Course (par-72, 7,305
yards), c-Carnoustie, Championship Course (par-72, 7,412
yards)  and  k-Kingsbarns  Golf Links  (par-72, 7,181 yards),
St. Andrews and Carnoustie, Scotland
uPurse: $5 million
David Howell..................................67c-68k-63s-67-265 (-23)
Howell won on second playoff hole
Peter Uihlein...................................71c-60k-65s-69-265 (-23)
Tom Lewis........................................64k-65s-73c-64-266 (-22)
Shane Lowry ..................................68k-66s-64c-68-266 (-22)
Tommy Fleetwood.........................65s-66c-69k-67-267 (-21)
Garth Mulroy .................................66k-69s-65c-68-268 (-20)
Chris Wood ....................................66k-69s-69c-65-269 (-19)
Charl Schwartzel ...........................68c-68k-66s-67-269 (-19)
Thomas Levet.................................68s-64c-68k-69-269 (-19)
Ricardo Gonzalez..........................67s-69c-63k-70-269 (-19)
Martin Kaymer...............................69c-66k-63s-71-269 (-19)
GOLF
WHAT? NO TEBOW?
Football  fans  in  the  United  King-
dom  are  known  for  representing  ev-
ery  team  at  international  series
games,  and  Sunday  at  Wembley  Sta-
dium was no dierent. That included
plenty  of  fairly  unusual  jersey
choices:  Mewelde  Moore,  Jermaine
Wiggins,  Darrell  Green,  Ronde  Bar-
ber, Zach Thomas, Priest Holmes, Le-
Roy  Butler  and  multiple  Mark
Sanchezes. 
Which means, of course, should an
expansion team ever land in London,
Sanchez  would  have  a  spot  where
hed be welcome.
OH, WAIT, 
THERES TEBOW
With Jacksonville Jaguars quarter-
back Blaine Gabbert ailing in his re-
turn  to  action,  there  was  a  sign  from
above Sunday at EverBank Field.
Gabbert tossed three interceptions
against  the  Indianapolis  Colts  in  a
37-3  loss.  Hes  a  mess,  and  Chad
Henne  doesnt  appear  to  be  the  an-
swer under center, either. 
Tim Tebow, perhaps?
Thats  the  message  a  plane
whisked  through  the  sky:  Tebow,
Why Not? 
Repeatedly,  the  Jaguars  have  stat-
ed  they  have  no  interest  in  Tebow,
but  some  fans  obviously  arent  hear-
ing that. 
Someone  green-lit  the  airplane
stunt,  and  a  handful  of  supporters
turned  out  recently  for  a  much-
hyped yet sparsely attended rally.
He cant be worse than what Jack-
sonville has. 
ALL TOGETHER NOW
Life  is  about  teachable  moments.
The  tip  drill  has  been  around    and
referenced  since the start of time. 
But  now,  after  the  Seattle  Sea-
hawks  epic  practical  application
Sunday  against  the  Houston  Texans,
secondary  coaches  everywhere  are
rejoicing. 
Their  words  have  true  value.  Ball
skills  are  no  joke,  and  this  is  only
reinforcement.
To  recap:  Houston  quarterback
Matt  Schaub  threw  a  pass  intended
for  tight  end  Owen  Daniels,  but  it
was initially deected by Seattle line-
backer K.J. Wright. 
Daniels  recovered  enough  to  bob-
ble  the  ball  to  Seattle  safety  Kam
Chancellor,  who  knocked  the  ball  to
Seahawks  cornerback  Brandon
Browner, who then tapped it into the
outstretched  arms  of  Seattle  safety
Earl Thomas. 
If  only  cornerback  Richard  Sher-
man would have been involved in the
play,  all  of  the  members  of  the  Sea-
hawks  vaunted  Legion  of  Boom  sec-
ondary  would  have  touched  the  ball
during  the  interception.
OUTSIDE THE NUMBERS
OH, SAY, ITS
SIMMONS 
Jeffrey Martin
@JayMart
USATODAYSports
CONCERNED FATHER
Seattle  Seahawks  defensive  end
Michael  Bennett,  the  teams  leader
in  sacks,  was  placed  on  a  stretcher
and  carted  o  the  eld  Sunday  at
Reliant  Stadium  after  suering  an
apparent  lower  back  injury  late  in
the  second  quarter  against  the
Houston Texans.
Bennett  went  to  high  school  in
Houston  and  attended  Texas  A&M.
His  father  attended  Sundays  game,
and  Fox  cameras  captured  the  fa-
ther  reacting  in  anguish  and  calling
out to his son from the stands.
The  Seahawks  said  Bennett  was
taken  to  a  local  hospital  but  had
feeling  in  all  of  his  extremities.
While rushing Houston quarterback
Matt  Schaub,  Bennett  was  pushed
from  behind  into  Schaubs  leg,
which  appeared  to  make  Bennetts
head  snap  back.  The  defensive  end,
who  lost  his  helmet  in  the  process,
lay  on  the  turf  face-down  as  he  was
given attention.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS
Gene Simmons sang the U.S. national
anthem in England on Sunday.
TROY TAORMINA, USA TODAY SPORTS
Michael Bennett is taken o the eld Sunday with Seahawks teammate Brandon Browner at his side. 
Gene  Simmons  is  a  co-founder  of
KISS,  the  legendary  heavy  metal
band  whose  members  perform  with
their  faces  painted  in  black  and
white.
He  might  be  best  known  for  his
work  on  the  bass  or  maybe  his  out-
rageously long tongue.
Simmons  was  not,  however,  re-
nowned  for  his  vocals,  which  is  why
he was a questionable choice to sing
the  national  anthem  before  Sun-
days kicko between the Minnesota
Vikings  and  the  Pittsburgh  Steelers
at Wembley Stadium in London.
The result was odd and rather se-
rene,  denitely  not  what  youd  ex-
pect. 
Last  season,  he  did  the  honors  at
O.co  Coliseum  for  a  Monday  night
clash  between  the  Oakland  Raiders
and the San Diego Chargers. 
Clearly, he has caught the football
bug;  Simmons  is  one  of  the co-own-
ers  of  the  L.A.  KISS,  an  Arena  Foot-
ball  League  team  that  will  debut  in
2014. 
Itll  be  interesting  to  see  if  his
ownership  stake  will  yield  more  ef-
forts  such  as  this.  Then  again,  an
owner  should  have  better  sense.
SISTER ACT
Oakland  Raiders  rookie  tight  end
Mychal  Rivera  had  seven  receptions
entering  Sundays  game  against  the
Washington Redskins. 
His  eighth  was  a  big  deal,  an  18-
yard  touchdown  that  sent  his  little
sister,  seated  up  in  a  box  inside  O.co
Coliseum, into hysterics. 
His little sister is Naya Rivera, who
plays  Santana  Lopez  on  the  popular
Fox series Glee.
CARY EDMONDSON, USA TODAY SPORTS
Raiders 
rookie Mychal
Riveras
touchdown
excited his
celebrity sis-
ter, an actress
who attended
Sundays
game.
FA
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 SPORTS 9C
Boxing: Welterweights, Sadam Ali vs. Jay Krupp, in Brooklyn,
N.Y. (Fox Sports 1, 9 p.m.)
Major League Baseball: Amiercan League tiebreaker game,
Tampa Bay at Texas (TBS, 8 p.m.)
NFL: Miami at New Orleans (ESPN, 8:25 p.m.)
Soccer:  English  Premier  League,  Newcastle  at  Everton  (NBC
Sports Network, 3 p.m.)
uComplete TV listings, 6D
SPORTS ON TV
Times Eastern. Programs live unless noted. Check local listings.
FOR THE RECORD
Baseball
uNational League
Miami Marlins: Promoted Michael Hill
to president of baseball operations and
Dan Jennings to general manager.
Philadelphia  Phillies: Reinstated  OF
Casper Wells from the 15-day disabled
list and P Antonio Bastardo from the re-
stricted  list.  Transferred  P  Kyle Kendrick
to the 60-day disabled list.
San Francisco  Giants: Agreed  to
terms  with OF Hunter Pence on a  five-
year contract.
Hockey
uNational Hockey League
Dallas  Stars: Assigned  G  Cristopher
Nilstorp, C  Travis  Morin and  RWColton
Sceviour to Texas (AHL).
Detroit  Red  Wings: Assigned  F Mitch
Callahan, F Luke Glendening, F Calle
Jarnkrok, F Tomas  Jurco, F Teemu Pulk-
kinen, F Riley  Sheahan, D Adam  Alm-
quist, D Xavier Ouellet, D Ryan Sproul
and  G  Jared  Coreau to Grand  Rapids
(AHL). Released F Jeff Hogganand DNa-
than Paetsch from  professional tryout
agreements.  Placed  F Willie Coetzee, F
Landon Ferraroand DNick Jensen on in-
jured reserve.
Edmonton Oilers: Claimed  F Luke
Gazdic off waivers from Los Angeles.
Los  Angeles  Kings: Loaned  RWTyler
Toffoli, C  Linden Vey  and  LW Tanner
Pearson to Manchester (AHL). 
Nashville Predators: Assigned F Tay-
lor Beck, G  Marek  Mazanec and  D Joe
Piskula to Milwaukee (AHL).
NewYork Rangers: Assigned F Marek
Hrivik, F Chris Kreider, F Oscar Lindberg, F
Brandon Mashinter, F Darroll Powe, D
Conor Allen and D Stu Bickel to Hartford
(AHL).
Tampa  Bay  Lightning: Assigned  LW
Mike Angelidis, RWJ.T.  Brown, RWBrett
Connolly, D J.P.  Cote, D Dmitry  Korobov,
RW Nikita  Kucherov, D Matt  Taormina
and  RW Dana  Tyrell to Syracuse (AHL)
and  G  Kristers  Gudlevskis  to Florida
(ECHL).
Vancouver Canucks: Agreed to terms
with RW Jannik  Hansen on a  four-year
contract extension.
Washington Capitals: Acquired  a
2014 fourth-round draft pick and F John
Mitchell from  the Anaheim Ducks  for F
Mathieu Perreault.  Assigned  Mitchell to
Hershey (AHL).
College
Southern California: Fired  football
coach Lane Kiffin.  Named  Ed  Orgeron
interim coach.
DEALS
College
uUSA TODAY Coaches Top 25:
1-Alabama 25, Mississippi 0
2-Oregon 55, California 16
3-Ohio State 31, 24-Wisconsin 24
4-Clemson 56, Wake Forest 7
5-Stanford 55, Washington State 17
10-Georgia 44, 6-LSU 41
8-Florida State 48, Boston College 34
9-Texas A&M45, Arkansas 33
West Virginia 30, 11-Okla. State 21
12-Oklahoma 35, 22-Notre Dame 21
13-SouthCarolina 28, Central Florida 25
15-Miami (Fla.) 49, South Florida 21
19-Florida 24, Kentucky 7
20-Washington 31, Arizona 13
23-Fresno State 42, Hawaii 37
Saturdays results
uFootball Bowl Subdivision
Arizona State 62, Southern Calif. 41
Army 35, Louisiana Tech 16
Ball State 31, Toledo 24
Boise State 60, Southern Miss. 7
Bowling Green 31, Akron 14
Colorado State 59, Texas-El Paso 42
Duke 38, Troy 31
East Carolina 55, North Carolina 31
Idaho 26, Temple 24
Illinois 50, Miami (Ohio) 14
Iowa 23, Minnesota 7
Kent State 32, Western Michigan 14
Missouri 41, Arkansas State 19
N.C. State 48, Central Michigan 14
Nevada 45, Air Force 42
Northern Illinois 55, Purdue 24
Oregon State 44, Colorado 17
Pittsburgh 14, Virginia 3
Rice 18, Florida Atlantic 14
San Diego State 26, N.M. State 16
TCU 48, Southern Methodist 17
Tennessee 31, South Alabama 24
Texas State 42, Wyoming 21
Tulane 31, Louisiana-Monroe 14
UNLV 56, New Mexico 42
Vanderbilt 52, Ala. at Birmingham 24
Western Kentucky 19, Navy 7
uFootball Championship Subdivsion
Alabama A&M12, Texas Southern 10
Alabama State 49, Alcorn State 30
Bryant 47, Wagner 28
Butler 45, Jacksonville 27
Coastal Carolina 53, Elon 28
Delaware 29, James Madison 22
Delaware State 24, Savannah State 22
Eastern Illinois 42, Eastern Kentucky 7
Fordham 38, St. Francis (Pa.) 20
Furman 24, The Citadel 17
Gardner-Webb 55, Point (Ga.) 7
Georgia Southern 23, Chattanooga 21
Harvard 41, Brown 23
Holy Cross 31, Dartmouth 28
Jackson State 19, Southern 14
Lamar 27, Grambling State 16
Lehigh 34, New Hampshire 27
Liberty 73, Kentucky Wesleyan 7
Marist 31, Dayton 20
Mercer 31, Drake 17
Missouri State 37, Illinois State 10
Monmouth 37, Columbia 14
Morehead State 45, Davidson 14
Nicholls State 44, Arkansas Tech 34
Norfolk State 27, Morgan State 21
Northern Arizona 34, Montana 16
Northern Iowa 41, McNeese State 6
Northwestern State 37, Langston 0
Old Dominion 66, Albany 10
Prairie View 56, Stephen F. Austin 48
