RICHMOND, Va. -- Ahmad Caver had 13 points, seven rebounds and five assists, Zoran Talley scored 12 points and OId Dominion beat Richmond 64-61 on Monday night.ODU (2-0) snapped a 10-game road losing streak against the Spiders.Caver made a layup and then, after his steal from Jones, fed Brandan Stith for a dunk that put Old Dominion up 60-59 with 3:49 to play. Neither team made a field goal the rest of the way, combining to go 0-for-7 -- with Richmond missing its last five shots including a half-court heave by ShawnDre Jones as time expired.The Monarchs made 4 of 6 foul shots, including 3 of 4 by Talley in the final 1:44, to seal it.A 3-pointer by Jordan Baker capped a 16-0 Old Dominion run to open the game and the Monarchs led 22-4 with 9:44 left in the half. ShawnDre Jones scored nine points during a 23-9 spurt to close the half that pulled Richmond (1-1) within four at the break.Jones led Richmond with 23 points. T.J. Cline added 18 with six rebounds and seven assists. Wholesale Shoes NZ . LOUIS -- St. Shoes NZ 2020 . Bryzgalov stopped 25 shots on Saturday in the Oklahoma City Barons 4-1 victory over the Abbotsford Heat. The Oilers signed Bryzgalov to a one-year $2 million contract last Friday after shedding payroll by dealing defenceman Ladislav Smid to the Flames. https://www.shoesnzonline.com/ . It was Kerbers third final of the year after losing to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova of Russia in Monterrey in April and to Petra Kvitova of Czech Republic in Tokyo two weeks ago. The 10th-ranked German improved her record in finals to 3-5. Shoes NZ Nike . -- Edmontons Val Sweeting is two wins away from a trip to Winnipeg to play in Canadas Road of the Rings in December. Shoes NZ Online .com) - The Pittsburgh Penguins placed forward James Neal on injured reserve Tuesday. I think we can all agree: Its been a long week. A long month. A long year.Obfuscation. Name-calling. Divisiveness. Anger.Wait: Im talking about the sidelines of your kids sports events. What are you thinking of?My favorite campaign ad of the year reflects a sentiment that I think we can all get behind:Dare to chill.Kudos to the Colorado chapter of the Positive Coaching Alliance for producing a pithy, hilarious and -- yes -- personally resonant spot that cuts to the heart of youth sports today.All parents have been there in some form or another: You openly gripe about the reffing. (Or worse: Other kids!) You shout out instructions to your kid on the court from the bleachers. (Or worse: Other kids!) You undermine the coach with chatter on the ride home that focuses on playing time or stats or strategies. (Or worse: Other kids!)What makes Dare to Chill (or, if youre on social media, #DareToChill) so poignant is that it indeed feels like a dare to suppress your well-intentioned (if inappropriate) inclinations to externalize your anxieties about your kids, your hopes and dreams or maybe even your view of the state of the world, in the form of unconstructive weekend chirping from the bleachers or sidelines.The easy thing to do is to give in to your impulse to shout out anything beyond Great effort! or Wow, do I love to watch you play! Your hard-earned high school varsity letter or extensive hours logged watching pros play on TV in whatever-sport-your-young-kid-now-plays totally qqualifies you as an expert -- I encourage you to volunteer to coach a rec-league team made up of kids from your local grade-school or neighborhood!But if youre not the coach, the best thing you can do for your kid is just .dddddddddddd.. to chill.Here is your challenge for the next two weeks, and it dovetails nicely with the zeitgeisty Mannequin Challenge that everyones obsessing over right now:Pick one of your kids games this weekend and do your best mannequin impression: Sit quietly. No yelling. No physical histrionics. Oh, sure, you can clap and cheer. You can shout Good hustle! or Way to work hard! But otherwise? Ignore every impulse you have to say anything else, from the moment your kid starts to collect gear from the closet to the car ride over to the field/gym to the warm-ups to the game itself to after the game (be sure they thank the coach and refs!) to the ride home. Say nothing except So fun to watch you play!If the kid wants to obsess over the outcome without your prompting, fine. You dont need to pile on. If -- more likely -- they want to leave it behind and dive back into Xbox or college football or whatever: Fine. Let it go. Dare to chill. See what happens next.Dan Shanoff writes about parenting for espnW. You can connect with him on Twitter at @danshanoff or follow his own struggles with chilling out on Instagram at @danshanoff. ' ' '