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A breakdown of prize money and FedExCup points for winner Patrick Reed and the rest of the players who made the cut at The Northern Trust, where FEC points were quadrupled for the first playoff event.

Finish Player FedEx Earnings ($)
1 Patrick Reed 2,000.00 1,665,000.00
2 Abraham Ancer 1,200.00 999,000.00
T3 Jon Rahm 650.00 536,500.00
T3 Harold Varner III 650.00 536,500.00
5 Adam Scott 440.00 370,000.00
T6 Rory McIlroy 355.00 299,468.75
T6 Louis Oosthuizen 355.00 299,468.75
T6 Brandt Snedeker 355.00 299,468.75
T6 Jordan Spieth 355.00 299,468.75
T10 Ian Poulter 290.00 240,500.00
T10 Justin Rose 290.00 240,500.00
T12 Patrick Cantlay 227.33 175,750.00
T12 Kevin Kisner 227.33 175,750.00
T12 Jason Kokrak 227.33 175,750.00
T12 Troy Merritt 227.33 175,750.00
T12 Andrew Putnam 227.33 175,750.00
T12 Justin Thomas 227.33 175,750.00
T18 Wyndham Clark 188.00 129,500.00
T18 Ryan Moore 188.00 129,500.00
T18 Webb Simpson 188.00 129,500.00
T21 Cameron Champ 164.00 103,600.00
T21 Corey Conners 164.00 103,600.00
T21 Billy Horschel 164.00 103,600.00
T24 Bryson DeChambeau 133.00 74,925.00
T24 Dustin Johnson 133.00 74,925.00
T24 C.T. Pan 133.00 74,925.00
T24 Adam Schenk 133.00 74,925.00
T24 Kevin Tway 133.00 74,925.00
T24 Danny Willett 133.00 74,925.00
T30 Branden Grace 92.50 53,765.63
T30 Andrew Landry 92.50 53,765.63
T30 Joaquin Niemann 92.50 53,765.63
T30 Vaughn Taylor 92.50 53,765.63
T30 Tony Finau 92.50 53,765.62
T30 Matt Jones 92.50 53,765.62
T30 Brooks Koepka 92.50 53,765.62
T30 Hideki Matsuyama 92.50 53,765.62
T38 Byeong Hun An 64.00 39,775.00
T38 Max Homa 64.00 39,775.00
T38 Sungjae Im 64.00 39,775.00
T38 Chez Reavie 64.00 39,775.00
T38 Jhonattan Vegas 64.00 39,775.00
T43 Ryan Armour 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Tommy Fleetwood 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Dylan Frittelli 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Lucas Glover 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Chesson Hadley 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Adam Hadwin 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Sebastián Muñoz 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Rory Sabbatini 40.66 27,565.00
T43 Aaron Wise 40.66 27,565.00
T52 Brian Harman 25.02 21,354.29
T52 J.B. Holmes 25.02 21,354.29
T52 Collin Morikawa 25.02 21,354.29
T52 Gary Woodland 25.02 21,354.29
T52 Jim Furyk 25.02 21,354.28
T52 Shane Lowry 25.02 21,354.28
T52 Brian Stuard 25.02 21,354.28
T59 Tyrrell Hatton 19.20 20,165.00
T59 Russell Henley 19.20 20,165.00
T59 J.T. Poston 19.20 20,165.00
T59 Cameron Smith 19.20 20,165.00
T59 Nick Watney 19.20 20,165.00
T64 Keegan Bradley 16.00 19,425.00
T64 Keith Mitchell 16.00 19,425.00
T64 Roger Sloan 16.00 19,425.00
T67 Joel Dahmen 13.20 18,777.50
T67 Mackenzie Hughes 13.20 18,777.50
T67 Carlos Ortiz 13.20 18,777.50
T67 Scott Piercy 13.20 18,777.50
T71 Kiradech Aphibarnrat 10.80 17,945.00
T71 Talor Gooch 10.80 17,945.00
T71 Phil Mickelson 10.80 17,945.00
T71 Kyle Stanley 10.80 17,945.00
T71 Matthew Wolff 10.80 17,945.00
76 Scott Brown 9.60 17,390.00
T77 Charley Hoffman 8.60 16,927.50
T77 Luke List 8.60 16,927.50
T77 Kevin Na 8.60 16,927.50
T77 Ryan Palmer 8.60 16,927.50
81 Danny Lee 7.60 16,465.00
82 Francesco Molinari 7.20 16,280.00
83 Martin Laird 6.80 16,095.00
84 Si Woo Kim 6.40 15,910.00