Rhode Island 42, Central Conn. 7
Robert Morris 37, Va. Military 31 (2OT)
Sacramento State 31, Weber State 3
Sacred Heart 16, Bucknell 0
San Diego 59, Stetson 0
Tennessee Tech 38, Indiana State 37
Tennessee-Martin 17, SE Missouri 7
Towson 35, Stony Brook 21
UC Davis 30, Idaho State 13
Villanova 35, Penn 6
Yale 38, Cornell 23
Youngstown State 28, Southern Ill. 27
Canadian Football League
East W L T Pts PF PA 
Toronto 9 4 0 18 388 337
Hamilton 6 7 0 12 327 364
Montreal 5 8 0 10 302 361
Winnipeg 2 11 0 4 268 421
West W L T Pts PF PA 
Calgary 10 3 0 20 408 312
B.C. 9 4 0 18 378 319
Saskatchewan 8 5 0 16 388 299
Edmonton 3 10 0 6 316 362
Sundays result
Montreal 17, Saskatchewan 12
Saturdays results
Calgary 35, Hamilton 11
Toronto 34, Edmonton 22
Fridays result
B.C. 53, Winnipeg 17
FOOTBALL
Major League Soccer
Eastern W L T Pts GF GA
New York 15 9 7 52 48 37
Kansas City 14 10 6 48 43 29
Montreal 13 9 7 46 48 44
Houston 12 10 8 44 38 37
Philadelphia 11 10 9 42 38 39
Columbus 12 14 5 41 40 41
New England 11 11 8 41 42 34
Chicago 11 12 7 40 38 45
Toronto 5 15 11 26 29 45
D.C. United 3 21 6 15 20 52
Western W L T Pts GF GA
Salt Lake 15 10 6 51 54 39
Seattle 15 8 6 51 39 29
Portland 12 5 13 49 46 31
Los Angeles 13 11 6 45 46 37
Colorado 12 9 9 45 37 31
Vancouver 11 11 8 41 42 39
San Jose 11 11 8 41 31 41
Dallas 10 10 10 40 42 46
Chivas USA 6 16 8 26 29 54
Sundays results
Portland 1, Los Angeles 0
Columbus 4, Dallas 2
New York 1, Seattle 1
San Jose at Chivas USA
Saturdays results
Toronto 4, D.C. United 1
Salt Lake 1, Vancouver 0
New England 1, Houston 1
Chicago 2, Montreal 2
Fridays result
Philadelphia 1, Kansas City 0
English Premier League 
GP W T L  GF  GA Pts
Arsenal 6 5 0 1 13 7 15
Liverpool 6 4 1 1 8 4 13
Tottenham  6 4 1 1 6 2 13
Chelsea  6 3 2 1 7 3 11
Southampton 6 3 2 1 5 2 11
Man. City  6 3 1 2 14 7 10
Hull City  6 3 1 2 6 7 10
Everton 5 2 3 0 6 4 9
Aston Villa  6 3 0 3 9 8 9
West Brom  6 2 2 2 6 5 8
Cardiff City  6 2 2 2 6 7 8
Man. United  6 2 1 3 8 8 7
Swansea  6 2 1 3 8 9 7
Norwich 6 2 1 3 4 6 7
Stoke 6 2 1 3 4 6 7
Newcastle 5 2 1 2 5 8 7
West Ham  6 1 2 3 4 5 5
Fulham  6 1 1 4 4 9 4
Crystal Palace 6 1 0 5 4 10 3
Sunderland  6 0 1 5 4 14 1
uHome teams in CAPS
Sundays results
Norwich 1, STOKE 0
Liverpool 3, SUNDERLAND 1
Todays game
Newcastle at EVERTON
Saturdays results
TOTTENHAM1, Chelsea 1
ASTON VILLA 3, Manchester City 2
Cardiff City 2, FULHAM1
HULL CITY 1, West Ham 0
West Brom 2, MAN. UNITED 1
SOUTHAMPTON 2, Crystal Palace 0
Arsenal 2, SWANSEA 1
Spanish Primera Liga
Sundays results
Levante 1, OSASUNA 0
Elche 1, CELTA VIGO 0
Getafe 2, ESPANYOL 0
REAL BETIS 1, Villarreal 0
Todays game
Athletic Bilbao at GRANADA
Saturdays results
VALENCIA 1, Rayo Vallecano 0
Barcelona 2, ALMERIA 0
REAL SOCIEDAD 1, Sevilla 1
Atletico Madrid 1, REAL MADRID 0
Italian Serie A
Sundays results
Juventus 1, TORINO 0
ATALANTA 2, Udinese 0
Inter Milan 1, CAGLIARI 1
CATANIA 2, Chievo 0
Lazio 2, SASSUOLO 2
CATANIA 2, Livorno 1
AS ROMA 5, Bologna 0
Todays game
Parma at FIORENTINA
Saturdays results
Napoli 2, GENOA 0
AC MILAN 1, Sampdoria 0
German Bundesliga
Sundays results
Nuremberg 3, WERDER BREMEN 3
Stuttgart 4, BRAUNSCHWEIG 0
Saturdays results
Schalke 3, HOFFENHEIM3
BAYER LEVERKUSEN 2, Hannover 0
BAYERN MUNICH 1, Wolfsburg 0
DORTMUND 5, Freiburg 0
HERTHA BSC BERLIN 3, Mainz 1
FRANKFURT 3, Hamburger 2
SOCCER
NASCAR Sprint Cup
Sundays AAA 400
uTrack: Dover (Del.)  International
Speedway
uLength: 400 1-mile laps
1.  (8)  Jimmie Johnson (Chevrolet)  400
laps, 48 points
2. (1) Dale Earnhardt Jr. (C) 400, 43
3. (11) Joey Logano (Ford) 400, 41
4. (16) Jeff Gordon (C) 400, 41
5. (14) Kyle Busch (Toyota) 400, 40
6. (12) Kevin Harvick (C) 400, 38
7. (2) Matt Kenseth (T) 400, 38
8. (3) Ryan Newman (C) 400, 37
9. (19) Greg Biffle (F) 400, 35
10. (23) Clint Bowyer (T) 400, 35
11. (7) Jamie McMurray (C) 400, 33
12. (22) Brian Vickers (T) 400, 0
13. (20) Kasey Kahne (C) 399, 31
14. (25) Jeff Burton (C) 399, 30
15. (10) Martin Truex Jr. (T) 399, 29
16. (24) Marcos Ambrose (F) 398, 28
17. (15) Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (F) 398, 27
18. (21) Paul Menard (C) 398, 26
19. (29) Mark Martin (C) 397, 25
20. (18) Denny Hamlin (T) 397, 24
21. (9) Kurt Busch (C) 397, 23
22. (5) Aric Almirola (F) 397, 22
23. (13) Juan Pablo Montoya (C) 397, 21
24. (26) Casey Mears (F) 395, 20
25. (27) David Ragan (F) 395, 19
26. (17) A J Allmendinger (T) 395, 18
27. (33) Cole Whitt (T) 394, 0
28. (39) David Reutimann (T) 394, 16
29. (31) Danica Patrick (C) 394, 15
30. (28) David Gilliland (F) 393, 15
31. (30) Travis Kvapil (T) 392, 13
32. (36) Ryan Truex (C) 392, 0
33. (40) Dave Blaney (C) 391, 11
34. (32) J.J. Yeley (C) 390, 10
35. (4) Carl Edwards (F) 385, 9
36. (42) Timmy Hill (F) 381, 8
37. (6) Brad Keselowski (F) 355, 7
38. (37) Landon Cassill (C) susp., 275, 0
39. (41) Joe Nemechek (T) susp., 168, 0
40. (43) Tony Raines (C) vibration, 154, 0
41. (35) Reed Sorenson(F) brakes, 139, 0
42. (38) Josh Wise (F) brakes, 128, 0
43. (34) M. McDowell (F) brakes, 107, 1
uRace statistics
Winners avg. speed: 130.909 mph.
Time of Race: 3 hours, 3 min., 20 sec.
Margin of Victory: 0.446 seconds.
Caution Flags: 4 for 21 laps.
Lead Changes: 19 among 8 drivers.
uLap Leaders: Earnhardt 1-25; Kenseth
26-30; Earnhardt 31-39; Gilliland 40; Ky-
.Busch 41-70; Newman 71-75; Earnhardt
76-117;  J.Gordon 118-119;  Johnson
120-165;  Newman 166;  Kenseth 167-
197;  Johnson 198-229;  Earnhardt  230;
Johnson 231-310;  Earnhardt  311-312;
J.Gordon 313;  Bowyer 314;  Johnson
315-370;  Earnhardt  371;  Johnson 372-
400.
uLeaders Summary (driver, times led,
laps led): Johnson, 5 times for 243 laps;
Earnhardt, 6 for 80 laps;  Kenseth, 2 for
36 laps;  Ky.Busch, 1 for 30 laps;  New-
man, 2 for 6 laps; J.Gordon, 2 for 3 laps;
Bowyer, 1 for 1 lap; Gilliland, 1 for 1 lap.
uSprint  Cup  points  leaders: 1.  M.Ken-
seth, 2,149;  2.  J.Johnson, 2,141;  3.  Ky-
.Busch, 2,137;  4.  K.Harvick, 2,110;  5.
J.Gordon, 2,110;  6.  G.Biffle, 2,108;  7.
R.Newman, 2,101; 8. C.Bowyer, 2,098; 9.
Ku.Busch, 2,094;  10.  D.Earnhardt  Jr.,
2,092; 11. C.Edwards, 2,084; 12. J.Loga-
no, 2,083.
AUTO RACING
Football
uAssociated Press Top 25:
Rank, school (1st) W-L Pts LW
1. Alabama (55) 4-0 1,495 1
2. Oregon (5) 4-0 1,422 2
3. Clemson 4-0 1,354 3
4. Ohio State 5-0 1,305 4
5. Stanford 4-0 1,280 5
6. Georgia 3-1 1,171 9
7. Louisville 4-0 1,091 7
8. Florida State 4-0 1,069 8
9. Texas A&M 4-1 1,012 10
10. LSU 4-1 979 6
11. Oklahoma 4-0 838 14
12. UCLA 3-0 834 13
13. South Carolina 3-1 812 12
14. Miami (Fla) 4-0 753 15
15. Washington 4-0 665 16
16. Northwestern 4-0 550 17
17. Baylor 3-0 536 19
18. Florida 3-1 481 20
19. Michigan 4-0 471 18
20. Texas Tech 4-0 264 24
21. Oklahoma State 3-1 230 11
22. Arizona State 3-1 192 NR
23. Fresno State 4-0 187 25
24. Mississippi 3-1 132 21
25. Maryland 4-0 119 NR
Others  receiving votes: Northern Illi-
nois 104, Va. Tech 49, Wisconsin 46, Ne-
braska 20, Missouri 14, Notre Dame 12,
Central Fla. 6, Mich. State 5, Rutgers 2
POLLS
WNBA
Conference finals  Best-of-3
uAtlanta def. Indiana (2-0) 
uMinnesota def. Phoenix (2-0)
Sundays results
Atlanta 67, Indiana 53
Minnesota 72, Phoenix 65
Finals  Best-of-5
uAtlanta vs. Minnesota
Oct. 6
Atlanta at Minnesota, 8:30
National Basketball Assoc.
Preseason
Saturday, Oct. 5
Oklahoma City vs. Fenerbahce Ulker
at Istanbul, 9 a.m.
Chicago at Indiana, 7
New Orleans at Houston, 8
Golden State vs. L.A. Lakers
at Ontario, Calif., 10
Sunday, Oct. 6
Philadelphia vs. Bilbao
at Bilbao, Spain, noon
Denver at L.A. Lakers, 9:30
Monday, Oct. 7
Toronto at Boston, 7:30
Atlanta at Miami, 7:30
Memphis vs. Chicago
at St. Louis, 8
CSKA Moscow at Minnesota, 8
New Orleans at Dallas, 8:30
Maccabi Haifa at Phoenix, 10
LA Clippers at Portland, 10
Sacramento at Golden State, 10:30
BASKETBALL
Thailand Open
Sundays  results  from Bangkok, Thai-
land:
uPurse: $631,530; Surface: Hard
Singles  Final: Milos Raonic (3), Can-
ada, def.  Tomas  Berdych (1), Czech Re-
public, 7-6 (4), 6-3.
Doubles  Final: Jamie Murray, Brit-
ain, and  John Peers  (3), Australia, def.
Tomasz  Bednarek, Poland, and  Johan
Brunstrom (4), Sweden, 6-3, 3-6, 10-6.
Malaysian Open 
Sundays  results  from Kuala  Lumpur,
Malaysia:
uPurse: $984,300; Surface: Hard
Singles  Final: Joao Sousa, Portugal,
def.  Julien Benneteau (5), France, 2-6,
7-5, 6-4.
Doubles    Final: Eric Butorac, USA,
and  Raven Klaasen, South Africa, def.
PabloCuevas, Uruguay, and HoracioZe-
ballos, Argentina, 6-2, 6-4.
Toray Pan Pacific Open 
Saturdays results fromTokyo:
uPurse: $2.37 million; Surface: Hard
Singles    Final: Petra  Kvitova (7),
Czech Republic, def.  Angelique Kerber
(5), Germany, 6-2, 0-6, 6-3.
Doubles   Final: Cara  Black, Zimba-
bwe, and Sania Mirza, India, def. Chan
Hao-ching, Taiwan, and  Liezel Huber,
USA, 4-6, 6-0, 11-9.
China Open 
Sundays results fromBeijing:
uPurse: Men -  $3.57 million;  women -
$5.19 million; Surface: Hard
Womens singles    First  round: Ag-
nieszka  Radwanska  (3), Poland, def.
Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 4-6, 6-4,
6-4;  Lucie Safarova, Czech Republic,
def.  Sam  Stosur (15), Australia, 7-5, 6-3;
Kaia  Kanepi, Estonia, def.  Julia  Goerg-
es, Germany, 7-5, 6-4;  Li  Na (4), China,
def.  Daniela  Hantuchova, Slovakia, 6-0,
6-4;  Madison Keys, USA, def.  Dominika
Cibulkova, Slovakia, 6-4, 6-3;  Serena
Williams  (1), USA, def.  Elena  Vesnina,
Russia, 6-4, 6-2;  Laura Robson, Britain,
def.  Klara  Zakopalova, Czech Republic,
7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-1; Lauren Davis, USA, def.
Mona  Barthel, Germany, 6-0, 5-7, 6-4;
Misaki Doi, Japan, def. Silvia Soler-Espi-
nosa, Spain, 6-1, 6-1;  Maria  Kirilenko,
Russia, def.  Zheng Jie, China, 7-5, 6-2;
Sabine Lisicki  (13), Germany, def.  Cha-
nelle Scheepers, South Africa, 6-3, 6-2.
Womens doubles  First round: Kris-
tina  Mladenovic, France, and  Flavia
Pennetta, Italy, def.  Darija  Jurak, Croa-
tia, and  Mandy  Minella, Luxembourg,
6-2, 6-2;  Vania  King, USA, and  Galina
Voskoboeva, Kazakhstan, def. Svetlana
Kuznetsova, Russia, and  Sam  Stosur,
Australia, 7-6 (5), 6-3.
TENNIS
National Football League
Todays game
Favorite Line Underdog Pts
NEWORL. 7 Miami 48
TODAYS LINE
National Hockey League
Preseason
(ss)-split squad 
Sundays results
N.Y. Islanders (ss) 5, Ottawa (ss) 2
N.Y. Islanders (ss) 4, Ottawa (ss) 1
Saturdays results
Toronto 3, Detroit 1
Florida 5, Tampa Bay 3
Chicago 4, Washington 3 (OT)
Colorado 3, Los Angeles 2
San Jose 6, Anaheim 5
Fridays results
Carolina 1, Buffalo 0
Washington 6, Philadelphia 3
N.Y. Islanders 6, Nashville 4
Detroit 5, Toronto 2
St. Louis 4, Minnesota 1
Dallas 4, Edmonton 0
Boston 5, Winnipeg 0
Phoenix 2, San Jose 1
Los Angeles 4, N.Y. Rangers 1
End of preseason
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NFL: WEEK 4
F
10C SPORTS
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
COLLEGES
Football poll; times p.m. Eastern
1. Alabama (4-0)
Points: 1,546  (59  rst-place
votes).  Previous  ranking: 1.  This
week: Saturday  vs.  Georgia  State.
