Colts vs. Ravens: Inactive players for Week 9Colts vs. Ravens: Inactive players for Week 9
Inactives for the Colts and Ravens.
Inactives for the Colts and Ravens.
The full list of inactives for Sunday’s Week 9 game between the New York Giants and Washington Football Team have been released.
The Falcons have listed their inactives for today’s game against the visiting Denver Broncos.
Joan Mir’s first win of the series extends his lead in the MotoGP world championship standings to 37 points.
Will Joey Logano capture his second Cup Series title in three seasons, or can Brad Keselowski, Chase Elliott or Denny Hamlin break through for their first win?
There's magic in those Georgia pines. With astonishing regularity, the home of the Masters Tournament provides moments so poignant as to strain credulity. Think Jack Nicklaus winning at 46 in 1986; Ben Crenshaw, then 43, capturing the '95 Masters after burying his lifelong coach Harvey Penick; and Tiger Woods' victory at age 43 last year. Here are nine things about Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters. 1. Everything and nothing stays the same As Fenway Park or Wrigley Field are for baseball, Augusta National is a sort of cathedral of golf. There's a timelessness about it. The towering Georgia pines, the spectacular canvas of flowers (azaleas, pink dogwood, etc.), the wildly undulating terrain - it never changes. But it always changes. The club reversed the nines in 1935, the year after Horton Smith win the first Augusta National Invitation Tournament, which wasn't called the Masters until '39. The pond at the 16th hole was built after the damming of a stream at the 11th in '50. And after Tiger Woods went 18 under to win by a dozen shots in 1997, the course gradually went from less than 7,000 yards to almost 7,500. "Well, Augusta National has been at the forefront of trying to keep it competitive, keep it fair, keep it fun, and they have been at the forefront of lengthening the golf course," Woods said early this year. "Granted, they have the property; they can do virtually whatever they want. Complete autonomy. It’s kind of nice. "But also, they have been at the forefront of trying to keep it exciting," he continued. "As the game has evolved, we have has gotten longer, equipment’s changed, and they are trying to keep it so that the winning score is right around that 12- to 18-under par mark, and they have." 2. A November Masters will bring big changes Jimmy Demaret dressed in yellow for Easter Sunday when he won in 1950. We're a long way from Easter this time around. Thanksgiving is more like it. Will it be cold, the way it was when Zach Johnson won in 2007? And if so, what type of player will that favor? With no patrons on site, the Par 3 Contest wouldn't have been the same and has been cancelled. With less daylight, players will be sent off the first and 10th tees. And in a neat new wrinkle designed to bring new audiences to the Masters and golf, the tournament will host ESPN's College Game Day from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Nov. 14, before third-round coverage. The studio will overlook Ike's Pond and the ninth green of the par 3 course. "When exploring ways to showcase a fall Masters, we were drawn to the concept of hosting College GameDay at Augusta National to introduce the Tournament to a new audience and provide even more anticipation and excitement to the event," Augusta National Chairman Fred Ridley said. "We appreciate the collaboration with ESPN, our longtime broadcast partner, for this first-of-its-kind opportunity." 3. There's a proud amateur tradition Bobby Jones, the consummate amateur, co-founded the club (with Clifford Roberts). And as per tradition, this year's field will include a robust lineup of amateurs from around the globe, including U.S. Amateur champion Andy Ogletree and runner-up John Augenstein; Latin America Amateur winner Abel Gallegos of Argentina; Asia-Pacific Amateur champion Yuxin Lin of China; U.S. Mid-Amateur champ Lukas Michel of Australia; and British Amateur champion James Sugrue of Ireland. Fun fact: Then-amateur Bryson DeChambeau was just one off the lead as he stood on the 18th tee Friday in 2016, but he triple-bogeyed the hole and ultimately finished 21st. He turned pro the next week. 4. It combines the best of old and new Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player will be the Honorary Starters this year as Augusta National honors its past champions. Winners come back for life, spinning yarns about the old days at the Champions' Dinner. More history: The clubhouse dates to 1854 as a private home and is believed to be the first concrete house built in the South. Fruitland Nurseries, which was bought as the future Augusta National Golf Club site in 1931, billed itself as the "South's oldest nursery," dating to 1856. The course was closed and used to raise cattle and turkeys for three years during the war effort of World War II. On the other hand, Augusta National has always been a place to identify the game's next wave, from 21-year-old mega-talent Tiger Woods in '97 - still the youngest ever to win - to Tianlang Guan, who was just 14 when he became the youngest to make the cut in 2013. 