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Just 18 holes stand between Viktor Hovland and a PGA Tour card.

The 21-year-old Oklahoma State product fired a 7-under 64 Saturday at the Albertsons Boise Open to take a one-shot lead into Sunday’s final round of the second of three Korn Ferry Tour Finals events.

"It could be my first professional victory, and that's always something special," Hovland told reporters.

A win by the talented Norwegian, who made seven birdies to climb to 15 under, would move him to No. 1 on the Finals points list. The top 25 on that list after next week’s KFT Championship earn Tour status for next season, so Hovland, T-10 entering the week, could secure his card even without a win.

Hovland earned special temporary membership this season on the PGA Tour, and though he fell short of earning his card this summeer like peers – and Tour winners – Matthew Wolff and Collin Morikawa, he did secure enough points to qualify for the Finals.

"It's been a crazy journey so far, and I've only been a professional golfer for a couple months," Hovland said. "Seeing what Collin and Matt have donee, hopefully I can try to catch them. Looking back, I don't think anyone could've really expected that to have happened, but it's a lot of fun, and I'll have a lot of fun playing tomorrow. ... Whatever happens, happens."

Rob Oppenheim and Bronson Burgoon, two players looking to retain Tour status, are tied for second at 14 under, a shot back of Hovland. Hank Lebioda and Tyler Duncan, each in the same boat, are another shot behind in a share of fourth along with Ryan Brehm, who was among the 25 players to earn their cards via the regular season.

The battle for the final three automatic qualifying spots on the U.S. Solheim Cup team is headed to a nerve-wracking conclusion Sunday at the CP Women’s Open.

Six players enter the final round with realistic shots at playing their way on to captain Juli Inkster’s team.

In the fight for the final roster spot off the U.S. Solheim Cup points list, Brittany Altomare put herself in strong position to hold off Angel Yin and Ally McDonald, the only players who can still overtake her.

In the fight for the final two roster spots off the Rolex world rankings list, Yin and Austin Ernst aren’t yet guaranteed anything in their bids to hold on to those spots. While Yin put herself in a very strong position, she needs to avoid a final-round stumble to hold off Amy Olson, Annie Park and McDonald, all of whom remain in the hunt to play their way on to the team.

Ernst made herself vulnerable missing the cut on Friday.

Here’s a closer look . . .

IN THE POINTS RACE

(Top-20 finishes earn points, with 60 points for first place, 30 for second place, 28.5 for third and down to 3 for 20th place)

Altomare (257.5 points) – With a solid 1-under-par 71 Saturday, Altomare sits T-22 on the CP Women’s Open leaderboard. She currently holds the eighth and final spot on the U.S. Solheim Cup points list.

McDonald (250.5 points) – If Altomare doesn’t finish T-20 or better Sunday, McDonald can pass her with a finish of T-17 or better. McDonald’s 69 on Saturday left her T-45, five shots behind the players currently holding the T-17 position.

Yin (217 points) – Yin must win to have a chance to overtake Altomare. Yin’s 68 on Saturday left her T-8 on the CP Women’s Open leaderboard, seven shots behind the co-leaders.

IN THE WORLD RANKINGS RACE

(The top two in the Rolex world rankings who aren’t qualified on the U.S. Solheim Cup points list will earn rosters spots)

Yin (No. 32) – At T-8 on the CP Women’s Leaderboard, she just needs to avoid a Sunday stumble to secure her spot via the world rankings.

Altomare (No. 40) – If Altomare secures a roster spot on points, her world ranking here doesn’t matter. But if she gets passed on points, she can still make the team off this list.

Ernst (No. 41) – Currently holds the second roster spot off this list, but her missed cut Friday left her in danger of getting passed.

Park (No. 42) – Just .01 average world ranking points behind Ernst, Park doesn’t have to do much to move past Ernst and take that second world-ranking spot. Park currently sits T-49 on the CP Women’s Open leaderboard. Even if she stays right there, she can still pass Ernst, depending on what other players do to move up or down in the complex computation of the world rankings. Park, however, has to worry about Olson and McDonald passing Ernst to take that second spot.

