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Wales are favourites for the World Cup - England coach Jones

Published in Rugby
Saturday, 17 August 2019 11:03

England head coach Eddie Jones says Wales are "favourites to win the World Cup" after they secured their rise to the top of the world rankings by beating his side 13-6 in Cardiff.

George North's try helped Wales to a victory that will see them become world number one for the first time.

England won 33-19 against Warren Gatland's side in their first World Cup warm-up, but faltered away from home.

"When you go to number one, you're favourites," said Australian Jones.

"It was a fantastic World Cup prep game for us. We found out a little bit about ourselves.

"We had to work hard to get back into the game. We had a number of difficult situations - some of them we handled really well and some of them we didn't handle well."

New Zealand have been top of the world rankings for 10 years but, despite a 36-0 win against Australia earlier on Saturday, the All Blacks will now drop to second on Monday when the ranking is updated.

But Wales head coach Gatland is remaining calm about the ranking honour.

"It's nice for a day but we won't be shouting from the rooftops about it," the New Zealander said.

"We've got to keep things in perspective. Lots of journalists will be out there saying "this is a joke" - probably Kiwi journalists more than anyone! It's just a number.

"We're not making a big fuss of it. We'll keep it in our pocket and go from week to week."

'We have options we haven't shown yet'

North's try left Jones' side 10-0 down at half-time and it was the first occasion England had not scored a point in the first half of a Test since a World Cup match against France in 2011.

Jones' side came close to scoring in Cardiff, but their driving maul let them down as they struggled to find a way through the Wales defence.

The 59-year-old was unperturbed by that though, saying his team want to keep some moves to themselves before their first World Cup match against Tonga on 22 September.

"We set these games up to deliberately practise things," added Jones. "We've got other options five metres from the line that we haven't shown yet and we won't show for a while.

"We want to get our team going. It's a bit easier to defend our maul when they know it's coming. They did it very well and full credit to Wales."

Jones had several players unavailable for selection due to injury, but said back rows Sam Underhill and Tom Curry could return for the match against Ireland on 24 August.

Wing Ruaridh McConnochie, who is in the 31-man World Cup squad but is still uncapped, has a "seven to 10 day" muscle strain, so could also be back in time for the Ireland game, but centre Henry Slade and wing Jack Nowell will not be ready for the match at Twickenham.

Hapless Scotland crash to heavy loss to clinical France

Published in Rugby
Saturday, 17 August 2019 14:03

Scotland's World Cup build-up got off to a poor start as they were crushed by an impressive France side in Nice.

The hosts claimed the initiative within two minutes through Alivereti Raka's try and never looked back.

Maxime Medard and Gregory Alldritt scored further first-half tries, with Medard and Antoine Dupont crossing after the break as the free-flowing French ran riot.

The sides meet again at Murrayfield next weekend.

Scottish trips to France have brought little joy in the past two decades and the most recent visit in February was one of the more painful ones.

Memories of that Paris pummelling came flooding back when France struck early. A botched Scotland line-out deep in their own territory gave the home side a sniff, and there was no stopping Raka when he came thundering into the line to take Wesley Fofana's clever inside pass.

Camille Lopez's conversion and subsequent penalty established a handy 10-point lead, and that soon became 15 when Medard went over in the corner after some soft Scotland defence in the build-up.

Adam Hastings got Scotland on the board with a penalty, but they were looking rusty. The set-piece was poor and whenever they did break through the France defence through the likes of Stuart Hogg or Ali Price, a lack of patience and accuracy led to the chance disappearing.

This may have been a warm-up game, but France brought a Test match level of intensity and physicality that Scotland struggled to deal with.

With Hastings in the sin-bin, Alldritt added the finishing touch after the France pack overpowered their opponents with a rolling maul to end the first half as it began.

France's big ball-carriers continued to blast holes in the Scotland defence after the break as Francois Cros careered through a gap and Medard was given a run to the line for his second try.

Damian Penaud carved Scotland open with a weaving run and put in Dupont for try number five and by now the visitors were going down with barely a whimper.

