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DUBLIN, Ohio – There has been no shortage of outrage over Hank Haney’s insensitive comments about women's golf earlier this week on his PGA Tour SiriusXM radio show, and following his round on Friday at the Memorial Tiger Woods was the latest to share his thoughts on the controversy.

“He deserved it,” Woods said of Haney’s suspension from the radio show. “Just can't look at life like that. And he obviously said what he meant, and he got what he deserved.”

Haney served as Woods’ swing coach for six years before the two split in 2010.

During Wednesday’s show on SiriusXM Haney and co-host Steve Johnson were discussing this week’s U.S. Women’s Open. When asked to predict a winner Haney said, “I’m gonna predict a Korean.”

“I couldn’t name you six players on the LPGA Tour,” Haney went on to say. “Maybe I could. Well … I’d go with Lee. If I didn’t have to name a first name, I’d get a bunch of them right.”

Haney was suspended from the show on Thursday and according to a statement from the PGA Tour officials are “reviewing his status on SiriusXM going forward.”

“I accept my suspension and apologize again,” Haney said in the statement.

DUBLIN, Ohio – Jordan Spieth described his second-round 70 at the Memorial as an “easy-on-the-body kind of day,” which was a refreshing change for a player who hasn’t exactly been on an easy run the last few months.

Spieth had just a single bogey on Friday and was alone in fourth place at 8 under par, just a stroke off the lead, following another solid ball-striking round that included 13 of 18 greens in regulation.

“I found something in my striking on the range today and really trusted it pretty well on the course. I feel like it will get better day-to-day,” Spieth said.

That’s a dramatic improvement over where he was just last week when he ranked 35th in greens in regulation and 65th in fairways hit.

“It's by no shape or form on its A level, but it feels really close and it's in a position where if I just get a little bit better the next two days, I'm in great shape in this golf tournament,” he said.

Spieth has finished in the top 10 in his last two starts (T-3 at the PGA Championship and T-8 at the Charles Schwab Challenge) but those performances were largely driven by his putting, which was not as productive on Friday when he made just 45 feet of putts. Last week at Colonial he rolled in over 500 feet of putts.

DUBLIN, Ohio – Minutes after stepping off the final green, Rory McIlroy had no trouble pinpointing his biggest frustration from a disappointing stint at the Memorial.

“Birdieing the last hole today and missing (the cut) by one,” McIlroy said.

Tournament host Jack Nicklaus annually draws a strong field to central Ohio, and his Muirfield Village design also sends many of the biggest names in golf heading for the exits early. Such was the case this week, as McIlroy opened with a 75 en route to a 2-over total that was one shot too many.

“I guess I had some misses with my driver that ended up costing me,” McIlroy said. “I had a couple of chances coming in to try to be here for the weekend. Just a couple shots yesterday, and just not taking advantage of when I did put it in the fairway and had wedges in my hand.”

But McIlroy was not the only notable casualty of the 36-hole cut. Phil Mickelson’s much-publicized experiment with two drivers largely backfired, as he led the field in driving distance but finished 103rd out of 118 players in strokes gained: off the tee. Mickelson hit his opening tee shot Friday out of bounds and shot a 7-over 79 despite three birdies.

One shot above that was world No. 6 Justin Thomas, whose first start back from a wrist injury ended with a second-round 80. Thomas was sitting at 1 under and still very much in position to make the cut when he made the turn, but a back-nine 44 included a triple bogey on No. 12 and a double bogey on No. 18 after his final approach bounced off the cart path and landed on a chair in front of the clubhouse. He added next week’s RBC Canadian Open shortly after completing his round.

Thomas joins a strong field north of the border, as McIlroy, Brooks Koepka and Dustin Johnson had already made plans to play the week before Pebble Beach.

“I was glad to have it either way, whether this was a good week or not,” McIlroy said. “I feel like I really need to play my way into the U.S. Open considering how I’ve played the last three years.”

Former champ Matt Kuchar (+3), Muirfield Village member Jason Day (+5) and Colonial runner-up Tony Finau (+7) also missed the Memorial cut.

DUBLIN, Ohio – It helps to set goals, even when you start the day outside the cut line on the PGA Tour. And so former world No. 1 Justin Rose drew a mental line in the sand heading into the second round of the Memorial.

“I came out today with the intention of not just trying to make the cut, but trying to play a round that would get me into the tournament,” Rose said.

Consider that mission accomplished. Once sitting at 4 over for the week after an early bogey Friday, Rose set fire to Muirfield Village Golf Club the rest of the way en route to a second-round 63 that serves as the low score of the tournament by two shots. Instead of packing his bags, Rose will instead head into the weekend inside the top 10 and three shots off the lead.

