SAN FRANCISCO -- Former first-round draft picks will duel on the mound for the second consecutive game Saturday night when the Baltimore Orioles and San Francisco Giants continue their interleague series.Orioles right-hander Kevin Gausman, the No. 4 overall pick of the 2012 draft, and Giants left-hander Madison Bumgarner, who went 10th overall in 2007, will square off where Baltimores Dylan Bundy (fourth overall, 2011) got the better of San Franciscos Matt Cain (25th overall, 2002) in the series opener Friday.Gausman has never faced the Giants in his four-year major league career, and his early ventures into interleague play generally have not been pleasant. Hes 1-4 with a 5.22 ERA in seven starts against National League competition.Only five pitchers who have made at least seven starts have a worse interleague record over that stretch.Gausman got a no-decision in his only previous interleague start this season. He was roughed up for four runs on eight hits over five innings in a 6-4 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on July 6.The 25-year-old has allowed two or fewer runs in four of five games against American League competition since then, although he has a losing record (2-3) to show for it.He will be looking to follow in the footsteps of fellow elite prospect Bundy, who limited the struggling Giants to just three hits and one run in 5 2/3 innings in the series opener.The Giants have alternated wins and losses in their last seven games, totaling just four runs in the four losses.Good start to the series, Orioles manager Buck Showalter assessed. Gutty effort by Dylan. He battled tonight, gave us a chance to win.Bumgarner, meanwhile, will be seeking to extend his streak of consecutive interleague starts without a loss to six. Hes 1-0 in four starts against AL teams this season, having allowed more than two runs in a game just once.The last time Bumgarner lost an interleague game was more than a year ago -- July 31, 2015 at Texas.Hes never faced the Orioles in his eight-year career thats included 20 interleague starts. The only other teams Bumgarner has never pitched against are the Chicago White Sox and Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.Bumgarner hasnt won since July 10, a stretch of five games in which hes allowed six home runs.The series matches the major league leader in homers (the Orioles, with 174) against the NL leader in homers allowed since the All-Star break (the Giants, with 37 in 25 games).Orioles slugger Mark Trumbo added to both those totals in the series opener Friday, taking Cain deep for his 33rd home run of the season. First baseman Chris Davis also homered, his 24th.Trumbo had a home run against Bumgarner last season as a member of the Arizona Diamondbacks.Giants catcher Buster Posey noted after the loss that he knows what to expect from Bumgarner. The question is: Will the San Francisco offense do enough to support him?We have the ability to get on a good streak. Thats the way we got to look at it, he noted. We have to look and say tomorrow is the day we get it going. Clearance Shoes Online Australia . Coach Tom Thibodeau says the former MVP will probably start travelling with the team in the next few weeks. Rose tore the meniscus in his right knee at Portland in November and was ruled out for the remainder of the season by the Bulls. Cheap Shoes Online Australia . Bryant, who signed a five-year, $34 million contract as a free agent with Cleveland in March, reported symptoms on Monday morning, a team spokesman said. http://www.shoescheapaustralia.com/ . -- If Henry Burris has his way, he will be the starting quarterback to lead the Hamilton Tiger-Cats back to the Grey Cup next year. Cheap Shoes Australia Free Shipping . The giant slalom world champion slipped during her first run in the morning, landing on her back and then twisting forward before getting her leg caught in the protective material on the side of the slope. Wholesale Shoes Australia . Mitch Holmberg added a goal and three assists. Connor Chartier also scored for the Chiefs (3-0-0). Luke Harrison spoiled Garrett Hughsons shutout bid with a power-play goal at 13:17 of the third period. The Spokane goaltender finished with 28 saves, including a Brandon Fushimi penalty shot in the second period that would have tied the game 1-1. A roundup of the past weeks notable boxing results from around the world:Saturday at Oakland, Calif.Andre Ward W12 Alexander Brand - Fight RecapLight heavyweight Scores: 120-108 (three times) Records: Ward (30-0, 15 KO); Brand (25-2, 19 KOs)Rafaels remarks: This was a downright horrible fight and an utter waste of HBOs money and the time of anyone who sat through the abomination. But at least the result, a completely dominant Ward win, set the stage for the big one on Nov. 19, a much-anticipated HBO PPV showdown between former super middleweight world champion Ward and unified light heavyweight titleholder Sergey Kovalev, who was at ringside. When the glorified sparring session was over Kovalev (30-0-1, 26 KOs), climbed into the ring for a joint interview with Ward in which they formally announced a fight that has been on the books for months -- but only as long as they each won their interim fights, which they did.Ward, 32, of Oakland, in his second fight since moving up to 175 pounds in search of another world title, put on a clinic against Brand, who has a good chin and was simply determined to go the distance. Brand, 39, never tried to win and spent virtually the entire fight holding, grabbing and backing up while missing most of the punches he threw from awkward angles. But enough about this egregious mismatch. Bring on the real fight, Kovalev-Ward, the winner of