Rory Hutchinson came off the bench for his international debut and showed some nice touches after replacing Duncan Taylor, who came through almost 50 minutes on his Test return after two injury-ravaged years.

In terms of positives for Gregor Townsend from this match, that was about it.

France, for their part, suddenly look like they could be a force to be reckoned with in Japan.

'This isn't progression, it's worrying'

BBC Scotland's chief sports writer Tom English

It's pretty worrying stuff. Scotland just weren't at the races at all. I know it's their first game, but it was France's first game as well. It would be too simplistic to say 'it's just the first game'. It's the continuation of a trend.

Scotland have conceded an average of four tries a game across the last six matches. An average of 26 points conceded across those games. Unless they get the defence sorted out, you can forget about it. This isn't progression. This is worrying.

Briar Bauman Conquers 73rd Peoria TT

Published in Racing
Saturday, 17 August 2019 18:41

PEORIA, Ill. – Briar Bauman took another big step toward claiming the 2019 AFT Twins presented by Vance & Hines championship by winning Saturday’s 73rd Law Tigers Peoria TT presented by Country Saloon.

The victory was Bauman’s fourth triumph of the American Flat Track season. It also happened to be the first time any rider other than Henry Wiles had stood atop the premier-class podium in the Peoria TT going back to 2003.

Wiles, who had assembled a truly remarkable 14-race Peoria TT win streak coming into this year’s event, was forced to watch from the fences after undergoing surgery for an injury suffered less than two weeks ago at the Black Hills Half-Mile.

With Wiles out of the running, the race quickly took shape as a battle of brothers. Briar and younger brother Bronson Bauman appeared to be on a collision course in turn one of the opening lap around the Peoria Motorcycle Club’s five-eighths-mile TT track.

While they both made it through cleanly, that feeling of an imminent collision wouldn’t go away for the next 10 or so laps. The two went back and forth up front, ripping the lead away from one another multiple times before Briar finally muscled his way back into first in turn four on lap nine. Bronson again looked to counter, but Briar strung together a few perfect corners to stretch open a small gap. He’d go on to build that advantage up to just over a second before first encountering lapped traffic on lap 13 of 25.

That padding allowed him to be aggressive as he cut his way forward, eventually lapping all the way up to eighth position and backing down to a 2.967-second margin of victory at the checkered flag.

“I was trying to just be as smooth as possible and not hit any of these holes and get too out of shape,” Bauman said. “It’s a bittersweet win… What could have happened between Henry and I? He owns this place, and I give a lot of respect to him. You don’t do something like that without being the greatest guy to ever race here. Hopefully next year we’re both healthy, and we can give the crowd a show.”

Bronson cruised to second, taking the position with nearly five seconds in hand on third place.

It was a different story for the final spot on the box, however. A titanic final lap showdown ultimately saw J.D. Beach storm past both Robert Pearson and defending champion Jared Mees in a desperate lunge to the stripe.

Beach had spent nearly the entire race looking for a way around Mees for third before Pearson closed in and displaced him to fifth with a lap-and-a-half remaining. Illinois-native Pearson also attempted to get the better of Mees in a final corner attempt at a home-state podium, but Beach was perfectly positioned to take advantage of their clash.

It was a costly double demotion for Mees, who ran in third from the Main Event’s start until the final meters. As a result, he now trails Bauman by 38 points with five races in which to make up the deficit.

In the Roof Systems AFT Singles class, 16-year-old phenomenon Dallas Daniels earned his maiden American Flat Track victory, obliterating a Roof Systems AFT Singles presented by Russ Brown Motorcycle Attorneys field stacked with TT superstars in Saturday’s 15-lap Main Event.

Daniels got away in fifth but wasted no time in slashing his way through the decorated pack. He drove up the inside of three-time Peoria TT winner Jesse Janisch for third on lap two, providing an early demonstration of just how serious the youngster’s challenge would be on this day.

Pre-race favorite Janisch responded the next time around, but Daniels immediately criss-crossed him and also overhauled offroad legend Ryan Sipes in one epic maneuver to take control of second.

