EUGENE, Ore. -- Oregon basketball coach Dana Altman has a new seven-year deal worth $18.45 million that keeps him under contract with the Ducks through 2022-23.Altman has led Oregon to six straight seasons with 20 or more wins, and four consecutive appearances in the NCAA Tournament.Last season, the Ducks won a school-record 31 games and took both the Pac-12 regular-season and tournament titles. Awarded a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament for the first time, Oregon advanced to the Elite Eight.Dana is one of the top coaches in the country and has quickly built an elite program. We are excited about the present and future of our program under Danas leadership, Oregon athletic director Rob Mullens said.Oregon, ranked No. 5 in the preseason AP Top 25, opened the season at home Friday night with a 91-77 victory over Army. Altmans record at the school is 155-64.My wife and I love it here and we want to be here, Altman said after the game. Weve very appreciative of Rob and the university for extending us. The people here in Eugene and across the state have been very good to us.Since arriving in Eugene after 16 years at Creighton, Altman has become one of six active coaches with 19 straight winning seasons. He is a three-time Pac-12 Coach of the Year.Air Force 1 Low Pas Cher . The veteran safety was a starter for the Bengals from 2008-2012. He totaled 41 tackles and three interceptions while starting all but four of the 13 games he played last season. Nike Air Force 1 Just Do It Blanche Pas Cher . Louis Blues absence from top spot in the TSN. http://www.siteairforce1pascher.fr/air-force-1-low-soldes/basket-basse-noir.html . Rinne played two periods in his first game since left hip surgery in early May. Gabriel Bourque scored 3:07 into the second period and Austin Watson tallied 5:15 later for Nashville. Air Force 1 Low Femme Pas Cher . Self was acquired from the Buffalo Bandits in a trade for Alex Hill midway through last season, and made his debut in Rochester on March 16, 2013. Air Force 1 Shell Pas Cher . With Parker having a quiet game for once, Nicolas Batum and Boris Diaw provided the scoring as France won its first major basketball title by beating Lithuania 80-66 on Sunday. It was a victory that ended a decade of frustration for Parker and a talented French generation, which lost the final against Spain two years ago and took bronze in 2005.Yorkshire 282 (Hodd 96*, Rafiq 74, Mullaney 3-54, Hutton 3-67) and 263 for 4 dec (Ballance 101*) beat Nottinghamshire 94 (Bresnan 3-15, Sidebottom 3-21, Brooks 3-41) and 146 (Bresnan 5-36, Brooks 4-35) by 305 runsScorecardNo one is mithering about Yorkshire enforcing the follow-on now. The remnants of those discussions were stilled 40 minutes into this final day of the 130th Scarborough Festival when Chris Read, so often the epitome of Nottinghamshires resistance, edged his third ball to Jake Lehmann at fourth slip and plodded off North Marine Road with his team six wickets down and needing to bat out another 86 overs for the draw.Recoveries from such positions prompt the writing of slim pamphlets and the composition of raucous songs. For all that Brendan Taylor and Brett Hutton survived for eighty minutes until lunch there was rarely any indication that Reads cricketers now have it in them to mount such wondrous revivals. The expressions on the faces of the players outside the away changing room after their eventual 305-run defeat said as much.There was angry impotence verging on the emotional emptiness of the truly beaten. Having reduced Yorkshire to 51 for 6 on the first day, Nottinghamshires bowlers had facilitated the home sides recovery and their batsmen had then lost 20 wickets in 94.4 overs. The last four of these had tumbled in 19 balls after lunch, three of them to Jack Brooks. The first, though, had been taken by Ryan Sidebottom, who had Hutton caught by Andy Hodd for 20. Next over Taylor slapped Brooks to Alex Lees at cover and the slow loop of the ball was almost mournful. It was time to pack the picnic away. Ten minutes later there were high fives and high jinks in the home dressing room. Yorkshire will return to Headingley for Sundays Royal London One-Day Cup semi-final buoyed by the fizz of victory. They will not be weary as Nottinghamshires players may be when they go to Chester-le-Street next week. Instead they will travel down to Southampton for their next four-day game a mere five points behind Middlesex and with the prospect of taking on the current leaders in the last match of the season looking ever more delicioous.ddddddddddddThey will feel vindicated, too. Bloody vindicated, probably. Are you going to ask me about the follow-on? said their coach, Jason Gillespie, at the opening of his post-match press conference. People had a pop at us but it was the right call. We stick by what we believe is the best opportunity to win a game of cricket.And so they should, of course. As will those who believe that Yorkshire had a good opportunity to complete a two-day win at Scarborough. Had they taken that opportunity, there may have been no need for officials to arrange for Headingleys Blotter to be transported to North Marine Road early on Friday morning and put to work mopping up the drenched outfield. I think it did bugger all, said Gillespie.Yet it still seemed faintly miraculous that cricket could be played on the final morning of this game. On Thursday evening thick mist had coiled itself around the town like a cat, hugging each streetlight and soaking every surface. Then, from around ten oclock until deep into the early hours, rain fell in pitiless rods on deserted streets, as if passing judgement on something.By 11 oclock in the morning, though, the air was sea-scented and the ground was fit for play. So fit, perhaps, that according to most timekeepers we began three minutes early and Tom Moores suffered the curious indignity of being caught by Adam Lyth off Tim Bresnan a minute before play was due to begin. Bresnan then had Samit Patel caught behind for five, although the batsman cast a couple of glances back at the umpires before dudgeoning off to the pavilion.Bresnan finished the innings with 5 for 36 in the innings and 8 for 51 in the match. Both are career-best performances and they come from a cricketer who is so often at the heart of his teams most rambunctious triumphs. Bresnan, at least, will be up for the next challenge whereas Nottinghamshires players will most probably face some bleak truths in September. Relegation brings financial consequences and it changes lives. Crickets poets need to remember that. ' ' '