Month: April 2017

Suzann Pettersen takes lead at wind-delayed ANA Inspiration (Sports Betting News)Suzann Pettersen takes lead at wind-delayed ANA Inspiration (Sports Betting News)

Suzann Pettersen of Norway watches her shot after teeing off on the 6th hole during the HSBC Women's Champions golf tournament held at Sentosa Golf Club's Tanjong course on Saturday, March 4, 2017, in Singapore. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

While the entire field at the ANA Inspiration spent the whole day playing catch-up, Norway’s Suzann Pettersen and the Korda sisters managed to get ahead. Pettersen finished her wind-delayed first round with a 4-under 68 and added a second-round 69 Friday, taking a one-shot lead over rookie Nelly Korda and five other players after two shortened days at the LPGA Tour’s first major of the year. After an early end to Thursday’s play and a late start on Friday for cleanup from the windstorm, play was halted by darkness with 56 players still on the course.

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How Oregon’s Jordan Bell evolved into college basketball’s best defender (Sports Betting News)How Oregon’s Jordan Bell evolved into college basketball’s best defender (Sports Betting News)

How Oregon's Jordan Bell evolved into college basketball's best defender

Before he became an NCAA tournament hero, a social media sensation and one of the pillars of Oregon’s first Final Four team in 78 years, Jordan Bell used to drive his high school coach crazy with his unwillingness to shoot when he was open. One day in practice when Bell was a junior, Long Beach Poly coach Sharrief Metoyer halted a 5-on-5 scrimmage to implement an unusual rule. “We ran like 10 times,” Bell said sheepishly.

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Masters Tournament storylinesMasters Tournament storylines

• COURSE: Augusta National Golf Club, 7,435 yards, par 72. Laid out over the site of a tree nursery, Bobby Jones and co-designer Alistair Mackenzie transformed the landscape into not only one of golf’s most visually stunning layouts but a stage for some of the game’s most memorable drama. Though tweaks are made every year, Augusta National is now a decade past an expansion era that saw yardage added four times from 1999-2006, as players and club officials have a better understanding of the nuances in the revamped layout. The club’s signature magnolia trees and azaleas are holdovers from the Fruitlands nursery operation that previously stood. • FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 600 points. • CHARITY: Masters Tournament Foundation, which produces some $3.5 million in annual giving for local projects and larger golf initiatives. The Community Foundation of the Central Savannah River Area receives the largest sum, with additional gifts to the World Golf Foundation, The First Tee, PGA TOUR Charities, the PGA Foundation and U.S. Golf Association. • FIELD WATCH: World No.1 Dustin Johnson, victorious at his past three stops, is joined by a typically strong cast that includes recent champions Jordan Spieth and Adam Scott. The expected roster stands at 93. … One more slot is open for the winner of this week’s Shell Houston Open, if not already qualified. Japan’s Hideto Tanihara, fourth at last week’s WGC-Dell Match Play, is among four who landed berths at last Monday’s final cutoff for the rankings’ top 50. … After weeks of holding out hope, four-time winner Tiger Woods announced Friday he won’t play for the third time in four years. This year marks the 20th anniversary of his historic first Green Jacket. • 72-HOLE RECORD: 270, Tiger Woods (1997), Jordan Spieth (2015). • 18-HOLE RECORD: 63, Nick Price (3rd round, 1986), Greg Norman (1st round, 1996). • LAST YEAR: Spieth’s Amen Corner implosion was Danny Willett’s gain. He became the first Englishman to don the green jacket since Nick Faldo won his third in 1995. A bogey-free Sunday 67 produced a three-shot victory, though Willett’s steadiness won’t be remembered as much as the way Spieth lost it. The Texan appeared on the way to becoming just the fourth man to win back-to-back Masters when he took a five-shot lead to the back nine, only to give shots back at Nos. 10 and 11. But that only served as a prelude to the devious 12th, where Spieth put two balls into Rae’s Creek on the way to a quadruple bogey and a two-shot deficit. A 73 left him tied for second with Lee Westwood (69). Johnson was another shot back, hurt by a three-putt at No.17. • STORYLINES: Johnson arrives as the man to beat, with two World Golf Championships added to his spring collection along with a win at Riviera. He now has five victories since last summer’s breakthrough first major at the U.S. Open. … Spieth, seven holes from back-to-back Green Jackets a year ago, encounters Amen Corner again trying to set aside some significant scar tissue. Until then, no one had led the Masters in seven consecutive rounds. … McIlroy, who tasted his own back-nine woes in 2011, tries again to complete a career Grand Slam. He would become just the sixth in history to accomplish that feat. … Jason Day’s status remains up in the air as he awaits the latest news on his mom’s lung cancer. The Aussie withdrew just six holes into the WGC Dell Technologies Match Play, preferring to be at his mom’s side before surgery. • SHORT CHIPS: Thursday’s ceremonial opening tee shots will feel a little empty without Arnold Palmer, who passed away last September at age 87. He had been part of the opening tradition for a decade, though last year all he could do is come out and watch Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player hit theirs. … Nineteen of this year’s entrants will make their Masters debuts, matching last year’s count. Among this year’s newbies: Jon Rahm, a winner at Torrey Pines and WGC Match Play runner-up to Johnson, and European Ryder Cup standout Thomas Pieters. … Willett has been coy about the menu for Tuesday night’s champions dinner. Speculation around the Yorkshireman has centered around “Toad in the Hole” – sausage links in Yorkshire pudding – but Willett won’t confirm or deny. • TELEVISION: Thursday-Friday, 3-7:30 p.m. ET (ESPN), highlights show 11:30-11:45 p.m. (CBS). Saturday, 3-7 p.m. (CBS). Sunday, 2-7 p.m. (CBS). • PGA TOUR LIVE: None. • RADIO: Thursday-Friday, 2-8 p.m. ET. Saturday-Sunday, 2-7 p.m. (Westwood One and SiriusXM).

