BATHURST, N. Mike Ditka .B. - Anthony Mantha set up two goals and then scored the winner as the Val-dOr Foreurs edged the host Acadie-Bathurst Titan 3-2 in overtime on Tuesday in Quebec Major Junior Hockey League playoff action. Louick Marcotte had a pair of goals in regulation for the Foreurs, who lead the first-round series 3-0, and Samuel Henley chipped in with two assists. Val-dOrs Antoine Bibeau stopped 17 shots for the victory. Scott Oke and Nicholas Blanchard scored for the Titan and Jacob Brennan kicked out 39-of-42 shots in a losing cause. The Foreurs can sweep the series Wednesday when the Titan host Game 4. --- MOOSEHEADS 4 ISLANDERS 1 CHARLOTTETOWN -- Philippe Gadoury scored three times and Zachary Fucale made 16 saves as Halifax toppled the Islanders to go up 3-0 in its first-round matchup. Jonathan Drouin had a goal and an assist for the Mooseheads while Andrew Ryan, Nikolaj Ehlers and Matt Murphy each tacked on two assists. Daniel Sprong scored the lone goal for Charlottetown. Islanders netminder Mason MacDonald turned away 3f-42 shots in defeat. --- ARMADA 4 WILDCATS 3 MONCTON, N.B. -- Danick Martel had a pair of goals as Blainville-Boisbriand edged the Wildcats in Game 4 of its opening-round series. Ryan Tesink and Daniel Walcott also scored for the Armada, who lead the series 3-1, and Philippe Sanche had two assists. Vladimir Tkachev scored all three goals for Moncton, which trailed 4-0 after two periods of play. Blainville-Boisbriands Etienne Marcoux made 20 saves for the win. Alex Dubeau played the first two periods for the Wildcats and allowed four goals on 30 shots. Jason Rioux faced only two shots in a period of relief. --- OLYMPIQUES 7 SCREAMING EAGLES 2 SYDNEY, N.S. -- Vaclav Karabacek scored twice and Simon Tardif-Richard had a goal and two assists as Gatineau took Game 3 against Cape Breton in its first-round tilt. Alexis Pepin, Emile Poirier, Jonathan Bourcier and Adam Stevens also scored for the Olympiques, who lead the series 3-0, and Robert Steeves made 18 saves for the victory. Kyle Farrell and Julien Pelletier responded for the Screaming Eagles. Cape Bretons Zachary Fortin was relieved at the 10:33 mark of the second period after giving up four goals on 26 shots. Alex Bureau stopped 11-of-14 shots in relief. --- DRAKKAR 3 CATARACTES 0 SHAWINIGAN, Que. -- Philippe Cadorette made 26 saves as Baie-Comeau blanked the Cataractes to go up 3-0 in its first-round matchup. Robby Graham, Jeremy Gregoire and Francis Turbide supplied the scoring for the Drakkar. Marvin Cupper gave Shawinigan an opportunity to win by stopping 50-of-53 shots in defeat. Nicholas Welsh led the Cataractes with five shots in net. --- OCEANIC 4 SAGUENEENS 0 CHICOUTIMI, Que. -- Michael Joly scored three times as Rimouski downed the Sagueneens in Game 3 of Round 1 action. Peter Trainor also scored for the Oceanic, who lead the series 3-0, while Philippe Desrosiers stopped 19 shots for the shutout. Chicoutimis Simon Tremblay led his lcub with three shots against Desrosiers. Domenic Graham stopped 30-of-34 shots for the Sagueneens. --- VOLTIGEURS 6 TIGRES 3 VICTORIAVILLE, Que. -- Alexandre Grande-Maison scored twice and Olivier Caouette and Frederick Gaudreau each had a goal and two assists as Drummondville doubled up the Tigres to take Game 3 in Round 1 play. Matthew Boudens and Joey Ratelle also scored for the Voltigeurs, who lead the series 2-1. Yan Pavel Laplante, Angelo Miceli and Philippe Hudon scored for Victoriaville. Drummondvilles Louis-Philip Guindon made 19 saves for the win as Francois Tremblay turned away 24-of-29 shots for the Tigres. --- HUSKIES 5 REMPARTS 2 ROUYN-NORANDA, Que. -- Mathieu Lemay scored twice as the Huskies beat Quebec to take a 2-1 lead in first-round series action. Jean-Sebastien Dea, Francis Beauvillier and Francis Perron also scored for Rouyn-Noranda. Alexandre Belanger made 19 saves for the Huskies, who outshot the Remparts 54-21. Nick Sorensen scored both goals for Quebec and Francois Brassard stopped 49 shots in defeat. Brandon Marshall . -- Ben Martin made his way through most of the TPC Louisiana course with