Granderson named Heart and Hustle recipientGranderson named Heart and Hustle recipient
Veteran outfielder Curtis Granderson has been named the Toronto Blue Jays 2018 Heart and Hustle Award recipient by the MLBPAA.
Veteran outfielder Curtis Granderson has been named the Toronto Blue Jays 2018 Heart and Hustle Award recipient by the MLBPAA.
NASCAR CEO Brian France was pulled over Sunday night and police found oxycodone in a search.
France was pulled over at approximately 7:30 p.m. Sunday night and police found oxycodone in a search.
Justin Thomas moved into third place in the United States team points race and clinched his Ryder Cup spot on Monday, the day after winning the World Golf Championships – Bridgestone Invitational by four shots in Akron, Ohio. The victory also moved Thomas past England’s Justin Rose to No. 2 in the
Alex Rodriguez’s worst ever performance at Fenway Park wasn’t when he tried to fight Jason Varitek. It came Sunday night, when his verbal diarrhea rendered ESPN’s “Sunday Night Baseball� telecast nearly unwatchable. In theory, the prospect of A-Rod calling a big Red Sox-Yankees matchup is infinitely interesting. He was one of the most polarizing figures in the history of the rivalry, and initiated two of the most indelible moments during the Red Sox’ 2004 World Series run: the aforementioned Varitek brawl, and slapping the ball out of Bronson Arroyo’s hand in the ALCS. But on Sunday night, viewers didn’t hear many remarks from A-Rod about his past. When they played the clip of him trying to rip
Our experts debate whether Tiger will end his drought (they say no) and which big-name player could be in big-time trouble (that’s you, Jordan).
Nearly eight decades ago, a young boy trounced through the woods in search of work. Neither of his parents played golf, but this son of an auto mechanic had heard that caddying could be a good source of extra income.  It was 4 miles from his house to Avon Fields Golf Course in Cincinnati, Ohio. He made the commute on foot.  “I didn’t mind the walk over in the morning, but the walk home in the dark was spooky,� Paul Thomas said. He punctuates this sentence with a laugh, an acknowledgement that this scene – a 10-year-old boy walking through dark woods on the way home from work – is a remnant of a bygone era.  Paul didn’t have his own golf clubs, so he played his first rounds with the rental sets available at Avon Fields. The course let caddies play on Mondays. He remembers winning the caddie championship a few years later in the pouring rain.  These were the humble beginnings of a golfing genealogy that produced one of today’s top players. Paul Thomas begat Mike Thomas who begat Justin Thomas, the winner of the 2017 FedExCup and the defending champion at this week’s PGA Championship.  Paul Thomas turned pro as a teenager, but not for the same reasons his grandson made a similar move at age 20. Justin was a phenom who’d prepared his entire life for the pro ranks. Paul left school early to make a living.  “I was forced out (of school) because of finances, and that was the first opportunity at halfway decent employment,� Paul said. “I know it sure didn’t pay much in those days.�  Paul was a lifelong club pro, but also an accomplished player who competed in the same events as Palmer, Nicklaus and Hogan. Before Justin Thomas won golf’s richest prize, Paul would regale him with tales from professional golf’s hardscrabble days. Hearing about his grandfather’s brushes with the game’s greats stoked Justin’s passion for the game.  “He’s told me the same stories a million times, but I never tell him to stop,� Justin said. “I keep all his voicemails.�  His grandparents’ presence behind the 18th green was the reason Justin got emotional before hitting the final putt of his four-stroke victory at last week’s World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational. Paul and Phyllis Thomas had never been on-hand for one of their grandson’s nine PGA TOUR victories. Paul enjoyed ice cream for breakfast in player dining before watching Justin conquer the same Firestone course where he played the PGA Championship in 1960. Paul made the cut with a second-round 72 that even bested the great Ben Hogan by a stroke. As the courses have gotten longer and the crowds have grown larger, it’s become harder for Paul and Phyllis to watch their grandson play golf. They follow closely from their home in Columbus, Ohio, though. Paul was one of the first to call Justin after he won last year’s PGA at Quail Hollow. Paul felt the tension when Justin stepped to the tee at the watery par-3 17th and celebrated when his grandson’s 214-yard 7-iron stopped within 2 feet of the hole. “He stood up there like a man and just staked it,� Paul said. Paul could appreciate such a shot because he grew up in an era that demanded toughness. He took a crack at the TOUR as a 25-year-old in 1957, back when professional golf was still gaining traction and players caravanned across the country to play for pittance. Paul Thomas (center) stands next to his son Mike and grandson Justin. (Submitted photo) “I wasn’t nowhere near good enough. I was just scraping it together, anyway,� Paul said. “The TOUR was just getting organized. It was nothing like it is today. You’d enter one tournament from the last one.