Day: January 23, 2021

Rory McIlroy leads by one at the Abu Dhabi ChampionshipRory McIlroy leads by one at the Abu Dhabi Championship

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Rory McIlroy will take a one-shot lead into the final round of the season-opening Abu Dhabi Championship after posting a 5-under 67 on Saturday. McIlroy holed out from 73 yards to eagle the 10th and added five birdies to go 13 under, wrestling control of the tournament from Tyrrell Hatton (71), who trails by a shot. "I thought I did well today. Obviously had that big stroke of luck on 10, the ball hitting the pin and going in," the four-time major champion said. "Sometimes that's what you need in golf tournaments to be in contention and to end up winning is those little strokes of luck every now and again." Hatton held a 5-shot lead when play was halted Friday because of fading light, but he finished the second round up by just a shot early Saturday before the third round started. "I just felt like I had nothing really go my way," Hatton said of his 71. "Hit a couple decent shots and ran into a bunker with a terrible lie and had quite a few putts burning the edge or lipping out. Pretty disappointed." One shot back heading into Sunday "isn't ideal but a lot can happen in 18 holes,” the Englishman said. Tommy Fleetwood (67) had six birdies to put himself two shots behind McIlroy and alone in third place. He rolled in a putt on the 12th from nearly 50 feet. David Lipsky and Marc Warren both shot 68 and share fourth place, three shots back of McIlroy. The Northern Irishman in 10 appearances at Abu Dhabi has finished second on four occasions and third three times. Apart from one missed cut, McIlroy has only one finish outside the top 10 — tied for 11th place in 2008 in his first appearance. "I can't go into tomorrow thinking it's my turn," McIlroy said. "I want to make it my turn. I have to go out there and continue to hit the ball like I hit it on the back nine tonight. If I can do that and give myself plenty of chances, I'll have a real chance." Earlier Saturday, Justin Thomas missed the cut after he double-bogeyed the 18th. Alexander Levy produced a hole-in-one on the 177-yard, par-3 15th. The Frenchman is eight shots off the lead. "A perfect yardage for a 9-iron, wind from the left," Levy said. "Hit a good 9-iron a little bit thin. I was thinking it was short but (it) bounced in the hole. Yeah, it's a really good feeling." The Abu Dhabi Championship begins a run of three events in the "Gulf Swing" — the Dubai Desert Classic and the Saudi International come next.

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Matthew Wolff assessed penalty a day laterMatthew Wolff assessed penalty a day later

On Friday, Matthew Wolff was assessed a one-stroke penalty from Thursday's opening round of The American Express for violation of Rule 9.4b (Ball Lifted or Moved by You - Penalty for Lifting or Deliberately Touching Your Ball or Causing it to Move). The situation - occurring on No. 1 at The Stadium Course at PGA WEST — was originally addressed by Wolff with the PGA TOUR's Rules Committee on Thursday, with the decision subsequently reversed on Friday after the Rules Committee gained access to video evidence not available at the time of the ruling. With the one-stroke penalty, Wolff's first-round score is now 72 with his 36-hole total being 139 after a second-round 67. He is tied for 37th, six shots behind leader Sungjae Im. "The incident was filmed on PGA TOUR Live and was not brought to our attention until Matthew was well into his second round today," said PGA TOUR Tournament Director Steve Rintoul. "Once we realized there was video evidence, we had to look at it. Matthew was extremely professional and initially thought he was in a disqualification situation. But, fortunately for him, it was not. He was acting under the jurisdiction of an official yesterday and understood how the penalty applies when a ball is moved by the player. Matthew said he didn't feel like he caused the ball to move, but certainly understood that he could have. He was extremely professional about the entire situation."

