Day: July 6, 2021

Rice RB tackled off bench in the 1954 Cotton Bowl has diedRice RB tackled off bench in the 1954 Cotton Bowl has died

HOUSTON (AP) Dicky Maegle, the Rice running back tackled in the 1954 Cotton Bowl by an Alabama player who came off the bench in one of the most legendary plays in college football history, has died. Rice University and the National Football Foundation said Tuesday that Maegle passed away Sunday. After leaving Rice, and playing with three teams over seven NFL seasons, he changed the spelling of his last name to the phonetically correct Maegle instead of Moegle.

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Bryson DeChambeau and Aaron Rodgers beat Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady at Capital One’s The MatchBryson DeChambeau and Aaron Rodgers beat Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady at Capital One’s The Match

Bryson DeChambeau and Aaron Rodgers are your winners of the latest edition of The Match. It wasn’t Bryson DeChambeau’s big, altitude-assisted tee shots that were key to victory, though. Instead, it was Rodgers’ putter. He holed clutch putt after clutch putt to help his team take control on the back nine. The pair won, 3 and 2, after Rodgers holed a 12-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole. The match was all square after nine holes, but DeChambeau and Rodgers won three consecutive holes on the back nine to pull away. Check below for our live updates from the action at Moonlight Basin in Big Sky, Montana. HOLE-BY-HOLE HOLE NO. 1 Par 4, 475 yards Moonlight Basin’s altitude promised us big bombs off the tee, but it was DeChambeau’s short game that gave his team a 1-up lead after one hole. DeChambeau, who carried his opening tee shot more than 340 yards uphill, holed out from about 10 yards short of the green after Rodgers left his wedge shot short of the putting surface. Mickelson had a 20-footer to halve the hole, but he left it low. DeChambeau was the star of the first hole. He brought duct tape to the first tee, giving Brady grief splitting his pants in the match at Medalist. Then DeChambeau split the fairway with driver. “Bryson, he’s a maniac,” Rodgers said. “And we’re already in Phil’s head, too. Bryson is bringing the jokes today.” HOLE NO. 2 Par 3, 172 yards DeChambeau/Rodgers, 1 up DeChambeau and Rodgers remained in the lead but Rodgers had to grind over a knee-knocker to halve the hole. He holed a 3-footer as both teams parred the short par-3 second. Both teams failed to concede short par putts, setting the tone for the match. Rodgers was the only member of the foursome to find the green. Brady was flag hunting, but his tee shot bounced just past the green and into the long grass. Brady lagged a 40-foot putt from the fringe close to the hole to ensure a par for his team. DeChambeau, whose tee shot found the bunker, burned the edge with his team’s 30-footer but he ran it about 3 feet by. Fortunately, Rodgers was steady under pressure. HOLE NO. 3 Par 4, 392 yards All square An unforced error brought the match to all square. With President Barack Obama watching, DeChambeau and Brady both knocked altitude-assisted tee shots close on this drivable par-4. DeChambeau used a 3-wood, while Brady hit driver. “My man, what a drive,” Mickelson said to his partner. Mickelson couldn’t convert the 15-footer that he had after Brady’s tee shot, but it didn’t matter. Rodgers knocked his downhill 12-footer about 5 feet past the hole and DeChambeau missed the comebacker. HOLE 4 Par 5, 566 yards Mickelson/Brady, 1 up We had some of our best banter of the day after Mickelson roasted a tee shot into the fairway. He was feeling good enough about the blast that he challenged DeChambeau. “Get you some of that, Bryson,” Mickelson said. DeChambeau couldn’t catch