JERSEY CITY, N.J. – Following last year’s Ryder Cup, where Patrick Reed scorched a few U.S. team members and some of captain Jim Furyk’s leadership choices, it became difficult to imagine how the 29-year-old would ever fit back into the American team room.

For much of the summer Reed’s position on this year’s Presidents Cup team wasn’t really an issue as he struggled early in the season and he began this week’s The Northern Trust 17th on the U.S. points list, with next week’s deadline to finish inside the top 8 (Aug. 18) and automatically qualify looming.

Reed gave his title chances a boost with his victory Sunday at Liberty National but it was still only enough to move him to 12th on the points list, which means captain Tiger Woods may still have to decide whether to pick Reed for this year’s team.

“If I'm not inside the top 8, that means that I have until [WGC-HSBC Champions in November] to continue playing good golf, continue playing well,” Reed said. “If you continue playing good golf and you continue to have a chance to win on Sunday, then it's one of those things that it's going to be hard not to pick somebody.”

Woods will announce his four captain’s picks on Nov. 4.

Following last year’s Ryder Cup, Reed criticized Furyk for not pairing him with Jordan Spieth. “The issue’s obviously with Jordan not wanting to play with me. I don’t have any issue with Jordan. When it comes right down to it, I don’t care if I like the person I’m paired with or if the person likes me as long as it works,” Reed told the New York Times.

JERSEY CITY, N.J. – With one fewer playoff event and more points available, this year’s postseason was billed as a more volatile version, and The Northern Trust didn’t disappoint.

In total, four players moved into the top 70 and advanced to next week’s BMW Championship led by Harold Varner III, who made the week’s biggest jump from 102nd on the points list to 29th.

“My second year on Tour [2017], I was in the same position where I had a hard chance of keeping my card and I got through the next one,” said Varner, who closed with a 68 to finish tied for third at The Northern Trust. “I've been playing really well this whole year. You stay patient and you keep doing the things that you believe and it paid off today.”

Troy Merritt (T-12), Wyndham Clark (T-18) and Joaquin Niemann (T-30) also moved into the top 70 and secured a spot in next week’s field; while on the other side of the bubble fell Sergio Garcia (MC), Danny Lee (81st), Matthew Wolff (T-71) and Kevin Streelman (MC) who dropped outside the top 70.

It marks the second consecutive year that Garcia failed to advance in the playoffs. Last season he finished 128th in points and didn’t qualify for the postseason.

Gabriela Ruffels made history Sunday in Mississippi, making birdie each of her final two holes to defeat Albane Valenzuela, 1 up, to become the first Australian winner of the U.S. Women’s Amateur.

The moment left the rising USC junior nearly speechless.

“It’s been kind of a blur the last kind of 20 minutes,” Ruffels said. “But this is amazing. This is what you dream of as a kid when you start playing golf.”

Only Ruffels’ dream of achieving great heights initially began with another sport.

Tennis runs in Ruffels’ blood. Her father, Ray, was a three-time semifinalist at the Australian Open and reached the mixed-doubles finals of the U.S. Open and Wimbeldon. Her mother, Anna-Maria Fernandez, won a national singles title at USC in 1981. Gabriela played the sport competitively and became a top-ranked junior player in Australia, until she gave it up at age 14.

Shortly after, she turned her focus to golf. As if earning a scholarship to a premier program and playing a pivotal role last season for the top-ranked Trojans weren’t enough to validate her decision, Sunday’s triumph at Old Waverly Club left no question.

