CHARLESTON, S.C. -- Michael Buchanan had 17 points and 14 rebounds and South Carolina Upstate outscored Campbell 8-1 in overtime for an 80-73 win on Friday at the Holy City Hoops Classic.The Spartans went 8 of 11 from the line in overtime while the Camels were just 1 of 4. Campbell also missed all six field goal attempts and had two turnovers.Ramel Thompkins opened the overtime making 2 of 3 from the line and finished with 13 points for SC Upstate (4-4). Malik Moore was 4 of 4 from the line in OT and scored 12 points and Philip Whittington went 5 of 7 from the field for 12 points.Chris Clemons led Campbell (3-4) with 26 points but only shot 9 of 25. He missed a long 3 at the end of regulation after Mike Cunningham had tied the game at 72 with 13 seconds left.Neither team led by more than seven, with Upstates lead coming in overtime. There were 10 ties and 10 lead changes. Calvin Murphy Jersey . Ferrer, trying to win his fourth title on Mexican soil, will next play South Africas Kevin Anderson, who eliminated American Sam Querrey,7-6 (2), 6-4. Also Wednesday, Gilles Simon (6) of France beat Donald Young of the United States 6-4, 6-3, Ukraines Alexandr Dolgopolov downed Frenchman Jeremy Chardy 6-3, 6-4 and Croatias Ivo Karlovic defeated Dudi Sela of Israel 7-6 (4), 6-2. Buck Johnson Jersey . Vaives lawyer Trevor Whiffen claims the former 50-goal man wasnt provided with a copy of the claim beforehand and that he would not have agreed to the allegations made against the NHL had he been asked to review its contents. https://www.cheaprocketsonline.com/ . The 28-year-old from Calgary matched his career best after missing just one shot in his two rounds of shooting in the mens 10-kilometre sprint competition. Smith finished in 23 minutes 15. Wholesale Rockets Jerseys . Spiller left Week 3s 27-20 loss to the New York Jets with a thigh injury, but fully practiced with the team all week and expects to be ready to go on Sunday. Matt Maloney Jersey . Reigning world champion Eve Muirhead of Scotland opened with a 12-2 rout of Winnipegs Jennifer Jones in a battle of teams bound for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Last year, when announcing the ECBs decision to change the coin toss before the start of Championship matches, Peter Wright, chairman of the cricket committee, set out the thinking behind the move: By giving the away team the option of bowling first, we hope the home side will be encouraged to produce the best possible four-day pitch. That will be good for cricket in general, and not only for spinners.So, with the dust settling on a four-day finale to remember at Lords, has the new regulation succeeded? Did better pitches help to rebalance the game, allowing English spinners to gain more traction?Leaving aside the sight of Alex Lees and Adam Lyth serving up a few declaration lobs against eventual champions Middlesex on Sky TV on the final day of the season (probably not the sort of exposure the ECB had in mind), there were certainly some encouraging signs.Speaking earlier in the month, Andrew Strauss, Englands director of cricket and a member of the ECBs cricket committee, indicated that the governing body has been satisfied by the trial.Anecdotally its been a really important step forward, Strauss said. Weve played on better pitches, more games have gone to the fourth day, the bowlers who have done well are those more likely to play international cricket, there have been different challenges on batsmen and spinners have bowled more overs.From an anecdotal point of view I think its achieved most of the objectives we set out. Ive always thought we can judge it too soon. But the noises are encouraging, and once people have got their heads round the idea, in my opinion, it has nudged the right behaviour.In Division One, the effect was marked by two spinners - Warwickshires Jeetan Patel and Somersets Jack Leach - topping the wicket-takers list. Not since 2009, when Danish Kaneria and James Tredwell led the way in Division Two, were the two most successful Championship bowlers both purveyors of spin.Patel, a vastly experienced international, has been recalled by New Zealand on the back of his good form and was already regarded as the best spinner in the county game, having taken 50-plus wickets in each of the past five seasons, although this was still his best return; Leach on the other hand enjoyed a breakthrough year as Somerset tailored their surfaces to suit the slow left-armer as the summer progressed and they narrowly missed out on a first title.Middlesex also benefited, eventually. Despite drawing seven of their first eight games and not winning at Lords until August, they came through strongly in the second half of the season and held off Yorkshire and Somerset in a taut last round. Ollie Rayners 51 wickets (another personal best) made him a vital component of their attack.It has made a difference, Middlesexs director of cricket, Angus Fraser, said. If its design was to get spinners more involved then its been a success because you just have to look at the top wicket-takers in the country.This time last year, Rayner was writing for ESPNcricinfo on the difficulties of bowling spin in England. Given greater responsibility and more overs - 444 compared to 273 in 2015 - he has risen impressively to the challenge, though ultimately neither he nor Leach won inclusion for Englands subcontinental challenges this winter.Fraser is also an England selector and, as well