VESTAL, N.Y. -- J.C. Show scored 23 points, including a late 3-pointer that pushed the lead to eight points with 90 seconds left, to lead Binghamton to a 68-62 win over Cornell in the season opener Friday night.The Bearcats trailed by three at the break but took the lead on Shows jumper with 18:32 remaining.Matt Morgan hit a 3-pointer with 3:13 left to cut the Binghamton lead to four, 60-56, but the Big Red could get no closer. Show hit a pair of free throws with 2:26 left to make it 62-56, and then drilled a trey with 1:29 remaining to make it 65-57.Dusan Perovic added 14 points for Binghamton, which shot a collective 23 of 58 from the field (39.7 percent) and knocked down 7 of 19 from beyond the arc.Morgan finished with 16 points to lead Cornell. New Balance Scontate .In my heart and mind Im competing for India, luge competitor Shiva Keshavan told The Associated Press in an email interview. Every day Im flooded with messages from Indians all over the world telling me they are supporting me. New Balance In Offerta . How great will be revealed in the next couple of days at the board of governors meeting in Pebble Beach, Calif. http://www.newbalanceoutlet.it/ . Pettersen, winner of last years Evian Championships, had nine birdies and three bogeys, holding off a series of challengers led by Marion Ricordeau of France. The second-ranked Norwegian made her season debut after missing the LPGA Tours opening event last month in the Bahamas because of a shoulder injury. New Balance Italia Negozi . -- Hunter Smith scored the winner with just 12 seconds remaining in the third period as the Oshawa Generals edged the host Sarnia Sting 5-4 on Friday in Ontario Hockey League action. New Balance Outlet Scontate .ca looks back at the stories and moments that made the year memorable. Politics has no lock on the expression, October surprise. The month in tennis is chock-full of them. Things go topsy-turvy on the ATP Tour, as accumulated fatigue, an opportunistic push to bolster rankings or the decision to just tread water until the end of the season affects weekly results.The main storyline in mens tennis at the moment is that the most consistent player this fall has been the once reliably inconsistent Andy Murray. Currently ranked No. 2, hes in the midst of a hard sprint to catch No. 1 Novak Djokovic. Beyond that, the narrative is once again a colorful, unpredictable one.Its a fall brawl. Every day in late October seems like Halloween.The Kremlin Cup featured two qualifiers in the quarterfinals. Then Pablo Carreno Busta, who hadnt won an ATP title until this year, crushed Italian bad boy Fabio Fognini in the title match. Fognini hadnt won two consecutive matches this year since the Olympic Games.In Antwerp the same week, No. 77 Diego Schwartzman made the first final of his career on indoor hard courts. In the semis, he brushed aside two match points and upset top-seeded David Goffin. Schwartzman was up a break on No. 3 seed Richard Gasquet (remember when Gasquet was dubbed Baby Federer?) in the first set, but ultimately the No. 16 ranked Frenchman prevailed.I was the favorite to win, Gasquet acknowledged in his news conference afterward. So its important for me.Not everyone has taken the obligations of his station to heart this month. Dominic Thiem, ranked No. 9, has won exactly one match since Sept. 26. No. 5 Kei Nishikori, currently playing in Basel, has won just two more. Nick Kyrgios won Tokyo and inflamed hopes that hes matured and is prepared to embrace his professional obligations. Just days later, he self-immolated in Shanghai and got himself kicked out of the game.Rafael Nadal pulled the plug on his year with persistent pain in his wrist, and Djokovic was last seen smashing a racket, tearing apart his shirt and howling in outrage while being methodically beaten in the Shanghai semifinals by Roberto Bautista Agut.dddddddddddd.And say, whatever happened to Tomas Berdych?But in tennis, one mans misfortune is another mans jackpot. Never is it more true than in October. Grigor Dimitrov has made the most of the fall brawl to continue rebuilding a flagging reputation. The Baby Federer thing didnt work out any better for Dimitrov than it had for Gasquet. But Dimitrov is still just 25 and back up to No. 18 thanks partly to having made the final in Beijing and the semifinals in Stockholm.Goffin may have fumbled away an opportunity in Antwerp against Schwartzman, but the Belgian is fully aware of the opportunities offered in October. Hes gorging on fall tennis, with six events (and counting), excluding Davis Cup, since the US Open. Hes 12-6 since he was upset in the first round at Flushing Meadows by American upstart Jared Donaldson.The guy who has really cashed in this fall, though, is the big man everyone loves, hard-luck Juan Martin del Potro. October started on a bummer for him when he was beaten (as a wild card ranked No. 63) in the first-round of Shanghai by Goffin. But since then, del Potro has been on a tear. Still recovering from multiple wrist surgeries, his career all but destroyed, the 28-year-old from Argentina took a giant stride in his latest comeback with a tournament win, beating No. 23 Jack Sock in the Stockholm final last week. It was del Potros first title in 33 months and a wonderful ranking and morale-booster.After the win, he told the media, Ive been trying to fix my problems for the past two years, and I didnt expect to win a title at this moment in my career. I am so happy to get the trophy here. Its motivation for looking forward to the future.As October surprises go, that one was a beauty. And he might not be done yet. At a hulking 6-foot-6 and blessed with easy power, Delpo is built for the fall brawl. ' ' '