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Sources: Man Utd 'miles away' from Maguire deal

Published in Soccer
Monday, 15 July 2019 10:34

Manchester United are "miles away" from meeting Leicester City's £80 million valuation for England defender Harry Maguire, sources have told ESPN FC.

United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has identified the 26-year-old as the solution to his team's defensive problems after initially targeting Ajax and Netherlands defender Matthijs de Ligt, who is close to completing a move to Juventus.

- When does the transfer window close?
- All major completed transfer deals

But having made an initial offer of just £40m for Maguire last month, United remain a substantial distance from matching Leicester's wanting price for a player the Foxes signed from Hull City for an initial fee of £12m two years ago.

Maguire has since helped England reach the World Cup semifinals in Russia and established himself as one of the Premier League's leading defenders. But with Leicester manager Brendan Rodgers told by the club's hierarchy that he is under no pressure to sell, the 2015-16 league champions are prepared to hold out for a world record fee for a defender, exceeding the £75m Liverpool paid for Virgil van Dijk in January 2018, before even considering a sale.

Sources say United are prepared to return with a £60m offer for Maguire, but there is no expectation at Old Trafford that a deal is imminent or that a breakthrough is close.

There is confidence within United, however, that Maguire is keen to move to the club, despite their failure to qualify for this season's Champions League.

But with the Premier League transfer deadline just over three weeks away, United are faced with the prospect of having to substantially increase their valuation of Maguire in order to get a deal over the line.

Warwickshire 161 and 67 for 1 need a further 336 runs to beat Essex 245 and 316 for 9 (Cook 83, Lawrence 74, Rhodes 4-38)

Liam Banks dug in with great determination as Warwickshire set about batting out a minimum of 121 overs to prevent a heavy defeat at Chelmsford.

Banks was 36 not out as Warwickshire reached 67 for 1 in their pursuit of 401 to pull off a mission improbable and record a third victory of the season. More realistically, the capture of another nine wickets stand between Essex and the seventh victory in eight games that would take them to the top of the Specsavers County Championship by just four points, assuming Yorkshire do not let slip their stranglehold over Somerset at Headingley.

The Warwickshire openers took advantage of some wide open spaces in the field to pass fifty in the 13th over. But Aaron Beard's arrival into the attack heralded the breakthrough Essex wanted with Will Rhodes lbw for 25. Warwickshire made it to the close without further alarm, still 334 runs from their target.

The match had essentially been put beyond Warwickshire's reach during an eighth-wicket rampage between Dan Lawrence and Simon Harmer that extended Essex's lead from 299 to nearly 400 in just 20 overs. Both batsmen fell straight after tea, but not before they had put 84 valuable runs on the board. Lawrence departed to the second ball of the final session, charging Rhodes and nicking to Tim Ambrose for 74.

That gave Rhodes his fourth wicket of the innings, and ninth of the match, at a combined personal cost of 55 runs. The part-time seamer's first-innings 5 for 17 was a career-best; his 4 for 38 in the second constituted the next best.

Harmer followed without addition, attempting to hit Jeetan Patel over the top and being caught on the long-leg boundary by Banks.

Alastair Cook had laid the foundations in the morning towards the eventual declaration with a carefree 83 from 168 balls. He was the senior partner in a second-wicket stand of 63 off 26 overs with nightwatchman Matt Quinn that frustrated Warwickshire for an hour and a half. Quinn contributed nine to the partnership from 69 balls.

Cook hit 11 boundaries in his sixth Championship half-century of the season, and went on the attack once he had reached that milestone, hitting Patel for three of them in quick order.

The return of Rhodes accounted for Cook when he was pinned lbw. The Yorkshireman had another in the same over when Tom Westley was caught behind wafting outside off stump. Quinn finally departed next over, nicking behind as Essex collapsed from 135 for 1 to 139 for 4.

Rishi Patel fell to the first ball after lunch when he deflected a ball from pad on to bat to Banks at second slip. Brookes claimed a second wicket in the over when Ryan ten Doeschate lost his middle stump as he attempted to force the pace. Adam Wheater had scored 21 at almost a run-a-ball when he reverse-swept at Patel and Rhodes threw himself from first slip to where second slip would have been to take the catch.

Lawrence rattled along apace and clobbered Brookes off the back-foot for four to bring up his second fifty of the match from 101 balls.

Essex took the field in the evening without wicketkeeper Wheater, who had struggled in Warwickshire's first innings after taking a blow to his thumb. Will Buttleman replaced him behind the stumps.