“I’ve always been a bit of a fighter, back to the wall,” Rose said. “I missed a lot of cuts early in my career, and I hate missing cuts. I’ve got a lot of personal pride on a Friday to try to get it done.”

Playing in a marquee grouping alongside Tiger Woods and defending champ Bryson DeChambeau, Rose first showed signs of life when he hit his approach inside 3 feet on No. 5 for a kick-in eagle. That was followed by another eagle two holes later, and the Englishman chipped in for birdie on No. 11. 

Rose made six 3s in a row starting at No. 4, and in the 12 holes from Nos. 5-16 he was an eye-popping 10 under. Having captured his first Tour win here in 2010 and having lost a playoff in 2015, he’s now once again in the mix at one of his favorite courses despite a decidedly slow start.

“I guess the two eagles on the front kind of kick-started everything,” Rose said. “I kept just pushing myself to keep trying to go as low as I could. Once you’re through the cut line, then you’ve got to build your way into the tournament. It was a great day.”

Competing in class 4, on the opening day of play, Sandra Mikolaschek had experienced defeat at the hands of Serbia’s Nada Matic (11-9, 8-11, 6-11, 11-4, 11-6); on the second day, after accounting for Borislava Peric-Rankovic, the top seed, the reigning Paralympic and World champion (12-10, 5-11, 11-9, 7-11, 11-9), the German extracted revenge. She accounted for Nada Matic in straight games (11-8, 11-6, 11-7).

Success against the top seed, it was the same for Ingela Lundbäck in class 5 but one round later; she accounted for Jordan’s Khetam Abuawad to seal the title (11-7, 9-11, 9-11, 11-4, 11-5).

Otherwise, in the women’s singles events it was the top prize for the top seed.

In group organised events, in class 1-2, Russia’s Nadejda Pushpasheva finished ahead of Serbia’s Ana Prvulovic; in class 9 it was first place for Poland’s Karolina Pek ahead of Germany’s Lena Kramm.  Similarly in class 10, Turkey’s Merve Demir emerged the winner, the runners up spot being claimed by Croatia’s Mirjana Lucic.

Silver for Mirjana Lucic, for colleague Andela Muzinic, it was gold. She claimed the class 3 title, beating Slovakia’s Alena Kanova in the final (11-8, 13-11, 11-8). Impressive, it was the same from Russia’s Raisa Chebanika. She concluded matters the class 6 winner. In the title deciding contest she overcame surprise finalist, Great Britain’s Fliss Pickard (11-9, 11-3, 4-11, 11-7), the penultimate round winner in opposition to the host nation’s Katarzyna Marszal, the no.2 seed (11-6, 9-11, 11-8, 10-12, 11-2).

“I’m pleased to get another medal but the biggest improvement I made from Slovenia was my approach and application towards matches. I didn’t feel my level was great but it’s nice to win matches in these situations. I felt I had chances in the final, just little things to work on not only when I get back into the training hall but also in the team event here.” Fliss Pickard

Meanwhile, in the one remaining women’s singles event, the finalists were no surprise; Norway’s Aida Dahlen beat Germany’s Juliane Wolf (11-5, 11-7, 9-11, 11-7) to secure the class 7-8 title.

Proceedings continue with the team events, play concludes in Wladyslawowo on Saturday 1st June.

2019 Para Polish Open: Latest results and main draws

Busch & Suarez Top Practice At Pocono

Published in Racing
Friday, 31 May 2019 14:40

LONG POND, Pa. – Kurt Busch and Daniel Suarez paced a pair of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice sessions on Friday at Pocono Raceway.

Busch was fastest in the second practice with a 52.110-second lap at 172.712 mph.  He was followed by Brad Keselowski, who was .277 of a second off Busch’s fastest lap/

Busch’s Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Kyle Larson was third, followed by Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Kyle Busch.

In the opening practice of the day, Suarez put his No. 41 Ford Mustang on the top of the practice charts. He led the way with a 52.565-second lap at 171.217 mph.

Ryan Blaney was second fastest in the first practice, followed by Alex Bowman, Kyle Busch and Keselowski.

Martin Truex Jr., who won the Coca-Cola 600 last week and the defending winner at Pocono Raceway, was 10th fastest in both practice sessions on Friday afternoon.

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying for the Pocono 400 is scheduled for 11:35 p.m. EST Saturday.

American Flat Track Red Mile Postponed

Published in Racing
Friday, 31 May 2019 15:33

LEXINGTON, Ky. – The Indian Motorcycle of Lexington Red Mile scheduled for Saturday at the Red Mile has been postponed due to inclement weather and rescheduled for Sunday.

On-track activity is currently scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. ET with gates opening for fans at 12 p.m. ET.