Last week: Beat then-No. 21 Missis-
sippi 25-0.
2. Oregon (4-0)
Points: 1,479 (2). Previous rank-
ing: 2. This week: Saturday at Colo-
rado  (Pac-12,  6).  Last  week: Beat
California 55-16.
3. Ohio State (5-0)
Points: 1,397. Previous ranking:
3.  This  week: Saturday  at  No.  15
Northwestern  (ABC,  8).  Last  week:
Beat then-No. 24 Wisconsin 31-24.
4. Clemson (4-0)
Points: 1,352 (1). Previous rank-
ing: 4. This week: Saturday at Syra-
cuse  (ABC,  3:30).  Last  week: Beat
Wake Forest 56-7.
5. Stanford (4-0)
Points: 1,325. Previous ranking:
5.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  No.  18
Washington  (ESPN,  10:30).  Last
week: Beat Washington State 55-17.
6. Georgia (3-1)
Points: 1,148. Previous ranking:
10.  This  week: Saturday  at  Tennes-
see  (CBS,  3:30).  Last  week: Beat
then-No. 6 LSU 44-41.
7. Louisville (4-0)
Points: 1,147.  Previous ranking:
7.  This  week: Saturday  at  Temple.
Last week: Idle.
8. Florida State (4-0)
Points: 1,129. Previous ranking:
8. This week: Saturday vs. Maryland
(ESPN, noon). Last week: Beat Bos-
ton College 48-34.
9. Texas A&M (4-1)
Points: 1,072. Previous ranking:
9.  Next game: Oct.  12 at Mississippi.
Last week: Beat Arkansas 45-33.
10. Oklahoma (4-0)
Points: 964.  Previous  ranking:
12.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  TCU
(Fox,  7).  Last  week: Beat  then-
No. 22 Notre Dame 35-21.
11. LSU (4-1)
Points: 931.  Previous  ranking:
6. This week: Saturday at Mississip-
pi  State  (ESPN,  7).  Last  week: Lost
to then-No. 10 Georgia 44-41.
12. South Carolina (3-1)
Points: 860.  Previous  ranking:
13.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  Ken-
tucky. Last week: Beat Central Flor-
ida 28-25.
13. UCLA (3-0)
Points: 812.  Previous  ranking:
14.  This  week: Thursday  at  Utah
(Fox Sports 1, 10). Last week: Idle.
14. Miami (Fla.) (4-0)
Points: 727.  Previous  ranking:
15.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  Georgia
Tech  (ESPNU,  3:30).  Last  week:
Beat South Florida 49-21.
15. Northwestern (4-0)
Points: 620.  Previous  ranking:
16.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  No.  3
Ohio State (ABC, 8). Last week: Idle.
16. Baylor (3-0)
Points: 573.  Previous  ranking:
18.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  West
Virginia  (Fox  Sports  1,  8).  Last
week: Idle.
17. Michigan (4-0)
Points: 546.  Previous  ranking:
17.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  Minne-
sota (ABC, 3:30). Last week: Idle.
18. Washington (4-0)
Points: 545.  Previous  ranking:
20.  This  week: Saturday  at  No.  5
Stanford  (ESPN,  10:30).  Last  week:
Beat Arizona 31-13.
19. Florida (3-1)
Points: 515.  Previous  ranking:
19. This week: Saturday vs. Arkansas
(ESPN2,  7).  Last  week: Beat  Ken-
tucky 24-7.
20. Oklahoma State (3-1)
Points: 330.  Previous  ranking:
11.  This  week: Saturday  vs.  Kansas
State  (ABC,  3:30).  Last  week: Lost
to West Virginia 30-21.
21. Fresno State (4-0)
Points: 270.  Previous  ranking:
23.  This  week: Saturday  at  Idaho.
Last week: Beat Hawaii 42-37.
22. Texas Tech (4-0)
Points: 231.  Previous  ranking:
25.  This  week: Saturday  at  Kansas
(Fox  Sports  1,  noon).  Last  week:
Idle.
23. Northern Illinois (4-0)
Points: 131.  Previous  ranking:
not  ranked.  This  week: Saturday  at
Kent  State.  Last week: Beat  Purdue
55-24.
24. Arizona State (3-1)
Points: 118.  Previous  ranking:
not  ranked.  This week: Saturday  vs.
Notre  Dame  in  Arlington,  Texas
(NBC, 7:30). Last week: Beat South-
ern California 62-41.
25. Nebraska (3-1)
Points: 71.  Previous  ranking:
not  ranked.  This week: Saturday  vs.
Illinois  (ESPNU,  noon).  Last  week:
Idle.
Dropped out: No. 21 Mis-
sissippi (3-1, lost to No. 1
Alabama25-0), No. 22 No-
tre Dame (3-2, lost to then-
No. 12 Oklahoma 35-21),
No. 24 Wisconsin (3-2, lost
to No. 3 Ohio State 31-24).
Others receiving votes:
Mississippi (3-1) 69; VirginiaTech (4-1) 54; Wisconsin (3-2)
47; Maryland (4-0) 45; Notre Dame (3-2) 29; Missouri
(4-0) 21; Central Florida (3-1) 15; Michigan State (3-1) 10;
Rutgers (3-1) 9; Oregon State (4-1) 7; Arizona (3-1) 1; Cin-
cinnati (3-1) 1; East Carolina (3-1) 1; Iowa (4-1) 1; Utah
(3-1) 1.
The USA TODAY Sports board of coaches is made up
of 62 head coaches at Football Bowl Subdivision schools.
All are members of the American Football Coaches Asso-
ciation.
I  think  were  going  to  kind  of  cir-
cle  the  wagons  a  bit,  play  these  eight
games  and  let  the  chips  fall  where
they  may,  Orgeron  said.  Im  going
to  have  some  energy,  some  excite-
ment,  high-ving  guys.  Thats  what  I
like to do.
TURNAROUND ON KIFFIN
Orgeron, a former head coach at Mis-
sissippi,  was  given  no  commitment
beyond this season.
Im  excited  to  coach  the  next
eight  games,  and  well  see  where  it
takes  us,  he  said.  Well  answer  the
bell.  Were  all  accountable  for  what
happened.
Haden  and  Orgeron  had  nothing
but  nice  things  to  say  about  Kin,
who  did  not  win  enough  to  maintain
Hadens support. His ring was a sur-
prise  only  in  terms  of  the  timing,  al-
though  it  was  a  striking  turnaround
for  Haden,  who  had  released  a  video
before the season saying, Im behind
Lane  Kin  100%.  I  have  great  con-
dence in him.
Hadens  explanation  Sunday  was
that  he wanted  to  give Kin  support
as he tried to right the ship. We sup-
port  our  coaches  100%  until  theyre
no  longer  our  coaches,  Haden  said.
It  came  down  to  a  gut  feeling  that
we  werent  making  the  progress  that
I thought we should be making.
Kin  was  told  of  his  ring  by  Ha-
den after the team arrived in Los An-
geles on a charter ight about 3 a.m.
He  really,  really  tried  to  keep  his
job,  and  I  respect  him  for  that,  said
Haden, who said after he told Kin a
group  text  message  was  sent  to  the
team.
I  was  surprised,  center  Marcus
Martin  said.  Now  well  just  try  to
move  forward  and  focus  on  the  next
few  games  and  bond  with  the  Trojan
family.
Orgeron said oensive coordinator
Clay  Helton  would  call  plays,  previ-
ously Kins job. Orgeron said the of-
fense  probably  would  look  about  the
same.  Orgeron  and  everybody  at  the
university  hopes  the  defense  will  be
improved.
LACK OF DEPTH
USCs  biggest  problem    under  Kif-
n  or  Orgeron    is  a  lack  of  depth,  a
result  of  NCAA  scholarship  sanc-
tions.  The  Trojans  were  down  to  56
healthy scholarship players Saturday,
and  the  defense  was  about  as  thin  
and eective  as paper.
Weve  just  been  ghting,  fth-
year USC linebacker Devon Kennard
said.  I  think  well  put  a  better  prod-
uct on the eld the next game.
USC  is  not  without  talent,  though
sophomore  quarterback  Cody  Kess-
ler  is  still  nding  his  way.  Two  young
running  backs    Tre  Madden  and
Justin Davis  have shined.
But  the  Trojans  best  player,  All-
America  wide  receiver  Marqise  Lee,
was  knocked  out  of  the  game  Satur-
day with a leg injury. His status is un-
known,  but  it  points  to  the  lack  of
quality backups.
The  issue  was  spelled  out  clearly
by Orgeron before the season.
The  sanctions  have  created  a
depth  issue  that  has  hurt  us,  Orge-
ron  said.  Our  rst  team  is  where  it
used  to  be.  We  still  dont  have  a  full
second team that you feel really good
about  putting  those  guys  in.  And  no
third team.
The  sanctions  last  another  year;
the  Trojans  are  limited  to  15  initial
scholarships  and  75  total  again  in
2014. 
But  Kin  said  before  the  season
that  the  impact  of  the  penalties
would  be  felt  longer  than  that  as  the
small  scholarship  classes  advanced
through the program. 
USC  might  not  be  back  to  a  deep,
talent-rich squad reminiscent of Car-
rolls teams until 2017.
Even  at  full  strength,  USC  has
plenty  of  competition  in  the  Pac-12.
Oregon  and  Stanford  are  powers,
while  Washington,  UCLA,  Arizona
State and Arizona are on the rise.
Former  Southern  California  wide
receiver  John  Jackson,  an  analyst  on
Trojans  radio  broadcasts,  says  the
setbacks  and  negativity  in  the  pro-
gram  do  not  signal  USC  will  cease  to
be a power. There is still that unques-
tioned tradition of success.
Pat  is  challenged  with  a  big  deci-
sion,  Jackson  said  of  the  coaching
search.  There  will  be  rumors  about
everybody, and youre going to see all
the big names.
And  the  top  high  school  players?
Will  they  turn  their  backs  on  USC
and  head  elsewhere,  such  as  cross-
town  UCLA,  which  has  emerged  as  a
force  under  second-year  coach  Jim
Mora?
UCLA  is  the  hot  team  now,  but
USC  has  a  great  opportunity,  Jack-
son  said.  Freshmen  want  to  play,
and  all  USC  has  to  do  is  show  them
their  depth  chart. 
Wobbly
Kiffin 
era ends
at USC 
vCONTINUED FROM1C
KELVINKUO, USA TODAY SPORTS
Ed Orgeron, talking at a news conference Sunday in Los Angeles, takes over the Southern California job
on an interim basis. He was 10-25 as head coach at Mississippi from 2005 to 2007.
Our history has been great. We
need to be great again.
Southern California athletics director Pat Haden
The  enduring  image
from  Lane  Kins  ten-
ure  at  Southern  Califor-
nia might be the deated
footballs.
How  could  we  forget?  Last  No-
vember,  with  USC  in  the  midst  of  a
tailspin  from  preseason  No.  1  in  the
Associated  Press  media  poll  to  un-
ranked,  the  Pac-12  ned  the  school
$25,000  for  intentionally  taking  the
air out of the balls on the sideline, ap-
parently  as  a  scheme  to  make  them
easier to grip and throw.
Kin  claimed  no  knowledge.  A
student manager was red. But it was
just another in a string of self-inict-
ed  controversies.  And  considering
the  violation  came  in  a  62-51  loss  to
Oregon    just  another  in  a  string  of
deating  performances    it  seemed
about right.
But for more symbolism, consider:
Before  Kins  rst  kicko,  the  life
had  already  been  sucked  from  the
program  by  Pete  Carrolls  departure
and  devastating  NCAA  sanctions.
The  combination  of  penalties  and
predecessor might have doomed Kif-
n from the start.
Now those factors are fading away.
It  might  not  take  much  for  Kins
successor,  whoever  gets  hired,  to
reinate  one  of  college  footballs
glamour programs. 
This  is  not  to  absolve  Kin.  Not
hardly.  So  much  of  what  went  wrong
with  USC  was  clearly  his  fault,  and  it
wasnt  just  losing    though  that,  as
usual,  was  the  biggest  reason.  His
time  was  highlighted  by  a  series  of
head-scratching gaes and otherwise
infuriating behavior that changed the
perception  of  Kin  from  Boy  Won-
der  into  wondering  whether  the  boy
would ever mature. 
Without  question,  his  actions
helped  hasten  the  programs  down-
ward  spiral  and  his  own  demise,  but
the  situation  was  set  up  for  failure,
which  is  also  why  the  next  hire  is  set
up  for  success.  At  a  news  conference
Sunday afternoon to discuss his deci-
sion,  USC  athletics  director  Pat  Ha-
den narrowed the prole of preferred
candidates  to  living  coaches  
really, he did  but otherwise, he de-
clined  to  discuss  the  search,  saying  it
wasnt  fair  to  the  players  who  still
have two-thirds of a season left.
Despite  the  last  few  seasons,  there
wont  be  any  shortage  of  attractive
contenders  for  one  of  college  foot-
balls  premier  jobs.  A  two-year  bowl
ban has been served. The scholarship
reductions (10 a year for three years)
have  one  more  year  to  run,  but  the
Trojans  can  sign  a  full  class  of  25
recruits  beginning  in  February  2015
and  carry  a  full  roster  of  85  scholar-
ships (up from 75) that season.
If  the  brand  has  been  tarnished  a
bit, theres still plenty of cachet to at-
tract  top  recruits,  many  of  whom  are
in the Trojans backyard.
As important, the next coach wont
be  following  Carroll  or  being  mea-
sured  directly  against  the  mantra  of
Win  Forever.  Kin  was,  and  even
more  so  because  he  had  been  a  part
of those teams as an assistant coach. 
But  even  before  Carroll got  out
just  ahead  of  the  NCAA  posse,  Ore-
gon  had  surpassed  USC  and  the  Tro-
jans recruiting had slid.
Yet when the Trojans went 10-2 in
2011,  including  a  victory  at  Oregon,
and quarterback Matt Barkley decid-
ed  to  return  for  his  senior  season,
USC became a chic preseason pick in
2012.  But  after  a  6-1  start,  USC  lost
ve of its last six games.
This  years  3-2  start,  punctuated
by  a  62-41  loss  at  Arizona  State  on
Saturday, nished Kin.
The  next  coach  enters  a  changed
environment. 