You might be forgiven for thinking that, in the aftermath of their success in the World Cup, England's players may have a chance to put their feet up for a few days.

But such is the unforgiving nature of the international schedule, many of those players involved at Lord's on Sunday will be required to report to an Ashes training camp this weekend. England's first Test of the summer, against Ireland, starts soon afterwards on July 24.

While all players likely to participate in the Ashes will be expected at St George's Park - the FA's national football centre; an ironic location given Ashley Giles' aversion to cricketers playing the sport - it seems several are likely to be rested from the Ireland squad that follows it.

In particular, the fast bowlers who featured in the World Cup campaign - Mark Wood and Jofra Archer - will be allowed to miss the game. Chris Woakes and Ben Stokes are likely to be rested, too, while England are not expected to risk James Anderson who is recovering from a torn calf muscle.

All of them are understood to be carrying niggles of one sort or another and, with five Ashes Tests to follow in seven weeks, the team management are keen to avoid risking more serious injury. Archer may have to wait until the second Ashes Test, at Lord's, to make a Test debut that now seems inevitable.

ALSO READ: Miller: England's perfect day gives hope for tomorrow

That will bring opportunity for other players. Stuart Broad is expected to lead the attack against Ireland with Sam Curran also set to return to the side. Jason Roy is likely to be named as one of the opening batsmen, but only if he is passed fit - he has been struggling with a hamstring problem for several weeks.

Rory Burns is set to be Roy's opening partner, while Joe Denly may well keep his place at No. 3. Joe Root has confirmed he will play, but a decision has yet to be made on Jonny Bairstow's and Jos Buttler's involvement. Bairstow, in particular, seemed weary on Monday meaning Ben Foakes - who batted at No.3 for the Lions against the Australians in Canterbury today - could yet be recalled to keep wicket.

Although the somewhat makeshift nature of the England squad may lead to some suggestions that they are taking the Ireland Test lightly, the team management are keen to learn the lessons of previous mistakes.

In 2013, for example, England went straight into their Ashes warm-up plans - and, specifically, a game against Essex - after a defeat in the ICC Champions Trophy final. As a result, the players did not have time to recover physically or emotionally from both their exertions and their disappointment. At least one of them, Jonathan Trott, has suggested in the past that the seeds of that side's decline was sown from that moment.

England's squad for the Test against Ireland is likely to be named on Wednesday afternoon.

England Lions 232 for 6 (Sibley 74) trail Australian XI 397 (Head 139*, Curran 6-95) by 165 runs

Two sights signalled this as day one of the Ashes campaign for England, though still in the afterglow of a scarcely believable triumph in Sunday's World Cup final over New Zealand at Lord's.

The first was that of the England selectors Ed Smith and James Taylor making their presence known by striding around the St Lawrence Ground in Canterbury, demonstrating their intent to finalise a Test squad, to face Ireland and then Australia, by Wednesday. The second came in the middle, where the left-armer Sam Curran obliterated the touring XI's middle and lower order with the second new ball on his way to figures of 6 for 95.

Where on day one the Australians had dominated through Travis Head and Matthew Wade as both sides kept one eye on events in London, now the spectre of a swerving Dukes ball in skilful hands was raised by Curran, a highly impressive performer in his first home summer as a Test player last year and likely to figure again this time around.

Alongside Head, who remained impassable throughout, Mitchell Marsh, Tim Paine and company would have hoped to bat well into the afternoon. However Curran was able to swerve his way through five Australians in the space of four overs, engineering the loss of the last six touring wickets for 17.

Marsh was first to go in circumstances that looked contentious - certainly the batsman thought so. Given out caught behind, Marsh made to remonstrate with the umpire, stood his ground for several moments and then trudged his way off with slow reluctance familiar to those who once watched Inzamam-ul-Haq for Pakistan.

Such a display of disagreement was not to be repeated by the rest, who fell with blinding speed. Paine was pinned in front of the stumps for a duck, Michael Neser edged behind, and then Chris Tremain was bowled first ball to have Curran on a hat-trick. Jackson Bird found three runs to avert that at least, but his exit was swiftly followed by Jon Holland shouldering arms to hand Lewis Gregory a third wicket.

The England Lions innings was thus underway far sooner than expected, and even as wickets fell regularly the Australians were unable to create quite the same level of mayhem throughout the rest of the afternoon. Plucky resistance was provided by Dom Sibley, spending precisely four hours over his 74, and James Bracey also hung around for a stand worth 89.