�  Paul served as an assistant pro at several clubs before becoming the head professional at Ohio’s Zanesville Country Club in 1963. He was 31 years old, and already had been a professional for 13 years.  He held the post for more than a quarter-century while remaining one of the top players in the Central Ohio PGA. He played with Arnold Palmer on the PGA TOUR Champions, made the cut in three U.S. Senior Opens and even beat former U.S. Open champion Tommy Bolt in an 18-hole exhibition.  Paul was an old-school instructor – “I don’t believe in theory because no two people are the same,� he said – whose students included two future LPGA Tour winners, Tammie Green and Michele Redman, and Mike Thomas, the second-oldest of his four sons.  Green, whose seven wins included one major, the 1989 du Maurier, lists Paul as the biggest influence on her career. Mike Thomas was a good amateur and an all-Ohio Valley Conference honoree at Morehead State before following his father into the club pro ranks.  Mike, too, enjoyed a lengthy tenure at one club, Harmony Landing Country Club outside of Louisville, and Justin reaped the benefits. The members were supportive of their head pro’s son, allowing him full use of the course and practice facility.  “You could tell when he was 7, 8, 9, 10 years old, he had something. You could tell that there was a big possibility there,� Paul said. “I remember telling him a long time ago that, as well as he drives the ball, don’t spend your time hitting those irons. Get out there and hit the sand wedge and the pitching wedge.�  The Thomas men all have strong short games. The putter was one of the strongest clubs in Paul’s bag. Mike was influenced by his father’s devotion to that aspect of the game, and he enjoyed practicing shots that he could see go in the hole. And Justin followed his father to the chipping green, a constant site of competition between three generations of Thomas men.  Paul won’t take credit for his grandson’s success, though.  “I would say the most help I ever gave him was playing with him and talking to him,� he said. “His dad is his only teacher, and that’s the way it should be.� Paul’s stories “influenced Justin’s love and passion� for the game, Mike said. Paul’s success as a player helped him teach course management and the art of playing the game. The older Thomases could be overly technical, though, so Mike tried to keep his instruction of Justin simple, focusing on the fundamentals. And after struggling to meet his father’s high standards, Mike also wanted to ensure his son had fun on the course. “My dad will be the first to tell you that he was pretty hard on me,� Mike Thomas said. “He had fun, but when it came to competition he was hard on himself. He was hard on himself, so he was hard on me. “That was a different era. Those guys truly did dig it out of the dirt.� Paul was born in 1931 in Ashland, Kentucky, a steel town on the border of West Virginia, but his family moved to Cincinnati when he was 5. Two of his early assistant-pro jobs took him to York, Pennsylvania, and Tequesta, Florida, where he worked for Ohio native and established PGA TOUR winner Dow Finsterwald at Tequesta Golf Club. Tequesta is a short distance from Jupiter, where Justin Thomas and a parade of other PGA TOUR players now live.  In 1958, Paul returned to Cincinnati to work as an assistant pro at Western Hills Country Club. He quickly established himself as one of the state’s top players. He won that year’s Southern Ohio PGA Championship to qualify for the PGA Championship. He never made it to the national championship, though.  Paul was declared ineligible because his membership to his new PGA section hadn’t yet transferred. Finsterwald, his old boss, won with a final-round 67, finishing two shots ahead of Billy Casper. Paul’s favorite player, Sam Snead, finished third.  There would be other PGA Championship chances earned, however. Paul played at Firestone CC in 1960 and Olympia Fields in ’61, and he also competed in the 1962 U.S. Open at Oakmont.  He missed the 54-hole cut at Firestone but had good company: Hogan, weeks after nearly winning his fifth U.S. Open, also failed to qualify for the final round.  Thomas remained a stalwart in his PGA section, twice winning the Central Ohio PGA Championship. His best success came in his 40s and 50s; he finished T15 in the 1983 U.S. Senior Open and played with Palmer in the final round of the Citizens Union Senior Golf Classic in Lexington, Kentucky. Thomas trailed Palmer by just a stroke entering the final round, but shot a 77 to Palmer’s 67. Those numbers have long since faded. The memory hasn’t.  Paul, 86, still plays a handful of times per week and gives the occasional lesson. He’s shot his age every year since turning 64. And, of course, he watches his grandson succeed in the family trade.  “After he showed that he was going to make it, I told him, ‘Only you can screw this thing up. It’s up to you to make something out of yourself,’� Paul said. “And he sure did.�
Our experts debate whether Tiger will end his drought (they say no) and which big-name player could be in big-time trouble (that’s you, Jordan).