Olson (No. 50) – Olson is in good position to take one of these two spots after her third consecutive 68 moved her to T-5 on the CP Women’s Open leaderboard. If she finishes solo fifth or better, she will probably be in position to make the team, depending greatly upon what other players do to move up or down in the world rankings.

McDonald (No. 60) – Her best chance is to pass Altomare on points, but she has a long shot’s chance to make it via the world rankings. McDonald probably needs to finish third or better at the CP Women’s Open to have a chance to make it off the world-rankings list, depending on what other players do to move up or down in the rankings. McDonald is T-45 on the CP Women’s Open leaderboard.

Kristen Gillman (No. 65) – Gillman needs a phenomenal rally to make it, but she’s mathematically alive. She currently sits T-41 on the CP Women’s leaderboard and probably needs to finish fourth or better to have a chance to make the team.

Real Madrid's early optimism was punctured by an 88th-minute equaliser from Real Valladolid's Sergi Guardiola as Zinedine Zidane's side stumbled to a 1-1 draw in their first home game of the La Liga season on Saturday.

Karim Benzema looked to have fired Madrid to a second straight win after last week's confidence-boosting 3-1 victory at Celta Vigo when he scored in the 82nd minute with a splendid piece of skill.

The Frenchman, Madrid's top scorer last campaign, controlled a pass with his back to goal and swivelled before striking his finish into the far corner to give the home side a deserved lead.

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Serbian striker Luka Jovic had gone close to breaking the deadlock earlier in the game when he headed against the crossbar barely a minute after coming off the bench, while Gareth Bale and James Rodriguez also spurned chances.

Valladolid had offered little in attack but grabbed a shock equaliser with only their second shot on target when Guardiola struck through the legs of Thibaut Courtois to complete a swift counter-attack after Toni Kroos had surrendered possession.

The goal plunged a happy Santiago Bernabeu crowd into silence and left Madrid with four points after two games.

"I'm left with a bitter taste because we did the hardest thing, which was to score in a second half where we did not produce our best performance," Madrid coach Zidane told a news conference.

"It's a bad feeling when you concede an equaliser so soon after scoring. We played well in the first half, but we were unable to find the net."

Real were without suspended midfielder Luka Modric but Rodriguez made his first appearance in a Madrid shirt for over two years in a team containing 10 players that were in the squad when Zidane first took charge in January 2016.

After a strong start in the unforgiving summer heat of the Spanish capital, Madrid struggled to maintain their intensity after the interval but found a breakthrough when it looked least likely due to the quick thinking of Benzema.

They were powerless to deal with the speed of Valladolid's counterattack which saw Guardiola level six minutes later, however, although Zidane said the draw was not down to his side's waning energy levels.

"We were less convinced of ourselves in the second half," he added.

"We did not play with fluidity and when we lack that we run into problems. But we cannot blame our result on the heat, our problems today were not physical ones."

Messi in doubt vs. Betis after injury setback

Published in Soccer
Saturday, 24 August 2019 11:57

Lionel Messi has been ruled out of Barcelona's game against Real Betis on Sunday after suffering a setback in his return from a calf injury.

Messi originally sustained the knock earlier this month and missed Barca's tour of the United States and their 1-0 defeat to Athletic Bilbao in the league last Friday.

He returned to full training earlier this week and was expected to be in the squad for Betis' visit this weekend, but felt some discomfort when training on Friday. Barca then took the decision for the Argentina forward to train alone on Saturday.

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Coach Ernesto Valverde has said he will not take unnecessary risks by rushing Messi back, despite the fact that Barca are already missing Luis Suarez and Ousmane Dembele due to injuries.

"We can't take a step back with his recovery," Valverde said in a news conference. "If Messi is not 100 percent, he will not play."

Messi has not played a competitive game since Argentina beat Chile in the third-place playoff at the Copa America in July.

Suarez and Dembele, meanwhile, were both injured in Barca's surprise opening day defeat at San Mames last Friday. The Uruguay striker will be out until after September's international break and Dembele is set to be sidelined for five weeks.

Dembele angered the club by not revealing the extent of his pain after last Friday's game, with the severity of his injury only being established at training on Monday.