Curran was then in to bat for the final hour or so, playing attractively in the company of Sam Hain, who lofted Head for six down the ground before being well taken by Paine off Holland's slow left-arm in the day's final over - a reward for two tidy, thoughtful spells. That gave Australia's selection chairman Trevor Hohns, in attendance alongside Messrs Smith and Taylor, a little more to ponder ahead of Ashes squad selections.

Binghamton hoops player Anyichie, 19, drowns

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 15 July 2019 11:13

Binghamton basketball player Calistus Anyichie drowned Sunday after an accident at a New York state park. He was 19.

The school announced Anyichie's death Monday, calling it a "heartbreaking loss for our community." Anyichie was entering his sophomore year at Binghamton.

Binghamton coach Tommy Dempsey tweeted that the program was "devastated" by the news.

Authorities confirmed to the Ithaca Journal that Anyichie's body was found at the base of a 15-foot gorge in Buttermilk Falls State Park, located just southwest of Ithaca, New York.

Anyichie was pronounced dead at Cayuga Medical Center. An autopsy is expected to be performed, and authorities are investigating his death.

The 6-foot-9 Anyichie appeared in 32 games as a freshman last season, averaging 1.9 point and 2.1 rebounds. He was majoring in political science after being recognized as one of New Jersey's top scholar-athletes in high school.

"A talented young person has been tragically taken from us," Binghamton president Harvey Stenger said in a statement. "This is a heartbreaking loss for our community. We will do all that we can to be there for his family, for the team and everyone who knew Calistus."

Navigating the cluttered mind of Jordan Spieth

Published in Breaking News
Wednesday, 10 July 2019 12:00

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland -- During the final round of last month's U.S. Open, Jordan Spieth, long out of contention and coming off three consecutive bogeys, couldn't believe where his tee shot ended up on the 15th hole at Pebble Beach.

Spieth's ball was buried in the tall native grass on top of a deep fairway bunker. Spieth took off his hat, rubbed his thinning hair and drove an iron into the ground in frustration.

After waiting a few minutes for playing partner Sergio Garcia to hit his second shot from the fairway, Spieth became impatient and quickly whacked his ball out of the grass. Garcia turned and looked at him, apparently surprised that Spieth had hit out of turn.

Spieth salvaged par on the 15th hole, had birdie on 16 and then another bogey on 17.

After driving his tee shot into the thick rough on the right side of the 18th fairway, Spieth waited for the pair in front of him to clear the green. When they finally did, he drew back a hybrid, turned his hips and took an explosive swing at the ball.

It dribbled 75 yards down the fairway. He threw up his right arm and shook his head in disbelief.

The reinvention of Jordan Spieth -- or reclamation, depending on whom you believe -- continues this week at the 148th Open Championship at Royal Portrush.

There's no guarantee the next step won't be as ugly or frustrating as the past two, when Spieth finished tied for 65th at the U.S. Open and missed the cut at the Travelers the next week.

"Not anywhere near where I want it to be," Spieth said of his game last month, after shooting 73-69 at the Travelers, before taking a three-week break to prepare for The Open.

What once seemed so simple isn't anymore. The former World No. 1, who won so quickly and so frequently early in his career, hasn't claimed a victory in nearly two years, not since a three-shot win in the 2017 Open Championship at Royal Birkdale. That one, of course, is famous for his bogey from the practice range near the equipment trailers on the 13th hole of the final round.

"If not for my past success, I don't think I'd get as many questions about being in a little bit of a slump," Spieth said earlier this season. "I think people would look at me and say, 'He's coming along nicely.' But because of the success I've had, people don't look at it that way."

Spieth has had to answer questions about his lack of victories for much of the past two seasons. At the PGA Championship at Bethpage Black in May, Spieth corrected a reporter who suggested he's in a slump.

"Was," Spieth interjected.

The reporter then asked if others walked around Spieth on eggshells or were awkward around him because of his subpar play.

"No, I mean, I didn't, like, go away from the game for five years," Spieth said. "I just happened to not win in the last year and a half or so."

What was once endearing is now being closely examined, too. All of Spieth's tics -- constantly talking to himself, his ball and his caddie, Michael Greller; backing off shots; or reaching for a towel before every swing -- are scrutinized.

When Spieth and Greller came up with the wrong club selections on consecutive shots in the opening round of the U.S. Open, TV microphones captured Spieth's terse reaction.