Those Ducks have been dominant,
and  Stanford  has  risen  to  become  a
national  contender.  Across  town,
UCLA  is  emerging  under  second-
year  coach  Jim  Mora.  Arizona  State
might  not  be  far  behind.  And  dont
forget  Washington,  which  is  nally
rising  again  under  Steve  Sarkisian
(another former Carroll assistant and
a potential  candidate  for  the  USC
job).
Still,  Haden  will  have  his  choice  of
coaches.  And  although  the  timing  of
his  decision  to  let  Kin  go  is  odd  
meaning  the  month,  not  the  middle
of the night  it also gives him a head
start.  Texas,  another  plum  job,  might
open  soon,  too.  Haden  gets  the  early
lead in searching for candidates.
If  he  lands  the  right  guy,  look  out.
A perennial  power  could  reinate  in
a hurry. 
Next USC coach could enjoy quick revival
George Schroeder
@GeorgeSchroeder
USATODAYSports
ANALYSIS
KELVINKUO, USA TODAY SPORTS
Southern California AD Pat Haden will
have his choice of coaches.
CHRIS PETERSEN, 
BOISE STATE
He has turned down opportunities
at other schools in conferences
whose champ automatically re-
ceives a Bowl Championship Se-
ries bid but none this lofty. Has
had at least 10 wins in each of his
seven full seasons at Boise State,
with two perfect seasons and two
BCS appearances. He might be
ready for another challenge.
KEVIN SUMLIN,
TEXAS A&M
The trendiest name for the way he
rapidly turned A&M from a peren-
nial underachiever into one of the
countrys hottest teams  and just
as it traded in the Big 12 for a spot
in the Southeastern Conference.
JACK DEL RIO, 
DENVER BRONCOS
The former Jacksonville Jaguars
coach has earned raves as an
assistant with the Broncos, but
what makes Del Rio a candidate is
his time as an All-America line-
backer at USC in the 1980s. But he
has never been a college assis-
tant, let alone a head coach.
STEVE SARKISIAN, 
WASHINGTON
His time as a USC assistant under
Pete Carroll is a bonus and an
impediment. Sarkisian was one of
the engines behind the dynastic
run in the 2000s. But USC might be
wary of hiring another of Carrolls
former offensive assistants.
JAMES FRANKLIN, 
VANDERBILT
Would bring the sort of energy the
program has lacked  and the
energy that was a hallmark of the
great Carroll-coached teams of
the last decade. But hes only three
years into his rst Football Bowl
Subdivision head coaching job.
Paul Myerberg
5 POSSIBLE
CANDIDATES
FOR USC JOB
Five coaches Southern California
could consider:
Fran Drescher is 56. Jenna Elfman
is 42. Marion Cotillard is 38. 
Compiled by Cindy Clark
DRESCHER, ELFMAN: WIREIMAGE; COTILLARD: GETTY IMAGES
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2013 SECTION D
Museum
exhibit will
showcase
the popular
comedy 2D
Anchorman
heads to new
level of classy
USA SNAPSHOTS
Biggest challenge 
for helping a kid 
with homework
Im too  Im too  Im too  Im too  Im too 
busy busy
My child  My child  My child  My child  My child  My child  My child 
doesnt  doesnt 
want my  want my 
help help
I dont 
understand  understand  understand  understand 
the subject  the subject 
Source National Center for Family Literacy
survey of 154 parents
CATHY PAYNE AND SAM WARD, USA TODAY
46%
32% 32% 32% 32% 32%
22%
NEWS PHOTOS
QR READER
Scan with a QRreader;
AT&Tcode scanner
available at scan.mobi.
Get codes for your
business at att.com/mcode.
LIFELINE
Miley Cyrus has no regrets.
Thats  the  takeaway  from    or  at
least,  the  oft-repeated  message  in  
MTVs Miley: The Movement.
The  Movement was  conceived  ear-
lier  this  year,  presumably  as  a  means
of promoting the 20-year-old TV and
pop  veterans  upcoming
album,  Bangerz,  out 
Oct.  8.  As  anyone  read-
ing  this  knows,  Cyrus
kicked  that  campaign
into high gear awhile ago
with  a  series  of  provocative  gestures
 the  most  notorious  being  the
twerk  seen  round  the  world  at 
Augusts  MTV  Video  Music  Awards,
which  Cyrus  memorably  describes
here as a strategic hot mess.
But  what  else  would  you  expect?
Show  business  is,  essentially,  all  that
this  still-very-young  woman  has
known.  Theres  no  life  for  me  other
than  entertaining,  she  says  in  one
interview  segment.  Mother  Tish 
Cyrus,  a  prominent  presence  in  the
lm,  notes  that  the  younger  Cyrus
gave  up  her  childhood    as  if  that
decision  had  been  made  without 
parental consent.
Father  Billy  Ray  Cyrus  wasnt 
interviewed  for  the  documentary,
which  follows  his  daughter  over
roughly  three  months,  mostly  at 
public appearances  culminating, of
course,  with  the  VMAs.  Even  more
conspicuous  in  his  absence  is  Cyrus
former  anc,  Liam  Hemsworth,
whose  split  with  her  made  news  two
weeks ago.
Instead,  Pharrell  Williams,  one  of
her  collaborators  on  Bangerz,  turns
up  to  vouch  for  Cyrus  character  and
authenticity.  Shes  still  evolving,
Williams  says,  praising  her  crazy
voice  and  calling  her  a  byproduct  of
America.
That  Cyrus  is.  She  tells  us  so,  not
in  those  precise  words,  but  in  how
she  presents  her  goals  and  denes
contemporary  fame.  Defending  her
creative choice at the VMAs, she says,
You  want  to  make  history.  ...  Every-
things  about  whats  going  to  be  the
big moment in pop culture.
Cyrus  cites  similar  moments
provided  by  Madonna  and  Britney
Spears.  The  latter,  Cyrus  idol  and  a
guest  on  Bangerz,  chats  with  her  in  a
cute segment; Cyrus tells Spears that
she has been a Madonna-like inspira-
tion to my whole generation.
Throughout  Miley,  Cyrus  comes
across as good-humored and grateful
to  her  fans,  the  army  driving  her
titular  movement.  She  greets  admir-
ers  with  seemingly  genuine  enthusi-
asm  after  a  radio  interview  and  a
Good Morning America appearance.
Now people really get to see what
the  movement  is  all  about,  the  for-
mer  child  star  says,  later  adding,
Right  now,  I  still  feel  like  Im
beginning.
Cyrus  is  certainly  entitled  to  that
perspective at her age. Lets just hope
that  her  unfolding  story  doesnt  be-
come yet another cautionary tale.
PHOTOS BY MTV
Miley Cyrus describes her infamous performance at MTVs VMAs as a strategic hot mess in the documentary. You want to make history. 
Movie showcases young stars
ruthless pursuit of celebrity
Cyrus and her mother, Tish, who says that her daughter gave up 
her childhood to become a star on television and in music.
Mileys
Movement
marches on,
mercilessly
MILEY: THE MOVEMENT   eeEE
MTV Wednesday, 10 p.m. ET/PT
TV
PREVIEW
ELYSA
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The  box-oce  forecast  turned  out
to  be  cloudy  with  a  chance  of
millions.
The  animated  Cloudy  With  a
Chance  of  Meatballs  2,  the  inevitable
sequel to the 2009 hit, coasted to the
top  of  the  charts  at  theaters  this
weekend  with $35  million,  according
to studio estimates.
The  debut  met  most  analysts  ex-
pectations  and  ends  September,  a
normally  sluggish  month  at  the  box
oce, on a ourish. 
Gitesh  Pandya  of  Boxoce
guru.com says  that  Meatballs  debut
underscores  the  hunger  families
have  right  now  for  something  com-
pelling to see with the kids.
Critics  didnt  nd  Meatballs  that
tasty,  as  just  58%  of  the  nations  lm
reviewers  gave  it  a  thumbs-up,  says
pollsters  Rottentomatoes.com.  But
80%  of  moviegoers  liked  it,  the  site
says,  a  good  sign  that  the  lm  could
show legs through the fall.
Reagen  Sulewski  of  Boxoce
prophets.com says  that  the  original
lm  quietly  built  up  goodwill  with
adults four years ago.
Heres  the  crucial  part,  Sulewski
says. The rst lm was actually good
and/or tolerable for parents, which is
the  real  secret  audience  for  family
lms.
Parents  and  other  adults  also  will
propel  ticket  sales  for  the  remainder
of  the  year  as  studios  gear  up  for  the
holidays  and  Oscar  season.  Two  pos-
sible  early  awards  contenders,  Ron
Howards  racing  thriller  Rush  and
Hugh Jackmans crime drama Prison-
ers, jockeyed for the silver medal this
weekend.
Prisoners,  last  weeks  winner,  took
second place with $11. 2 million. Rush
took  third  with  $10.3  million  in  its
rst weekend of national release.
The  comedy  Baggage  Claim was
fourth  with  $9.3  million.  Raunchy
comedy  Don  Jon,  Joseph  Gordon-
Levitts  directorial  debut,  took  fth
place with a respectable $9 million.
Final gures are expected today.
MOVIES
Meatballs 2 orders up beefy win at box oce
Animated sequels secret:
Its tolerable for parents
Scott Bowles
@gsbowles
USATODAY
SONY PICTURES ANIMATIONVIA AP
Steve the Monkey, left, Flint, Brent, Earl and Sam should be wide-
eyed with excitement about Meatballs $35 million opening weekend.
@oliviawilde No one on TV ever
EVER says goodbye on the phone
unless theyre about to die.
@DylanMcDermott Silence is 
sometimes the best answer...
@KellyOsbourne why is it that
when you get a really good nights
sleep you sometimes wake up so
much more tired than you were
before you went to sleep?
@WValderrama Adios #LA.. 
#AirFrance shall we?.. #Paris see
you in 10hours..
@janemarielynch A day w/o 
the arts for a kid is like a day w/o
sunshine! Lets get them some 
sunshine !! @adoptthearts
TWEET TALK
STARS SOUND OFF ON TWITTER
WILL FERRELL BY FRANK MASI,
DREAMWORKS PICTURES
Christina Hen-
dricks looked
fresh in florals
at the Rape
Foundations
annual brunch
Sunday in
Beverly Hills.
The Mad
Men stars
famous curves
were flattered
by the figure-
hugging num-
ber, which she
accessorized
with nude
pointed-toe
pumps.
STYLE STAR
AMANDA EDWARDS,
WIREIMAGE
ITS YOUR BIRTHDAY
WHOS CELEBRATING TODAY?
The brush
Ron uses to
groom his
trademark
facial hair
shows the
vanity required
by anchors in the
1970s, Christof-
fersen says.
When  Adam  McKay  was  directing
2004s  Anchorman:  The  Legend  of
Ron  Burgundy (and  co-writing  with
the  lms  star,  Will  Ferrell),  he
knew history was in the making.
Honestly,  from  the  very
the  rst  day  of Anchorman,
we  started  each  day  by  say-
ing, Everything were doing
here  is  going  to  go  into  a
museum,  McKay says.
OK,  he  might  have
been making that up. 
But  in  truth,  Anchor-
man has landed its museum gig.
Starting  Nov.  14,  the  Newseum  in
Washington,  D.C.,  will  feature  an
exhibit  based  on  the  comedy
classic. 
Key  items  from  the  lm,
which  is  centered  on  pomp-
ous,  sexist  1970s  San 
Diego  news  anchor  Ron
Burgundy  (Ferrell),  will
be  on  display.  They 
include  Burgundys
wardrobe  (including  his  sig-
nature  burgundy  anchorman  suit),
his  IM  #1  vanity  plate,  his  ute
and,  most  importantly,  his  mustache
brush.  Items  from  other  news  team
members,  such  as  stud  reporter 
Brian  Fantanas  (Paul  Rudd)  Sex 
Panther  cologne  in  its  original  box,
will class up the joint.
This  was  no  surprise  at  all,  Mc-
Kay  says  of  the  exhibit.  I  was  just
wondering, What took so long? 
The sequel probably had a lot to do
with  the  timing.  Anchorman  2:  The
Legend  Continues  opens  in  theaters
in December. 
Newseum  staers  believe  that  the
exhibit  will  be  educational,  shining 
a light  on  the  industry  at  the  time.
For  example,  the  movie  comically
looks  at  the  old-school  sexism  that
ruled  1970s  newsrooms,  which
made it  dicult  for  women
such  as  Veronica  Corning-
stone (Christina Applegate)
to sit in the anchor chair.
There is a reality about
the  newsroom  here  and
the  changes  that  were 
going  on  at  the  time, 
says  Newseum  curator 
Carrie  Christoersen.  We
like  to  edu-tain.  You  can  get
educated and entertained.
Even Burgundys mustache brush
demonstrates  that  there  is  a  level  of
vanity  required  by  anchors  in  the
1970s, she says. 
As  for  the  ute  on  display,  used  by
Burgundy  to  impress  Veronica,
Christoersen  has  an  educational 
element  for  that:  On-air  chemistry
was  important  to  the  anchors  at  the
time.  They  needed  that  chemistry.
This  was  the  era  where  there  would
be happy talk between the anchors,
she says. 
Of  course,  Ron  Burgundy  takes  it
to a dierent level.
McKay leans toward the entertain-
ment value of the exhibit.
Its  a  sugary  treat  to  give  people
who  come  to  the  museum  and  think
about the news, the press and Ameri-
can  democracy,  he  says.
But  as  silly  as  the  movie
is,  it  does  deal  with  serious
issues.  There  is  a  little  histo-
ry there, denitely.
History  lessons  at  a  cost. 
McKay  used  to  keep  the  Sex  Panther
cologne  box  in  his  oce  on  display.
And,  until  the  exhibit  ends  Aug.  31,
Ron  Burgundy  will  have  to  make  do
without his ute.
Ron Burgundy is old-school, Mc-
Kay  says.  While  his  utes  gone, 
I dont think he has any shame about
picking up the recorder and playing a
little  Hot  Cross  Buns. 
Rons ute catches re during 
a particularly hot jazz solo 
in Anchorman: The Legend 
of Ron Burgundy.
SNEAK PEEK ANCHORMAN EXHIBIT
Old-school anchor
gets his chance to be
a museum piece 
Newseum exhibit
nds serious
issues behind
the satire of Ron
Burgundy
Bryan Alexander
@BryAlexand
USATODAY
Ron Burgundy (Will Ferrell) drives his colleague
Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate) 
to a romantic spot in San Diego in Anchorman.
His license plate will be part of the new exhibit
opening in Washington on Nov. 14.
The box of Sex Panther cologne,
the pungent scent worn by Chan-
nel 4 reporter Brian Fantana
(Paul Rudd), used to reside in
director Adam McKays oce. 
The exhibit will include the
stued animal that was used as
a stand-in for Rons beloved dog,
Baxter, who returns in the lms
sequel, due in December.