as having greater options to discuss - Moeen Ali, Adil Rashid, Zafar Ansari and the 38-year-old Gareth Batty were the slow bowlers selected for next months tour of Bangladesh - he suggested cricket is more complete when spin plays its full part. He was in no doubt about the strides that Rayner has made.The pitches have meant, one: hes bowled more overs, two: hes been in the game and three: hes grown in confidence, Fraser said. So the fact hes been used as a potent weapon rather than just a stopgap has given him far more confidence, and extra overs, so therefore hes got into rhythm and the whole things opened up for him because of it. So its been hugely positive for spinners in that respect.The fact is, hes done a bloody good job, because on pitches that werent offering a great deal, as in the past hes offered us control, but then on the surfaces when youd expect him to come to the front, he has done. We would have won two or three more matches but for weather and a lot of that would have been on Ollie.While Middlesex would have liked to see a bit more pace and carry in the surfaces at Lords - they have discussions with thhe MCC and groundsman Mick Hunt at the start of each year - the team they pipped to top spot went down a different route.dddddddddddd Somerset also won one and drew seven of their opening eight matches; they then lost on a green Taunton pitch that improved to the extent that Middlesex chased 302 in 46 overs. After that, in the words of their captain, Chris Rogers, Somerset were forced to try the spin path and it worked.Rogers, who has suggested a similar tweak to the toss rules could work in Australia, admitted that the change of tactics did not play to his strengths, as an opening batsman with huge experience against the new ball nibbling around in damp conditions, but said his own game - batting and as a captain - had improved in the process.Initially it didnt overly help, there were so many draws and a lot of sides were struggling to find the best ways to create results, he said. But certainly towards the back end of the year, there were a lot more results and teams worked things out a bit more - for instance we made the pitches spin and sometimes those games were over very quickly but at least it was a contest.If anything its been a new learning skill for a lot of county cricketers, who havent had to face the prospect of serious spin before, and facing so many overs of spin, so in many respects I think its been good for the English game. He did sound one note of caution, however: My only worry is whether you wont find as many high-quality seam bowlers coming through that England have always seemed to be quite proud of, and even fewer opening batsmen who learn the skills to be able to play the swinging and seaming new ball. But I do think in the end its for the benefit of English cricket.The full picture will take time - perhaps several seasons - to come to light. While spin became an instrumental factor in Division One, the rule change had a negligible effect in the second tier, where the leading slow bowler was Northamptonshires Rob Keogh, with 31. That more than doubled the number of first-class wickets Keogh, a top-order batsman, had taken in his career.By one measure, Division Two spinners were actually entrusted less. While the number of overs of spin delivered in Division One rose from 4395 in 2015 to 6231 this year, in Division Two it dropped from 4295 overs to 3581.This could have been down to a number of factors. There were few experienced spinners beyond Tredwell at Kent operating in the second division, so clubs were inevitably less inclined to set up that way; if young talent is not (yet) there, it will take time to bring through. Another consideration may be that, with only one team going up, there was greater pressure to get results. Essex, the Division Two winners, relied heavily on their seam-bowling strengths but head coach, Chris Silverwood, was positive that better pitches had been good for Essex, and the game in general.I think it will help everybody produce better cricketers, Silverwood said. Playing in good conditions, youve got to bowl well to get your wickets but, equally, youve got to bat well to get your runs. To me, the blend itself will produce better cricketers, full stop, and possibly bring spin back into the game.One inarguable statistic was that the number of results dropped from 93 to 71, although if, as Strauss suggests, the priority is to produce battle-hardened players ready for the drawn-out rigours of Test cricket, that need not be a bad thing.There may well be dissenters out there, though. Yorkshires captain, Andrew Gale, spoke against the move when it was announced and the change possibly contributed to his team missing out on a third straight title, having suffered rare defeats at Headingley and Scarborough (only one opponent, Surrey, opted not to insert Yorkshire on their own patch). Others grumbled darkly about Somerset switching to turners - their victory over Warwickshire saw 21 wickets fall on the opening day - to fuel an unexpected Championship bid.Fraser has even suggested taking the rule change a step further. You wonder whether the toss should be taken away completely from the home side, so then you avoid any of those contentious situations, he said.It is perhaps too early to tell if the fortunes of English spin are on the turn but, either way, the flip of a coin has never been so hotly discussed. ' ' '