CHICAGO - Josh Donaldson hit his first career grand slam, Josh Reddick made a homer-saving catch in the ninth inning, and the Oakland Athletics rallied from a three-run deficit Friday night for a 4-3 victory over Chris Sale and the Chicago White Sox. Donaldsons ninth home run of the season came in the sixth inning and helped Oakland right-hander Jarrod Parker (5-6) earn his fourth win in five decisions. Reddick made a leaping catch to take away a home run from Chicagos Conor Gillaspie with one out in the ninth to preserve the win. Sale (5-4) hadnt given up more than two earned runs since April 11, and he cruised out to a 3-0 lead through five innings in this one. In the sixth Adam Rosales singled and, after Coco Crisp struck out, Jed Lowrie singled. Yoenis Cespedes followed with walk, and Donaldson hit a 1-1 pitch for an opposite-field home run to right to give Oakland a 4-3 lead. The Athletics won for the 18th time in 21 games and the White Sox lost for the 10th time in 11. Parker beat the White Sox for the second time in five days with a seven-inning, five-hit effort. He walked two and struck out four. Reliever Ryan Cook pitched out of a first-and-second jam with none out in the eighth and Grant Balfour pitched the ninth for his 15th save. Sale stayed in the game for 118 pitches. He left after striking out Crisp to lead off the eighth. Sale allowed five hits, walked one and struck out six. The White Sox led 1-0 on Tyler Flowers third-inning home run on a 0-2 pitch by Parker. In the fourth, Dayan Viciedos sacrifice fly to left scored Alex Rios, who had singled, stole second when Adam Dunn struck out, and moved to third when catcher Derek Norris threw the ball into centre field for an error on the stolen base. Chicago expanded the lead to 3-0 on a fifth-inning sacrifice fly by Alejandro De Aza, scoring Gordon Beckham. Beckham had led off with a single, moved up on Jordan Danks ground out and took third on Flowers single. NOTES: Chicago played for the second straight game without manager Robin Ventura, who was on the West Coast for his daughters graduation. ... The Athletics are now 5-0 on the season against Chicago. ... The grand slam allowed by Sale was the first home run he gave up in five starts. ... Flowers home run was his fifth, but first in 24 games. He matched a career high with three hits in the game. ... Saturdays starters will be Oaklands Tommy Milone (6-5, 3.91) and Chicagos John Danks (0-2, 5.06). ... The White Sox have a family tie to their third-round pick in Fridays baseball draft, outfielder Jacob May of Coastal Carolina. May is the grandson of former Cincinnati Reds player Lee May. Lee Mays brother is former White Sox first baseman Carlos May. China Shoes Black Friday .com) - Following a late-game loss to the reigning NBA champs, the Toronto Raptors will look to sustain their recent high-level play as they travel to Indiana to take on the Pacers. Fake Shoes Black Friday . 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SOUTH KINGSTOWN, R.I. -- A former boxing promoter, ex-college basketball coach and founder of a Rhode Island-based sport institute was convicted Monday of embezzling from the nonprofit organization he founded three decades ago.Dan Doyle, of the Institute for International Sport, was found guilty by a jury of 18 counts, including embezzlement, forgery, filing false documents and obtaining money under false pretenses.Prosecutors said the 67-year-old Doyle, of West Hartford, Connecticut, used the institute as a piggybank, taking more than $1 million to pay for things that included college tuition and wedding expenses for his children and for plastic surgery.He was also accused of forging the signatures on board documents, including that of Alan Hassenfeld, the former CEO of Pawtucket-based Hasbro Inc.Doyle founded the institute in 1986 to create international connections among schoolchildren. It was best known for the World Scholar Athlete Games and drew high-profile people to sspeak at its events, including former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Colin Powell and Nobel Prize winners Desmond Tutu and Elie Wiesel.ddddddddddddDoyle was once a boxing promoter for Sugar Ray Leonard. He also was the head mens basketball coach at Trinity College in Connecticut.He maintained his innocence throughout the two-month-long trial, threatening at one point to hold a sit-in and hunger strike in the courtroom over complaints that he was not receiving a fair trial. His lawyer said he and his family invested hundreds of thousands of dollars of their own money in the institute, which was based at the University of Rhode Island.Doyle remained free on bail Monday and left court without speaking to reporters, though his lawyer expressed his disappointment and called him a great man. His sentencing has not yet been scheduled. ' ' '