5. It's consistently innovative Longtime network partner CBS used just six cameras, covering only holes 15-18, in its first tournament broadcast in '56. Nowadays the network uses 75-100 cameras to cover all 18 holes. The '66 Masters was the first tournament to use a stop-action technique seen only in football; 2001 gave us the first golf telecast to use HDTV; and the 2010 Masters was the first major sporting event produced and presented in 3D on television and the Internet. Ancillary feeds like "Masters on The Range" and "Amen Corner" broke ground, as did the club's 2019 commitment to capture every shot on camera. And speaking of innovations, the state-of-the-art press building, which opened in 2017, features white columns and gray stonework; a huge atrium with skylight; grand staircase; a wall of windows opening up to the driving range; 350 seats; and men's and women's locker rooms. It's a far cry from the reporters' old tent and Quonset hut, and even a far cry from the press building that one reporter dubbed it "our Taj Mahal" when it opened off the first fairway in 1990. 6. The architecture is revered Dr. Alister Mackenzie of Scotland was the original architect and brought design concepts inspired by some of the classics in his home country, including the Old Course at St. Andrews. He would design masterpieces from coast to coast - Cypress Point in Monterey, California stands out - and spanning the globe. (This in an era in which globe-trotting was not easy.) Tom Fazio helped the club add yardage and trees for the 2002 Masters, and more wrinkles arrive seemingly non-stop. The newly lengthened fifth hole played to nearly 500 yards and elicited copious bogeys last year. The par-5 13th will reportedly get a new back tee, although it may not be ready yet. The club considers every detail - Bobby Jones, for example, initially disliked the fairway bunkers at the fifth hole - adjusting on the fly where needed. How it might adapt after DeChambeau makes his mark this year, assuming he does, is anybody's guess and one of the dominant pretournament storylines. 7. Every hole has a story, and a name It was dubbed "the shot heard 'round the world" when Gene Sarazen made an albatross (2) at the par-5 15th hole in 1935. He won a playoff the next day and said the shot wouldn't have meant anything without the title. He's probably right. Jeff Maggert made the first albatross at the 13th hole in 1994, and Louis Oosthuizen made an albatross at the second hole in 2012. Both shots were soon forgotten relative to Sarazen's. More storytelling: Augusta National co-founder Clifford Roberts and renowned sportswriter Grantland Rice hosted a private train party for the official opening of the club in 1933. Herbert Warren Wind, another sportswriter, coined the term "Amen Corner." Oh, and every hole is named in a sort of homage to the old nursery: Tea Olive for the first hole, Pink Dogwood for the second, Flowering Peach for the third, and so on. The most famous is arguably Golden Bell, the short, par-3 12th hole, where club selection is key and train wrecks are not uncommon, often separating the winners from the also-rans. 8. Guile is rewarded First-timer Fuzzy Zoeller won the tournament in 1979, but he's the only newbie to don the green jacket. More often than not, players require seasoning to grasp the course's intricacies. Veterans sometimes turn back the clock at Augusta National: Jack in '86, Tiger last year. You also get compelling sidebars like Bernhard Langer making the cut last year at age 61. Don't count out Phil Mickelson, 50. The flip side is the near-misses that tug on the heartstrings, like 48-year-old Kenny Perry bogeying the last two holes to fall into a playoff, which he lost to Angel Cabrera, in 2009. More agonizing still was veteran Greg Norman's collapse as he lost a six-shot lead and Nick Faldo won in 1996. 9. Youth is irrepressible Woods was 21 when he won in '97. Jordan Spieth was a marginally older 21 when he won in 2015, tying Woods' 72-hole scoring record of 18-under 270. They're the two youngest winners ever. It helps to be too young to have scar tissue. Conversely, as with the oldies, the kids have suffered their own wipeouts. A shellshocked Spieth made a quadruple-bogey 7 at the 12th hole and lost the '16 Masters in his title defense. Brandt Snedeker, then 27, shot a final-round 77 to finish T3, four back of winner Trevor Immelman, in 2008. Rory McIlroy, then 21, shot a final-round 80 to lose in 2011. Ah, well, maybe tears are inevitable at Augusta for both the winners and the losers. The trick is just being young enough to survive it and come back next year - or in five months.
Robbie Ray agreed to a one-year deal with the Toronto Blue Jays. The deal is worth $8 million, a source told ESPN’s Jeff Passan.
The Yankees are moving minor league affiliates out of Staten Island and Trenton, New Jersey.