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Q&A: Wingo on his PGA TOUR LIVE debutQ&A: Wingo on his PGA TOUR LIVE debut

Trey Wingo, a 23-year veteran of ESPN whose contract ended in November, will make his PGA TOUR LIVE debut as he calls the Farmers Insurance Open at San Diego. While he is more closely linked to the NFL, Wingo is no stranger to golf, having covered the U.S. Open and The Open Championship for ESPN. We caught up to him to talk about the game, the TOUR, pop culture, and Tiger's most overlooked accomplishment. PGATOUR.COM: You're known as a football guy, having covered the NFL. Where does golf rank on your list? WINGO: I love the game; I always say I'm not sure the game loves me back. That's kind of what I love about it because the ball only goes where you send it. I think, to me, it's the second hardest thing to do in sports, behind only hitting Major League pitching. You see the No. 1, No. 2 players in the world miss four or five cuts in a row, and if they can suddenly have a problem playing the game, you have to understand you're definitely going to have a problem. PGATOUR.COM: What exactly will you be doing for PGA TOUR LIVE? WINGO: I'll be hosting some of the featured groups on Thursday and Friday. I'll work with Billy Kratzert, whom I've worked with for six or seven years on the U.S. Open and Open Championship, so I'm looking forward to that. Also, Craig Perks, the owner of the greatest 3-2-4 in the history of golf to win THE PLAYERS Championship. That was a couple years after "Be the Right Club Today" and Hal Sutton beating Tiger at THE PLAYERS, which was when Tiger was having problems with big, burly guys - Darren Clarke beat him at the WGC-Match Play in 2000. PGATOUR.COM: What kind of scores do you shoot, and does the game suffer a bit in a Connecticut winter? WINGO: I'm about a 9. My index at my club is a 7.6. I was on a heater toward the end of the year, but the clubs have been in storage for a while. Every year about this time I'm reminded that I have to play to be able to repeat anything and have success. PGATOUR.COM: What about a simulator? WINGO: We thought about putting one in the basement, but the ceiling was six inches too low. PGATOUR.COM: You'd have got get on your knees like Dorf on Golf. WINGO: Shout out to Tim Conway, rest in peace. PGATOUR.COM: Best score? WINGO: I shot 73 at the Bay Course at Kapalua. It's a shorter course; it's not the Plantation. I made the turn at level, and birdied the 10th hole, a par-5 before they rerouted the course, and birdied 11. I texted my wife, "I'm 1 under through 11," and she said, "What are you doing? Don't tell me that, just play!" And I bogeyed the next three holes. PGATOUR.COM: Dad would love a shutout. WINGO: "Bull Durham." Still the greatest sports movie of all time. PGATOUR.COM: Favorite golf movie or book? WINGO: "The Greatest Game Ever Played" and "The Match," both by the same author, Mark Frost. "The Greatest Game Ever Played" was the Francis Ouimet story, and "The Match" was Ken Venturi and Harvie Ward versus Hogan and Nelson, who ended up winning 1 up. An incredible story. The guy who set up the match, a successful car dealer in California, was Eddie Lowery, Ouimet's caddie at the U.S. Open at Brookline. PGATOUR.COM: You started a podcast, Trey Wingo Presents: Half-Forgotten History. What's that about? WINGO: It's about Super Bowl championships, how the winners got there, what people don't know about the journey. Season one has Archie and Eli Manning together. It's off to a great start, we've sold three seasons. Season two is in the can. Season three will be a lot about golf, by the way. PGATOUR.COM: Speaking of half-forgotten history, what have we overlooked about Tiger Woods? WINGO: His 142 straight made cuts is the greatest record no one talks about. These guys today, with all due respect, don't know how good he was in his prime. He would get out there on a day when he didn't have it and still find a way to shoot 68. PGATOUR.COM: Will working for PGA TOUR LIVE make you a better golfer? WINGO: Let me put it this way: If osmosis is a thing, then absolutely. I've yet to see any evidence that that helps, but I'm always optimistic.

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Landeskog’s OT goal propels Avalanche to 3-2 win over DucksLandeskog’s OT goal propels Avalanche to 3-2 win over Ducks

Gabriel Landeskog scored 1:38 into overtime, Mikko Rantanen extended his goal-scoring streak to four games, and the Colorado Avalanche topped the Anaheim Ducks 3-2 on Friday night. Landeskog was initially stopped by Anaheim goalie John Gibson on a breakaway, but he got his own rebound and converted a wraparound for his third goal of the season.

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Aaron lauded for grace amid racism during home run pursuitAaron lauded for grace amid racism during home run pursuit

Reaction to Hank Aaron’s death from former presidents to fellow Hall of Famers to everyone who knew him followed a theme: how the one-time home run king handled the racism he faced on the way to passing Babe Ruth’s hallowed record nearly 50 years ago. Joe Carter met his childhood idol when he won the first Hank Aaron Award in 1986 after leading the majors in RBIs.

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