Sporting director Eric Abidal met with the France forward's agent on Friday to translate Barca's disappointment in the player, whose professionalism away from the pitch also threw up questions last year.

Valverde refused to be drawn on events, saying that "a big deal" is made of everything Dembele does and that he would not comment on the issue.

Antoine Griezmann, therefore, is the only fit forward in the first team. B team attackers Carles Perez and Ansu Fati have been training with the squad this week and could feature against Betis after included in Valverde's 18-man squad.

Barca's shortage in attack shows why they are still attempting to bring Neymar back to the club, with a third and possibly final offer expected to be made to Paris Saint-Germain in the coming days.

"Neymar's a PSG player and we have to focus on Sunday's game, which we're obliged to win after losing our opener," Valverde said.

"It's not something which affects us. If we were affected by all the rumours out there, we wouldn't be able to play.

"We're used to it and you have to be able to deal with these things."

Klopp pleased by 'greed and passion' of Liverpool

Published in Soccer
Saturday, 24 August 2019 15:00

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp praised his side's intensity as they took control at the top of the Premier League with their third consecutive win of the campaign in Saturday's 3-1 victory over Arsenal.

After wins over Norwich City and Southampton, the European champions, who were league runners-up last term, needed to step up their game for the visit of Unai Emery's Gunners who were also unbeaten -- and that is exactly what they did.

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"It was a brilliant game from my side so early in the season. It was outstanding. It was a performance full of power, energy, greed and passion, which I think you need to have against a team like Arsenal," said Klopp.

"We are still really early in the season and throwing such energy on the pitch is exceptional. The work rate of the whole team was exceptional. Tactical discipline was exceptional apart from maybe 10-15 minutes," he said.

Although Liverpool eased off in the latter stages and allowed Arsenal to score a consolation goal, Klopp was still well satisfied with what he witnessed.

"For 80 minutes we were completely in charge of the game. We are not Disneyland, we do not need to excite everyone in every second," said the German.

Mohamed Salah was the decisive figure -- turning David Luiz to gain a penalty which he blasted home in the 49th minute and then beating Arsenal's former Chelsea defender out wide before scoring an outstanding solo goal.

"The decision about the penalty I think was absolutely obvious. Mo's third goal was absolutely amazing, but the pedigree of the boys is sensational. Our identity is intensity, and we showed that today," said Klopp, who also had praise for his two Brazilians on the field.

"Roberto Firmino what a player he is, unbelievable. I am really happy with the performance. I did not see a bad player tonight or a player that played under his level. Fabinho played sensational," he said.

Liverpool have a five-point advantage over champions Manchester City, who pipped them to the title by a solitary point last season.

City play their third match of the league campaign at Bournemouth on Sunday.

Salah sums up Liverpool class to sweep Arsenal aside

Published in Soccer
Saturday, 24 August 2019 15:12

LIVERPOOL, England -- The clock struck 57 minutes and for Arsenal, already 2-0 down against Liverpool, the nadir was still to come.

Mohamed Salah received possession on the right flank and beat David Luiz with such ruthlessness that social media was awash with obituaries for the defender's career. The Egyptian forward sped goalward, with Nacho Monreal's presence proving to be no impediment either, before planting the surest of finishes into the bottom left corner of Bernd Leno's goal.

The home side had a third goal through a piece of wondrous football, and despite Unai Emery's side following a different tactical script on this latest visit to Liverpool's red side, their all-too-familiar inferiority on this ground had been extended: this 3-1 reverse means that Arsenal have conceded 25 times in the last seven league games at Anfield, of which they have drawn two and lost five.

"We are the champions, champions of Europe" had been the opening chant from the home support after kickoff and what followed on an atypically sunny Merseyside evening served as a reminder of how wide the gulf is between these two sides, something a late Lucas Torreira consolation strike could not disguise.

Having begun the season with back-to-back wins, Arsenal arrived with confidence and a plan to starve Liverpool of space centrally. Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola once remarked that Jurgen Klopp's men "especially like to attack from inside, through the middle. I don't think there is another team in the world attacking in this way with so many players capable of launching moves in an instant" and Emery wanted to stifle that strength with a narrow midfield.

