Day: October 27, 2018

NBA trade rumors: Which big men could soon hit open market?NBA trade rumors: Which big men could soon hit open market?

We’re a week-and-a-half into the NBA season, and these days that means the heating up of trade-rumor season, which now runs something like 11 months of the year — we only take a few weeks off after the trade deadline passes in February. As always, big men remain a tough bunch to figure in this context

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Georgia vs. Florida odds, line: 2018 college football picks, predictions from proven model on 5-1 rollGeorgia vs. Florida odds, line: 2018 college football picks, predictions from proven model on 5-1 roll

Playing at a neutral site every season, Georgia and Florida have one of the most interesting rivalries in college football. With Jacksonville bringing in scores of both fans and no real home-field advantage to offer, it’s an annual test of which team is truly better. This season, with No. 7 Georgia

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Cameron Champ closing in on first TOUR win at Sanderson Farms ChampionshipCameron Champ closing in on first TOUR win at Sanderson Farms Championship

JACKSON, Miss. – Notes and observations from the third round of the Sanderson Farms Championship at the Country Club of Jackson. LEADING LIGHT Cameron Champ has led the Sanderson Farms Championship since Thursday, but his position atop the leaderboard was tenuous after his approach shot bounded over the green on the 12th hole. Champ was leading by one when his wedge shot from the rough flew the green and took a hard bounce, settling 20 yards past the green. His ball sat on a tight lie and he was staring at a lake on the other side of the putting surface. Champ opted for the safe play, a bump-and-run. That removed the threat of hitting it into the water. His shot stopped short of the putting surface, though. “I wasn’t trying to get too cute with it,� Champ said. “If I got lucky and it just barely trickled on, great. If not, I would just take that chip and live with it.� It looked like he would lose at least one shot on Saturday’s hardest hole. He chipped in, instead, to par Saturday’s hardest hole. “Luckily, I was able to pull it off and make a nice par,� he said. He took control of the tournament after that, making birdies on the next three holes. The run started with a 9-iron to 6 feet on the par-3 12th hole. He unleashed a 349-yard drive on the next hole, then hit a 6-iron just left of the green. A chip and a putt gave him his fourth par-5 birdie of the day. Another greenside up-and-down, this time from a bunker, gave him a birdie on the 292-yard, par-4 15th. Champ walked off that green with a four-shot lead. He holds that same advantage after parring the final three holes for a 64 that matched the low score of the day. Corey Conners, a second-year TOUR player, also shot 64 and will begin the final round in second place. TOUR veterans D.J. Trahan and Shawn Stefani are five back. OBSERVATIONS A HONEYMOON WIN?: Seven days ago, Corey and Malory Conners got married in Ontario, Canada. The Sanderson Farms Championship is doubling as their honeymoon. Sunday could bring a happy ending, as Corey is playing in the final group. “It would be really special to have her here and win,� he said. “We had an awesome wedding and are kind of excited to have it over with so we can start a new chapter in our lives.� Conners, 26, is playing this season on conditional status after finishing 130th in last season’s FedExCup. This is the third time he will start the final round in first or second place. He shot a final-round 77 at the Valspar Championship after holding a one-shot lead. He was in second at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship before a final-round 76. HOPEFUL HAAS: Bill Haas needs a solo eighth-place finish this week to fulfill a medical extension. A 67 on Saturday gave him an opportunity to meet that mark. He will start the final round in a seven-way tie for eighth at 9 under par. “I think if I focus on that then it hinders you,� the 2011 FedExCup champ said. “I’m certainly not going to hang my future on tomorrow’s round.� Haas also has the opportunity to start the season with back-to-back top-10s after having just one last season and missing the FedExCup Playoffs for the first time in his career. He finished T10 at the Safeway Open. QUOTABLES You want to get off to a good start in the year, and when you have your little break over Christmas know you’re in good position.As soon as I hit it I thought it was going to be a good shot. It disappeared before I even knew it. SUPERLATIVES Low round: Champ and Conners both shot 64. Champ started the day with a share of the lead and is now four ahead. Conners jumped from 15th to second. Both players had nine birdies and one bogey. Longest drive: Tom Lovelady’s 353-yarder on the 14th hole was the longest of the day, four yards longer than Champ’s tee shot on the same hole. They combined for Saturday’s five longest tee shots. Lovelady had three (353, 343, 340). Champ had two (349, 342). Lovelady is in 30th place (71-71-68). Longest putt: Stefani holed a 54-footer for birdie on the par-3 13th in his second-round 68. Hardest hole: The 428-yard, par-4 12th played to a 4.4 stroke average. There were twice as many double-bogeys (4) as birdies (2) on Saturday. CALL OF THE DAY For play-by-play coverage of the final round of the Sanderson Farms Championship, listen at PGATOUR.COM. SHOT OF THE DAY

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Cameron Champ shoots 64, takes four-shot lead at Sanderson Farms ChampionshipCameron Champ shoots 64, takes four-shot lead at Sanderson Farms Championship

JACKSON, Miss. — Cameron Champ shot an 8-under 64 on Saturday to open a four-stroke lead in the Sanderson Farms Championship. Champ has held at least a share of the lead all three days at Country Club of Jackson, opening with a 65 and shooting a 70 on Friday. Averaging a field-best 306.7 yards off the tee, the 23-year-old PGA TOUR rookie has hit 44 of 54 greens in regulation. On Saturday, he hit 15 of 18 and had just 25 putts. Corey Conners was second, matching Champ with a 64 to get to 13 under. D.J. Trahan, the 2006 winner when the event was the Southern Farm Bureau Classic, was five strokes back with Shawn Stefani. Trahan shot 67, and Stefani had a 68. Norman Xiong, the 19-year-old who was tied with Champ for the second-round lead, had a 76 to drop into a tie for 36th at 5 under.

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