Day: October 4, 2020

The Latest: Rams off to strong start against GiantsThe Latest: Rams off to strong start against Giants

The Rams got off to a strong start against the struggling Giants, but a turnover is keeping New York in the game. Los Angeles led the Giants 7-0 after a first quarter dominated by a 12-play, 65-yard drive by the Rams culminating in tight end Gerald Everett’s first career rushing touchdown. The Rams’ offense didn’t have a negative-yardage play in the quarter, while the LA defense pushed the Giants back minus-2 net yards on their first two drives.

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Peter Malnati's runner-up a step in the right directionPeter Malnati's runner-up a step in the right direction

JACKSON, Miss. - Peter Malnati was an alternate for the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open next week, so he was just hoping for a top-10 finish to get himself to Las Vegas. He did better than that. The winner of the Sanderson Farms Championship five years ago, Malnati scorched the Country Club of Jackson with a final-round 63 to finish 18 under par. Then he hung out for a few hours with wife Alicia and their son Hatcher, watching as one by one the others failed to match him, before Sergio Garcia birdied the 18th hole to complete a final-round 67 and beat him by one. Alas, Malnati's belly laugh at Garcia's final approach shot - which nearly went in before settling to 30 inches from the pin - spoke volumes. Fine, he didn't win, but he'd potentially revived his career. "I’ve really struggled with my long game," said Malnati, who again missed the FedExCup Playoffs last season and was 312th in the world coming into the Sanderson Farms. "Consistency in my long game, I should say. I’ve had weeks where I’ve been good, but I’ve really struggled with consistency for the last several years." He's thought about breaking his swing down to fix what he calls his idiosyncrasies, but with the year-round schedule, he said, "There’s never a time to take a two-month break to work on a golf swing." Malnati wasn't great with his long game Sunday, either, barely finishing in negative numbers in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee, but he took just 23 putts. Then he had to wait an hour and 40 minutes for the final group, Garcia and Australian Cameron Davis, to finish. "Honestly after the restart, he wasn't playing very well," said his caddie, Chad Antus. "Not up until (the Wyndham Championship in) Greensboro did he hit it very well, and then last week (at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship) he didn't finish that great (T41) but he hit it good, and that continued this week. It's one of the best weeks I've seen him hit the ball, and he putted amazing today." Malnati made 139 feet, 6 inches worth of putts Sunday. "It was impressive," said Antus, who has worked for Malnati for three and a half years. "Our biggest goal was to try and top-10 because we were third alternate for next week." They're not third alternate anymore. Malnati planned to join Alicia for the long drive home to Knoxville, Tennessee, and then fly to Vegas for the Shriners. Given how far off the radar he's been the last five years, it was, for all intents and purposes, a win.

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Sergio Garcia rallies for win at Sanderson Farms ChampionshipSergio Garcia rallies for win at Sanderson Farms Championship

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Sergio Garcia delivered two key shots on the back nine, the last one an 8-iron to 30 inches on the final hole for birdie and a one-shot victory in the Sanderson Farms Championship. RELATED: What’s in Garcia’s bag? Garcia closed with a 5-under 67 and won for the 10th consecutive year worldwide, and the first time on the PGA TOUR since the 2017 Masters. Peter Malnati, whose lone PGA TOUR victory came at this tournament five years ago, closed with a career-best 63 and waited nearly two hours to see if it would hold up. It almost did. Garcia was two shots behind when he hit 5-wood on the par-5 14th that narrowly cleared a bunker, hitting in the top collar, onto the fringe and rolling out to just inside 4 feet for eagle to tie for the lead. He had to save par from a bunker with a 5-foot putt on the 15th after a poor tee shot, and then he delivered the winner with a big tee shot on the 18th and an 8-iron from 171 yards. Garcia immediately began walking after the shot, and it dropped down next to the hole and settled right behind it. Closing his eyes right before the stroke, a habit he returned to this week, he made it and clenched his fist with a grin not seen on the 40-year-old Spaniard lately. One week after falling out of the top 50 in the world for the first time since 2011, Garcia won for the 11th time on the PGA TOUR and the 31st time worldwide. The former winner of THE PLAYERS Championship finished at 19-under 269 and he moved to No. 4 in the FedExCup standings. J.T. Poston, who started the final round in at three-way tie with Garcia and Cameron Davis of Australia, was one shot behind when he missed the 16th fairway to the right, went into a bunker and failed to save par. He finished with two pars for a 70 to finish alone in third. Davis had three bogeys on the front nine and was never a factor, closing with a 72.

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