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PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – Shane Lowry absolutely blew the 2016 U.S. Open at Oakmont. Just tossed it away. The Irishman shot a third-round 65 to take a four-shot lead into the final round and shot 76 Sunday to finish three shots behind winner Dustin Johnson.

He knows he blew it. We know he blew it. He knows that we know he blew it.

“I said to (caddie) Bo (Martin) when I finished, looked at the leaderboard, four ahead, I said to Bo, ‘at least I won’t have to answer any questions about Oakmont, I’m four ahead going into the final round of a major,’” Lowry joked late Saturday at Royal Portrush sitting on a four-shot lead heading into the final round of The Open, acknowledging similarities between the two situations.

“I learned a lot about myself at Oakmont. I’m going to learn a lot about myself tomorrow.”

Lowry, 32, knows that one of the most difficult things in golf is to follow a great round of golf with another great round. He shot a third-round 63 Saturday that includes eight birdies and no bogeys. It was flawless.

Even though the Oakmont hiccup was three years ago, Lowry contends that it feels longer ago than that. Couple that with the fact that he and his wife Wendy have since had a child (daughter Iris is now 2). He believes he’s in a better position to handle everything that’ll be thrown at him Sunday at Royal Portrush.

“That’s a long time ago,” Lowry said. “I feel like I’m a different person. I don’t think I’m a much different golfer, but I feel like I’m a different person now. I think that’s what will help me tomorrow.”

Cydney Clanton missed retaining her LPGA status by a mere $8 last year.

With the help of Jasmine Suwannapura, she won’t have to worry about her final standing on this year’s money list. The duo teamed to shoot a better-ball 59 in Saturday's final round, and win the inaugural Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational in Midland, Mich.

Clanton and Suwannapura were each handed $241,269 checks after routing the field. Their 11-under 59 gave them a six-shot victory over Jin Young Ko and Minjee Lee, who teamed to shoot 58.

It’s Clanton’s first LPGA title, coming in her eighth year on tour. She doesn’t just get a two-year exemption with the victory. She earns spots in next week’s Evian Championship and the following week’s AIG Women’s British Open.

“I've had full status before, but it will allow for me to kind of sit back and relax a little bit, and kind of set my own schedule,” said Clanton, who just turned 30. “I think it's just going to free me up, because it's been something that I've been working on.”

With limited status, Clanton was making just her fourth LPGA start this year. She came into this week No. 269 in the Rolex Women’s World Rankings.

It’s Suwannapura’s second LPGA title. She qualified for the event and then chose Clanton as her partner. The connection? Suwannapura’s caddie is Michelle Simpson, who has caddied for Clanton in the past. Clanton remains friends with Simpson.

“I put something in her ear,” Clanton said. “I guess she ended up talking to Jasmine about it and then Jasmine picked me.”

As the rout demonstrates, there was instant chemistry.

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – Shane Lowry and his coach Neil Manchip have a close relationship. They have for a long time. Lowry tells Manchip everything. Doesn’t see any reason not to. Manchip is there to help, and if Lowry can’t be honest with him then there is no point in them working together.

Saturday, following a spectacular 63 in the third round of The Open, Lowry shared an example of when he was brutally honest with Manchip at one point earlier in his career.

“I needed a caddie for me in Valderrama, years ago,” Lowry recalls, and ended up using Manchip at the last minute. “I was playing, had a chance to win the tournament playing the 17th. We got down and did the number and I said to him, ‘I’m absolutely sh**ting myself.’

“I don’t know what he said, but he was like, 'that’s kind of the way it is. I like to talk about things.'”

Fast forward to the present. Lowry, 32, holds a four-shot lead heading into the final round of The Open, in Ireland. Lowry grew up four hours south of Royal Portrush. Everyone here will be cheering for him Sunday.

It’s a big moment.

“I’m not going to be sitting there tomorrow morning in the house in a corner trying not to think about the day ahead. I’ll be talking about it. Obviously I’ll be thinking about holding the claret jug tomorrow evening. It’s only natural isn’t it?

“We’re human. We’re not robots. We can’t not thinking about things. And when you try not to think about something you end up thinking about it more, so you might as well talk about it. So, we talk about stuff. Talk about everything.”

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland – Brooks Koepka didn’t sound like a man who was seven strokes off the pace through three rounds of The Open.

“Nobody has hit it better than me this week. I've hit it as good as I could possibly imagine,” he said Saturday following a third-round 67 at Royal Portrush.