the 51-year-old. He missed low and left, just like his partner, Rodgers. “I toe-snap-hooked the heck out of that thing,” DeChambeau said. “That’s the risk you take when swinging it that fast.” That opened the door for Mickelson to boast about his length. “I feel like that’s what happens when you try to keep up with me. You have to stay within yourself. On national TV, a 51-year-old outdriving you? That can’t happen,” Mickelson said. The struggles off the tee led to another lost hole for Rodgers and DeChambeau, who now trail after taking the early lead. Mickelson hit his 55-yard third shot so close that Brady exclaimed, “Good shot, Phil. I’m surprised they don’t give that to me.” The putt was about 5 feet but Brady rolled it into the heart. “Why didn’t you give just give it to me and save some time on the front end?” Brady said. Back-to-back birdies gave Mickelson and Brady their first lead of the day. HOLE 5 Par 3, 245 yards Mickelson/Brady, 1 up This one was easy. Both Mickelson and DeChambeau hit their tee shots within 3 feet of the hole, rolling their balls down a slope and close to the hole. Mickelson won closest-to-the-hole honors by about a ½-inch. The hole was halved with conceded birdies. On to the next one. That’s three straight birdies from Mickelson and Brady. HOLE 6 Par 5, 590 yards All square Buckle up. This hole features a long-drive competition, an opportunity for DeChambeau to get revenge on Mickelson. Phil found the fairway. That was enough to win. Bryson hit a cart path but his ball ended up deep in the high grass. With the quarterbacks hitting from a forward tee, each team used their tee shots instead. That left DeChambeau and Mickelson to hit the approaches. DeChambeau hit first, leaving his about 30 feet from the hole. Mickelson missed the green. A two-putt birdie was enough to square the match again. We also found out from Phil that Tom Brady “smells incredible.” In case you were wondering. HOLE 7 Par 3, 184 yards Brady/Mickelson, 1 up After the other three hit pedestrian tee shots, Phil knew he had an opportunity to capitalize on this short par-3. He took time over the club selection, prompting DeChambeau to wonder if Mickelson was in violation of pace-of-play protocol. “That’s you,” Brady replied, in defense of his partner. Mickelson used a slope left of the hole to funnel his tee shot within 10 feet of the hole. And then Rob Gronkowski called in from his nephew’s baseball game while Brady was waiting for DeChambeau to putt. When Gronk questioned whether Brady would be ready for the upcoming season, Brady said The Match was simply a chance to scout the competition. “I’m 30 feet away from Aaron Rodgers, who is the leader of the Packers,” Brady said. “I think.” Then Brady drained the birdie putt. HOLE 8 Par 5, 777 yards All square A 280-foot drop from the tee made a 500-yard tee shot possible. A white line was painted across the fairway at that point. Mickelson’s tee shot caught the small bunker in the middle of the fairway, while Bryson crushed his tee shot. It hung up in the rough, though, and didn’t roll to the bottom of the hill. DeChambeau’s ball still traveled 480 yards. Meanwhile, Mickelson had fairway wood for his third shot after Brady had to pitch out of the bunker. Rodgers piped one from a forward tee, so they used his tee shot, leaving Bryson with just an 8-iron into the hole. He hit it into a bunker but Rodgers blasted out to 12 feet. Mickelson was left with about a 40-footer for par. He conceded after missing and the match was back to all square. Fun fact: Golfers at Moonlight Basin get bear spray for their cart. That also was shared during this hole. HOLE 9 Par 4, 282 yards All square At this altitude, players were trying to drive the green with long-irons and fairway woods. Mickelson and DeChambeau both