Ruffels rolled through the first three rounds of match play, never reaching the 16th hole, and then in the semifinals took down All-American Andrea Lee of Stanford to earn a finals matchup against Lee’s Cardinal teammate, Valenzuela.

The 21-year-old Valenzuela, who two years ago lost to Sophia Schubert in the final of this tournament, got out to an early 2-up lead after four holes. But neither player played particularly well in the morning portion. Ruffels won Nos. 8-11 to go 3 up, yet she let Valenzuela win holes with pars on the back nine to go into the break tied.

Valenzuela led 1 up for much of the second 18, including through 32 holes.

At that point, Ruffels’ caddie, USC head coach Justin Silverstein, had to relinquish his duties in order to get to the airport. (Silverstein had to fly home to California from Memphis on Sunday afternoon to attend a funeral on Monday.) Mississippi State junior Blair Stockett, who plays Old Waverly frequently, took over.

Ruffels birdied the next hole, the par-5 15th, to square the match. Two holes later, she took the lead with another birdie. And on the last, with Valenzuela facing a short birdie putt, Ruffels drained a 10-footer to halve the hole and clinch the match.

“Seeing that just drop in, probably the best feeling of my life,” Ruffels said.

She’s sure to have more, considering Ruffels’ victory earns her several perks. She receives exemptions into the U.S. Women’s Open, ANA Inspiration, Women’s British Open and Evian Championship next year, as well as the 2020 Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

“Never. Been. Prouder,” Ruffels’ older brother, Ryan, a professional golfer, tweeted Sunday from Canada. “To step away from tennis five years ago because you wanted to pursue something you had more of a passion for is a very gutsy call for a 14-year-old to make. Hard work, and now look at you.”

Gabi Ruffels, USGA champion.

Bo Hoag won the final regular-season event on the Korn Ferry Tour, finalizing his PGA Tour card for 2020 in the process. But as always at the WinCo Foods Portland Open, the drama extended well beyond the tournament's final leaderboard.

Players at various stations on the developmental circuit spent Sunday crunching numbers and projected point totals, with the top 25 in the season-long race earning promotions next season and Nos. 26-75 securing spots in the upcoming Korn Ferry Tour Finals. Among the former group was Hoag, who entered the week outside the bubble at No. 31 but moved all the way up to seventh after a final-round 65 led to a two-shot victory.

"It's a life-changer for me," Hoag said. "I've been playing under pressure my whole life, so that's what I told myself today was there's going to be a lot of pressure. But this is all I've been doing since I can remember."

There were tears of joy for runner-up Scott Harrington, a Portland native who at age 38 earned a PGA Tour card for the first time. Harrington took a leave of absence from professional golf last year to serve as a caretaker for his wife, Jenn, who was battling Hodgkin's lymphoma. Entering his hometown event at 38th in points, he shot a final-round 69 that moved him all the way up to 19th to secure his card.

Her cancer in remission, Jenn was there to greet her husband behind the 18th green after holing his final putt.

"We've been through so much. I just had a feeling all year, even when I got off to a bad start, I knew. I knew this was going to be the year," Harrington said. "I just love her so much. To do it for her, and everything she's been through, I just can't put into words."

But the emotions also factored on the other side of the spectrum, as some players missed the top-75 cutoff by the thinnest of margins. Needing a top-six finish to earn a Finals bid and keep alive hopes of a PGA Tour return, 41-year-old veteran Edward Loar left a birdie putt on the 72nd hole hanging on the lip. After tapping in for par for a tie for seventh, he moved up from 102nd to only 78th.

But Loar's heartbreak paled in comparison to that of Vince India, who minutes later came to the last hole in third place, needing a par to advance to Finals. Finding the greenside bunker in two on the par 5, India's sand shot rolled into a collection area on the other side of the green. His next chip rolled back to his feet, and after walking off with a double bogey, he realized a spot in Finals and a chance at the PGA Tour had disappeared in the blink of an eye.

"I thought I clipped (the bunker shot) well enough to hold, and it just kept going," said India, who moved to 85th in points after a fifth-place finish. "Then I dropped it in like a very small divot and couldn't get great contact on it. And then, I just did my best."