This was not idle boasting from the four-time major champion. He ranks 22nd in the field in greens in regulation, hitting 14 of 18 on Saturday, and 14th in fairways hit. Officials don’t keep strokes-gained statistics at The Open, but if they did Koepka’s tee-to-green performance would undoubtedly be impressive.

His game on Royal Portrush’s greens, however, would explain why he will begin the final round tied for fourth and seven strokes off the record pace set by Shane Lowry.

“I putted the worst in the entire field,” Koepka said. “It's been really bad. Very frustrating. Disappointed.”

The stats would also prove that point. Koepka has needed 29 putts in each of the first three days, and he missed numerous birdie opportunities on Day 3 that would have closed the gap on Lowry.

“They feel like good putts when they come off the blade. But they're burning the edge. That's the only thing I can say,” Koepka said. “They feel like good putts. They're all tap-ins right there. The speed is fine.”

Koepka marched directly to the practice putting green following his round in his ongoing attempt to find an answer to his putting woes. But he remained optimistic in his quest to win his fifth major – and fourth in his last seven major starts.

“I just need to putt good one day,” he said.

Sources: Neymar confident of tempting Barca offer

Published in Soccer
Saturday, 20 July 2019 13:21

Neymar and his entourage are confident Barcelona will soon put together a strong cash-plus-players offer to entice Paris Saint-Germain into a sale, sources have told ESPN FC.

The Brazil international has been back with the French champions and training this week after returning late from his homeland. However, the 27-year-old has not featured in either preseason friendly in Germany against Dynamo Dresden or FC Nurnberg after he remained insistent on leaving this summer.

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Despite the confidence on Neymar's side, sporting director Leonardo confirmed on Saturday that PSG haven't yet received any formal offers from Barca for their €222 million man. However, that could only be a matter of time, with super-agent Pini Zahavi -- heavily involved in discussions -- confident that the Spanish giants will soon find the money to make the deal happen.

Sources add that Barca are remaining hopeful that Neymar's relationship with the Ligue 1 giants remains frosty and that PSG will ultimately lower their demands and make an agreement more feasible.

Leonardo recently told Le Parisien the club are aware that Barcelona are not in a strong position as buyers, and that they do not have enough money to purchase the South American without including multiple players in any potential deal.

Neymar has not travelled to Germany for either one of PSG's friendly fixtures this week, but sources say the club have made the necessary arrangements for their No. 10 to be part of their travelling party to China next week -- barring any dramatic developments.

PSG will face Inter Milan and Sydney FC in China before Rennes in the Trophee des Champions -- a match for which Neymar is suspended, although he is awaiting the results of an appeal.

ESPN's Jonathan Johnson, Julien Laurens, Sam Marsden and Joao Castelo-Branco all contributed to this report.

Former Zimbabwe batsman Grant Flower believes Zimbabwe Cricket's perpetually crisis-ridden state might have contributed to the ICC's decision to suspend them. The drastic decision, which immediately froze all payment to Zimbabwe Cricket and barred the nation from participating in ICC events, took many by surprise, particularly since this was the first time a Full Member had been sanctioned in this manner.

Flower, however, believes their lamentable track record, as well as the glacial rate of progress despite the ICC ploughing bail-out cash into the board over the years, had counted against them.

"I can understand the player's frustrations, but unfortunately with Zimbabwe cricket, it sounds like the ICC have just had enough," Flower told ESPNcricinfo. "Regarding money owed and money lent, and money the ICC gave Zimbabwe that they're probably never going to see again, it sounds like maybe they've run out of patience.

"I think over time, the ICC have just been worn down by all the corruption, the fraud, and the problems with Zimbabwe cricket not being able to get its house in order. Maybe they thought a jolt to their system would make some people realise what was expected of them. They would have reasoned Zimbabwe needed to understand that at some stage, you've got to put your house in order, and we can't keep propping you up like we have been doing over the years.

"We can go back so many years to when things were very badly run. It's pretty obvious what was happening at the time and the people responsible who were involved. And I think the current crop of players and the interim board, who are really good people, are being punished because the ICC felt they needed to take a stand."

ALSO READ: 'Do we just burn our kits and apply for jobs?' - Sikandar Raza

The most ironic, and from a Zimbabwean point of view, frustrating, point in this state of affairs is the timing of the suspension. In September 2018, former Olympic swimmer and Zimbabwe's most famous sportsperson Kirsty Coventry was appointed minister of Sports and Recreation Committee (SRC). Under her stewardship, there was a belief that a corner had been turned, and that Zimbabwe Cricket would benefit from the increased accountability the revamped SRC was expected to deliver. It was a point Flower accepted and said both the timing of the decision, as well as the consistency with which it was applied across the cricketing world, didn't quite add up for him.