found trouble, though, leaving it to the quarterbacks. This was the fifth time in the last six holes that DeChambeau’s team used Rodgers’ tee shot. Both quarterbacks hit shots near the green but neither of the TOUR players knocked his pitch close. Both quarterbacks missed birdie putts of about 15 feet. HOLE 10 Par 4, 427 yards DeChambeau/Rodgers, 1 up Another drivable par-4. Another hole where the quarterbacks hit the best tee shots. Rodgers’ tee shot has now been used on six of the last seven holes. DeChambeau hit his pitch to 3 feet to set up birdie but Mickelson’s chip ran 12 feet past the hole. Brady left it high and DeChambeau/Rodgers took the lead for the first time since the second hole. HOLE 11 Par 4, 447 yards DeChambeau/Rodgers, 2 up Rodgers and Brady played catch before the pros teed off. Then they tried to use the altitude and elevation changes to their advantage. Even this hole was in reach off the tee. DeChambeau’s tee shot rolled down a hill, about 20 yards short of the green. Rodgers, playing from a forward tee, rolled his ball about five yards past DeChambeau. After Mickelson’s tee shot hung up on the hill, about 100 yards behind his opponents’, Brady hit an iron shot to about 40 feet. Rodgers made a 10 footer for a second straight birdie. It’s a formula that led to wins on the first two holes of the back nine. Rodgers tee shot. DeChambeau pitch. Rodgers putt. Win. This is the first time all match that anyone has led by more than 1 up. HOLE 12 Par 3 DeChambeau/Rodgers, 3 up Three. Straight. Birdies. Rodgers rolled in another birdie putt after Dehambeau hit his approach to 8 feet. And Rodgers is walking them in. They’re starting to break this thing open. HOLE 13 Par 4, 470 yards DeChambeau/Rodgers, 3 up Things got a little ugly on this one. Rodgers and DeChambeau both missed well left of the fairway and out of play. Then Brady shanked his tee shot with an iron. “I’m channeling my inner Charles Barkley,” Brady said. There was more trouble after Brady hooked the approach some 40 yards left of the green and into the thick grass. The hole was halved with bogey, but that’s all Rodgers and DeChambeau need at this point. HOLE 14 Par 4, 443 yards DeChambeau/Rodgers, 3 up ONE. CLUB. CHALLENGE. It got ugly. Each player drew a card and was required to play the hole with only that club. Rodgers drew 3-wood. Mickelson pulled 4-iron. Brady drew 7-iron and Bryson had to play wedge. And the tee shots with the shortest clubs had to be used after Rodgers and Phil hit it off the map. Things got ugly from there. Rodgers put DeChambeau in trouble with the 3-wood and Brady missed a 4-foot bogey putt with his 7-iron. Rodgers earned the half by knocking in a 3-footer with his 3-wood. The hole was halved with 6s. HOLE 15 Par 5, 633 yards DeChambeau/Rodgers, 2 up Phil had his caffeine gum. It was a protein bar for Bryson. The caffeine gum won. Phil hit the approach on the green, giving his team a 30-foot eagle putt. Bryson, trying to hit a long-iron out of thick grass, hit his shot into a penalty area, forcing Rodgers to hit a lengthy fourth shot. That missed the green and Bryson couldn’t hole the bunker shot. Brady never had to attempt the eagle putt. Phil and Brady won a hole for the first time since No. 7. HOLE 16 Par 3, 180 yards DeChambeau/Rodgers win, 3 and 2 Mickelson and DeChambeau both hit the green. DeChambeau’s tee shot zipped back and threatened the hole before settling some 15 feet away. Mickelson tried to throw some shade Rodgers’ way before his team attempted its birdie putt. “We can’t kick the field goal here. We have to go for the touchdown,” he said, a jab referring to the Packers’ loss to Brady’s Buccaneers in this year’s NFC Championship. Rodgers got revenge, holing a 12-footer to cash in on DeChambeau’s tee shot and win The Match.