Daniels then proceeded to run down reigning class champion Dan Bromley and dive up the inside of him the next time into turn four to take the lead on lap four.

Daniels raced off into the distance from that point forward, ultimately sealing his first AFT win in the same season he also claimed his first MotoAmerica victory.

“The track was pretty treacherous and slick today, so it was really tough,” Daniels said. “I was just trying to find certain lines, and I think I found a few before the rest of the guys did. My bike was just working so good – it was perfect. I love my team and everything they’ve done for me, and also all the people who have helped get me to this point even before this year. I’ve been dreaming of this my whole life, and to do it so soon… We’re just going to keep going.”

Bromley held on for a solid second, which, when factored in with the sixth-place finish of Dalton Gauthier, sees the two riders sit equal atop the points chase with four races remaining to decide the AFT Singles crown.

Janisch was heading in the wrong direction midway through the Main, being passed by both James Rispoli and Jacob Lehmann.

Despite sitting fifth with just a couple short laps remaining, Janisch dug deep. He fought his way back past 2014 Peoria TT winner Lehmann, and then snuck past Rispoli — who was nursing a flat tire the last two laps — by a scant 0.003 seconds at the checkered to steal away the final spot on the podium.

Rispoli was forced to accept fourth, followed by Lehmann in fifth.

Tomac Wins To Lock Up Motocross Championship

Published in Racing
Saturday, 17 August 2019 18:53

MECHANICSVILLE, Md. – Eli Tomac made short work of the field during the 30th running of the GEICO Motorcycle Budds Creek National to lock up his third-straight Lucas Oil Pro Motocross 450 class championship Saturday afternoon.

Tomac swept both motos aboard his Kawasaki en route to his fifth victory this year and the championship. He is the fourth rider to win three-straight 450 class championships.

In the 250 Class, Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/KTM’s Shane McElrath proved to be unstoppable as he swept both motos for his first win of the season.

The first 450 class moto got underway with Justin Bogle emerging with his second holeshot of the season over Tomac and Zach Osborne. Tomac immediately pushed his way to the front as he blasted around Bogle to lead the opening lap. Ken Roczen once again used incredible speed to start the moto and blitzed his way towards the front into second, followed by Bogle.

Tomac dropped the hammer early in an attempt to break away, however, Roczen refused to let his rival go by upping his pace to keep Tomac in sight. With the leaders well out front, Marvin Musquin was on the move, latching onto the rear fender of Bogle and eventually taking control of third on lap five. Tomac’s pace proved to be too much for Roczen to maintain as the race wore on, and the German lost ground in the second half of the 30-minute-plus-two-lap moto.

There was no stopping Tomac as he disappeared to take a commanding win by 13.9 seconds over Roczen. It marked the ninth moto win of the season for the multi-time defending champion. Musquin completed the podium in a distant third.

As the 450 class field exited the first turn to start moto two it was Osborne who narrowly edged out Tomac for the holeshot, just ahead of Roczen and Musquin. The lead for Osborne was short lived as Tomac powered his way to the front before the second turn. When the 40-rider field completed the opening lap it was Tomac, Roczen and Osborne out front.

Similar to the opening moto, Tomac and Roczen set the pace early and moved out to a comfortable gap on the riders that followed them. On lap two, Osborne’s teammate Jason Anderson found his way by for third, while Musquin dropped Osborne another spot to fifth just moments later. Anderson’s march to the front continued as he began slowly closing in on Roczen, eventually taking control of the runner-up position on lap nine. Roczen continued his charge from third.

Based on the running order in the waning minutes of the moto, Tomac had yet to move into a position to clinch the title. Roczen’s hold on third was enough to keep him within 49 points of Tomac in the championship standings, as the reigning champ needed a lead of 50 points to secure the title a round early.

With the racing closing in on the 30-minute mark, Roczen began to drop off of the pace, which allowed Musquin and several other riders to close in. Roczen’s title hopes were in serious jeopardy when Musquin began a challenge for the position on lap 12. The German didn’t put up much of a fight, and Musquin took over third. Roczen proceeded to lose two more positions on the same lap.