"Two perfect shots there, Michael," Spieth told Greller. "You got me one in the water and one over the green."

Spieth was criticized on social media for throwing his caddie under the bus. After the round, Spieth explained that he was frustrated they hadn't come up with the correct yardage.

"I'm going to be frustrated that as a team we didn't figure out how to make sure that didn't happen," Spieth said. "Yeah, I may have looked like the bad guy there, but my intentions were that we should be in play if the ball is hit solidly, and I was out of play on both shots."

Of course, none of it probably matters if Spieth is winning like he did so often in the early stages of his career. He has won 11 times on the PGA Tour and had three major championship victories before age 24 (Tiger Woods had only two at that age).

Spieth became the youngest winner in PGA Tour history when he won the 2013 John Deere Classic at 19. He won five times in 2015, including the Masters (he was the second-youngest golfer to win a green jacket, behind Woods), U.S. Open (he was the youngest champion since Bobby Jones in 1923) and Tour Championship. He won twice more in 2016 and three more times in 2017.

His game has often been in disarray ever since. He is ranked No. 38 in the world.

"Your expectations are what drives your mentality, and when he came out and had so much success, his expectations went through the roof," said Kevin Kisner, who played two practice rounds with Spieth at Pebble Beach before the U.S. Open. "His mentality when he tees it up on Thursday -- and it's this way with any of us, not just him -- you expect to have a chance to win. This game can be a harsh reality when things aren't working."

According to Kisner, Spieth was working on two swing changes before the U.S. Open. It's a continuation of what has seemed like a never-ending process as Spieth tries to regain form. Spieth even admitted during the 2018 PGA Championship at Bellerive that he'd been working on the wrong thing in his swing for months and needed additional time to make corrections.

"The things I've been working on are so drastic that it's just really difficult to try and play through it, I guess," Spieth said.

Cameron McCormick, Spieth's swing coach, did not respond to an interview request from ESPN.com.

Spieth isn't the first PGA Tour player to alter his swing. During the mid-1980s, Nick Faldo decided to change his swing, which he believed was unreliable and involved too much wrist. Under the guidance of coach David Leadbetter, Faldo's swing became more compact and efficient. The changes helped Faldo win six major championships from 1987 to 1996.

Like Faldo, Curtis Strange redesigned his swing from a powerful but erratic action to a more compact and tighter swing. After the face-lift, Strange won back-to-back U.S. Open titles in 1988-89.

"Sometimes it doesn't work out, but you've got have the patience to do it if it's going to be a long-term change and you're really committed to it," Strange said. "You've got to have commitment and patience because there's going to be a rocky road ahead of you, especially when you're doing it during tournament play. Then you finally get to a point where you're really practicing well, but now you've got to believe in it. Can you hit that shot to a corner pin when there's pressure on? It's tough."

Even Woods, who has won 15 major championships, has made dramatic changes to his swing at least three times.

Woods, after winning his first major at the 1997 Masters by a staggering 12 strokes with the lowest 72-hole total in history, completely overhauled his swing and started from scratch with the help of Butch Harmon.

After making the changes, Woods won once in 1998 and didn't win again for for more than nine months. Once he perfected the new swing, he won eight times in 1999 and nine times in 2000, including four majors in the two seasons combined.

"I was in it to find the answer to one question: How good can I be?" Woods said in the biography, Tiger Woods, by Armen Keteyian and Jeff Benedict. "I suppose I was searching for perfection, although that's not attainable in golf except for short stretches. I wanted to take control of my swing, and, hence the ball."

Despite his early success, Spieth was never considered one of golf's great ball strikers. During the 2015 season, he ranked 78th in driving distance (291.8 yards) and 80th in driving accuracy (62.9 percent of fairways hit). His greatest strengths were putting, chipping and his imagination around the green.

"The guy just gets the ball in the hole," said swing coach John Tillery. "He's one of the best scorers in history. When you're that good, it's easy to never feel like you're that far off."

In reality, though, Spieth's short game masked flaws in his swing.

"In my opinion, his stats from tee to green were never up to par with his record that he established early on," Strange said. "He was a great chipper and putter. I applaud him for trying to get better. But in the long run, you're trying to be a better ball striker. I hope he can accomplish that. He's certainly accomplished a lot with what he has."