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Live blog: Capital One’s The Match featuring Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady vs. Bryson DeChambeau and Aaron RodgersLive blog: Capital One’s The Match featuring Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady vs. Bryson DeChambeau and Aaron Rodgers

Two of golf’s greatest thinkers and two of the NFL’s most successful quarterbacks will take part in the fourth edition of Capital One’s The Match on Tuesday evening. The foursome will compete roughly 7,500 feet above sea level, at the scenic Moonlight Basin in Big Sky, Montana. RELATED: How to watch Expect stunning views and big bombs from two players with an affinity for the long ball. Mickelson will pair with seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady and DeChambeau will play with the reigning NFL MVP, Aaron Rodgers. And there will be plenty of conversation about air density and enhanced carry distances from Mickelson and DeChambeau, who have never been shy about their analytical approaches to the game. The telecast begins at 5 p.m. Eastern on TNT. Stay here for our live blog that will bring you the best shots and wittiest quips from this exhibition.

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Dissecting the FedExCup chances of Rickie Fowler, Tommy Fleetwood and othersDissecting the FedExCup chances of Rickie Fowler, Tommy Fleetwood and others

With the season’s final major championship right around the corner, only seven PGA TOUR events remain before the beginning of the lucrative FedExCup Playoffs. Several postseason stalwarts find themselves in precarious spots with less than two months to go in the Regular Season. As marquee names jockey for position down the stretch, Twenty First Group ran more than 10,000 simulations of how the rest of the PGA TOUR regular season would play out to project the likelihood of different points scenarios unfolding. The projection gives newly-minted major winner Jon Rahm the best chance at leading the FedExCup race entering THE NORTHERN TRUST (36.3%), with current FedExCup leader Patrick Cantlay right behind him (32.8%). RELATED LINKS: Twenty First Group | FedExCup standings The math says that currently, 100 of 125 spots in the standings are projected to be taken. The most intrigue lies with the remaining 20 percent of the spots still up for grabs. Here are some of the more interesting probabilities the mathematical projections unearthed: Rickie Fowler Current FedExCup position: 114 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 73.3% Strong finishes at the PGA Championship (T8) and the Memorial Tournament (T11) moved Fowler from outside the playoff picture to firmly inside the top 125. Twenty First Group probability models now have Fowler at a better than 73 percent chance to reach the FedExCup Playoffs. Fowler’s marked recent improvement can’t just be tied to one particular statistic. Entering the PGA Championship, he was averaging +0.22 Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green per round, and -0.39 Strokes Gained: Putting per round. In his last four starts, he’s gaining more than half-a-stroke per round in both statistics. Fowler has qualified for the FedExCup Playoffs every full season he’s been on TOUR (since 2010). Chesson Hadley Current FedExCup position: 116 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 55.8% Hadley’s season is a perfect example of how one week can change the narrative of an entire season. The lanky TOUR veteran has missed 13 cuts in 21 starts entering this week’s John Deere Classic, but a runner-up finish at the Palmetto Championship in June has him in a great position to make the FedExCup Playoffs for the fifth time in his career. More than 42% of Hadley’s FedExCup points for the 2020-2021 PGA TOUR season came that week in South Carolina. With just a few events left, can he turn an up-and-down campaign into a spot in the Playoffs? Tommy Fleetwood Current FedExCup position: 125 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 71.1% The man currently in the final qualifying spot in the standings, Tommy Fleetwood, is not in that spot due to the nature of his global schedule. On the contrary, his 15 starts this season are his most entering the month of July in his PGA TOUR career. Currently, Twenty First Group has Fleetwood at about a 71% chance to reach the Playoffs. Fleetwood has just a single top-10 finish in a stroke play event this season, a far cry from the previous three PGA TOUR seasons, when he was tenth or better in 38% of his starts. Fleetwood has not been as proficient with his driver in 2021, ranking outside the top 150 in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee. Still, The Open Championship – where Fleetwood finished runner-up in 2019 – presents a great opportunity to accrue the points needed to lock up a playoff spot. Dylan Frittelli Current FedExCup position: 130 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 43.8% Sitting just outside the top 125 is this week’s defending champion, Dylan Frittelli. In his 2019 John Deere Classic victory, Frittelli was lights out on and around the greens, leading the field in scrambling percentage and ranking second in Strokes Gained: Putting. Those are two statistics Frittelli has struggled with in 2021, as he’s ranked 114th in scrambling percentage and 186th in putting. After seven missed cuts in his last nine starts, the friendly confines of Sylvis, Illinois, might be just what the South African needs to right the ship. Charles Howell III Current FedExCup position: 131 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 55.1% He is one of just nine players to qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs every season since its inception in 2007, but Charles Howell III has some work to do in the coming weeks if he wants to make it 15-for-15. This week’s John Deere Classic would be a good place to start a resurgence – he finished tied for sixth here in 2019 and has eight top-25 finishes in twelve previous career starts. Howell’s approach play, in particular, has betrayed him a bit this season, as he is on pace for a career-low finish in Strokes Gained: Approach (currently ranks 194th on TOUR). TPC Deere Run could be a place that turns around, through: In his last 16 rounds played at the John Deere Classic, he’s gained a strong four-tenths of a stroke on approach shots per round.

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Dissecting the FedExCup chances of Rickie Fowler, Tommy Fleetwood and othersDissecting the FedExCup chances of Rickie Fowler, Tommy Fleetwood and others