India, Loar and the others finishing Nos. 76-85 on the final points list won't be in the field next week for the first of three Korn Ferry Finals events. Instead, they'll have to head back to Q-School this fall in order to regain Korn Ferry status for 2020, while Nos. 86-100 will face two stages of Q-School to regain their Korn Ferry privileges.

Vince Whaley held onto the 25th and final PGA Tour card despite missing the cut in Portland, edging out Chris Baker who fell from 24th to 26th. Xinjung Zhang topped the regular-season money list, while former NCAA standouts Robby Shelton, Scottie Scheffler and Maverick McNealy will all headline the 2020 PGA Tour rookie class.

The Korn Ferry Finals, which will offer another 25 PGA Tour cards for next season and will also include Nos. 126-200 from the PGA Tour's FedExCup list, will start next week in Columbus, Ohio, before heading to Boise, Idaho, and concluding in Evansville, Ind.

Pogba: 'Question mark' over Utd future remains

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 11 August 2019 18:23

Paul Pogba has admitted there is still a "question mark" over his Manchester United future but has promised to "give everything" while he remains at Old Trafford.

The Frenchman has been linked with moves to Real Madrid and Juventus after saying he wants "a new challenge" earlier this summer.

Sources have told ESPN FC that the 26-year-old will not be sold despite the European transfer window remaining open until Sept. 2.

But after starring for United during the 4-0 win over Chelsea on Sunday, Pogba left the door open for a move away.

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"I am always good whenever I play football," the midfielder told French reporters in the mixed zone. "It is what I love -- it is my job. I give the maximum each time I am on a green pitch.

"Obviously there have been things said, but only time will tell. This question mark remains.

"However, as I said, I am here in Manchester. I enjoy playing with my teammates and I always want to win every game. I always give it everything."

Focusing on Sunday's match, Pogba said that he was delighted with United's performance against rivals Chelsea and was effusive in his praise of new teammate Harry Maguire.

"I call him 'The Beast'," Pogba said. "Honestly, as you saw, he was really impressive. He is a leader. He fit right in with us in training. We talked about controlling the defence well and he has a good understanding with Victor [Lindelof]. It was a very good match to start with from the whole team.

"In the first half, we were dominated in terms of chances and possession, but we reacted in the second. Our changes enabled us to take over. We were better in possession and in terms of chances. We were lucky to have the lead through the penalty in the first half, but after a bad start, we finished the match well. We are satisfied with our performance."

Pogba was pivotal in setting up Manchester United's third and fourth goals against Chelsea -- laying on assists for Marcus Rashford and Daniel James -- and says that the squad is developing a good understanding within Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's system.

"That [position change] has been there for a while now -- since before this season," he said. "In terms of organisation, it is a bit more like how I play with the French national team. It does not bother me where I play, whether it is higher or lower, we adapt and enjoy. The team too, we were much better coming out of the back and that is something to keep going with in the coming games.

"Rashy and I understand each other well. We try to do a maximum number of passes like that. I am starting understand his calls for the ball too and that enables me to find him like I did."

Dortmund wonderkid, 14, nets six for U19s

Published in Soccer
Monday, 12 August 2019 04:23

Borussia Dortmund wonderkid Youssoufa Moukoko scored six goals on his under-19 debut on Sunday.

After a record 50 goals in 28 matches for Dortmund's U17s last season, the 14-year-old was promoted to Borussia's U19 team this summer, and his debut performance against Wuppertaler SV was enough to suggest that he could continue to break records.

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Moukoko, who also plays for the Germany U16 side, had completed a hat trick within 17 minutes of the first half and ended the match with six goals as Dortmund won 9-2.

"Hats off," a statement on Wuppertaler's official website read after the young player's stunning debut.

"We were warned! But what can you do? The lad's just so good."

United States youngster Gio Reyna, 16, was also on target for reigning U19 champions Dortmund, scoring just one minute into his competitive debut for BVB.

Moukoko could make his Bundesliga debut in the 2021-2022 season, once he has turned 17.