"My understanding is the SRC is a public body and not exactly government," he said. "I think there's quite a big difference there and I'm surprised the media hasn't picked up on that. The SRC now is slightly more transparent. I don't know all the members, but I do know Kirsty Coventry and she's a good lady, a good person. And a few other people that are involved in it you could say the same of. So if you got someone at the top like Kirsty there, her hands might be tied in a lot of places, but there should be more good things happening than bad.

"Regarding government intervention, it's curious how the ICC have decided to interpret that. There are other countries where it's publicly stated that some of the times that certain things will be discussed and decided at government level. So I think there's quite a big contradiction there from the ICC."

"It is a sad day, and maybe some of the players are going to move on. Most of the players are still quite young, like Brendan Taylor and Kyle Jarvis, who left their county to return to Zimbabwe."

Zimbabwe cricket isn't a stranger to deep crises. Flower played a part in arguably the gravest one of all, when in 2004, he, along with 14 other white cricketers, walked out on Zimbabwe cricket after captain Heath Streak was dismissed following a disagreement over the squad's re-selection based on what Streak interpreted as unofficial racial quotas. It saw 21-year old Tatenda Taibu become captain, and an inexperienced side suffer a drastic downturn in results. One year later, they would withdraw from Test cricket for over half a decade.

Flower believed this particular bind was even graver, especially because it effectively prevented Zimbabwe from playing cricket altogether. "Even when we were leaving, there were a good bunch of youngsters coming through that could get the country's cricket going. But that's not the case anymore, with even the domestic competitions unable to take place. For it to be stopped until October at the very least, the guys are probably going to go and play in the leagues, seek a future elsewhere to try and look after their families, So yeah, I certainly think this is far worse."

An impending exodus threatens to plunge Zimbabwe cricket into further turmoil. Solomon Mire has already announced his retirement, while Sikandar Raza hinted at it in a post on Twitter and interview with ESPNcricinfo. Kyle Jarvis wryly noted that "we are not far behind you" in response to Mire's decision to quit, while, with no money to pay players, administrators and groundstaff, a secure future with the international side looks next to impossible. Flower said it was a harsh lesson Zimbabwe were learning, and hoped there could be a favourable resolution to the dispute in October.

"Unfortunately in Zimbabwe corruption is rife. When you live there, you get used to it. It's quite an unhealthy state of life and affairs which has become the norm. It's quite frightening, but until you live there, you don't quite actually realise that.

"The scapegoats are the players and some of the good administrators. I saw this thing on Twitter about Harare Sports club, it's a beautiful ground and at the moment it's just going to waste because no one is being paid and the staff have left. It's publicly owned by Harare Sports Club and the upkeep is paid for by Zimbabwe Cricket so unfortunately those sorts of things may just go to ruin.

"It is a sad day, and maybe some of the players are going to move on. Most of the players are still quite young, like Brendan Taylor and Kyle Jarvis, who left their county to return to Zimbabwe. They could still ply their trade elsewhere; it'd be a pity it won't be for their country of birth.

"But life goes on eh?"

For those players with no offers abroad and the hundreds of non-cricketing staff that ZC employ, even that's barely a guarantee.

Derbyshire 166 for 5 (Godleman 70*) beat Yorkshire 164 for 8 (Thompson 50, Watt 4-19) by five wickets

Yorkshire's David Willey runs in to bowl to Billy Godleman. The ball is speared down leg side and races away for five wides. On the instant a deep-throated cheer comes up from most of the supporters who ring Queen's Park. Chesterfield's festival, once threatened, always cherished, has ended in a five-wicket victory for the home side over one of their traditional rivals.

The atmosphere is festal; the air, almost tropical earlier in the day, has freshened towards evening. A jazz band will play in the beer tent later and you can be assured plenty of ale will be supped to celebrate Derbyshire beginning their Vitality Blast campaign with a win. Godleman, whose unbeaten 70 has anchored his side's innings, is applauded back to the pavilion. Home supporters are grateful their side had five balls to spare. English cricket has had enough of ties.

Visiting supporters rightly bemoan the absence of Matthew Fisher who has had to leave the field in the third over of Derbyshire's innings with a dislocated right shoulder. Fisher's left-arm pace bowling might have made 164 an even more competitive total. As it is, Yorkshire have had to bowl 11 overs of spin, not necessarily a problem on a used pitch, but a limitation on Tom Kohler-Cadmore's options. None of which worries the children who are playing games on other used wickets or the supporters enjoying the sun and wondering if Dominic Cork's arrival as T20 coach will help their side reach their first T20 Finals Day.