Tomac left his rivals well behind to easily take his 10th moto win of the season by 14.9 seconds. Anderson finished runner-up for his fifth moto podium of the season, followed by Musquin in third. Roczen ended the moto seventh.

“This is such a special way to end the weekend, and not something I really anticipated happening with one round to go,” said Tomac. “I honestly didn’t even know I had the championship until the last lap. I thought that I needed one more spot from the guys behind me, so that was a little bit of a surprise. It was good to get the job done today. It’s tough to beat the first championship, but they’re all special and unique in their own ways.”

McElrath matched the performance by Tomac by sweeping both 250 class motos, marking his second and third moto victories. The KTM rider did not win either moto en route to his first victory last season.

“It’s been a true test to my fate this season,” said McElrath. “The results haven’t been what we wanted, but we never gave up and just kept at it and giving it our best. The conditions were brutal today and this feeling is crazy. It feels really good to get it done and walk away with the overall win today.”

Hamlin Denies DiBenedetto In Bristol Thrill Show

Published in Racing
Saturday, 17 August 2019 21:00

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Matt DiBenedetto did everything in his power to take a stunning victory away from Bristol Motor Speedway on Saturday night, but Denny Hamlin was just too strong when it mattered.

With 15-lap fresher tires in his arsenal and a fast car in the final laps, Hamlin drove from fourth to the lead during the closing stages of the Bass Pro Shops/NRA Night Race, ultimately passing DiBenedetto with a power move to the inside on lap 489 and driving off into the Tennessee night.

Hamlin led the final 12 laps around the high-banked, concrete half-mile for his fourth win of the season and second at Bristol. His last win at The Last Great Coliseum before Saturday was in August of 2012.

However, as he celebrated with a smoky burnout on the frontstretch, Hamlin’s focus was as much on the driver who he had just beaten – and who announced going into the weekend he wouldn’t be back with Leavine Family Racing in 2020 – as it was on the triumph he collected for his Joe Gibbs Racing team.

“I’m so sorry to Matt DiBenedetto and Mike Wheeler. I hate it,” said Hamlin of his Toyota teammate and former crew chief. “I know a win would mean a lot to that team. I just had to give it 110 percent for FedEx and my whole team. I’m just sorry (for having to take it away).

“Man, I’m proud of this whole FedEx team for giving me a great car tonight, though,” he added. “This pit crew, my crew chief (Chris Gabehart) … everybody is doing an amazing job right now. They’re just kicking ass and it’s cool to be doing what we’re doing out here.”

Despite starting from the pole, Hamlin actually got pinned a lap down during the first half of the race, when Aric Almirola spun in turn two and brought out the caution flag on lap 190 just moments after the Chesterfield, Va., native ducked to pit road for a loose wheel.

But a wave-around and a free pass later, Hamlin was back on the lead lap, just in time for the second stage break. From there, he carved his way through the field to put himself in contention to strike.

“Between my spotter (Chris Lambert) and crew chief, they just stayed on me to make sure I didn’t get anxious and just took my time,” he noted. “I had plenty of time.”

Hamlin’s patience showed in the closing laps, as he worked both high and low to try and get around DiBenedetto, taking nearly 20 circuits before finally storming past on the bottom and on to victory.

That bottom lane was Hamlin’s ace card, he tipped after the race.

“I just worked him (DiBenedetto) over and worked him over. I knew I didn’t want to show him the bottom until I knew I could make the pass,” Hamlin explained. “I ran the top, ran the top, ran the top, got the position on the bottom and then finished it.

“We had a great car that could move around, came back from a couple laps down … and here we are.”

Matt DiBenedetto (95) leads in the final laps of Saturday’s Bass Pro Shops/NRA Night Race. (Toyota Racing photo)

As for DiBenedetto, the likable Californian charged into the mix on the final restart of the night at lap 388, following the eighth yellow of the night for a five-car accident in turn two.

DiBenedetto surged past Kyle Busch and into second when the green flag waved, then chased down Erik Jones to take the race lead on lap 395, quickly opening up a one-second gap over his nearest pursuers.