Event promoters and AFT officials continue to monitor developments in the weather forecast and will communicate any additional information to fans via AFT’s communications channels.

Beaubier Fastest After Elias Penalized

Published in Racing
Friday, 31 May 2019 15:46

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. – Toni Elias emerged from the Friday fray as the fastest man in the MotoAmerica EBC Brakes Superbike class at Road America, but that was before his time was disallowed.

His fastest lap was disallowed in the final session for the loss of custody of the bike at the end of session. That miscue by the current Superbike Championship points leader dropped him to third in the combined times and allowed Cameron Beaubier to move to the top in the Dunlop Championship at Road America.

“This morning, first practice, I was a little slow to get up to speed and the wind was kind of affecting everyone, blowing us around,” Beaubier said. “That was something to get used to. All in all, it wasn’t too bad and we led the first session by a little bit. Second practice, made a couple of changes chassis-wise and struggled a little bit with a couple of things that we’re going to work on for tomorrow.

“I noticed Toni (Elias) was a chunk faster than us, like three or four tenths, so definitely we have to do our homework tonight and come out swinging tomorrow. All in all, felt like I wasn’t piecing the track together like I was last year. My times were slower than what they were last year on Friday. I wasn’t super comfortable, but I’m still happy to be up with those guys, looking at the positives. I’m curious to see what the weather is going to be like tomorrow. We will see what happens, but no matter what we will be ready to go.”

Elias had ended up on top via his 2:12.444 lap on Friday afternoon, the Spaniard besting Beaubier by .421 of a second. Beaubier, meanwhile, had put his Monster Energy/Yamalube/Yamaha Factory Racing YZF-R1 in second, leading his teammate Garrett Gerloff by .308 of a second. But that was before Elias was penalized.

The Spaniard encountered electrical issues and made his way back down toward turn five on an ill-running motorcycle. He then left the track and rode the bike back to the paddock. At that point, he was in violation of the rules and his lap times from the session were disallowed. Elias, with his 2:13.603 from the morning session, was dropped to third fastest on the day.

“Today went pretty well,” Elias said, prior to learning of his penalty. “The bike is pretty different than last year. We move in the same direction as last year to see if all the pumping problems from last year can come back for this race. The problems of pumping came back when we did the same moves as last year so it’s good to know and not on Sunday. We found out on Friday so for this afternoon we moved in another direction so it works so well because in five or six laps we are running in 12s (2:12 lap times) very consistent and very comfortable.

“We need to improve if we want to continue like this because the other rivals will improve too for tomorrow. I’m happy. We had an electrical problem because we did just six or seven laps. The first time I could come back to the pit, but the second time I couldn’t come back to the pit. The bike stopped, I switched the bike on and then I had to take the bike to the track but only with 2000 rpm. I hear that you cannot do that, so what do I have to do? I have to stop the bike and it wasn’t working so being in the middle of the way was not okay. What I did in VIR was not okay. Today I brought the bike to the pit and I hope everything will be fine.”

Westby Racing’s Mathew Scholtz ended the day fourth fastest, one spot better than Yoshimura Suzuki’s Josh Herrin.

M4 ECSTAR Suzuki’s Bobby Fong and Sean Dylan Kelly gave the team a one-two finish in the Supersport provisional qualifying session on Friday afternoon. Fong was best, turning in a 2:19.814 on his final lap to snatch provisional pole from Kelly, the Floridian ending up .575 of a second behind.

The Stock 1000 provisional pole went to Geoff May, the veteran racer besting defending class champion Andrew Lee. Weir Everywhere Racing BMW’s Travis Wyman rounds out the provisional front row going into tomorrow’s final qualifying.

Rocco Landers put a half a second between himself and his closest rival Dallas Daniels in advance of Saturday’s final qualifying session for the Liqui Moly Junior Cup class. The rest of the class finds itself in a hole, with Kevin Olmedo third, but 1.7 seconds behind Landers, who has won three of the first four races so far in 2019.

Michael Barnes led Kris Turner to lead the only Twins Cup practice session of the day.

CHARLESTON, S.C. – Jessica Korda shot a 68 to move within a stroke of the lead halfway through the second round of the U.S. Women's Open on Friday.

Korda played bogey-free golf and was a stroke behind first-round leader Mamiko Higa and tied with Esther Henseleit at 5-under par at the Country Club of Charleston. Higa and Henseleit play Friday afternoon.

Amateur Gina Kim was a stroke behind Higa when the round began. She shot a 72 to fall to 4 under, two behind after 36 holes.

Pei-Yun Chien shot the best score of the morning starters with a 66 to move five shots off the pace. It was her lowest score in eight career U.S. Women's Open rounds.

The field will be cut to the top 60 scorers and ties at the end of the round.

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