Yet Cork is not the first man to be interviewed when the players emerge from the pavilion and nor does Godleman win the man of the match award. That honour falls to Mark Watt, a 22-year-old slow left-armer from Edinburgh, whose four wickets for 19 runs ensured Yorkshire's array of T20 hitters never launched an uninhibited assault on the shorter boundaries around the tree-lined ground.

"Meet George Stephenson" suggested one flyer outside the restaurant at Queen's Park this lunchtime. "Meet a medieval surgeon," urged another as the custodians of Chesterfield's museum placed even greater faith in the power of time travel or the credulousness of the town's tourists. We will never know how many of the five-and-a-half thousand souls who crammed into one of England most famous outgrounds took the tourist board up on their offers. But to judge from the folk queueing up for the post-match signing session quite a few people were interested in meeting Watt.

One could see their point. Victories over Yorkshire are treasured occasions in these parts and Watt's wickets on his Derbyshire debut did more than anything to set up his side's triumph. Nor were Watt's victims death-over donations. Brought into the attack in the sixth over from the Pavilion End, he removed Willey, Harry Brook, Gary Ballance and Nicholas Pooran to leave Yorkshire on 77 for 6 after 11.3 overs of their innings.

At that point Watt's accuracy and subtle changes of length and pace looked to have done enough to ensure his team would be chasing a low total. Ballance, bowled when reverse-sweeping, and Pooran, hitting the seventh ball of his Yorkshire career straight to long-off, had given him all the assistance he needed.

But the visitors were rescued by Jordan Thompson, whose maiden first-team fifty included five crowd-scattering sixes. Thompson put on 66 in less than seven overs with Jonny Tattersall before he skied Logan van Beek to wicketkeeper Daryn Smit in the penultimate over. Tattersall's canny 39 off 31 balls and Fisher's big six in the final over saw Yorkshire to 164, a plainly defendable total on a used pitch. Fisher's day, however, was about to get very much worse when he dived to prevent a boundary and stood up clutching his shoulder.

In time, of course, so did Yorkshire's, although Dom Bess's removal of Luis Reece and Wayne Madsen, both leg before wicket, kept the result in doubt. Yet at no point in Derbyshire's innings did they lose control of their pursuit and scoring eight runs an over is a familiar task for batsmen as experienced as Godleman. Leus du Plooy helped when he got inside the line of Bess's final over and whacked two sixes to the right of the Norway maple. Du Plooy was caught at short third man off Thompson for 30 but Matthew Critchley maintained the momentum towards what is Derbyshire's fifth successive T20 win over Yorkshire.

And maybe visiting supporters sporting their Leeds and Sheffield United shirts should not have been too surprised. Yorkshire have not won a T20 game at Chesterfield since 2014 and home fans clearly arrived ready to drink deeply whatever the outcome. Even the school bus was a bar. Well, it is the end of term.

Open adjusts Sunday tee times as weather looms

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 20 July 2019 12:43

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland -- With weather forecasts calling for heavy rain and very strong wind gusts on Sunday, the R&A has moved up the tee times by an hour for the final round of the 148th Open Championship at Royal Portrush Golf Club.

The R&A moved up the first tee times to 2:32 a.m. ET, with the leaders going off at 8:47 a.m. ET.

Players battled inclement weather earlier in the week, but the conditions for Saturday's third round were largely benign, with 30 of the 73 players in the field shooting under par.

"Weather looks pretty poor from about 9 a.m. onward [on Sunday]," said Englishman Danny Willett, who shot 6-under 65 on Saturday to move into the top 10. "Then this place will grow some teeth again. ...

"If [the weather] is what is forecast tomorrow -- 10-, 15-mph winds and raining -- this place will be a completely different kettle of fish. Just have to go to bed and wake up and see."

The forecast from the Met Office, the national weather service in Northern Ireland, on Sunday calls for "persistent and occasionally heavy rain during the afternoon and evening" with winds at 15 mph and gusts at 25 mph. There's a 40% chance of gusts as strong as 35 mph after 11 a.m. ET.

"It will be hard," said Xander Schauffele, who sits at 5-under after firing a 2-under 69 on Saturday. "If it's normal wind, the hard holes play really difficult. There's about six birdie holes, and everything else is holding on for dear life."

In the first major of the season, at the Masters in April, Augusta National Golf Club officials moved up the Sunday tee times and had players tee off on Nos. 1 and 10 in threesomes because of the threat of severe thunderstorms.

Irish eyes are smiling: Lowry leads Open by 4

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 20 July 2019 13:03

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland -- The cheers grew louder and Shane Lowry kept getting better Saturday in the Open Championship.