Klopp admitted later that he "didn't expect the system they played," and the tactic encouraged Liverpool to use the twin threat of full-backs Andy Robertson and Trent Alexander-Arnold on the flanks, with the visitors backing themselves to deal with crosses and fire the ball quickly upfield to Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Nicolas Pepe, isolating them against Virgil van Dijk and Joel Matip.

It was partly successful for 40 minutes, with Arsenal coping with aerial bombardment and sustained pressure. But while the best chances for the north Londoners came via their front men, they were created by Liverpool's mistakes. The standout statistic of the first half was that Klopp's charges made 128 passes in the attacking third, while Arsenal only managed 18.

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Liverpool's superiority would eventually be reflected on the scoreboard, beginning when Joel Matip headed in Alexander-Arnold's corner four minutes before half-time. During a 10-minute spell after the interval, Salah got the better of Luiz twice -- first winning a penalty as the centre-back tugged on his shirt, then leaving him in his shadow for his second and Liverpool's third -- to leave Arsenal on the canvas.

"I think now we have reduced the difference with Liverpool over the 90 minutes," Emery said post-match. "We've reduced the difference from last year (Arsenal lost 5-1 at Anfield in December 2018), but at the moment it's not enough."

That last line summed up matters succinctly. Arsenal were not so awful as they have been here -- they were organised, they had a blueprint and they created chances in the first half -- but that was nevertheless not enough against the champions of Europe.

Liverpool, like City, are operating in a different sphere from their rivals, and neither have yet hit the heights of which they are capable. Klopp noted after the game, for example, that "we could have controlled it better; that's probably our real challenge."

"I think everything we did well in the first four games we did tonight for longer, more precise and better tuned," the Liverpool manager added. "I loved the desire, the passion, the power and the energy that we put into this game. It made us really uncomfortable to play against."

Arsenal can take solace in the fact they will not be the only side to huff and puff but still be blown away at Anfield, where Liverpool are now unbeaten in 42 league fixtures.

Gloucestershire 189 for 4 (Klinger 74, Hammond 56) beat Somerset 164 (Babar 44, Smith 3-19) by 25 runs

Michael Klinger marked probably his last innings at the Bristol County Ground with a match-winning 74 to lead Gloucestershire to a vital 25-run Vitality Blast win over arch-rivals Somerset.

The home side posted 189 for 4 after losing the toss in front of an 8000 crowd, Klinger leading the way with eight fours and a six in his 52-ball innings, while Miles Hammond hit 56 from 43 deliveries. Max Waller was the pick of the Somerset attack, bowling his four overs for 25 runs. In reply, Somerset could manage only 164 all out, Babar Azam contributing 44. Tom Smith claimed 3 for 19 and Graeme van Buuren 2 for 27.

The victory strengthened Gloucestershire's hopes of reaching the quarter-finals, while leaving west country neighbours with much to do over their last three group matches.

Fresh from receiving a presentation from club officials to mark his seven years of service before the game, Klinger quickly gave Gloucestershire's innings momentum, hitting three fours from successive balls in the second over, sent down by Jerome Taylor. Soon opening partner Hammond was joining in as 54 came from the six overs of Powerplay. By the halfway point in their innings, the hosts were well placed at 84 without loss.

Hammond reached a 39-ball half-century and hit the first six of the game off Roelof van der Merwe before being caught at wide long-on in the same over, the 13th, with the total on 105.

Klinger went to his fifty off 38 balls and the 15th over, bowled by van der Merwe, saw James Bracey smack two sixes in succession. He perished for 20, but Jack Taylor ensured Gloucestershire of a meaningful score with 23 off 10 balls.

Klinger departed to a standing ovation in the final over, raising his bat to all sides of the ground as he walked off.

Somerset's reply had reached 20 in the third over when Tom Banton was caught at long-on off David Payne, having just hit the left-arm seamer for six. By the end of the Powerplay the visitors had 59 on the board, Babar and Hildreth scoring quickly with classical strokeplay. Barbar played a textbook 29-ball innings, featuring six fours, before being beaten by a turning delivery from Smith in the tenth over and stumped by Bracey. At halfway Somerset were 91 for 2.