Adesign rendering depicts 
Anchorman: The Exhibit, which
will edu-tain, says Newseum
curator Carrie Christoersen. 
MOVIE PHOTOS BY PARAMOUNT PICTURES; 
LICENSE PLATE, FLUTE, BRUSH BY SARAH MERCIER,
NEWSEUM; DOG, COLOGNE BY BRENDAN OHARA,
NEWSEUM; EXHIBIT RENDERING BY NEWSEUM
F
2D LIFE
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
You are meh. 
As  a  simple  declaration  of  biologi-
cal fact, the title of this mediocre CBS
sitcom  misstep  is  accurate:  The  four
main  characters  are,  indeed,  male.
But  to  the  extent  the  show  means  to
imply  these  four  men  represent  the
entire  sex,  then  both
sexes  should  rise  in  pro-
test    unless  you  really
do  think  all  men  are
boorish,  babbling,  im-
mature boobs who never
outgrew  their  childhood  member-
ship  in  some  Our  Gang He-Man
Woman Haters Club. 
The  shame  here  is  that  three  of
TVs  more  personable  men    Tony
Shalhoub,  Jerry  OConnell  and  Kal
Penn  are being wasted by this mis-
begotten  series  about  four  recently
(and  deservedly) single guys  living in
an  apartment  complex  that  appar-
ently puts a losers only covenant in
its  leases.  There  are  women  in  this
world, but outside of one of the mens
daughters,  they  are  all  either  bodies
to  be  admired  or  shrews  to  be
avoided.
Really:  If  these  are  men  and  those
are  women,  one  shudders  for  the 
survival of the race.
Shalhoub  is  the  group  leader,
Frank,  a  four-time  divorc  with  the
sensible  ospring  (Rebecca  Breeds)
and, it seems, a way with the opposite
sex. Penn is Gil, an inept philanderer,
and OConnell is Stuart, a doctor try-
ing  to  hide  his  nancial  assets  from
his  about-to-be  ex-wife  while  expos-
ing  his  other  assets  via  a  constantly
worn Speedo.
The  foursome  is  completed  by
Carter  (Chris  Smith),  who  was
dumped  at  the  altar  by  his  horrible
ance  and  is taken  under  the  older
mens wings. Until, that is, he decides
to  return  to  his  ex    a  decision  his
three friends work to subvert.
And  there,  it  seems,  you  have  it.
They  give  him  stupid  bits  of  advice.
He  follows  some  and  rejects  others.
And it all leads to the moment where
the ance  calls  them  idiots,  which
is  about  the  only  line  in  the  entire
show that rings true.
As  anyone  who  has  followed  his
career  knows,  Shalhoub  is  a  very 
talented  actor    but  even  he  cant
triumph over material that is, at best,
instantly  forgettable.  So  what  youre
left  with  is  a  series  that,  while  less 
repellent than the even more misogy-
nistic Dads, is equally dull.
So, yeah: meh.
CLIFF LIPSON, CBS
Carter (Chris Smith, front) meets Frank (Tony Shalhoub, left), Stuart
(Jerry OConnell) and Gil (Kal Penn) after being dumped at the altar.
These Men display
male-pattern mediocrity
One-sided battle of the
sexes wastes its actors
WE ARE MEN   eeEE
CBS  Tonight, 8:30 ET/PT
TV
PREVIEW
ROBERT
BIANCO
If you have to go, go out on top.
In  a  stunning  75-minute  extended
nale,  Vince  Gilligan  brought  Break-
ing  Bad to  a  supremely  tting  close,
tying  up  all  the  loose  ends  in  his
modern  classic  AMC  series  and  kill-
ing  o  his  now  iconic  anti-hero  Wal-
ter White. And he did so in a way that
conrmed Bads status as one of TVs
greatest  series    and
star  Bryan  Cranston  as
one  of  Americas  best
actors.
Tense,  witty,  violent,
oddly  tender  and,  in  its
own  strange  way,  as  close  to  a  hap-
py  ending  as  a  story  this  dark  could
hope,  this  last  episode  brought  the
story  to  a  straightforward,  denitive
conclusion,  without  the  spirituality
of  Lost or  the  ambiguity  of  The  So-
pranos.  If  its  debated,  it  wont  be  for
what  it  meant,  but  for  what  it  did:
killing  Walt,  but  leaving  Jesse  alive
and Walts family rich.
So  sometimes  crime  does  pay.  It
certainly did for viewers.
Sundays  dazzling  nale  began
with Walt at a series low point: dying,
alone,  and  so  thin  he  has  to  wear  his
wedding  ring  on  a  string  around  his
neck. But he has one last burst of en-
ergy in him, fueled by his remarkable
ability  to  convince  himself  hes  the
aggrieved party.
So  its  out  of  New  England,  to  the
prophetic  strains  of  Marty  Robbins
Streets  of  Laredo.  (For  Im  a  young
cowboy and know I must die.) 
Hes  o  to  New  Mexico,  but  rst,
he  has  to  stop  at  the  house  of  Elliott
and  Gretchen  Schwartz,  the  couple
he  blamed  for  stealing  his  research,
and  whose  TV  interview  sparked  his
drive for a grand criminal exit.
In  a  lesser  show,  he  would  have
killed  them,  setting  o  a  Spaghetti
Western-style  rampage  of  revenge.
Instead,  after  treating  us  to  a  beauti-
fully  composed,  nerve-racking  long
shot  of  the  couple  babbling  in  the
kitchen  as  he  looks  at  pictures  in  the
other  room,  executive  producer  and
writer  Gilligan  twisted  the  scene  to
give  Walt the  rst  of  his  victories.  He
forced the couple to hold his $10 mil-
lion  in  trust  for  his  children    a  deal
he  sealed  by  tricking  them  into
thinking  hed  put  a  contract  on  their
lives.
His  familys  future  set,  he  was  o
to  a  surprise  reunion  with  Skyler  
and  for  one  welcome  burst  of  hones-
ty:  a  refutation  of  the  claim  (by  him
or  anyone  else)  that  he  did  it  for  his
family. 
I  did  it  for  me.  I  liked  it.  I  was
good at it, and I was alive.
And that settles that.
Oh,  and  that  ricin  at  the  start  of
the  season?  Turns  out  it  was  for
Lydia.
In  a  sense,  the  nal  episode  was  a
goodbye  tour  for  Walt  and  for  us,
ending,  appropriately  enough,  with
Jesse.  Having  planned  to  kill  Jesse,
he  instead  saved  his  life,  protecting
him from the machine-gun-equipped
trunk that mowed down the neo-Na-
zi  gang,  and  watching  as  Jesse  killed
Todd  with  a  chain,  an  echo  of  that
long-ago murder that set Walt on this
trail. 
He gave Jesse a chance to kill him,
but  Jesse  left  instead    leaving  Walt
to  die,  smiling,  and  the  series  to  end
on a creative high.
Which  is  just  how  it  began,  and
just what it deserved.
TELEVISION
URSULA COYOTE, AMC
Walter White, played by Emmy winner Bryan Cranston, achieves
revenge, and a measure of redemption, in the Breaking Bad nale.
Breaking Bad nale:
Satisfaction to the end 
TV NEWS
& VIEWS
ROBERT
BIANCO
Ambiguity was not an
option in an ending that
ranks with TVs nest
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 LIFE 3D
Mel  Gibson  is  breaking  bad
on-screen.
The 57-year-old actor and director
is making a screen return in roles far
from  the  edgy,  good-guy  characters
he  portrayed  in  box-oce  franchises
fromMad Max to Lethal Weapon.
In  Machete  Kills (out  Oct.  11), 
Gibson  goes  for  full  baddie  as  arms
dealer  Luther  Voz,  while  in The 
Expendables  3, now  shooting  in  Bul-
garia, Gibson goes malevolent against
Sylvester Stallone and company.
I  guess  it  seems  like  there  is  a 
pattern,  says  Gibson,  who  acknowl-
edges that he has never before played
a full-on villain.
Those  are  the  juicy  parts.  You  go
to  movies  and  its  the  bad  guys  that
you  really  dig,  he says.  Its  interest-
ing  territory  to  explore.  He  repre-
sents  the  dark  side  that  we  all  are
capable of.
A LARGER-THAN-LIFE ROLE
The  former  box-oce  titans  career
has  been  in  low  gear  since  2010,
when  audio  tapes  of  an  enraged 
Gibson  played  on  a  tabloid  website
and damaged his reputation. 
His starring role in 2011s The Bea-
ver,  directed  by  Jodie  Foster,  opped
at the box oce, and while 2012s Get
the  Gringo received  solid  reviews,  it
went straight to video-on-demand.
During  Gringos  Austin  premiere,
Machete  Kills director  Robert  Rodri-
guez  proposed  the  role  of  Voz,  who
goes  maniacally rogue and forces the
U.S.  president  (Charlie  Sheen)  to  sic
the  mercenary  Machete  (Danny 
Trejo) on him.
You have a larger-than-life villain
who is bent on destroying the world,
Rodriguez  says.  Mel  just  really  ap-
pealed  and  popped  out  as  the  guy.
I had to explore it fully before I could
even  consider  another  actor.  I  really
responded  to  him  as  an  artist.  I
wasnt chasing a tabloid.
Gibson  liked  the  idea  of  a  Bond-
like  villain,  and  he  also  was  a  fan  of
Rodiguezs  original  bloodfest,  2010s
Machete.
I  laughed  until  I  almost  got  sick
because  of  the  sheer,  shameless  ex-
ploitation, Gibson says. I said, Lets
do it. 
Rodriguez  says  Gibson  was  a  col-
laborator on the set, and he even had
ideas  about  a  scene  in  which  Voz
watches  his  henchmen  deal  with 
Machete  on  a  video  monitor  while
eating macadamia nuts.
Mel  put  one  into  his  mouth  and
said, These are terrible. Do you mind
if  I  spit  them  out  even  though  youre
not  supposed  to  do  that  with
these?  Rodriguez recalls. 
So  it  turned  into  this  very  odd
moment  with  these  macadamia
nuts.
Gibsons  double  take  at  the  video
monitor  watching  Machetes  actions
was  so  eective,  Rodriguez  repeated
the scene in the lms closing credits.
That  kind  of  sums  up  the  movie
experience,  Rodriguez  says.  (Gib-
son)  was  constantly  inventive  in
making every moment unique.
THE CAST CHIROPRACTOR?
When  reports  surfaced  in  2010  that
Gibson  would  appear  in  a  Hangover
Part  II  cameo,  the  cast  reacted  nega-
tively. (Liam Neeson eventually lled
the  part.)  But  in  Machete  Kills,  the
cast  was  game  to  have  Gibson  on-
board.  In  their  rst  meeting  on  the
set,  Gibson  immediately  noticed  a
chronic shoulder injury Trejo has en-
dured since 1968.
He  just  started  messing  with  my
shoulder.  And  all  of  a  sudden,  I  had
no  more  shoulder  problems,  Trejo
says. And all of sudden, hes cracking
peoples backs. He could have opened
a chiropractor  clinic.  He  just  under-
stands the body.
During  a  climatic  sword  scene,
Trejo  paid  his  respects  by  acknowl-
edging  Gibsons  Oscar-winning  turn
in 1995s Braveheart.
Before  Robert  said  action,  I
threw  my  sword  down  and  said,  Im
not  ghting  William  Wallace,   says
Trejo,  who  was  impressed  with 
Gibsons villain. 
Mel  owned  that  part.  Hes  one  of
the  greats.  I  dont  care  about  any-
ones  baggage.  He  came  on  and  did
his job.
For his role as Conrad Stonebanks
in  The  Expendables  3  (due  next 
summer),  Gibson  has  even  sculpted
himself  into  shape,  working  with  a
trainer  and  modifying  his  diet  over
three months before trying to annihi-
late Stallone and his crew.
I  just  want  Sly  to  look  good.  And
hes  not  going  to  look  good  if  hes
beating  up  a  fat  old  man,  Gibson
says.  I  have  been  working  really
hard  at  it.  A  lot  of  cardio  and  very
light weight training, nothing heavy.
Gibson  looks  so  cut  that  after  he
was  photographed  leaving  a  Malibu,
Calif., gym, online pundits insisted he
couldnt have achieved the look with-
out steroids.
Thats  just  hard  work,  dude,  he
insists.  When  asked  about  steroids,
he  laughs:  Have  you  seen  the  side 
eects of some of that crap? Forget it,
thats too scary.
The  positive  notices  that  Gibson
has  received  for  Machete  Kills have
him  contemplating  a  return  to  di-
recting,  though  he  wont  specify  a
project.  Meanwhile,  Rodriguez  says
Gibson tested well enough with audi-
ences  that  he  has  featured  his  villain
prominently in the lms trailers.
People  responded  great  to  him,
and  they  liked  that  he  was  actually
playing  the  villain,  Rodriguez  says.
The  villains  are  the  best,  and  Mel
had  a  eld  day.
MOVIES
Mel Gibson looks sharp as a bad guy 
RICOTORRES, OPENROAD FILMS
Machete Kills director Robert Rodriguez, left, says Mel Gibson brought a lot of inventiveness to the role of
arms dealer Luther Voz, including a very odd moment in a scene involving a bowl of macadamia nuts. 
Machete Kills nds
him carving out a
new career direction
Bryan Alexander
@BryAlexand
USATODAY
Those are the juicy
parts. You go to
movies and its the
bad guys that you
really dig.
PARAMOUNT PICTURES
Gibsons villain gets in some
Braveheart-worthy swordplay.
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1
Debut album
should solidify
this sister acts
staying power
After a seemingly endless summer,
Haim  is  primed  for  its  formal
introduction.
The  Los  Angeles  band,  made  up  of
three musical sisters  Este, Danielle
and  Alana  Haim  (plus  drummer
Dash  Hutton)    played  a  jampacked
itinerary  that  spanned  both  sides 
of  the  Atlantic,  including  a  trifecta 
of  performances  at  the  Bonnaroo,
Lollapalooza  and  Glastonbury  music
festivals.
The  groups  busy  schedule,  which
earlier  in  the  year  included  succes-
sive stints opening for Florence + the
Machine,  Mumford  &  Sons  and 
Vampire  Weekend,  hindered  the 
album-making  process.  But  Haim
(pronounced  Hime)  squeezed  in
enough studio time to complete Days
Are Gone, out today. 
It was hard for us to focus on just
doing  a  record  when  people  like
Florence  (Welch)  and  Marcus
Mumford  were  asking  us  to  go
on tour, says bass player Este,
the  big  sister  of  the  group  at
27. We had to go on tour and
come  back  to  it,  which  really
was  kind  of  nice  because  be-
ing  on  the  road  is  inspiring
for us.