the type of sparse gallery one would expect for a player who had missed seven cuts in his previous nine starts on the PGA Tour. Danny McCray . After spending the minimum time on the disabled list with a strained muscle near his left ribcage, Davis was in the starting lineup for Sundays game against the Houston Astros. Wieters had an MRI on his elbow Monday and visited Dr. James Andrews, who prescribed he rest his arm.BELGRADE, Serbia -- Novak Djokovic has served many match-winning aces on the tennis court, but now he has fired a major one in the flood-hit Balkans. The worlds No. 2 tennis player has achieved what no politician has managed since the bloody Balkan wars in the 1990s: to at least temporarily reunite former bitter wartime foes as they jointly struggle against the regions worst flooding in more than a century. Djokovic has sparked worldwide financial and media support for victims of the massive river water surge that has killed at least 45 people and left hundreds of thousands homeless in Serbia, Bosnia and Croatia. The Serb has in the past triggered fury in the other former Yugoslav republics for what people considered nationalistic gestures, such as celebrating his victories with a three-finger victory sign that was used by Serb soldiers during their wartime campaigns in Croatia and Bosnia. What has set Djokovics flood salvage campaign apart is that he didnt just seek international support for Serbia. He also did it for Bosnia and Croatia which were at war with Serbia. All three states are still harbouring a deep mutual hatred and distrust, 20 years after the wars ended and the former Yugoslavia split up into seven different countries. "My heart is breaking when I see that so many people were evacuated and endangered in Bosnia! More than 950,000!!! Hold on brothers ... help will come from the world," Djokovic wrote on Twitter. "I also see that the east of Croatia is hit by floods ... I sincerely hope that it will not hit you like Serbia and Bosnia. Keep safe." "Long live the people of former Yugoslavia. Let God be with you," he wrote, adding a map of the former Yugoslavia with the flags of now different countries. The floods have triggered unprecedented regional solidarity in the Balkans, with the former Yugoslav countries sending rescue teams and humanitarian aid to each other over their borders. Ego Ferguson. . After beating top-ranked Rafael Nadal in the final of the Masters tournament in Rome on Sunday, Djokovic donated all the prize money -- about $500,000 -- to the flood victims. His charity foundation collected another $600,000. "There have not been floods like this in the existence of our people," Djokovic said. "It is a total catastrophe of biblical proportions. I dont really know how to describe it." Djokovics gestures triggered mostly positive public support in both Croatia and Bosnia. "Im not Djokovics supporter or like tennis," said Davor Buric, a university student in Zagreb, Croatian capital. "It is nice that he mentioned not only Serbia, but also Croatia and Bosnia. Djokovic has nothing to do with the war, and I have never heard him saying anything against other nationalities." In Bosnia, national football team coach Safet Susic said Djokovic had won "the support of the whole of Bosnia" with his campaign, and promised to support him in the upcoming Grand Slam tournaments -- the French Open and Wimbledon. Djokovic replied by saying he will support Bosnia at the World Cup in Brazil. Such sentiments in Bosnia and Croatia have prompted some commentators to nickname him "Marshal Djokovic" after Marshal Josip Broz Tito, the post World War II Yugoslav communist leader who managed to keep Yugoslavia united with iron fist. With his death in 1980, the country started unraveling along ethnic lines. "This water ... has destroyed what we have been building for the past 20 years," wrote prominent Croatian columnist and writer Vedrana Rudan in an ironic commentary on her web page. "Djokovic has sketched the map of Yugoslavia, he greets both our and his people ... the slaughter has separated us, the drowning has reunited us." ' ' '