He then led the next 93 laps in succession, as a sizable crowd waited with bated breath to see if DiBenedetto could put the rocky events of the last week behind him by taking a statement victory.

However, contact with Ryan Newman inside of 40 laps to go as DiBenedetto was trying to lap Newman’s No. 6 Ford led to front-fender damage that “flipped a switch” on the leader’s race car and allowed Hamlin to close in.

Ultimately, things didn’t pan out as the handling went away on DiBenedetto’s Toyota, but he hung on for a career-best runner-up finish – marking the best result for both himself and Leavine Family Racing.

After climbing out, DiBenedetto couldn’t hold the emotions back and was nearly in tears as he spoke candidly about what his standout performance meant, as well as what he missed out on in the final laps.

“I wanted to win so bad for these guys, for this team, to thank them giving me this opportunity,” DiBenedetto said. “I’m just thankful that they gave me this opportunity. I’m so thankful. But man, I’m sad. We got tight after the deal with Newman when he came up into us.

“Congrats to Denny. He raced hard,” DiBenedetto added. “I’ve been a fan of his since I was a kid. To be racing door‑to‑door with him at Bristol, in front of a great group of fans … man. I’m trying not to get too emotional, but it’s been a tough week. I just want to stick around and keep doing this for a long time to come. I love racing. I love the opportunity.

“I’m not done yet.”

Brad Keselowski crossed the line third, followed by Busch and Chase Elliott.

Kyle Larson and Clint Bowyer were sixth and seventh, the last two cars on the lead lap, with Daniel Suarez, Kurt Busch and Ryan Blaney completing the top 10.

Oberbreckling Leads Maquoketa Winners

Published in Racing
Saturday, 17 August 2019 21:13

MAQUOKETA, Iowa  – The contact and hard racing was just friendly fire.

Shane Oberbreckling outbattled Kile Vohringer to win the 15-lap Shawn’s Auto Service IMCA Hobby Stock feature Saturday evening at Maquoketa Speedway.

“I felt him back there no doubt,” Oberbreckling said. “That was just a great race. We get along great, he drove me clean with a few bumps and I would’ve drove him the same way.”

The two stuck to the highside cushion and dueled side by side and nose to tail almost the entire distance, including hooking bumpers once on lap 11 on the front stretch.

“I wasn’t sure how that was going to turn out, but we did what we had to. That was a great way to get my second win.”

Daniel Wauters, Lukas Short and Dawson Bowling rounded out the top five.

Jaden Fryer moved to the front early and the 16-year old paced the QCJeeps.com IMCA Modified 20-lap feature. He outran point leader Bryce Garnhart, Jed Freiburger, Steve Johnson and Jarrett Franzen.

Tyler Soppe took another 15-lap B&D Pit Stop IMCA SportMod finale ahead of Gage Neal, Jerry Miles, early leader Joe Grant and Ryan Reed. The race went the distance without a caution with Soppe starting P8 and getting by Grant on lap 9.

Damon Murty passed Joe Zrostlik about halfway through, stayed on the cushion and hung on for the 15-lap GRE / REV Chassis IMCA Stock Car win. Shane Richardson, Chase Zaruba and Tom Cannon followed.

Tyler Shady passed Jamie Wood on the white flag lap and won the epic 12-lap Obie’s Bar and Restaurant / B&C Liquor 4 Cylinder feature. Point leader Ashley Reuman also got by to finish on Shady’s bumper to finish off a great three-car battle. Tim Sibley and Thomas Adams were next.

Grosz Controls Jackson Motorplex Sprint

Published in Racing
Saturday, 17 August 2019 21:21

JACKSON, Minn. – Lee Grosz, Bill Johnson and Eric Schultz each garnered a feature victory on Saturday evening as Jackson Motorplex hosted Glenn Gillund Night presented by Gillund Enterprises.

Grosz garnered his second DeKalb/Asgrow presents the Midwest Power Series and Midwest Sprint Touring Series 360 sprint cars win of the season at the oval. The result propelled him into the lead in the track championship standings.

