RENO, Nev. -- Cameron Oliver scored 24 points on 9 of 12 shooting as Nevada cruised to an 83-58 victory against Oregon State on Friday night.Nevada (2-1) took a 48-25 advantage into halftime and never trailed.It was sweet, man. It was sweet, said Oliver, a sophomore who originally signed with Oregon State before starting his collegiate career to Nevada last year. Playing against Oregon State, Ill always have a chip on my shoulder. Every time I play them, I really want to show them that aggression.Oliver left Oregon State after former head coach Craig Robinson was fired in 2014. Oliver said Friday the coaching change led to him leaving the program and coming to Nevada.I think he was focused tonight and he took really good shots and he got into a rhythm and they had absolutely no answer for him at all, Nevada head coach Eric Musselman said.Oliver added seven rebounds.Nevada shot 48 percent from the field. Oregon State (2-2) shot 46 percent.Tres Tinkle led Oregon State (2-2) with 16 points on 7 of 16 shooting. Beaver forward Gligorije Rakocevic scored 10 points with seven rebounds.Were young, Oregon State head coach Wayne Tinkle. We have to understand our scouting report and execution. Those are things we got to get better at. Weve got a lot of guys that havent played any college basketball. We have one senior. But thats really no excuse.Nevada outrebounded Oregon State, 37-32. Wolf Pack forward Jordan Caroline led all players with 12 rebounds.Nevada guard D.J. Fenner added 17 points.The Wolf Pack jumped out to a 10-4 lead before the first timeout and stretched its lead to 22-10 with 10:32 in the first half when guard Marcus Marshall found Oliver racing toward the basket on a fast break, which he finished with one of his several dunks.On Nevadas final possession of the first half with seven seconds on the clock, Marshall dribbled off the inbound, stopped about eight feet behind the three-point line and converted on yet another Nevada field goal as the first half ended.After entering the break down 23 points, Oregon State failed to cut the deficit under 21 points in the second half.I thought our intensity from the opening tip was really, really good, Musselman said.BIG PICTUREOregon State: After turning the ball over 27 times in a 63-60 upset loss at home against Lamar, Oregon States struggles continued at Nevada. The Beavers will look to bounce back Tuesday at Tulsa.Nevada: Nevada won one of its most high-profiled out of conference home games of the season and looks to continue that momentum as one of eight teams in the Great Alaska Shootout beginning Sunday with a tournament home game against Iona.UP NEXTOregon State goes to Tulsa for a game Tuesday.Nevada stays at home to face Iona on Sunday night. Charles Hudon Jersey . The visitors took a deserved lead in the 16th minute with midfielder Yohan Cabaye curling the ball beyond Adrian from inside the penalty area. Jean Beliveau Jersey . Bjorn, who had a 36-hole total of 8-under 134, made a testing six-foot putt to save par on the 16th and a birdie on the 17th before bogeying the final hole after a misjudged approach shot. American Kevin Streelman was in second place after shooting a 69. http://www.canadienssale.com/authentic-tomas-tatar-canadiens-jersey/ . The Lightning are 2-0 so far on a four-game road trip, giving the club five straight wins as the guest and improving Tampas away record this season to 11-8-2. Dickie Moore Jersey .Y. -- Leading 3-0 with only 11:25 left, the Colorado Avalanche committed a seemingly meaningless penalty to give the New York Islanders a power play. Karl Alzner Jersey . Louis Blues absence from top spot in the TSN. Bud Selig spent 22 years as the commissioner of baseball. John Schuerholz built World Series champions in Atlanta and Kansas City. On Sunday night, they were elected together to the Baseball Hall of Fame.Schuerholz was elected unanimously by the 16 members of the Halls newly formed Todays Game Era Committee. Selig received 15 of 16 possible votes. No one else on the 10-person ballot came close to the 12 votes (or 75 percent) needed for election. Longtime manager Lou Piniella, who got seven votes, was the only other candidate to get within five votes of election.Selig became the first living commissioner to be elected to the Hall since Happy Chandler in 1982. Selig has been serving as baseballs commissioner emeritus since retiring as commissioner after the 2014 season.His time as commissioner weathered its share of storms, from the strike that canceled the 1994 World Series to the PED era. But Selig wound up spending more years on the job -- 22, if you include his six years as interim commissioner -- than any commissioner in history, with the exception of Kenesaw Mountain Landis. And Selig presided over an era of dramatic change which, as Hall of Fame president Jeff Idelson put it Sunday, had a profound impact on how the game has matured over the last quarter-century.It reminded me of many a ninth inning when I used to pace around, Selig, the one-time owner of the?Milwaukee Brewers, said on a conference call of not seeing his election as a sure thing.Schuerholz was picked by all 16 voters on a veterans committee at the winter meetings in suburban Washington. Selig was listed 15 times.The ultimate of honors, Schuerholz said.Interleague play came to baseball on Seligs watch. So did wild cards, replay, 22 new ballparks, huge attendance growth, realignment, two expansions, globalization and an explosion in revenues. Baseball was a $1.2 billion industry when he took the job. It was a $9 billion industry when he retired.Before becoming commissioner, Selig spent 28 years as the owner of the Brewers after leading the effort that brought them to Milwaukee from Seattle. And before that, in the 1960s, he was a minority owner of the Milwaukee Braves.Selig and Schuerholz are linked by their association with the Braves, but they also worked together extensively during Seligs time as ccommissioner.dddddddddddd. Selig appointed Schuerholz to lead a number of different committees, most recently the committee that formulated baseballs foray into expanded use of replay in Seligs final season.Schuerholz has spent the past 25 seasons with the Braves and currently serves as their vice chairman. But he is best-known as the general manager who built a modern quasi-dynasty in Atlanta.I loved to build teams, he said.He arrived in Atlanta in 1990. In 1991, the Braves went from last place to first, lost a seven-game World Series to the Minnesota Twins and began an unprecedented run of 14 straight division titles. Although those teams won the World Series only once, in 1995, they reached the Series five times in the 1990s. And from 1991-2005, they won more games (1,431) than any team in baseball and won nearly 200 more games than any other team in the National League, averaging 95 wins a season.I always had aspirations to be a successful general manager, Schuerholz said.Before arriving in Atlanta, Schuerholz spent nine years as the general manager of the Royals. He was the youngest general manager in baseball history, at 40 years old, when he was first promoted to that job in 1981. His Kansas City teams then made it to the postseason in three of the next five years and won the World Series in 1985.When he won the Series in Atlanta a decade later, it made him the first general manager in history to win a championship in both leagues.The Todays Game Era Committee was formed to review candidates from 1988 to the present. In addition to Selig and Schuerholz, the committee also considered former?New York Yankees?owner George Steinbrenner, along with two managers (Piniella and Davey Johnson) and five players (Harold Baines, Albert Belle, Will Clark, Orel Hershiser and?Mark McGwire). Only Selig, Schuerholz and Piniella got more than four votes. Complete voting totals were not released to the public.ESPNs Tim Kurkjian was a member of the committee, as was Schuerholzs longtime manager, Bobby Cox. The committee is a mix of executives, writer/historians and former Hall of Fame players.Information from The Associated Press was used in this report. ' ' '