Countdown to Cade? How to watch the 2021 NBA draftCountdown to Cade? How to watch the 2021 NBA draft
NBA draft 2021 live updates, TV channel info and more. Detroit Pistons own No. 1 pick for first time since 1970, expected to take Cade Cunningham.
NBA draft 2021 live updates, TV channel info and more. Detroit Pistons own No. 1 pick for first time since 1970, expected to take Cade Cunningham.
On the latest Sporticast episode, hosts Scott Soshnick and Eben Novy-Williams sit with Detroit Pistons chief business officer Mike Zavodsky to talk about the business opportunity around the NBA Draft. The Pistons won the NBA draft lottery in June and will pick No. 1 overall on Thursday night. The prospect of landing an elite rookie—the […]
KAWAGOE, Japan – A last-minute flight and lack of a practice round weren’t enough to keep Patrick Reed from excelling in a red, white and blue uniform. Despite arriving in Japan on the eve of the Olympics’ first round and not hitting a shot before Thursday’s opening tee ball, Reed fired 68 on Thursday. It matched the low score among the four-man U.S. contingent – Xander Schauffele also shot 3 under – and left him in a tie for 12th place, five shots back of Sepp Straka. RELATED: Leaderboard, tee times | How the format works | How to watch Reed has wholeheartedly embraced the Captain America moniker he earned early in his career with his heroics in international team competitions. That’s why he didn’t hesitate when he found out about another opportunity to play for the United States. Reed was informed Saturday about Bryson DeChambeau’s positive COVID-19 test, shortly after finishing his third round at the 3M Open. Reed said it was “a duty of mine to go out and play for our country … whenever I get the call.” Because of the plethora of paperwork needed to enter Japan during a pandemic, Reed only got 35 minutes of sleep before his flight to Tokyo early Tuesday. “I actually almost feel like that helped me because it allowed me to go to sleep on the plane and get on the (Japan) time zone,” he said after Thursday’s round. “I slept through the night last night.” He arrived in Japan on Wednesday but didn’t have time to hit a shot at Kasumigaseki. He toured the course in a golf cart, driving the final four holes in darkness. “I felt good today coming out and … the swing actually held in there all day,” Reed said. “A couple mistakes out there, not really knowing spots to hit it, kind of ended up in bad spots, but besides that it wasn’t too bad.” He shot bogey-free 33 on his front nine before making two birdies and two bogeys on the back nine. His bogey on 17 was an example of where his lack of preparation hurt him. He thought the green was sloping toward him, so he hit a low wedge shot with less spin. “The back part of the green actually slopes away from you, so it skipped over the green, made bogey,” he said. “If the green was running away like that, I would just hit a normal 61-degree and not worry about spinning too much.” Reed is one of four players here representing the United States. They are competing in individual stroke play but the fact that they share a uniform made players more willing to help than most weeks. There was only so much Reed could glean from his teammates, though. “JT hits it way past me. And then you have Xander, he spins his irons more than I do. Then you go to Collin and he hits cuts and I hit draws,” Reed said. Thomas shot even-par 71 with 18 pars today. He is in 41st place. Morikawa, making his first start since winning The Open, shot 69.