Given how much Spieth won early in his career, and how much he has struggled lately, it might be fair to ask if his best golf is in his rearview mirror. Was his 2015 season, which was as good as many players' careers, as good as it gets? Most players would be satisfied with what Spieth has accomplished.

Two-time U.S. Open champion Andy North, an ESPN golf analyst, doesn't think Spieth is too far away from returning to form. He points to Spieth's three consecutive top-10 finishes at the PGA Championship, Charles Schwab Challenge and the Memorial -- before the struggles at the U.S. Open and Travelers -- as an indication that there's light at the end of the tunnel.

"I think he's out of his funk," North said. "He's played some really good golf over the last month or two. If you'd look at any other guy with three top-10s in a row, you'd say he's playing unbelievably. But because he's coming out of a slump, everybody wants to talk like he's still struggling because he hasn't won. To finish in the top 10 three weeks in a row, that doesn't happen very often. You can probably count how many times it happens in a year on one hand."

And Spieth was in contention in two majors last season: He shot 64 on Sunday at the Masters to finish two strokes behind Patrick Reed, and he tied for ninth at The Open Championship. He didn't have a birdie in the final round at Carnoustie, where he finished four shots back of Francesco Molinari.

"If you put yourself in position enough times, the bounces go your way, sometimes they don't," Spieth said. "I had a chance to win two majors last year feeling like I had a 'C' game. I mean, that's realistic. I was in the final group Sunday of last year's Open at Carnoustie, and I woke up saying, 'How in the world am I in the final group at Carnoustie?'

"And that's not just me not believing in myself -- that's just legitimately, mechanically, how I felt through my swings. It just wasn't good compared to when I was on."

Finding that form again hasn't been easy.

"He's come through the darkest part, and he's doing some really good things," North said. "I think he's gotten through the worst of it and figured some things out. ... Winning is hard. It's hard to do it. You go through stretches where you don't do it, and if you're putting pressure on yourself, then you're really going to have trouble with it. There's no way you can figure it out. I think it's something we all go through."

Sources: Cavs to waive JR Smith on Monday

Published in Basketball
Monday, 15 July 2019 10:58

The Cleveland Cavaliers will waive guard JR Smith on Monday, before his contract for next season becomes guaranteed, and he will become a free agent, sources confirmed to ESPN.

The news was first reported by Cleveland.com.

The Cavs have been looking to trade Smith since November because only a portion of his $15.6 million for next year is guaranteed. The team worked out a deal with Smith to extend his guarantee date from June 30 to July 15, boosting his guarantee from $3.9 million to $4.4 million, but were unable to find a deal.

By waiving and stretching the guaranteed money, the Cavs will move below the luxury tax for the 2019-20 season.

Smith, 33, played in only 11 games last season, agreeing to leave the team last November to await a trade or release. The 15-year veteran is a career 37 percent 3-point shooter.

Agent: Simmons, 76ers have 5-year, $170M deal

Published in Basketball
Monday, 15 July 2019 12:13

The Philadelphia 76ers and star Ben Simmons have agreed to a five-year, $170 million maximum extension, Simmons' agent Rich Paul confirmed to ESPN's Brian Windhorst.

The sides had until mid-October to finalize the extension of Simmons' rookie deal, but Paul and Sixers general manager Elton Brand completed the deal significantly sooner.

ESPN reported earlier this month that the Sixers had offered the max $170 million extension to Simmons, the NBA Rookie of the Year in 2017-18. The Athletic first reported Monday that the sides had reached an agreement.

Simmons, the 2016 No. 1 overall draft pick, is one of the cornerstone stars for the 76ers. His teammates, including All-Star center Joel Embiid (five years, $150 million), Tobias Harris (five years, $180 million) and Al Horford (four years, $109 million), have been secured with long-term deals.

Simmons, who will turn 23 on Saturday, averaged 16.9 points, 8.8 rebounds and 7.7 assists for the Sixers last season. At 6-foot-10, he has one of the NBA's most unique skill sets as a playmaker and finisher at the rim.

The Growth Of Indiana Sprint Week

Published in Racing
Monday, 15 July 2019 09:00

As Kokomo (Ind.) Speedway owner Kent Evans pondered the upcoming racing season, he struck on an idea he felt could spice up the 1996 schedule.

Indiana Sprint Week, a collaboration of Hoosier state short-track promoters, had worked passably well for eight years. The car counts had always been solid and the crowds weren’t bad either. Still, Evans felt this event had untapped potential. Taking the initiative, Kent spearheaded a meeting at a Martinsville, Ind., restaurant to discuss his idea.

