Washington is favored against Washington State in Fridays Apple Cup. The Huskies must win to keep their CFP hopes alive.But the Cougars can spring the upset, says Scouts Inc.s Steve Muench -- and he has put together the game plan to prove it.His Scouts Inc. colleague Kevin Weidl, on the other hand, has the right recipe for Washington.Heres how the analysts laid out strategies for both teams.Custom Hotspur Jerseys . -- If this was Aaron Gordons final home game at Arizona, and it almost certainly was, then he went out in style. Harry Winks Jersey . -- Eastern Kentucky thrives off creating havoc for others. http://www.footballhotspurstore.com/Women-Erik-Lamela-Tottenham-Hotspur-Jersey/ . -- Canadian Andrew Wiggins got the ball on the wing, made a nifty spin move and then let go with a soft floater from about 10 feet that swished through the net in Allen Fieldhouse. Harry Kane Jersey . Detroit and Boston are deadlocked, 1-1, and Tigers manager Jim Leyland could be forgiven if he was caught rationalizing instead of dissecting how his club could blow a 5-1 lead late in Game 2. Moussa Sissoko Jersey . -- Stanfords Kevin Danser knelt on one knee and hardly moved on the sideline as Michigan State celebrated its Rose Bowl victory and his Cardinal teammates made their way to the locker room.BOSTON -- Boston manager John Farrell is certainly on-board with expanding the use of replays in baseball after an admitted blown call cost the Red Sox the potential tying run in a loss a night earlier. Speaking to reporters at Fenway Park on Tuesday night about three hours before Boston opened a three-game series against Seattle, Farrell said he believes that with better technology baseball can get more "out or safe" calls correct. Trailing by a run in the eighth inning of a 2-1 loss to Tampa Bay on Monday, pinch-runner Daniel Nava was called out by home plate umpire Jerry Meals attempting to score on a fly ball. After watching the replay, Meals later admitted to a pool reporter from the Associated Press that he was "wrong on my decision." Major League Baseball is looking at a vast expansion of video review by umpires for the 2014 season and is examining whether all calls other than balls and strikes should be subject to instant replay. Currently, baseball uses replay only for home runs, but Farrell thinks the game would be better served by expanding its use. "In plays like last night, I think it furthers the debate," he said. "Ive always felt that the advances in technology, how its come into the game, theres no reason to think that it cant be used to a greater extent without prolonging the time of the game, particularly on plays that are not continual plays. That was out or safe. Theres really no other continuance, such as a play thats in the gap with multiple men on and less than two outs." The use of replay has been in place for home run calls since August 2008. Commissioner Bud Selig initially wanted to add trap plays and fair/foul calls down the lines for 2013, but change was put off while more radical opttions were examined.dddddddddddd In Mondays game, replays showed that Nava slid into the top portion of the plate before Rays catcher Jose Molina came across to make the tag. Farrell and Nava argued, with Farrell getting ejected. About 25 minutes after the game, standing in the umpires room, Meals said: "What I saw was Molina blocked the plate and Navas foot lifted. But in the replays, you could clearly see Navas foot got under for a split second and then lifted, so I was wrong on my decision. From the angle I had, I did not see his foot get under Molinas shin guard." With the loss, the Rays retook first place in the AL East, jumping over Boston to grab a half-game lead. The same umpiring crew was in town for the series opener against the Mariners. Farrell just wants to see the calls made correctly and understands that the lengthening of games is an option that the league is likely trying to avoid. "I know its an ongoing conversation with the commissioners office and those that are on the field committee," he said. "How its ultimately implemented, I think thats the challenge in all of this. I know theres a lot of sensitivity in the overall time of game to not slow things down. In situations like last night, I think the most important thing and the overriding thing is to call things the way they should be." When discussing the options other professional leagues use, Farrell even had a solution. "I think theres a limit to how many times you can challenge a call," he said. When asked if "once" would be OK with him, he said: "Id be in favour of it." The first-year Boston manager even had an idea. "There could be one guy in New York that could monitor all the games." ' ' '