The Masters has a new date, but the amount of excitement remains unchanged. Tiger Woods is the defending champion after holding onto his Green Jacket for 19 months due to the impact of COVID-19 on the PGA TOUR schedule. A stout list of chasers will look to slip their arms into a Green Jacket, including reigning FedExCup champion Dustin Johnson, two-time FedExCup winner Rory McIlroy - who's looking to complete the career Grand Slam - and the most recent major winners, Bryson DeChambeau and Collin Morikawa. Morikawa is making his Masters debut. FIELD NOTES: Ninety-four golfers will tee it up at the Masters... The field for this edition was confirmed earlier in 2020, which means no one could earn their way in at the last minute or via his play through the Return to Golf... Twenty-six participants will be playing the Masters for the first time, including world No. 4 Morikawa and reigning PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year Scottie Scheffler... Reigning U.S. Amateur winner Andy Ogletree leads the six-golfer amateur contingent. John Augenstein, the runner-up to Ogletree at Pinehurst in 2019, also is in the field. Augenstein is No. 6 in the PGA TOUR University rankings. The top 5 after the NCAA Championship earn Korn Ferry Tour status. Augenstein can earn PGA TOUR U points at Augusta National ... Tiger Woods looks to become the first golfer in history to win the Masters in back-to-back years twice. Jack Nicklaus (1965-66) and Nick Faldo (1989-90) achieved the feat while Woods pulled the trick in 2001-02... Four Canadians will tee it up, led by 2003 winner Mike Weir - the most that country has ever had in the Masters... Phil Mickelson, who has won twice on PGA TOUR Champions in two starts since turning 50 this year, is looking to become the oldest major winner ever. Mickelson is one of 15 past champions in the field... DeChambeau is on the hunt for his second major in a row. The last man to win back-to-back majors was Jordan Spieth in 2015. FEDEXCUP: Winner receives 600 FedExCup points. COURSE: Augusta National Golf Club, 7,475 yards, par 72. Spring's tradition unlike any other has morphed into a fall classic for 2020. That likely means fewer flowers at the former site of Fruitland Nurseries. From a golf course perspective, the Bobby Jones/Alistair McKenzie classic will likely play longer than it does in the spring, given the weather and the grass being much fresher versus April. According to many TOUR players who have been asked about the course over the last few months, there's an ongoing belief that Augusta National has resources to make November's conditions as similar to April as possible. There were no changes to the course for the 2020 edition of the tournament, but land continues to be purchased around the course for potential future efforts. STORYLINES: Rory McIlroy is gunning for the career Grand Slam once again after winning the 2014 Open Championship... There will be no patrons at Augusta National in 2020. That's not the only change for the first November edition of the Masters. Golfers will go off split tees and there will be a morning and afternoon wave... Jordan Spieth looks to quash his winless drought that dates back to the 2017 Open Championship at a place where he is very comfortable. The past FedExCup champion has a win, two seconds, and a third at Augusta National... Morikawa, Justin Thomas, and Dustin Johnson are among the large group of notables looking to notch their second major championship ... Xander Schauffele, Patrick Cantlay, and Tony Finau are amongst the group looking to capture their maiden majors. Schauffele has finished in the top-10 in six of the last 10 majors he's played... Woods is looking to tie Jack Nicklaus for the most Green Jackets of all time (six). He missed the cut at the U.S. Open earlier this season and finished T37 at the PGA Championship in August. 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 TIME: Tiger Woods held off a strong leaderboard to win his fifth Green Jacket - and first major since 2008. A final-round 70 put Woods at 13 under, one shot ahead of Johnson, Schauffele, and Brooks Koepka. After several of his closest pursuers hit their tee shots into the water on the par-3 12th hole, Woods birdied Nos. 13, 15, and 16 to eventually pull ahead for good. Despite a bogey on the par-4 18th, it was all he needed to capture his 15th major title in his "return to glory." Woods was two shots back of the 54-hole lead held by Francesco Molinari, who shot 74 Sunday to finish T5 alongside Jason Day, Webb Simpson, and Finau, who was also in the final group Sunday with Woods and Molinari. HOW TO FOLLOW Television: Thursday-Friday, 1 p.m.-5:30 p.m. ET (ESPN), Saturday, 1 p.m.-5 p.m. (CBS), Sunday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. (CBS) Radio: Thursday-Friday, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. ET, Saturday, 12 p.m.-5 p.m., Sunday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. (Sirius 208 and XM 92)
Saturday had 5 races on the dirt, headlined by the $6 million Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1) won by Authentic. Also on the card were the Longines Breeders’ Cup Distaff (G1) won by Monomoy Girl, the Breeders’ Cup Sprint (G1) won by Whitmore, the Big Ass Fans Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile (G1) won by Knicks Go, and the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Sprint (G1) won by Gamine. Get the results, charts, and photos here.