The Irishman made two straight birdies around the turn at Royal Portrush to break out of a four-way tie, and Lowry later made three straight birdies to walk off the Dunluce Links with an 8-under 63 -- the 54-hole record (197) at the Open Championship.

He has a four-shot lead over Tommy Fleetwood.

With favorite son Rory McIlroy having failed to make the cut at Northern Ireland's first major since 1951, Lowry filled the void just fine.

He didn't mind the lack of attention, which instead was showered on the trio of Ulstermen -- McIlroy, Graeme McDowell and Darren Clarke at the start of the week.

"Those guys are from here; I grew up four hours away," said Lowry, who opened the tournament with 100-1 odds of winning at Caesars Sportsbook in Las Vegas. "I felt like I could come here and come under the radar. I'm not quite under the radar anymore. I didn't feel like a forgotten Irishman. But hopefully, I'm the one they're talking about tomorrow evening."

He was at 13-under 197, breaking by one the 54-hole record held by Tom Lehman at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in 1996.

Low scoring was helped by a day that ended in relative calm, perhaps ahead of the storm. The forecast for Sunday is so nasty that the R&A moved up the tee times by one hour in a bid to avoid the worst of heavy rain and gusts expected to top 35 mph.

There's also the chance of an internal storm brewing in Lowry.

This is the second time he has had a four-shot lead going into the final round of a major. The other time was in the 2016 U.S. Open at Oakmont. Lowry closed with a 76 as Dustin Johnson rallied for his only major.

The pressure for Lowry figures to be even greater this time around as he goes for a silver Claret Jug on the Emerald Isle.

The only golfer to blow multiple leads of four or more strokes after 54 holes of a major is Greg Norman.

Fleetwood did his part with a bogey-free 66, and he lost ground. He at least got into the final group as he goes for his first major.

"You have to look at it realistically," Fleetwood said. "I had a great day today. I had one of the best rounds of the day, and I was bogey-free. Shane just played great, and I'm four back. But that's it. I'm just happy with how I played."

J.B. Holmes, who started the third round tied with Lowry atop the leaderboard, tried to stay with him until he dropped two straight shots in the middle of the back nine. A birdie on the 18th gave him a 69, leaving him six back.

Still on the fringe of contention was a familiar face in the majors -- Brooks Koepka. He couldn't get enough putts to fall for the third straight day and still managed a 67, leaving him seven back.

"Nobody has hit it better than me this week," said Koepka, who posted his 11th round in the 60s at a major this year. "I've hit it as good as I could possibly imagine. I putted the worst in the entire field.

"It's been really bad. Very frustrating. Disappointed. But thankfully, [the wind is] going to blow tomorrow to have any sort of chance. I need to figure out the putter."

Justin Rose had a 68 and joined Koepka at 9-under 204, figuring that's just enough to at least stay in the conversation.

Behind him, Lowry, who teamed with McIlroy for Irish golf when they won the European Amateur Championship in 2007, kept widening the gap.

The pin was back right on the par-3 16th known as "Calamity Corner" because it drops off some 50 feet right off the green. He sent that tee shot onto the green and right at the flag until it settled about 10 feet away.

From the light rough to the left of the fairway on the 17th, Lowry hit a perfect chip-and-run to 3 feet for his final birdie. Holmes drove down the hill short of the green, close enough to use putter. He ran it about 8 feet by, and when it caught the lip and spun away, Holmes dropped the putter in disbelief.

Some of that surely was the frustration of seeing Lowry getting further and further away from him.

Lowry, who won the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship on the European Tour earlier this year, can't think of a better day he's ever had on the golf course. His 63 was the 13th at The Open -- one stroke short of the major championship record that Branden Grace set at Royal Birkdale in 2017.

The support was more than he could have imagined.

"Every time I had a putt today," Lowry said, "I wanted to hole it so I could hear that roar."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Voit gets hit in face by pitch, scores, then leaves

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 20 July 2019 13:50

New York Yankees slugger Luke Voit left the team's game against the Colorado Rockies after being hit in the face by a pitch.

Voit was hit by a 91.4 mph pitch from Chad Bettis in the bottom of the fourth inning and initially remained in the game.

He eventually scored from third on a Gleyber Torres single to give the Yankees a 9-0 lead at the time, but he was lifted at the top of the sixth inning. New York went on to win 11-5.

DJ LeMahieu moved from third base to replace Voit at first, while Gio Urshela entered the game to take over at third.

Voit was tested for a concussion, but he has been cleared, and no further testing is planned.

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