which will probably be viewed by many as the No. 1 fighter in the world pound for pound.Saturday at Tucson, Ariz.Juan Diaz TKO8 Cesar VazquezLightweight Records: Diaz (42-4, 21 KOs); Vazquez (27-4, 16 KOs)Rafaels remarks: The Baby Bull Diaz, 32, of Houston, unified three lightweight world titles during his 2004 to 2008 reign but retired in 2010 before launching a comeback in 2013 and winning five fights in a row to set him up for another world title fight. But Diaz suffered a torn left rotator cuff in training and his title fight was canceled. He wound up out of the ring for 18 months before returning for a knockout win in March and dominated Vazquez, 30, of Mexico, in the main event of Top Ranks Solo Boxeo Tecate card on UniMas.As usual, Diaz was extremely energetic and aggressive as he stalked Vazquez the entire fight and laid a beating on him with his non-stop punch output. Time and again Diaz rocked him with left hooks to the head before referee Tony Zaino stepped in at 2 minutes, 9 seconds of the eighth round. Top Rank said Diazs next outing will be a major step up, perhaps a title eliminator and possibly even a title shot.In a stunning result on the undercard, light heavyweight prospect Egor Mekhontsev (12-0-1, 8 KOs), a 2012 Olympic gold medalist from Russia, was held to an eight-round draw by fellow southpaw Alexander Johnson (16-4-1, 7 KOs), 34, of Oxon Hill, Maryland, who entered the fight having lost three of his previous four bouts. One judge scored the fight 78-74 for Mekhontsev but the other two each had it 76-76.Saturday at MiamiYunieski Gonzalez TKO1 Jackson JuniorLight heavyweight Records: Gonzalez (17-2, 13 KOs); Junior (21-7, 19 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Gonzalez made a big splash 13 months ago when he got a shot on HBO to face former light heavyweight champion Jean Pascal and most thought he won their terrific fight. But Pascal got the dubious decision. Then Gonzalez lost again, dropping a majority decision to contender Vyacheslav Shabranskyy in December. Making his return, Gonzalez, 31, a Cuban defector fighting out of Miami, decimated Junior, 30, of Brazil, who dropped to 3-4 in his last seven bouts. Gonzalez, working with new trainer Pedro Diaz for the firsst time, dropped Junior three times before the carnage was waved off.ddddddddddddFriday at Temecula, Calif.Rob Bravo Brant TKO3 Chris FitzpatrickMiddleweight Records: Brant (21-0, 14 KOs); Fitzpatrick (15-5, 6 KOs)Rafaels remarks: Brant, 25, of Saint Paul, Minnesota, continued his ascent in the middleweight division. The former amateur standout is a fun fighter to watch and entertained as he took apart Fitzpatrick, who is trained by his wife Cynthia, the way he was expected to in the main event of the promoter Greg Cohens CBS Sports Net-televised card.Brant took it to Fitzpatrick, 29, of Columbia, South Carolina, from the opening bell but he was patient in doing so. His jab was outstanding and then he dropped Fitzpatrick, who lost his third fight in a row. He hurt him with a right uppercut and then hammered him with a right hand that nearly knocked him out of the ring in the second round. In the third round, Brant landed a perfect left hook to the chin and Fitzpatrick went down again. He barely beat the count but referee Edward Hernandez Sr. did not think he was in any condition to go on and waved off the fight at 1 minute, 18 seconds. Brant appears to have a bright future and called out for a shot at secondary titleholder Daniel Jacobs.Friday at PhiladelphiaDavid Benavidez TKO10 Denis DouglinSuper middleweight Records: Benavidez (16-0, 15 KOs); Douglin (20-5, 13 KOs)Rafaels remarks: In his first scheduled 10-round fight and first main event, Benavidez, an exciting 19-year-old puncher from Phoenix, headlined the Premier Boxing Champions card on ESPN and did what was expected in a solid step up in competition as he took out Douglin, 28, of Marlboro, New Jersey. Douglin, who is trained by his mother Saphya (which earned him the nickname Mommas Boy), was aggressive to start and won the first round on all three scorecards and also looked good in the second round. But then Benavidez, the younger brother of welterweight contender Jose Benavidez Jr., began to assert himself.By the sixth round he was hurting Douglin to the head and body and late in the ninth round he landed several uppercuts before a left one flush on the chin deposited him on the canvas. In the 10th round, Benavidez was all over a still-shaky Douglin. He unleashed a flurry of punches and had him sinking into the ropes when referee Gary Rosato stepped in to stop the fight 35 seconds into the final round. This was a very good performance from a young prospect many think will eventually win a world title.Alejandro Luna W10 Naim NelsonWelterweight Scores: 99-91, 98-92, 97-93 Records: Luna (21-0, 15 KOs); Nelson (13-2, 1 KO)Rafaels remarks: Luna, 24, of Bellflower, California, was supposed to fight Stephen Ormond (21-2, 11 KOs), 33, of Ireland, in the PBC on ESPN co-feature. But Ormond came to the weigh-in at 139.7 pounds for a fight contracted at 135. He was given two hours to drop at least some of the weight but returned to the scale a whopping 146.4! He was tossed from the card and Nelson, 26, of Philadelphia, who was scheduled to fight on the untelevised undercard, moved into the slot on 24 hours notice. They agreed to fight at a catch weight of 144 pounds, putting the naturally smaller Luna at a disadvantage but Luna, a solid prospect, pounded out the clear decision under very trying circumstances. Lunas left eye was swollen by the end of the third round, but he opened a cut on Nelsons forehead in the seventh round and maintained control of the bout. ' ' '