Along  the  way,  the  band
released  a  trio  of  singles
(Forever, Dont Save Me and
Falling),  revealing  a  pol-
ished  studio  prowess  to
match  its  energetic  live
show.  The  building  buzz
has  made  Days  Are  Gone
one of this falls most antic-
ipated  album  debuts,  says
Jason  Lipshutz,  associate 
editor at Billboard.com.
What is  remarkable  is  that
they  seem  so  comfortable  in
the studio already when ... they
are  very  much  a  live  band,  he
says.  They  just  kind  of  radiate
this  older-sister  vibe,  someone
who is cooler than you, and they
radiate that in their music, too.
The  11-song  collection  of  infec-
tious, slick pop songs includes recent
single  The  Wire,  which  has  an  enter-
taining  video  that  presents  the  girls
as  heartbreakers.  (Jorma  Taccone  of
comedy  group  The  Lonely  Island  is
among the guys dumped by the Haim
sisters,  yet  he  still  feels  drawn  to 
attend the bands concert.)
No  song  is  strictly  biographical  
we draw a lot of inspiration from our
friends  stories,  too,  Este  says.  We
have  three  songwriters  in  the  band. 
A lot  of  the  songs  are  each  of  our 
stories, all melded. Whether we like it
or  not,  we  judge  the  quality  of  our
lives  based  on  the  relationships  that
we have. I know I do.
Family is central to the bands sto-
ry.  The  girls  began  performing  with
their  parents  in  a  cover  band  called
Rockinhaim  at  ages  11
(Este),  8  (Danielle)  and
5 (Alana).  Mustang
Sally was  the  rst
song  we  learned,
Este says.
As they got older, the sisters began
crafting  their  own  songs  and  per-
forming  in  L.A.  venues,  playing  in
touring  bands  with  ex-Rilo  Kiley
singer Jenny Lewis and Strokes sing-
er  Julian  Casablancas.  After  Haim
topped  the  BBCs  Sound  of  2013  list,
which showcases the best rising stars,
stu  really  started  snowballing,
Danielle,  23,  told  USA  TODAY  at 
the  South  By  Southwest  festival  in
Austin,  where  the  band  was  named
the best developing U.S. act.
Its been pretty amazing watching
them  grow  over  the  last  couple
years,  says  Ezra  Koenig,  singer  and
guitarist  for  Vampire  Weekend,
whose  producer  Ariel  Rechtshaid
wound up assisting on Haims album.
They are one of the few bands I was
really  struck  by  just  how  good  they
could play.
Dont  hold  your  breath  waiting 
for  a  family  feud.  There  is  really  no
drama.  We  have  been  playing  in  a
band  since  we  were,  like,  5,  says 
Alana, 21. If we were going to fall out
and have our Oasis moment, it would
have happened 10 years ago. The only
time  we  ever  have  disagreements  is
when  I  want  to  borrow  Danielles
leather  jacket  and  she  doesnt  want
to let me. Thats a ght.
Fans  who  have  followed  the  band
will know a number of songs on Days
Are  Gone.  Five  appeared  on  EPs,  but
its  really  not  a  detriment,  because
the  other  half  of  the  unheard  songs
could  be  singles  in  themselves,  Lip-
shutz says. They are just that good.
With the albums release, the band
embarks  on  its  own  U.S.  headlining
tour  in  October.  Then  the  sisters
head  overseas  again    Haim  just
played the iTunes Festival in London
 to  open  for  Phoenix  on  more  than
a dozen  European  shows  before
headlining  several  concerts  in  the
United Kingdom and Ireland.
Still,  the  band  wont  forget  this
past summer. Before going onstage at
Glastonbury, where Haim played to a
crowd  of  30,000,  all  of  us  stopped
for  a  second,  Este  says.  We  really
wanted  to  appreciate  it.  It  was  kind
of a surreal moment for us.
The  albums  release  should  swell
Haims  crowds.  We  are  really
charged  up  and  red  up  about  the
record,  Este  says.  It  was  so  dicult
for  me  not  to  just  leak  the  record  on
my  own.  We  hope  that  people  like  it
and enjoy what we are doing.
MUSIC
Mike Snider
@MikeSnider
USATODAY
Haim prepares for even brighter Days 
TOMBEARD,
COLUMBIA RECORDS
The Haim
sisters 
Este, left,
Danielle
and Alana
grew up
playing
music 
together.
Their first
full-length
album,
Days Are
Gone, is 
in stores
today.
If we were going
to fall out and
have our Oasis
moment, it would
have happened 
10 years ago. 
Alana Haim
PHOTO GALLERY
LIFE.USATODAY.COM
Haim joins a long list of bands with
names that are often mispronounced.
ROBYNBECK, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Communities are at risk if high numbers
of people dont get whooping cough shot.
The  2010  California  outbreak  of
the  respiratory  disease  pertussis
(commonly  called  whooping  cough)
resulted  in  9,120  cases  and  10  deaths
 a  third  of  all  the  cases  in  the  USA
that  year.  Several  causes  have  been
documented,  including  waning  im-
munity  of  the  pertussis  vaccine.  A
new  analysis  oers  evidence  of  an-
other  cause:  Areas  with  higher  num-
bers  of  people  who  refused  to  get
vaccinated  had higher  rates  of  the
disease.  The  study  in  Octobers  Pedi-
atrics,  online  today,  found  that  areas
with  non-medical  exemptions  for
kids  entering  kindergarten  between
2005 and 2010 were more than twice
as likely to have a cluster of pertussis
cases  in  2010.  The  authors  conclude
that  communities  with  large  num-
bers  of  intentionally  unvaccinated
people  can  lead  to  pertussis  out-
breaks,  putting  vulnerable  popula-
tions such as infants at higher risk. 
VACCINE REFUSAL LINKED TO
CALIFORNIA PERTUSSIS OUTBREAK
4D LIFE
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
Lori Ireland and a handful of other
parents  in  Chapel  Hill,  N.C.,  had  a
simple  dream:  They  wanted  their
teenage  kids  to  be  able  to  have  jobs
someday.  Sitting  around  with  noth-
ing  productive  to  do  would  be  unsat-
isfying  and  frustrating,  not  to
mention expensive.
But  they  also  knew  the  dismal
truth:  Its  tough  for  someone  with 
autism to get a job.
So,  like  an  increasing  number  of
parents  with  children  on  the  autism
spectrum,  Ireland  and  her  peers  set
out  to  employ  them  themselves.
Their  non-prot  Extraordinary  Ven-
tures  businesses,  including  one  that
cleans  city  buses  and  another  that
makes  candles  and  other  gifts,  now
employ  40  people  with  developmen-
tal disabilities in the Chapel Hill area.
Ireland recently told her story to a
group  of  parents  and  autism  advo-
cates  as  part  of  a  nationwide  eort 
by  the  non-prot  Autism  Speaks  to
inspire  more  parents  to  follow  her
lead.  The  group  has  also  developed  a
digital  tool  kit  to  help  people  with 
autism get and keep jobs.
Ireland  and  others  will  bring  their
tales to more cities this fall, including
Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, Miami,
St. Louis and Scottsdale, Ariz. 
Slightly  more  than  half  of  young
people with autism have ever worked
for  pay  since  leaving  high  school, 
says  a  survey  in  the  current  issue  of
the Journal of the American Academy
of  Child  &  Adolescent  Psychiatry.
Roughly 85% of those who were least
disabled  had  worked,  vs. just  12%  of
those most severely disabled.
By comparison, young people with
emotional disturbances, learning dis-
abilities  or  impaired  speech  and  lan-
guage  were  about  ve  times  more
likely  to  have  held  a  job.  And  people
with  intellectual  disabilities  were
twice as likely to have been employed
since high school, the survey found. 
Paul  Shattuck,  associate  professor
at  Drexel  Universitys  Autism  Insti-
tute  in  Philadelphia,  helped  conduct
the research.  He says  its  not entirely
clear  why  people  with  autism  are  so
much  more  disadvantaged.  But  he
thinks  that  the  social  and  communi-
cations challenges that dene autism
put them at a particular decit. 
More  and  more  jobs  in  our  econ-
omy require that you successfully in-
teract  with  other  people  as  part  of
your  job    that  is  your  job,  he  says.
This is uniquely disabling for people
on the autism spectrum.
Though  many  people  still  think  of
autism  as  a  childhood  condition,  its
eects  are  mostly  life-long.  Begin-
ning  in  the  late  1980s,  autism  diag-
noses  began  to  skyrocket,  and  kids
diagnosed  then  are  now  young
adults.  About  50,000  children  on  the
autism spectrum turn 18 every year.
Their parents began advocating for
better  diagnosis  and  care  back  in  the
90s. Many of those same parents are
now  turning  their  advocacy  skills  to
jobs for those on the spectrum.
People  with  autism  may  be  as 
good  as  or  better  at  a  particular  job
than  someone  else, says  Lisa  Goring,
vice  president  of  family  services  at
Autism  Speaks.  But  those  on  the
spectrum  will  likely  need  special 
accommodations to work to their po-
tential.  Some  mainstream  business-
es,  such  as  Walgreens,  are  known  for
accommodating  people  with  autism,
but  there  arent  nearly  enough  op-
portunities,  Goring  says.  So  parents
are increasingly lling the void. 
Irelands  son  Vinnie  doesnt  mind
repetitive  tasks,  such  as  cleaning
rows  of  bus  seats  or  mowing  lawns
day after day. But someone else must
handle  the  communications  aspects
of  the  work,  because  Vinnie  doesnt
speak more than a few words. 
Other  parents  play  to  their  adult
childrens strengths, perhaps opening
a T-shirt  silk-screening  shop  if  their
child  has  artistic  skills,  or  starting 
organic  farms  if  they  like  to  work
outdoors.
The  nonPareil  Institute  in  Plano,
Texas,  was  started  ve  years  ago  to
take  advantage  of  the  founders  chil-
drens  love  of  technology.  The  non-
prot  trains  adults  on  the  spectrum
to  develop  digital  games  and  apps.
The  institute  has  released  ve  apps
and  a  couple  of  games,  with  many
more  on  the  way,  says  Dan  Selec,
nonPareils CEO. 
The training program, which costs
$675  a  month,  has  now  grown  to  130
students  and  is  in  talks  to  expand  to
seven more cities, Selec says. 
Aaron  Winston  of  Dallas  joined
the  program  three  years  ago,  after
graduating  from  high  school  and
briey  attempting  community  col-
lege.  Though  he  had  no  technical
skills  at  the  beginning,  he  has  now
learned  so  much  that  the  company
recently promoted him  to  a full-time
employee,  one of four  full-time  sta-
ers on the spectrum.
If it wasnt for nonPareil, Id prob-
ably  be  struggling  through  college  or
doing some type of job Im overquali-
ed  for,  he  says. 
HEALTH
Parents help their autistic kids nd work
Its tough for those
on the spectrum to
get, and hold, a job
Karen Weintraub
Special for USATODAY
DALYNNMONTGOMERY
Aaron Winston of Dallas joined the nonPareil program after nishing
high school and attempting community college. The company, which
develops digital games and apps, recently hired him full time.
PETER GRANDSTAFF
Charles 
Roland helps
clean buses 
in North 
Carolina, one
of the jobs that
Lori Irelands
Extraordinary
Ventures group
has lined up for
young people
on the autism
spectrum. 
More and more
jobs require that
you successfully
interact with other
people, (which) is
uniquely disabling
for people on the
autism spectrum.
Paul Shattuck, Drexel University
A notable  1991  study  found  that
91%  of  6-year-old  kids  correctly
matched  Old  Joe,  the  Camel  ciga-
rettes  cartoon  logo,  with  a  picture  of
a cigarette    nearly  equal  to  the
number  who  correctly  matched
Mickey  Mouse  with  the  Disney
Channel  logo.  Two  decades  later,  a
study  nds  that  cigarette  manufac-
turers  eorts  to  reach  young  chil-
dren  in  low-  and  middle-income
countries  globally  is  nearly  as  eec-
tive.  The  study,  in  Octobers  Pediat-
rics, nds  that  68%  of  2,400  children
ages  5  and  6  surveyed  in  Brazil,  Chi-
na,  India,  Nigeria,  Pakistan  and  Rus-
sia  correctly  identied  at  least  one
cigarette  brand  logo  when  matching
logos  with  their  respective  objects.
Previous  studies  show  that  kids  with
high  exposure  to  and  awareness  lev-
els  of  tobacco  marketing  are  more
likely to smoke cigarettes as adults.
Michelle Healy
TOBACCO MARKETING REACHES
CHILDREN AROUND THE WORLD
IN BRIEF
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013 LIFE 5D
PUZZLES
ACROSS
1   Let through a turnstile
6  ___ myrtle (shrub)
11   Neither go-with
14  Candle in the Wind
1997 dedicatee
15   Chinese pongee fabric
16  Life ___ Highway
17   Absentminded activity
19   Channel that plays
The NewlywedGame
20  Fruit used to flavor gin
21   Muse with Clio,
Thalia and Urania
22  Played, but didnt
play the field?
23  Big ATMmanufacturer
25  One who reads the
books closely
27  Comprises
32  Dos follower
33  French for king
34  Outta sight!
36  Justice Dept.
employees
39  Gut-wrenching feeling
41   Darn those socks!
42  Former Pistons great
Thomas
43  Religion with an
apostrophe in its name
44 Bee-related
46  ___-Magnon
47  Lake ___ (Blue Nile
source)
49  Adorned
51   Hazy hazard
54  University URL part
55  Kind of poetry
collection
56  Serving on a stick
59  Word on an Irish
postage stamp
63  Drops on blades
64  Week in and week out
66  Grecian art object
67  New Orleans ___
(Pelicans home)
68  Conjure up
69  Faux ___
70  Heron or egret
71   Casting assignments
DOWN
1   Tacks on
2   Part of an old phone
3   BLT layer
4  Use the Tab key
5   Material for a road
or roof
6  Blacken on the grill
7   Type of plum
tomato
8   Baker of song
9  Succeed
10  Certain twins name
11   Billy club
12   Prefix meaning
bone
13   Abbreviated
vacation goal
18   A bit unsettling
22  Watches the
waistline
24  Southwestern
watering hole
26  Spent
27  Hermit crustacean
28  The last Mrs. Charlie
Chaplin
29  Eveningwear for the
ladies
30  Exploration
organization
31   Second part
of assembly
instructions, perhaps
35  Boo-boo
37  Easily handled,
as a ship
38  Fitted by a
blacksmith
40  Seinfeld drove them
45  Owe ___ of gratitude
48  Capital of Turkey
50  Jose of tequila fame
51   Sick of it all
52  Verdi production
53  Vandalized a car,
in a way
57  The ___ of ones
existence
58  To distant spots
60  Graven image
61   Croupiers instrument
62  Places you may have
contacts
64  Crowlike bird,
for short
65  Musket add-on?
180S, YOU
COULDSAY
Answers: Call 1-900-988-8300, 99 cents a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-320-4280.