With the season’s final major championship right around the corner, only seven PGA TOUR events remain before the beginning of the lucrative FedExCup Playoffs. Several postseason stalwarts find themselves in precarious spots with less than two months to go in the Regular Season. As marquee names jockey for position down the stretch, Twenty First Group ran more than 10,000 simulations of how the rest of the PGA TOUR regular season would play out to project the likelihood of different points scenarios unfolding. The projection gives newly-minted major winner Jon Rahm the best chance at leading the FedExCup race entering THE NORTHERN TRUST (36.3%), with current FedExCup leader Patrick Cantlay right behind him (32.8%). RELATED LINKS: Twenty First Group | FedExCup standings The math says that currently, 100 of 125 spots in the standings are projected to be taken. The most intrigue lies with the remaining 20 percent of the spots still up for grabs. Here are some of the more interesting probabilities the mathematical projections unearthed: Rickie Fowler Current FedExCup position: 114 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 73.3% Strong finishes at the PGA Championship (T8) and the Memorial Tournament (T11) moved Fowler from outside the playoff picture to firmly inside the top 125. Twenty First Group probability models now have Fowler at a better than 73 percent chance to reach the FedExCup Playoffs. Fowler’s marked recent improvement can’t just be tied to one particular statistic. Entering the PGA Championship, he was averaging +0.22 Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green per round, and -0.39 Strokes Gained: Putting per round. In his last four starts, he’s gaining more than half-a-stroke per round in both statistics. Fowler has qualified for the FedExCup Playoffs every full season he’s been on TOUR (since 2010). Chesson Hadley Current FedExCup position: 116 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 55.8% Hadley’s season is a perfect example of how one week can change the narrative of an entire season. The lanky TOUR veteran has missed 13 cuts in 21 starts entering this week’s John Deere Classic, but a runner-up finish at the Palmetto Championship in June has him in a great position to make the FedExCup Playoffs for the fifth time in his career. More than 42% of Hadley’s FedExCup points for the 2020-2021 PGA TOUR season came that week in South Carolina. With just a few events left, can he turn an up-and-down campaign into a spot in the Playoffs? Tommy Fleetwood Current FedExCup position: 125 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 71.1% The man currently in the final qualifying spot in the standings, Tommy Fleetwood, is not in that spot due to the nature of his global schedule. On the contrary, his 15 starts this season are his most entering the month of July in his PGA TOUR career. Currently, Twenty First Group has Fleetwood at about a 71% chance to reach the Playoffs. Fleetwood has just a single top-10 finish in a stroke play event this season, a far cry from the previous three PGA TOUR seasons, when he was tenth or better in 38% of his starts. Fleetwood has not been as proficient with his driver in 2021, ranking outside the top 150 in Strokes Gained: Off-the-Tee. Still, The Open Championship – where Fleetwood finished runner-up in 2019 – presents a great opportunity to accrue the points needed to lock up a playoff spot. Dylan Frittelli Current FedExCup position: 130 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 43.8% Sitting just outside the top 125 is this week’s defending champion, Dylan Frittelli. In his 2019 John Deere Classic victory, Frittelli was lights out on and around the greens, leading the field in scrambling percentage and ranking second in Strokes Gained: Putting. Those are two statistics Frittelli has struggled with in 2021, as he’s ranked 114th in scrambling percentage and 186th in putting. After seven missed cuts in his last nine starts, the friendly confines of Sylvis, Illinois, might be just what the South African needs to right the ship. Charles Howell III Current FedExCup position: 131 Probability of reaching Playoffs: 55.1% He is one of just nine players to qualify for the FedExCup Playoffs every season since its inception in 2007, but Charles Howell III has some work to do in the coming weeks if he wants to make it 15-for-15. This week’s John Deere Classic would be a good place to start a resurgence – he finished tied for sixth here in 2019 and has eight top-25 finishes in twelve previous career starts. Howell’s approach play, in particular, has betrayed him a bit this season, as he is on pace for a career-low finish in Strokes Gained: Approach (currently ranks 194th on TOUR). TPC Deere Run could be a place that turns around, through: In his last 16 rounds played at the John Deere Classic, he’s gained a strong four-tenths of a stroke on approach shots per round.

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Xander Schauffele making first start as a married man in ScotlandXander Schauffele making first start as a married man in Scotland

Xander Schauffele is playing the Scottish Open for the first time this week. He’s also making his first start as a married man after marrying longtime girlfriend Maya Lowe in Las Vegas a week after the U.S. Open. His two weeks overseas won’t serve as a honeymoon, however. “No offense to anyone here but I would not choose a place that rains so much to take my honeymoon,” Schauffele said Tuesday in his pre-tournament press conference. “It’s been a long time coming. … We’ve been together for quite some time and decided to make it public. We’re very happy.” Schauffele posted a photo from his wedding on his Instagram account on Monday. The wedding party included the couple’s French bulldog, who was wearing a tuxedo. Schauffele’s best Open Championship finish came in Scotland, after he finished runner-up three years ago in Carnoustie. Schauffele usually comes to the United Kingdom a week early with his family to get acclimated to the time zone. Because of COVID protocols, he decided to play the Scottish Open instead. He’s traveling with his caddie, former college teammate Austin Kaiser. “I’ve been hanging in there,” Schauffele said. “I just had to wake up my caddie. He’s staying with me and he was dozing off on the couch in a robe. We’re hanging in and trying to do our best of staying outside as long as possible and just going day-to-day. “I brought a few extra books for myself to read, so I’ve been taking the downtime as a positive.” Schauffele is eighth in this season’s FedExCup standings. He does not have a win but has finished in the top 25 in 14 of his 17 starts this season, including three runners-up. He is coming off a seventh-place finish in the U.S. Open in his hometown of San Diego. Four of the top five players in the world are playing in the Scottish Open this week: Jon Rahm, Collin Morikawa, Justin Thomas and Schauffele.

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