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Kang sets 36-hole scoring record in HoustonKang sets 36-hole scoring record in Houston

HUMBLE, Texas — Sung Kang shot a 9-under 63 to take a six-shot lead in a record-breaking second round Friday at the Shell Houston Open. After shooting a 65 on Thursday, Kang was at 16-under 128 through two rounds, setting the 36-hole tournament record by a stroke. Blaine McCallister (1993) and Curtis Strange (1980) previously held the record at 129. The 29-year-old South Korean, who entered the week ranked No. 202 in the world, bested the tournament course record at the Golf Club of Houston by three strokes, topping Johnson Wagner’s 132 in 2008. Strange and Wagner went on to win those respective tournaments, while McCallister settled for a third-place finish. Kang’s 9-under Friday matched the 18-hole tournament course record and helped him take the largest 36-hole lead in tournament history, topping the previous record by two strokes. Hudson Swafford and Russell Henley were at 10 under after both shooting 5-under 67. Rickie Fowler, the leader after one round, slipped to fourth at 9-under after he followed Thursday’s 8-under 64 with a 71. Kang found an edge with red-hot putting. He sank six puts of at least 20 feet — a tournament course record since the stat began being recorded in 1983. It was a dramatic turn of events for a golfer who entered the week ranked No. 156 in putting and switched to a new putter earlier this week. Kang said someone has been urging him to use a certain putter for months, even saying, “If you want to succeed, you use that.” He gave it a spin for the first time on Monday and hasn’t looked back. “I putted pretty good (Thursday), but putted really good today,” Kang said. “The putter just kept making the putts and happened and happened and happened. It was a fun day.” Kang used the word “rare” to describe the putting clinic he put on. He said he told his caddie that he wanted to play 10 more holes after he was finished on Friday, not wanting to let his momentum rest. He is among the 115 players who need a victory to qualify for next week’s Masters Tournament, as Jim Herman did by winning in Houston last year. Among the 144 players in the Houston Open field, 29 already have invitations to play. Kang insisted that playing in the Masters hasn’t crossed his mind. “It’s not in my head,” Kang said. “Whatever happens, happens.” Zac Blair and Aaron Baddeley trail Kang by eight strokes at 8-under 136 through two rounds. The field boasted five of the world’s top 12-ranked golfers, but only one of them — Fowler — made the cut to continue playing on Saturday. No. 5 Henrik Stenson shot 5 over, No. 6 Jordan Spieth finished 2 over, No. 7 Adam Scott was 1 over and Patrick Reed shot 2 over to add two extra days to their Masters preparations. Phil Mickelson rallied late to shoot par for a second straight day to make the cut, something he said was important to him ahead of Augusta. “I fought hard in the end to get to the weekend because I felt, to get sharp for next week, I need to play a better round,” Mickelson said. “I didn’t want to have five days without competitive rounds before we tee off. I also think the course provides a great opportunity to get ready for next week.” After mid-week rains dampened the course Thursday, warm, sunny weather and a light breeze caused little problems on the fairways on Friday.

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