Real Salt Lake terminate Petke's contract

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 11 August 2019 21:19

Real Salt Lake has terminated the contract of manager Mike Petke, and named assistant Freddy Juarez as head coach on an interim basis for the rest of the season, the club announced on Sunday evening.

Petke was set to return from a two-week suspension on Monday. ESPN FC confirmed a report from The Athletic that the suspension was for directing multiple anti-gay slurs at officials following RSL's 1-0 Leagues Cup defeat against UANL Tigres on July 24.

Following an investigation by MLS, Petke was suspended for two weeks, fined $25,000, suspended for three MLS league matches, three Leagues Cup matches, and required to take anger management classes, as well as sensitivity and diversity training. He was also required to send written apologies to both MLS and the referees in question. It marked the third time in Petke's RSL tenure that he had been suspended.

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Despite the heavy punishment, RSL owner Dell Loy Hansen told fans following a Utah Royals game last Wednesday that he was considering firing Petke. On Sunday, the organization did just that.

"At Real Salt Lake, we have the privilege to represent our great community and fans here locally and on a national and global basis," the organization said in a statement to the media.

"We hold all of our coaches, players, executives and staff to the highest standards of professionalism. As an organization, it is vital that everyone, particularly our leadership, reflects and embodies our core values and the values of our community, treating all people with respect, civility and professionalism.

"Moreover, throughout our 15-year history, we have championed diversity, acceptance and inclusion throughout our organization, our stadiums and our community. This is a responsibility that we take very seriously."

The statement added, "After further deliberations and a series of constructive discussions internally and with various members of our community, we have concluded, pursuant to his employment agreement, to immediately terminate Mike Petke's employment."

Petke was hired as RSL's manager just weeks into the 2017 season after the club opted to fire then-manager Jeff Cassar. Petke had been managing the Utah Monarchs, RSL's entry into the second tier USL Championship. Petke's time with RSL, including playoffs, ends with a record of 39-36-16.

Prior to his stints in Utah, Petke was manager of the New York Red Bulls, leading the club to the 2013 Supporters Shield. But a front office shakeup saw Petke relieved of his duties prior to the 2015 regular season.

Petke spent the entirety of his playing career in MLS, playing for the likes of the MetroStars (the forerunner of the Red Bulls), D.C. United, and the Colorado Rapids before finishing his career with the Red Bulls in 2010. He was part of DCU's MLS Cup-winning side in 2004. Petke made two appearances with the U.S. men's national team.

Five minutes was all it took for Bhuvneshwar Kumar to flip the game in India's favour.

Thirty-fifth over. Nicholas Pooran, the form batsman, made it look like West Indies had the game in their pocket. They needed 92 in 12 overs, perfectly doable.

The ball was on the shorter side, probably a bit slower than Pooran expected, and it was pulled to leg, where Virat Kohli was positioned at deep midwicket. Gone. Two balls later came the catch of the match. Before fans or even the Indian players realised what had happened, Bhuvneshwar, in his follow through, had plucked the ball out of thin air after a Roston Chase leading edge, flying diagonally to his left and landing on his arms.

The score: 179 for 6, after the over had started with 178 for 4.

"My catch, I just took it!" he said with a laugh at the press conference. It was too fast for him to even process what was happening. He'd taken a similar catch in the second T20I in Lauderhill, but this one was different.

"I wasn't thinking much about the result. We knew if we could get one or two wickets then we would be back in the game. When I came to bowl, all I was thinking was I have to bowl economically and I feel that wickets are the by-product of bowling tight."

Bhuvneshwar's four wickets might have helped India reach the finish line, but there were two other performances that stood out for the team: the innings from Kohli and Shreyas Iyer.

Kohli's century (120 in 125 balls) was his first in 11 innings. The knock also took him past Sourav Ganguly's tally of 11,363 runs, making him the eighth highest run-getter in ODIs.

"From Virat's expression you could see that he badly wanted to score a 100, not because he was out of form, but because he was getting out in the 70s and 80s and he always looking to score big runs," Bhuvneshwar said. "The wicket wasn't easy and it wasn't easy to score runs as the ball got older. We know how good he is a player."