CROSSWORD
EDITEDTimothy Parker
BY MONNIE WAYNE
Fridays Answer
CROSSWORDS
ONYOUR PHONE
mobilegames.usatoday.com
9/27
9/30
DIFFICULTY RATING )))$$
Completethegridsothat every row, columnand3x3
boxcontains thenumbers 1 through9 (norepeats).
9/30
9/27
SUDOKU FUSION
ONYOUR PHONE
mobilegames.usatoday.com
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boxcontains thenumbers 1 through6(norepeats).
DIFFICULTY RATING )$$$$
6   7
7   4   5
8   4   3   5   9   6
4   2   6   8   1
1   6   9   4   7   5   2
8   1   5   6   4
7   5   6   1   9   3
6   4   3
5   7
2   3   5   1
6   5   3
4   6   3   1
6   3   1   5
3   1   2
1   4   3   6
9   5   8   2   7   4  6   1   3
7   4   2   3   1   6   5   8  9
1   6   3   8   5   9   4   7  2
2   8   1   9   3   5   7   4  6
3   9   6   1   4   7   8   2  5
5   7   4  6   2   8   3   9   1
4   2   7   5   6   1   9   3  8
6   3   9   4   8   2   1   5  7
8   1   5   7   9   3   2   6  4
5   3   2   4   1   6
1   4   6   2   3   5
4   5   1   3   6   2
6   2   3   5   4   1
3   1   5   6   2   4
2   6   4   1   5   3
Fridays Answers
SUDOKU
QUICKCROSS
By JohnWilmes
Fridays Answer
9/27
9/30
Golf ____
(Bob [?) Solo]
Golf bag item
Await judgment
Golf shot
Folk tales
Once ____ a Time
____ It Like Beckham
A   L   E   X
R   O   D   E
O   L   I   N
D   A   T   A
  QUICKCROSS
ONYOUR PHONE
mobilegames.usatoday.com
CONTACT
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
PLAYONLINE
PUZZLES.USATODAY.COM
UP &DOWNWORDS
By DavidL. Hoyt andRussell L. Hoyt
1. Not far enoughaway
2. It results inasmoothface
3. Trimwithablade
4. Not onthejob
5. Practice
6. Initially
7. Star Trek: ____ ____
Clues:   Fridays Answer
DOWNTON
ABBEY
ROAD
SIGN
LANGUAGE
BARRIER
ISLAND
ABBEY
ROAD
SIGN
LANGUAGE
BARRIER
ISLAND
CHAIN
TOO
9/30
H  J   C  H  A  S  M  V  R  N  E   X
K   I   H  O  R   S   E   E   I   L   N  L
Y   C   L   J   B   K   T   A  G  O  A  C
E   I   K   L   C  S   T   N  G  T   L   L
L   R   V  A  M N  A  A   I   G  A   I
L   C   J   A  U   I   T   P  N  J   V   F
A   L   H  O  R   C  A   I   X   K  O  F
V  E  M  T   O  C  K   B   L   U  F   F
WORDROUNDUP
By DavidL. Hoyt andJeff Knurek
Fridays answer: HOUR TOUR POUR SOUR YOUR / BOHEMIAN
SHOPPINGNORTHERNENTRANCE / WALRUS WHALE OTTER SEAL /
NATALIE PORTMAN/ NEXT
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Six land formations   
Four shapes   
Two mammals starting with H   
Two playing cards   
Hamilton, to Bermuda   
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DONT QUOTE ME
Rearrange the words to complete the quote. Author Richard Bach
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BUTTERFLY   CALLS   CATERPILLAR   END   MASTER   WHAT   WORLD
________ THE ______________ CALLS THE ________ OF THE
___________, THE ___________  ___________ A ______________.
9/30
Fridays Answer: Every manhas aright tohis opinion, but nomanhas aright tobewronginhis facts.
- BernardM. Baruch
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1-800-THE-LOST
Photo Has Been Age Progressed
Her teen idol status is undeniable.
Fans  wear  T-shirts  emblazoned
with  her  face  and  play  computer  and
video  games  that  carry  her  name.
Her  concerts  are  sold  out,  and  she
has admirers around the world copy-
ing her look.
Hatsune  Miku  is  a  pop  star,  no
doubt. Shes just not a real person.
Shes  a  virtual  idol,  says  Ian 
Condry,  a  Massachusetts  Institute  of
Technology  professor  who  lectures
on Hatsune Miku and is the author of
The  Soul  of  Anime. I  might  even  call
her a wiki-celebrity.
The  futuristic-looking  cartoon
character    a  16-year-old  with  pale
skin,  long  teal  pigtails  and  skimpy
school-girl  attire    was  born  in
2007  as  nothing  more  than  a  mascot
for  Crypton  Future  Medias  Hatsune
Miku  synthetic  voice  software.  The
application,  which  utilizes  Yamahas
vocaloid  technology,  allows  users  to
make  music  with  a  synthetic  singer
(sampled  from  the  voice  of  Japanese
actress Saki Fujita) who sounds like a
mix  of  Auto-Tuned  Britney  Spears
and high-pitched synth. 
From  there,  Miku  went  on  to  star
in a series of computer programs and
video  games,  two  of  which  (Hatsune
Miku  V3  English and  Project  Diva  F)
got  English-language  U.S.  releases  in
August.
Miku  has  become  a  hub  of  cre-
ative  culture  for  collaborations
among  artists  and  fans,  says  Crypton
marketing  director  Muraki  Kanae,
who  e-mailed  USA  TODAY  via  an
interpreter.
More  obsessive  followers  began
creating  art  in  her  likeness  (more
than  1  million  derivative  artworks
have  been  produced,  Crypton  says),
uploading  music  videos  (100,000-
plus fan-produced songs), writing fan
ction  and  marrying  the  cyber 
celeb in virtual weddings.
(Shes)  one  of  the  rst  big,  truly
global  phenomenons  based  on  wide-
spread  prevalence  of  video-capable
sites like YouTube, says Tom Looser,
a professor  of  Japanese  studies  who
covers  Hatsune  Miku  in  his  New
York  University  classes.  She  became
a crowd-sourced celeb.
This  all  sounds  about  right  for
Hello  Kitty-  and  anime-adoring 
Japanese  fans,  but  Americans  have
welcomed  Miku,  too.  Theyre  even
dressing  and  acting  like  her  via 
cosplay, short for costume play.
At the Anime USA convention this
month in Washington, D.C., plenty of
Hatsune Mikus were spotted dancing
around the convention center.
The  songs  are  just  amazing,
gushes  Miku  cosplayer  Alaisa  Cow-
herd, 16, of Virginia Beach. 
Condry  gets  the  appeal.  Its  as  if
you write a song for Lady Gaga, and
she actually sings it, he says.
Crypton  has  brought  Miku  to
life  in  concert,  like  virtual  band
Gorillaz  or  the  Tupac  Shakur
hologram  that  played  at  Coa-
chella  music  festival.  The  per-
forming Miku looks like a 3-D
gure  but  is  actually  a  two-
dimensional projection on a
curved  glass  screen,  Con-
dry  says.  (Crypton  wont
disclose technical details.)
An  estimated  85,000
people have seen the ener-
getic  avatar  sing  fan-
produced  songs  in  Hong
Kong,  Los  Angeles  and 
Yokohama,  Japan,  where
Miku performed last month
as  part  of  her  6th  birthday
celebration.
Shes also gotten into opera.
After  several  shows  throughout
Japan,  vocaloid  opera  The  End is
making  a  November  stop  at  the
Theatre du Chatelet in Paris. 
Louis  Vuitton  and  Marc  Jacobs
collaborated on Mikus outts for the
show,  which  is  themed  in  death 
music,   Kanae  says.  But  it  certainly
wont be Mikus funeral.
She  should  last  another  30  to  40
years, Condry predicts.
Hatsune 
Miku was
born in 
2007 as
a mascot 
for synthetic
voice software. 
Meet Hatsune Miku, worlds
rst crowd-sourced celeb 
The cartoon character
is a global phenomenon
Carly Mallenbaum
@thatgirlcarly
USATODAY
MUSIC
VOCALOID
VIDEO
LIFE.USA
TODAY.COM
See Hatsune
Miku in action.
KEI, CRYPTON
FUTURE MEDIA
Its as if you write a
song for Lady Gaga, and
she actually sings it. 
MIT professor Ian Condry
Daddy Knows Best
Channel: Blip.tv
The Internets worst dad (Steve Rannazzisi of
The League) is back in Season 2 of the comedy.
blip.tv/daddyknowsbest
Fresh Othe Boat
Channel: Vice.com
In Season 2, restaurateur Eddie Huang visits
global cities in transition. (Adult content)
vice.com/fresh-o-the-boat
Breaking Bad Good Riddance
Channel: Dog and Pony Showon YouTube
Green Day plus scenes fromve seasons of
Breaking Bad equals this moving retrospective.
youtube.com/dogandponyshowyoutub
TV ON THE WEB
ALL ONLINE TV
TVONTHEWEB.USATODAY.COM
Check out webisodes, Internet TV 
and online programming.
MARK SULLIVAN, WIREIMAGE
Fall Out Boy 
Patrick
Stump, left,
Joe Trohman,
Andy Hurley
and Pete
Wentz  
rises to the
Challenge.
REIGNITE AN ARCADE FIRE ON SNL
Leave it to NBCs Saturday Night Live
to put Breaking Bad, Obamacare, Arcade
Fire and Tina Fey in one place. Hulu has 
sketches from the season premiere, 
featuring a cameo appearance from 
Breaking Bads Aaron Paul. And the 
Creators Project on YouTube has the 
Arcade Fire special that aired after SNL.
youtube.com/creatorsproject
BANDS MAKE DEMANDS
Event producer Live Nation puts the back-
stage demands of rock stars front and center
in the new reality series The Rider Challenge.
Six teams of two compete to fulll the 
requests of an artist rider, a list of random
items requested by a band. The series, which
makes its debut today, takes place in ve cities
and features Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic
Zeroes, Fitz and the Tantrums, Kid Cudi, 
Fall Out Boy and The Lumineers.
riderchallengeseries.com
ALSO ONLINE
Yahoo Screen(screen.yahoo.com)
Newsmakers. 
Ann Romney is
interviewedby
Deborah Roberts.
The Yo Show.
The newAlice on
ABCs Once Upon 
aTime in Wonder-
land.
YouTube.com 
Breaking Bad Eggs
(Annoying Orange).
Meet Walter
Eggwhite andhis
associate Messy
Pinkman.
MYNOT SO 
subCONSCIOUS
(AsAmFilmLab).
What happens
when your sub-
conscious takes on
alife of its own.
Hulu.com
Larry King Now. Todays guest is actress
GinaGershon.
OUR TOP PICKS
Compiled by Daniel Hurwitz
Win Butler, left, and the members of
Arcade Fire perform Here Comes the
Night Time in a special that aired after
Saturday Night Lives season premiere.
TRAE PATTON, NBC
Christina Aguilera is back for another
spin or two as a judge on The Voice.
Robert Bianco
@BiancoRobert
USA TODAY
THE VOICE
NBC, 8 ET/PT
Whatever you thought of The Voices
Emmy win, you have to give the show
credit for at least two things. The rst
is the spinning-chair gimmick, which
may be the most entertaining twist 
in any game show. And the second is
disguising a game show as a singing
contest  because when it comes
right down to it, The Voice is closer to
The Hollywood Squares than Amer-
ican Idol. You watch for the stars in
the chairs; the contestants dont
matter, and the winners are forgot-
ten the moment theyre o-screen.
SLEEPY HOLLOW
FOX, 9 ET/PT
Pity the poor person trying to sell 
a home in Sleepy Hollow. Its bad
enough the town has been invaded 
by a demonic headless horseman and
a should-be-dead Revolutionary War
hero. Now its facing the Sandman, 
a Freddy Krueger-type character
whos invading the townsfolks
dreams and driving them crazy 
Abbie (Nicole Beharie) included. Her
only hope lies with Ichabod (Tom
Mison) and her institutionalized
sister (Lyndie Greenwood).
CASTLE
ABC, 10 ET/PT
In case you missed last weeks pre-
miere, Castles visit to D.C. has not
gone well: Hes been infected with 
a deadly military-grade toxin, and
Becket has only 24 hours to save him.
Well, actually, one hour: Hes due
back in New York next week. And
that counts as a spoiler only if you
really thought Castle was going to kill
Castle in the seasons second episode.
CRITICS
CORNER
BROWNIE HARRIS, FOX
Abbie (Nicole Beharie) and Ichabod
(Tom Mison) uncover a new evil soldier. 
6D LIFE
USA TODAY
MONDAY,   SEPTEMBER  30, 2013
WHAT TO WATCH
  8:00   8:30   9:00   9:30   10:00   10:30   11:00   11:30
NETWORK
ABC Dancing with the Stars. The couples perform; elimination. (N) (Live) (HD) Castle. Beckett races to find a stolen toxin. 
(N) (HD)
Local news. Kimmel. Danny 
DeVito. (N) (HD)
CBS HowI Met Your 
Mother. (N) (HD)
We Are Men. (Series 
premiere) (N) (HD)
2 Broke Girls. (N) (HD) Mom. Bonnie and 
Christy face a crisis. (N)
Hostages. Duncan threatens Ellen. (N) (HD) Local news. Letterman. Sean
Hayes; Sting. (N) (HD)
Fox Bones. Investigating a gang members death. 
(N) (HD)
Sleepy Hollow. Ichabod helps Abbie defeat 
the Sandman. (N) (HD)
Local news and programming.
NBC The Voice. Vocalists audition for the judges. (N) (HD) The Blacklist. An assassin known as The
Freelancer. (N) (HD)
Local news. Leno. Magic Johnson; 
Marjorie Johnson. (N) (HD)
PBS Antiques Roadshow. Poster for Joan Baez/
Bob Dylan concert. (HD)
Genealogy Roadshow. Secret World War II
activities. (N) (HD)
Independent Lens. (Season premiere) Journey lead singer Arnel
Pineda. (N) (HD)
Charlie Rose. (N) (HD)
CW iHeartradio Music Festival, Night 1. Performances include Robin Thicke. (N) (HD) Local programming.
MyNet Law& Order: Special Victims Unit. (HD) Law& Order: Special Victims Unit. (HD) Local programming.
ION Criminal Minds. Cannibalistic serial killer. (HD) Criminal Minds. Serial killer may target Garcia. Criminal Minds. Search for a serial killer. (HD) Criminal Minds. (HD)
Telemundo Dama y Obrero. (N) (HD) Marido en Alquiler. (N) (HD) Santa Diabla. (N) (HD) Al Rojo Vivo. (N) Decisiones.