Justin Thomas cruised to an impressive ninth PGA TOUR victory at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational while Andrew Putnam picked up his very first win in the mountains of Reno at the Barracuda Championship. Welcome to the Monday Finish where Thomas showed his extended family what he could do and Putnam added extra time to his annual family Maui vacation. FIVE OBSERVATIONS 1 Justin Thomas has an impressive ability to channel his nerves and turn pressure into performance. Of course we have already seen this on numerous occasions but on Sunday at Firestone Country Club it was clear that Thomas wanted to stay measured, calm, but yet ruthless if need be. With a three-shot lead to start the day he was in a comfortable position game plan-wise. Play it safe at a course that can hurt those who press. He was not going to show an open door to the likes of Rory McIlroy and Jason Day. If they wanted the trophy they would have to come and take it. And no one looked like they would be allowing Thomas to continue his for the most part conservative smart play. But the key part was when some people go into protect mode, they can’t get out of it. Thomas can. And did. Finally, early on the back nine, Kyle Stanley and Day made a mini run – both getting within two of the lead and riding some momentum. Thomas sensed it. He then hits a booming cut of a drive down the 13th hole, knowing both of those players were struggling on the hole. Stanley had already bogeyed it. Thomas watched in the fairway so close Day could probably feel him as he lipped out par from 5 feet. Thomas went for the kill and hit a pristine approach to 10 feet. Made birdie. Big lead restored. Tournament over. Being able to create those moments is what puts Thomas in the top echelon. Read about his emotional win in front of his grandparents here. 2 Dustin Johnson could have done what many players at the back of a WGC event sometimes do on Sundays … he could have conserved energy ahead of the PGA Championship and just cruised around. But the FedExCup leader and world No.1 doesn’t play that way. Instead he put in a charge to ensure he stays No. 1 in both categories — at least a little while longer. Seven birdies in his first 10 holes had everyone thinking sub-60 was on the way but the putts started to edge out on the back nine. Regardless, he catapulted his way all the way to third place and announced himself as one of the clear favorites heading to Bellerive this week. 3 What is the takeaway for Jason Day and Rory McIlroy from Akron? Is it positives after the pair both pushed their way into the mix through three rounds despite having some wonky swings at times? Or are there worries given those wonky swings – which for Day created a two-way miss with the driver and for McIlroy meant another Sunday fade this season. Day knows he didn’t have his best stuff on the weekend but on the bright side he was still able to score. That was the case until late Sunday when he pressed hard and came up empty. His early week in St. Louis will be trying to figure out the tee ball. McIlroy is just not bringing his ‘A’ game under the gun as often anymore. But he’s aware of it and has been grinding hard on his swing also. Sunday was slightly concerning to watch but at the same time either of these two could easily be holding one or more trophies in the coming weeks. 4 Tiger Woods walked away from Firestone South a winner – even after his 73-73 weekend fade in Akron. A fitting final hole birdie from the man who has won eight times at the venue gave the local crowd one more chance at a Tiger roar. At 42, Woods doesn’t have the same stamina he had 18 years ago when he began his dominance at Firestone. But he still pulled in the crowds. It’s a very interesting time for Woods who will play a very heavy schedule for the first time since coming back from his fusion surgery. Woods says his back is fine but age gets us all. And recovery time in the grueling heat could have been a factor in Akron. St. Louis will be sweltering, too. His practice management is going to be critical as he fights to become the first three-time winner of the FedExCup. 5 Good on Andrew Putnam for his win in Reno. Not long ago he went into a final round Sunday pairing with Dustin Johnson tied for the lead at the FedEx St. Jude Classic. He was smashed by Johnson. But he sucked in every bit of experience he could from the round. Seeing Johnson’s demeanor. Seeing his poise under pressure. And understanding his own nerves. How his body reacted. He claimed he’d be better for it. And clearly, he was. On Sunday at the Barracuda Championship Putnam stayed calm and found his lane when it came to his own game. Early birdies helped. He didn’t panic after his lone bogey. And he picked off a few more opportunities when they came. Could be a serious game changer for Putnam as he is now 31st in the FedExCup hunting down the TOUR Championship. Read more on his win here. FIVE INSIGHTS 1 Justin Thomas recorded his ninth PGA TOUR win in his 112th career start and eighth win in his last 43 (19%) starts on TOUR. He remains second in the FedExCup but narrowed the deficit to just 147 points behind leader Dustin Johnson. 2 With his win this week, Justin Thomas becomes the third player with three wins on TOUR this season (Bubba Watson & Dustin Johnson). Thomas has now converted six of eight 54-hole leads/co-leads into victories on TOUR (75%). 3 Thomas was stellar on approach and on the greens. A total of 84 percent of Thomas’ total strokes gained for the week were a result of his approach the green and putting performance gaining +3.09 strokes per round in these two categories combined. From the 125- to 150-yard range, Thomas ranked fifth in the field averaging 11 feet, 7 inches in proximity to the hole. From inside 150 yards, Thomas was a combined 11-under par and outperformed the field by +7.31 total strokes on 32 approach shots. He hit 75 percent (54 of 72) of the greens in regulation, hitting 13 or more greens in each round this week (T2). Thomas averaged 25 feet, 2 inches in proximity to the hole on all approach shots, over 6 feet better than the field average. 4 Thomas outperformed the field by +1.174 strokes per round on the greens, making 56 of 56 putts from inside 6 feet. It was the first stroke-play event he has made every putt from within this distance this season. 5 The big movers in the FedExCup were Kyle Stanley – from 40th to 18th, Andrew Putnam – from 55th to 31st and Chad Campbell who went from 161st to 126th to keep his Playoffs hopes alive. Anirban Lahiri jumped from 102nd to 83rd while C.T. Pan made an important jump from 115th to 107th. Vaughn Taylor (119 to 110) and William McGirt (120 to 111) also went closer to shoring up Playoffs berths.
Odell Beckham Jr.’s agent has left the New York area with no deal in place after face-to-face meetings with the Giants last week, a source told ESPN’s Josina Anderson.