Smith struck again to remove Eddie Byrom off a skyer in the 12th over and when Hildreth was brilliantly stumped by Bracey off a leg-side wide from van Buuren a Somerset slump set in. Craig Overton fell to a big shot off van Buuren and Tom Abell to a reverse sweep off Smith, who finished four accurate overs to a rousing ovation from home fans.

With five overs left, Somerset required 59. Tom Lammonby hit sixes off van Buuren and Andrew Tye to keep his side's hopes alive, finding a lively partner in van der Merwe, who contributed a breezy 17 before falling to Ryan Higgins, leaving 29 needed from 13 balls. But tt proved too much as Tye claimed two wickets in the 19th over and Ryan Higgins wrapped things up with the third ball of the last.

Joe Root wasn't just battling to save this match. And he wasn't just battling to save his side's hopes in the Ashes. He was, perhaps, battling to save his captaincy.

Few England captains survive two Ashes series defeats to lead their side into a third. Archie MacLaren did so, but that was more than a century ago and he had been replaced in between series. Archie didn't have Twitter to deal with, either.

But it wasn't just defeat that threatened Root. It was the thought that captaincy may be getting the better of him. England had been a bit of a shambles at the end of day two and the start of day three. Root himself had put down a relatively straightforward catch at slip - Marnus Labuschagne was on 14 at the time; it may yet prove a crucial moment - they had conceded over-throws and started to snipe at one another in the field. Increasingly it was looking hard to sustain the belief that Root was the man to drive this side forward.

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More than that, Root's primary problem was the diminishing returns from his own bat. In a side as parched for runs as England, any drop of output from their best batsman cannot be accommodated. Going into this innings, Root was averaging 18.85 in Test cricket this summer having suffered consecutive ducks in his previous two innings. Overall, he averaged 52.88 when not captain and 40.41 when captain. The evidence was starting to suggest he had been worn down by the burden of the role. The whispers were growing that, for his own good as much as the team's, it might be necessary to make a change.

That would be a nightmare for England's team management. There are few obvious alternatives for the role - Ben Stokes, perhaps, or, maybe Stuart Broad for the rest of the summer - and it would spell defeat in England's rebuilding efforts of the last few years. But, tough though the decision might have been, it was increasingly looking as if it might appear necessary.

Moments after Root came to the crease, England subsided to 15 for 2 requiring 344 more for victory. It looked a hopeless task. No England side has ever made such a total to win a Test and there's not much about this side - the team that have lost 10 wickets in a single session four times in the last three years - to suggest they will be the ones to change history.

But, at last, they found some resistance. Not swashbuckling, counterattacking, blistering resistance. The more substantial kind. The kind that is prepared to wait and leave and take blows to the body. The kind that reminds us that batting isn't just about eye-catching shots, but tight defence and well-judged leaves. It's about hours of careful accumulation.

Root was beaten at times. Josh Hazlewood, in particular, bowled beautifully and might, with a slice of luck, have won the battle. But while England pushed and prodded at deliveries in the first innings, here Root defended with bat in front of his eyes, played the line and refused to be lured into jabbing at the ball as it left him. His first three boundaries were all the result of soft hands combatting well directed deliveries and guided - sometimes with more than a hint of edge about them - to third man.

As his innings progressed, there were one or two more expansive shots. When Nathan Lyon over-pitched, for example, Root leaned into a cover driven boundary that registered his half-century from 120-balls. The next delivery, Lyon dropped short and Root turned him to fine leg for four more. And when Lyon removed his slip, Root responded with a reverse-sweep for another boundary.

But he had earned the right to those strokes. He had seen off the bowlers at their freshest and the ball at its hardest. He had forced them into third and fourth spells and, for perhaps the first time this series, exposed the limitations of Australia's three-man pace attack. This is how Test batting used to look.