Univision Porque el Amor Manda. (N) (HD) La Tempestad. (N) (HD) Qu Bonito Amor. (N) (HD) Primer Impacto Extra. Noticiero Uni.
CABLE
A&E Barter Kings. Trading up for a snowcat. (HD) Barter Kings. Vacation house on Catalina Island. Barter Kings. The guys make their own jingle. Barter Kings. (HD)
ABC Family Zookeeper. e (From 7:00) With Kevin James. 
(1 hr. 41 mins.) (2011) (HD)
Billy Madison. e A hotel magnates adult son goes back to grade school. With Adam 
Sandler, Darren McGavin. (1 hr. 29 mins.) (1995) (HD)
The 700 Club. (HD)
AMC Shooter. ee(From 7:00) A wounded sniper plots revenge against those who betrayed him. 
With Mark Wahlberg, Michael Pea. (2 hrs. 6 mins.) (2007) (HD)
Breaking Bad. The story concludes. (HD) Shooter. ee(Starts 11:15) With Mark 
Wahlberg. (2 hrs. 6 mins.) (2007) (HD)
Animal Planet Monsters Inside Me. (HD) Monsters Inside Me. (Season premiere) (N) Infested! Scorpions invade a newhome. Monsters Inside Me. (HD)
BBC America Top Gear. Highlights from the show. (HD) Top Gear. Highlights from the show. (HD) Top Gear. (HD) Top Gear. (HD)
BET Death at a Funeral. ee(From 7:30) With Keith David, Loretta Devine. (2010) (HD) Beauty Shop. eeWith Queen Latifah, Alicia Silverstone. (1 hr. 45 mins.) (2005)
Bravo NeNe/Wedding. The Real Housewives of NewJersey. Someone newgets involved. The Real Housewives of Miami. (N) (HD) What Happens. Real Housewives.
Cartoon Uncle Grandpa. (N) MAD. (N) (HD) King of the Hill. (HD) The Cleveland Show. Bobs Burgers. (HD) American Dad. (HD) Family Guy. (HD) Family Guy. (HD)
Cinemax The Five-Year Engagement. eee(From 7:50) An engaged couple trips up on the long walk 
down the aisle. With Jason Segel, Emily Blunt. (2 hrs. 4 mins.) (2012) (HD)
The Dark Knight Rises. eeeBatman faces a masked villain named Bane. With Christian
Bale, Anne Hathaway. (2 hrs. 45 mins.) (2012) (HD)
CMT Extreme Home Makeover. Extreme Home Makeover. Extreme Home Makeover. Cops Reloaded. Cops Reloaded.
CNBC The Costco Craze: Inside the. 60 Minutes on CNBC. American Greed. Mad Money. (HD)
CNN Anderson Cooper 360. (N) (HD) Piers Morgan Live. (N) (Live) (HD) AC 360 Later. (N) (HD) Erin Burnett OutFront. (HD)
Comedy Futurama. (HD) Futurama. (HD) South Park. (HD) South Park. (HD) Brickleberry. (HD) South Park. (HD) Daily Show. The Colbert Report.
Discovery Fast N Loud. The Bronco goes over-budget. Fast N Loud: Revved Up. (N) (HD) Turn & Burn. (N) (HD) Fast N Loud: Revved Up. (HD)
Disney Teen Beach Movie. With Ross Lynch, Maia Mitchell. (1 hr. 30 mins.) (2013) (HD) Dog with a Blog. Jessie. (HD) A.N.T. Farm. (HD) Jessie. (HD)
DisXD Crash & Bernstein. Kickin It. (N) (HD) Lab Rats. (N) (HD) Pac-Man and the Lab Rats. (HD) Lab Rats. (HD) Lab Rats. (HD) Lab Rats. (HD)
E! E! News. (N) (HD) Ryan Seacrest. Keeping Up with the Kardashians. (HD) Keeping Up with the Kardashians. (HD) Chelsea Lately. (N) E! News. (HD)
Encore Goldfinger. eeee Agent 007 fights Oddjob and a madmans Fort Knox scheme. With
Sean Connery, Gert Frobe. (1 hr. 52 mins.) (1964) 
Good Will Hunting. eee(Starts 9:50) A young Boston man must deal with his genius and 
emotions. With Matt Damon, Robin Williams. (2 hrs. 6 mins.) (1997) 
Fox News The OReilly Factor. (N) (HD) Hannity. (N) (HD) On the Record with Greta Van Susteren. (N) The OReilly Factor. (HD)
Food Diners, Drive. Diners, Drive. Diners, Drive. Diners, Drive. Diners, Drive. Diners, Drive. Diners, Drive. Diners, Drive.
FX Unstoppable. eeeTwo men try to stop a runaway train carrying toxic cargo. With Denzel Washington, Chris Pine. 
(1 hr. 38 mins.) (2010) (HD)
Unstoppable. eee(Starts 10:33) Two men try to stop a runaway 
train carrying toxic cargo. With Denzel Washington. (2010) (HD)
Gala El Chavo. Familia Peluche. Familia Peluche. Familia Peluche. Familia Peluche. Los Supergenios. Noticiero Con Joaquin.
GSN Family Feud. Family Feud. Family Feud. Family Feud. Family Feud. Family Feud. Family Feud. Family Feud.
Hallmark Your Love Never Fails. eeeWith Elisa Donovan, Kirstin Dorn. (2011) (HD) Frasier. Frasier. Frasier. Frasier.
HBO Parental Guidance. ee(From 7:15) With Billy 
Crystal. (1 hr. 44 mins.) (2012) (HD)
Prometheus. eeeExplorers wage a terrifying battle to save mankinds future. With Noomi
Rapace, Michael Fassbender. (2 hrs. 3 mins.) (2012) (HD)
Eastbound & Down. 
(HD)
Boxing.
HGTV Love It or List It. (HD) Love It or List It. (N) (HD) House Hunters. (N) Hunters Intl. Love It or List It. Holly and Peter. (HD)
History Ancient Aliens. Extraterrestrial link to pyramids. Ancient Aliens. (HD) Ancient Aliens. The three pyramids of Giza. Ancient Aliens. Gigantic lines extend for miles.
HLN Nancy Grace. (N) Dr. Drewon Call. (N) HLN After Dark. (N) Showbiz Tonight. (HD)
ID 20/20 on ID. A teenage pact leads to arson. (N) 20/20 on ID. (N) (HD) Twisted. Five bodies found in a pool. (N) (HD) 20/20 on ID. A teenage pact leads to arson.
IFC The Hills Have Eyes 2. e With Michael McMillian, Jessica Stroup. (2007) (HD) House of 1000 Corpses. eWith Sid Haig, Bill Moseley. (1 hr. 28 mins.) (2003) (HD)
Lifetime Hocus Pocus. eeWith Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker. (1993) (HD) Because I Said So. e With Diane Keaton, Mandy Moore. (1 hr. 49 mins.) (2007) (HD)
Lifetime Movie A Child Lost Forever. With Beverly DAngelo, Michael McGrady. (1 hr. 37 mins.) (1992) Baby Snatcher. eeWith Veronica Hamel, Nancy McKeon. (1992) (HD)
Movie Channel Behind the Burly Q. ee Behind-the-scenes stories tell of burlesque
performers. (1 hr. 37 mins.) (2010) (HD)
Bel Ami. ee (Starts 9:40) A man seduces his way up the ladder of Parisian society. With Rob-
ert Pattinson, Uma Thurman. (1 hr. 42 mins.) (2012) (HD)
Public Sex. e(2009) 
(HD)
MSNBC All In with Chris Hayes. (N) (HD) The Rachel MaddowShow. (N) (HD) The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell. (N) All In with Chris Hayes. (HD)
MTV Teen Mom3. Brittney goes on a road trip. Teen Mom3. Briana makes a decision. (HD) Teen Mom3. Briana faces Devoin in court. (N) (HD) Teen Mom3. (HD)
Nat. Geo. Alaska State Troopers. (HD) Alaska State Troopers. (HD) Alaska State Troopers. (HD) Alaska State Troopers. (HD)
Nick AwesomenessTV. (N) Full House. Full House. Full House. The Nanny. The Nanny. Friends. Friends.
OWN Dateline on OWN. Internet con artists. (HD) Dateline on OWN. (HD) Dateline on OWN. (HD) Dateline on OWN. Internet con artists. (HD)
Oxygen Snapped. A wife is the target of a killer. Snapped. An end to a husbands cheating. Snapped. Snapped. A lottery winner goes missing.
Science NASAs Unexplained Files. (HD) Are We Alone? Explorers search for clues to whether alien life exists in the solar system. (HD) NASAs Unexplained Files. (HD)
Showtime Homeland. Nick Brody remains at large. (HD) Masters of Sex. A secret study of human
sexuality. (HD)
Homeland. Nick Brody remains at large. (HD) Masters of Sex. A secret study of human
sexuality. (HD)
Spike Cops. (HD) Cops. (HD) Cops. (HD) Cops. (HD) Cops. (HD) Cops. (HD) Cops. (HD) Cops. (HD)
Starz The Patriot. eee (From 6:10) (2000)  Underworld: Awakening. eeWith Kate Beckinsale. (2012)  Reindeer Games. ee(Starts 10:35) With Ben Affleck. (2000) 
Sundance The Hurt Locker. eeeMembers of an elite bomb squad pull hazardous duty in Iraq. With Jeremy Renner. (2 hrs. 7 mins.) (2008) (HD) Breaking Bad. (HD)
Syfy Drive Angry. ee (From 7:00) (2011) (HD) Ghost Rider. ee A motorcycle stuntman is a supernatural agent of vengeance. With Nicolas Cage. (2007) (HD) The Covenant. e
TBS The Big Bang Theory.
(HD)
The Big Bang Theory.
(HD)
The Big Bang Theory.
(HD)
The Big Bang Theory.
(HD)
The Big Bang Theory.
(HD)
The Big Bang Theory.
(HD)
Conan. Demi Lovato; J.B. Smoove; Moby. 
(N) (HD)
TCM Stagecoach. eeee Travelers embark on a perilous trip across the Southwest. With John
Wayne, Claire Trevor. (1 hr. 36 mins.) (1939)
The Story of Film: An Odyssey. War makes 
cinema more daring. (N)
Citizen Kane. eeee (Starts 11:15) With Or-
son Welles, Joseph Cotten. (1941)
TLC Long Island MediumOn the Road. (HD) Long Island MediumOn the Road. (HD) Long Island MediumOn the Road. (HD) Long Island MediumOn the Road. (HD)
TNT Castle. A DJ is murdered. (HD) Castle. Alexis starts a video blog. (HD) Major Crimes. A producer rides along with
Sanchez. (HD)
CSI: NY. A private school student is murdered.
(HD)
Travel Bizarre Foods America. (HD) Bizarre Foods America. (HD) Hotel Impossible. (N) (HD) Hotel Impossible. (HD)
TruTV Lizard Lick Towing. Lizard Lick Towing. Lizard Lick Towing. Lizard Lick Towing. Lizard Lick Towing. Lizard Lick Towing. All Worked Up. (HD) All Worked Up. (HD)
TV Land Andy Griffith Show. Andy Griffith. Everybody/Raymond. Everybody/Raymond. Friends. (HD) Friends. (HD) The King of Queens. The King of Queens.
USA WWE Mon. Night Football. RAW: CMPunk looks to avenge Rybacks sinister attack. (N) (HD) (Live) Fast Five. ee (Starts 11:05) With Vin Diesel,
Paul Walker. (2011) (HD)
VH1 Basketball Wives. (N) (HD) T.I. and Tiny. Black Ink Crew. Dutchess covers a tattoo. (N) Basketball Wives. (HD) T.I. and Tiny.
WE CSI: Miami. CSI: Miami. The team investigates two murders. CSI: Miami. A criminal takes Natalia hostage. CSI: Miami. Horatio protects a martial artist.
WEA Heavy Metal Monsters. Heavy Metal Monsters. Heavy Metal Monsters. Heavy Metal Monsters. Weather Center Live. (N) (HD) Heavy Metal Monsters. Heavy Metal Monsters.
WGN America Americas Funniest Home Videos. Parks and Recreation. Parks and Recreation. WGN News at Nine. (N) (HD) HowI Met/Mother. Rules of Engagement.
SPORTS NETWORKS
ESPN Mon. Night Football. NFL Football: Miami Dolphins at NewOrleans Saints. (N) (HD) (Live) SportsCenter. (N)
ESPN2 SEC Storied. (HD) 30 for 30. Shorts (N) E:60. (N) (HD) Baseball Tonight. (N) (HD) (Live) SportsCenter. (N) Olbermann. (N) (Live)
ESPNU College Football: Teams TBA. (HD) BCS Countdown. (HD)
FS1 Fox Sports 1 on 1. (N) Being. (HD) Boxing: Sadam Ali vs. Jay Krupp. Ali battles Krupp in the main event. From NewYork. (N) Fox Sports Live. (N) (HD) (Live)
Golf Live Fromthe Presidents Cup. (HD) Live Fromthe Presidents Cup. (HD) Live Fromthe Presidents Cup. (HD) Inside the PGA Tour. Learning Center.
NBA NBA Media Day: Highlights. NBA Rooks. NBA Rooks: Passing. NBA Media Day: Highlights. NBA Media Day: Highlights.
NBCSports Poker After Dark. (HD) Poker After Dark. (HD) Poker After Dark. (HD) Poker After Dark. (HD)
NFLN NFL Total Access. (N) NFL GameDay Final. (HD) NFL GameDay Final. (HD) NFL Total Access. (N)
EXCELLENT   
GOOD 
FAIR 
POOR 
MOVIES  NEWS  SPORTS
Eastern Time
may vary insomecities.
(N) Newepisode.
(HD) High-definition
where available. 
Ratings
TVY Childrenof all ages
TVYChildrenover 
TVGAll audience
TVPGParental guidance suggested
TVInappropriate for under 
TVMA Mature Audience
FV Fantasy Violence
V Violence
S Sexual situations
L CoarseLanguage
D Suggestive dialogue
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FRANK OCKENFELS, AMC
Michonne (Danai
Gurira) is ready
for Deads fourth
season; are you?
NEW ON:
Netix
The Walking Dead: Season 3 (AMC)
Michonne and her katana sword are back
Oct. 13. You have some time to catch up on
Season 3.
666 Park Avenue (ABC)
This short-lived series starred Losts Terry
OQuinn as NewYorks creepiest landlord.
Undercover Boss: Seasons 1-3 (CBS)
Howis it that no worker on this showever
suspects something might be up with the
newguy in the wig with the camera crew?
Compiled by Jayme Deerwester
TONIGHT ON TV