Grosz took the lead on a wild lap eight when he and Dominic Scelzi, who led the first seven laps, reached thick traffic. Grosz dove to the bottom in turn one and slid Scelzi, who turned his race car underneath Grosz in turn two.

The duo drag raced into turn three with Scelzi regaining the top spot before Grosz made the race-winning pass with a daring move in turn four.

“I had my mind set I had to go in and run the bottom early,” Grosz said. “I figured I might as well move up behind (Scelzi) and wait for lapped traffic. Sometimes running second is better in that position.”

Grosz pulled away during the non-stop race and Scelzi ended second. Dusty Zomer placed third with Trey Starks fourth and Matt Juhl fifth.

Johnson extended his lead in the Heartland Steel RaceSaver sprint cars presented by Wyffels Hybrids championship standings thanks to his second triumph of the season. He started the feature fifth and took the top spot approximately two thirds of the way through the 20-lap A Main.

Ryan Voss recorded a runner-up result with Colin Smith third, 11th-starting Mike Moore fourth and Jody Rosenboom fifth.

Schultz scored his first NSL non-winged sprint car victory of the season. Craig Campton, Johnny Parsons III, Doug Schenck and Jimmy Kouba rounded out the top five, respectively.

MEDINAH, Ill. – Medinah Country Club boasts a storied history, one that dates back nearly 100 years and includes five major championships and a Ryder Cup. It has built a reputation as a brawny, demanding, old-school layout, one that requires precision in every facet of the game.

And in the course of three rounds at the BMW Championship, that storied reputation has been torn to shreds.

It’s not just Justin Thomas running away with the tournament, torching Medinah for a Saturday 61. Or the fact that Thomas’ round broke the course record by two shots, just one day after Hideki Matsuyama broke the old record by two shots himself.

It’s the depth of the red figures that are plastered across the leaderboards outside Chicago, where only two players will begin the final round over par. This, on a course where Lou Graham shot 3 over in 1975 and still left town with the U.S. Open trophy.

Eleven under, the 72-hole total that Tiger Woods shot en route to victory here at the 1999 PGA Championship, is only tied for ninth with a round to go and doesn’t stand a chance of retaining that position. Even Woods’ 18-under winning total from the 2006 PGA likely wouldn't be enough to catch Thomas.

“We all thought this was one of the more tough and bigger ballparks, and the whole field is playing well,” said Woods, who is T-31 at 7 under. “Somehow guys are figuring out a way to all make birdies.”

While Woods didn’t seem to have many answers, the same cannot be said for some of his peers. Adam Scott shot a 3-under 69 to move inside the top 20 at 9 under, but he was neither shocked nor surprised at the low scores posted around him.

“If a golf course is soft, we’re just going to tear it apart,” Scott said. “They just, they haven’t figured out yet that long means nothing to us. You can’t build it long enough. And I’m not challenging them to build a longer golf course, I’m challenging them to build smarter golf courses.”

While the scoring deluge has likely led to plenty of wincing among the Medinah membership, some factors have conspired to aid and abet the 69-man field. With the tournament moved up a month from its usual mid-September slot, players are enjoying summer heat that allows the ball to soar. And while sporadic storms throughout the week have softened the No. 3 course, the rain that blew through Saturday morning and caused a 76-minute suspension of play meant the leaders teed off with the course at its most vulnerable.

But in the Aussie’s eyes, the scoring this week highlights a glaring issue with the current state of the game. Scott pointed to shorter layouts like Colonial and Harbour Town as examples that length is not synonymous with challenge, and believes that the task required of top players has become overly simplified.

“If you require us to shape tee shots to get it in play, I think we’re going to struggle,” Scott said. “We just play straight. Everything straight. And if you had to draw a driver to get it in the fairway, down where you want to be and long, then I think we’re going to see different scores. But while there’s an option to go over trees and go over bunkers, it’s just relentless.

“The driver is the most forgiving club in the bag now. You swing as hard as you can and get it down there far, it’s not skillful. It’s not a skillful part of the game anymore.”