One of the more remarkable moments in Root's innings came when he had scored 59. It earned no applause and will probably not feature on any highlights package. But his ability to keep out one delivery from Hazlewood - a ball that jagged in and kept horribly low - was remarkable; a testament to the batsman's hand-eye coordination and the manner in which he was keeping his eye on the ball.

It was, for the most part, good old-fashioned Test batting. There was none of this nonsense about needing to be positive or putting the pressure back on the bowler by hitting them for boundaries. Instead it was about the importance of remaining compact, the importance of wearing bowlers down and the importance of selling his wicket for the highest price possible. It was, in short, the innings of a leader.

He received admirable support from Joe Denly. There have been times in this series - really quite long times, not least in this game - when Denly has looked some way short of the standard required to sustain success at this level. Even in this innings, there were times when his most productive shot was the leave; so late was he on some leaves, that the ball flashed away off the face of the withdrawing bat to the boundary.

But there should be no doubting his toughness or determination. The Australian bowlers gave him a wonderfully sustained examination against the short-ball and, while he rarely looked anything other than hugely uncomfortable, he never took a backward step and he never gave it away. Eventually, he too produced a cut, a clip and a drive or two that suggested this attack could, in time, be overcome. He earned this half-century through bravery, bruises and bloody-mindedness.

And then there's Stokes. Forget, for a moment, the fact that he reached stumps having batted 50 balls for 2. That's an admirable demonstration of restraint, for sure. But it pales into insignificance beside his effort with the ball. Had it not been for Stokes' incredible spell - his 24.2 overs, every one of them dripping with pace and hostility, were broken only by night and four balls from Jofra Archer - this Ashes campaign would have been decided already. Not for the first time, his figures - 3 for 56 and 2 not out - provide little insight into the enormity of his commitment and contribution.

Australia remain overwhelming favourites for this match and this series. With the pitch exhibiting signs of uneven bounce and a new ball due after eight overs on the fourth day, Root may consider that his work has hardly begun. It would be little less than a miracle if England pulled this off.

But Root has, at least, shown that he has the character and skill to perform under pressure. And he has shown the leadership qualities to coax performances out of his team. Maybe, just maybe, Root can lead his side through such hardships in the manner in which Allan Border did so when captaining Australia during the defeat of 1985 and 1986-87. Border, after all, then went on to lead his side to success in the next three Ashes series. There were moments, at least, on Saturday when Root suggested he had the skill and the fortitude to do something similar.

Washington's Haener opts to leave, not be No. 2

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 24 August 2019 15:05

A day after former Georgia quarterback Jacob Eason was officially named Washington's starter, sophomore backup Jake Haener has decided to leave the program, the school announced.

Haener played in four games last year and completed nine passes for 107 yards with one touchdown and an interception as Jake Browning's backup.

Although he lost the starting job to Eason, coach Chris Petersen said Friday that he planned to play Haener in the 13th-ranked Huskies' season opener against Eastern Washington on Aug. 31.

"It was awesome," Petersen said of the competition. "Jake Haener and Jacob Eason, obviously two really good quarterbacks. Tight competition, and you take it as long as you can and you've got to make a decision and roll with it. Jake Haener will play in that first game. He should, he deserves it and he will."

With Haener gone, redshirt freshman Jacob Sirmon and true freshman Dylan Morris now will compete for the backup spot behind Eason.

Redshirt freshman Colson Yankoff transferred to UCLA in June but is expected to sit out the 2019 season after Washington didn't support his waiver for immediate eligibility.

Texans RB Miller exits preseason game on cart

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 24 August 2019 17:47

Houston Texans starting running back Lamar Miller was taken off the field on a cart during the first quarter of the team's preseason game against the Dallas Cowboys on Saturday.

On first down, Miller was tackled by Cowboys tackle Maliek Collins, who hit him just above the left knee. Miller grabbed his left leg and was checked out by the medical staff. He was eventually carted off.

Miller has been the Texans' lead back since 2016. In 14 games last season, he ran for 973 yards on 210 carries and scored five touchdowns. Miller is entering the last season of a four-year contract.

Houston traded for running back Duke Johnson earlier in the month but was hoping to feature both backs in their offense. Miller was replaced in the game by Taiwan Jones.

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