Attendees included Paragon Speedway owners Keith and Judy Ford, Bloomington Speedway’s Mike Miles, USAC Vice President Bill Marvel and USAC Communication Director Dick Jordan. In retrospect, it was one of the most important gatherings in USAC history, and a turning point in a new era for traditional, non-winged sprint car racing.

As a result of an agreement forged by the aforementioned participants, Indiana Sprint Week became a USAC-sanctioned affair for the first time in 1996. The pact created a modest three-race slate with events at Bloomington, Paragon and Kokomo Speedways.

Kevin Thomas and Jon Stanbrough topped the first two rounds and in a memorable moment, Brad Marvel scored his lone USAC national series victory in front of his proud father to conclude the series at Kokomo.

Within a few short years, the series exploded, augmented by the appearance of stars from the West Coast-based Sprint Car Racing Ass’n. In a time when non-winged sprint car racing, once moribund, was showing signs of renewed life, this event was a godsend.

Dave Darland (center) bested Chris Windom (left) and A.J. Hopkins (right) to win a USAC Indiana Sprint Week feature at Lincoln Park Speedway last year. (Dick Ayers Photo)

The uniting of the best traditional sprint car racers in the land added luster to this series within a series.  Not surprisingly, as the cars and drivers migrated from east and west in droves, the stands filled to capacity. Soon, what once seemed like a risky proposition was now viewed as a masterstroke.

Not wanting to be left on the sidelines, other tracks were anxious to join the fun. Now, as the 2019 edition of Indiana Sprint Week looms, this year’s edition of the event is scheduled to include eight races over a 10-day stretch during July.

The slate features stops at Gas City I-69 Speedway, Plymouth Speedway, Lawrenceburg Speedway, Bloomington Speedway, Terre Haute Action Track, Lincoln Park Speedway and the finale at Tri-State Speedway.

Today, Indiana Sprint Week is no longer a regional phenomenon but has become a destination racing vacation for sprint car fans.

This must-see event tests the stamina of spectators and participants alike. Yet, for those who race for a living, it can be the pivotal moment in the campaign. From a logistical perspective, the June swing through the East can prove to be a greater challenge. For teams based in the Indianapolis area, finding the parts and the space to work is challenging when disaster strikes miles from home.

However, timing is everything. When the schedule turns to mid-July, those in contention for the USAC crown know they have reached winning time. The pressure grows exponentially.

Nothing underscored the importance of every single race more than the 2018 USAC championship tussle. In the end, Tyler Courtney and Kevin Thomas Jr. ended the year tied in points, and Courtney walked away with the top prize by virtue of his edge in feature victories.

Unquestionably, Thomas had quiet moments during the offseason in which he pondered where a stroke of bad luck or a quick decision in traffic thwarted his night. Just one more point would have made all the difference.

Chris Windom, the 2017 USAC sprint car champion, deems Sprint Week “the turning point of the season. When you come out of sprint week, you know who is going to be in the chase for the rest of the year.”

Rory McIlroy will begin Open Championship week as the betting favorite to lift the claret jug.

McIlroy is listed by Westgate Las Vegas SuperBook at 8-1 to win at Royal Portrush in McIlroy’s native Northern Ireland. He has won twice this year, at The Players and RBC Canadian Open, and is coming off a T-34 finish in Northern Ireland.

Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka are each 10-1, followed by Jon Rahm at 16-1 and Tiger Woods at 18-1.

Here's a look at the betting odds on some of the pre-tournament favorites:

8-1: McIlroy

10-1: Koepka, D. Johnson

16-1: Rahm

18-1: Woods

20-1: Justin Rose, Francesco Molinari, Xander Schauffele

25-1: Rickie Fowler, Patrick Cantlay, Tommy Fleetwood, Justin Thomas

30-1: Adam Scott, Louis Oosthuizen, Henrik Stenson, Matt Kuchar

40-1: Jordan Spieth, Jason Day, Hideki Matsuyama, Bryson DeChambeau

50-1: Paul Casey, Graeme McDowell, Matt Wallace

60-1: Gary Woodland, Marc Leishman

80-1: Sergio Garcia, Tony Finau, Shane Lowry, Ian Poulter, Patrick Reed, Matt Fitzpatrick, Rafa Cabrera Bello, Bernd Wiesberger

100-1: Eddie Pepperell, Phil Mickelson, Webb Simpson, Tyrrell Hatton

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