Scott was not alone in his assessment. Seven years removed from his postseason run to the FedExCup, Brandt Snedeker is poised for an East Lake return but mirrored Scott’s thoughts nearly word-for-word at Medinah.

Snedeker pointed to players like Jack Nicklaus, or even Davis Love III, both of whom were skilled drivers in their respective eras. But neither man could swing out of his shoes off the tee because the cost for a mis-hit drive with older equipment was exponentially more penal.

These days the misses are more manageable, which means top players like Thomas and Rory McIlroy can fire at will with the biggest club in the bag.

“Now the drivers are made so easy to hit that there’s no penalty for swinging as hard as you want to at every driver, because it won’t go as far off-line,” Snedeker said. “There’s no penalty for really going all-out on one. That’s changed a lot.”

Staked to a six-shot lead and coming off his best round of the year, Thomas agreed that the soft conditions contributed significantly to the blood-red scoring trends this week. But he bristled at the notion that modern driving is nothing more than swinging for the fences.

“Trust me, I’ll show you some drives that go pretty far off-line, even if it doesn’t especially feel that far off,” Thomas said. “It’s the biggest face, so I guess you could make an argument that yeah, it’s the easiest to hit because you have the biggest margin for error. But the faster you swing it, the easier it is to hit off-line.”

In another place in time, perhaps a baked-out Medinah would have posed as stern a test as it did in major days gone by. Perhaps the sloping fairways would be less receptive to ball flights coming from any direction, with players required to put in more thought and strategy before firing over the corner of another dogleg.

But with more rain in the forecast bumping back final-round tee times, it’s not going to dry out here anytime soon. There will be another bevy of birdies in the final round, when a par-72 monster tipping out above 7,600 yards will play more like a par-68 muni.

In the modern game, technology off the tee continues to outpace any efforts to rein in the world’s best by adding distance. Throw in some receptive fairways and soft greens, and the scoring records might as well be written on napkins.

“That’s probably the best way the Tour can temper the scoring a little bit is stop watering greens as much. And fairways, for that matter. Let it run into trouble,” Scott sad. “Just stop watering stuff so much. Let it go firm.”

ENDICOTT, N.Y. – Monday qualifier Doug Barron had a one-stroke lead in the Dick's Sporting Goods Open when lightning forced the suspension of play late in the second round Saturday.

Making his second PGA Tour Champions start after turning 50 last month, Barron was 10 under for the tournament playing the par-4 15th when play was stopped at En Joie Golf Club.

Barron got into the field Monday with a 66 at The Links at Hiawatha Landing. He's coming off a fifth-place tie in the Senior British Open in his Champions debut.

Scott McCarron was tied for second after a 66. He won the event two years ago.

Marco Dawson, playing alongside Barron and Miguel Angel Jimenez in the final group, also was 9 under with Scott Parel and David McKenzie. Playing together in the second-to-last group, Parel and McKenzie also were on 15 when play was suspended.

Why Thomas just won $1,000 from Koepka for BMW holeout

Published in Golf
Saturday, 17 August 2019 13:59

MEDINAH, Ill. – Justin Thomas pushed his lead to five shots late Saturday when he holed out for eagle from 180 yards at the par-4 16th.

And he immediately name dropped Brooks Koepka, as you can hear in the video below.

“The first thing I said to Jimmy,” Thomas said, “‘I got some of that Brooks Koepka money.’”

Thomas and Koepka have a running bet this season concerning holeouts, with certain payments allotted for certain shots.

“That’s the first thing I said to him,” Thomas repeated. “Because that’s another holeout.

“Thank you, Brooks.”

That was an 8-iron from 180, by the way.

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Baseball

White Sox's Rojas has hairline fracture in big toe

White Sox's Rojas has hairline fracture in big toe

EmailPrintGLENDALE, Ariz. -- Chicago White Sox infielder Josh Rojas has a hairline fracture in his r...

Tigers narrow 3B pool, option Jung to Triple-A

Tigers narrow 3B pool, option Jung to Triple-A

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe Detroit Tigers optioned Jace Jung to Triple-A Toledo on Monday,...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

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