Iyer's performance was overshadowed by Kohli's, but he was as impressive, with a sensible 71 from 68 balls. For Bhuvneshwar, "I think it was a crucial partnership with Virat. He was hitting singles and he was hitting boundaries as well. I think he played with maturity."

Winnipeg Hawks 192 for 8 (Anwar 90, Lynn 37, Duminy 33, Russell 4-29) tied with Vancouver Knights 192 for 6 (Malik 64, Russell 46*, Emrit 2-37)
Super Over Winnipeg 10 beat Vancouver 9 with two balls to spare

In a pulsating final decided in the Super Over, Winnipeg Hawks held their nerve to out-battle Vancouver Knights and, especially, Andre Russell, who could well have been on the park for West Indies at Port-of-Spain, if not for the knee injury he was managing post-surgery. Yet, as the final got tense, he batted like a man possessed, came out to bowl the Super Over, and everything asked of him and more, except win the game for his side.

Here's how it panned out: 54 needed off 19 balls in the Knights chase. Shoaib Malik has been dismissed for a fine 64. It is the final, no second chances. In walks Russell at No. 7, the Knights' last hope. Earlier in the evening, he had taken 4 for 29 to restrict Winnipeg to 192. He has been held back, even below Canada's Saad Bin Zafar, in the batting order. Now, it's all or nothing. So what does he do? Smash the ball like only he can - three fours, five sixes, all in 19 balls, to bring it down to three runs off the final ball.

Russell is on strike and but this time, he can only mistime an attempted slog towards long-on. The bowler can't collect the throw as they scramble for a second. They now try to sneak in a third, but the cover fielder backing up quickly hurls the ball to the wicketkeeper. Zafar is run out, Russell's heroics aren't enough, and the game is forced into a Super Over. The Hawks are still in it. Shaiman Anwar, whose 90 allowed them to make 192 and keep them alive in the first place, can still be a winner.

Now for the one-over shootout.

Vancouver, predictably, send in Russell and South Africa's Rassie van der Dussen. Kaleem Sana, an unheralded 25-year-old left-arm medium pacer from Rawalpindi, with an experience of five List-A games and four first-class fixtures, has the unenviable task of bowling.

He's been clubbed for 50 off four wicketless overs earlier in the evening. Now, the pressure is on him and he sees the first ball of the shootout vanish for six. Russell is in his zone again, or he had never left it. Sana follows it up with two length balls to cramp the batsmen, before getting Russell caught at long-on. He's redeemed himself and Winnipeg need just 10 to win.

You'd think Russell wouldn't feature anymore in the game - creaking knees, managing his injury and all that. But no! He's bowling the Super Over. Having got the side to the doorstep of victory, only to see them fluff it, he's now got the chance to deliver the knockout blow.

He starts well, restricting the first two balls to singles, before he slips in a full toss which the batsman misses. All good for now, except, wicketkeeper Tobias Visee misses too. Four byes, game on. Chris Lynn is on strike. Four to get, three balls left, and he swings, gets a thick outside edge over short third man, and it races away for four and Winnipeg win. The Global T20 Canada couldn't have asked for a more fitting finale.

Earlier, after being asked to bat, the Hawks rode on UAE batsman Anwar's 45-ball 90, with eight fours and seven sixes, to get to a strong total at CAA Centre in Brampton. Anwar started with a 73-run stand with Lynn in the Powerplay before Russell got rid of the Australian for a 21-ball 37. But Anwar batted on, putting up another good stand of 81 with JP Duminy (33 in 27 balls) for the third wicket before falling ten short of his boundary when he miscued an attempted biggie in the 16th over. Russell's four wickets were complemented by USA pacer Ali Khan's 2 for 30 and local boy Rayyan Pathan's 2 for 24.

The Knights' reply started poorly, with Rayad Emrit reducing them to 2 for 2 by the second over, but van der Dussen (23 in 22) and Australian Daniel Sams (21 in 9) gave them stability before Malik, Zafar (27 in 26) and Russell took them to the doorstep of victory. The fell just short in the end, but only just.

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