KAWAGOE, Japan (AP) — Rikuya Hoshino did not have the first tee to himself Thursday for the start of Olympic golf. RELATED: Leaderboard, tee times | How the format works | How to watch The grandstand behind him, normally empty like at so many other venues at the spectator-less Games, was filled with volunteers in their Tokyo2020 shirts wanting to see the 25-year-old from Japan with the honor of hitting the first shot in the pandemic-delayed Olympics. The other two players with him in the first group, Sepp Straka of Austria and Thomas Pieters of Belgium, took it from there. Straka picked a good day to be dialed in with his irons in soft and still conditions. He made four birdies in his last six holes for an 8-under 63 to tie an Olympic record — not all that historical considering golf returned only in 2016 — for a one-shot lead over Jazz Janewattananond of Thailand. Pieters, who finished one spot out of a bronze medal in Rio de Janeiro five years ago, was sick Wednesday and saw the front nine at Kasumigaseki Country Club only during practice rounds. He shot 30 on the back nine for a 65. “I kind of didn’t expect this today,” Pieters said. “I felt horrible this morning even when I woke up, so maybe it’s just because I wasn’t thinking about bad shots or places not to hit it. My caddie told me, ‘Hit it there,’ and I did. I kept it simple.” Carlos Ortiz of Mexico also had a 65 in ideal scoring conditions on a course so pristine it didn’t have a divot when players first began arriving because it was closed for two months. The volunteers had emptied the stands after Hoshino’s drive to go to work — most of them stationed to help look for errant shots — when the biggest attraction in Japan arrived. Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama still had reason to believe everyone was watching. “If I say there’s no pressure I’ll be lying,” Matsuyama said after opening with a 69, not the best start in a round with such low scoring that only 13 players in the 60-man tournament were over par. “Hopefully, I’ll be able to embrace the pressure that’s upon me and just try to put together a nice tournament here.” Matsuyama had the biggest crowd, such as it was, with some 80 people tagging along, most of them Japanese media. He was 4 under through eight holes, only to make bogey from two poor tee shots and then didn’t have another birdie. The struggle was more coronavirus-related than any external expectations. Matsuyama has played one round of competition the last five weeks after a positive COVID-19 test. One of his biggest concerns was rust and conditioning. “Probably towards the end a little bit, the mental side and focus kind of faded away from me,” he said. “So that’s something that I need to put together for the rest of the week.” Straka, who had missed the cut in six of his last seven events, wasn’t the only surprise. Juvic Pagunsan of the Philippines was among those at 66. Pagunsan earned a small measure of fame when he won the Mizuno Open in Japan by carrying his own bag with 11 clubs, three fewer than allowed. Caddies were only allowed to follow players in carts because of COVID-19 restrictions, and Pagunsan found that to be a hassle, so he lightened his bag and walked it himself. The victory earned him a spot in The Open Championship, and then he withdrew so he could concentrate on the Olympics. He picked up three birdies on the back nine after rain further softened the golf course. Patrick Reed and Xander Schauffele each were at 68, and that was quite a feat for Reed. He was a last-minute replacement when Bryson DeChambeau had a positive COVID-19 test, and because of his testing requirements, Reed didn’t arrived at the course until Wednesday afternoon. That left enough time to ride in a cart to look at the last four holes. “Adrenaline got me going early on today, but really the body hung in there a lot better than I expected,” Reed said. “The swing actually held in there all day. A couple of mistakes out there, not really knowing spots to hit. But besides that, it wasn’t too bad.” His biggest issue was a delay of just over two hours from thunderstorms. They hit right about the time most new arrivals from his American time zone are wanting to take a nap. “I was feeling it during that rain delay,” he said. The Open Championship winner Collin Morikawa and Rory McIlroy each had a 69, which was only good for a tie for 20th on such a low scoring day. Justin Thomas wouldn’t have minded that. His Olympic debuted featured 18 pars and more missed birdie chances than he cares to remember. “I would love to have some kind of old useless club that I could break over my knee right now,” Thomas said.
Austin Smotherman’s routine before the Korn Ferry Tour event every week is the same. He must chat with his grandfather to give him the course rundown. Not so his grandfather can check up on how it fits his game. It’s more of a preliminary strike on his grandfather’s nerves by letting his grandfather know how the course is playing, so when he is following along at home he’ll know when to sweat and when not to. “I have to give him the whole rundown of, ‘Alright, when the PGA TOUR app says first cut, the first cut is nothing this week, don’t even worry about it. When it says primary rough, the rough is nonexistent this week, so do not worry,” Smotherman said. “Because he’ll see me in the rough and he’ll start freaking out.” Smotherman’s grandfather, Bill Acquistapace, is the man who introduced him to the game. When he was three or four, his grandfather cut in half an old Sam Snead 7-iron blade and a persimmon 5-wood and taped them with duct tape and electrical tape for grips. Now that his grandson is on the Korn Ferry Tour, Acquistapace and his daughter, Smotherman’s mom, have become pros at figuring out his proximity to the hole with minimal info when they can’t be at the tournament. If his two playing partners scores post on the app before him, they get excited because they know he’s got a nice look at birdie. “They live and die by the PGA TOUR app every single week,” Smotherman said. “But they love it.” Smotherman, who played at SMU despite never having a coach until college, even jokes with his grandfather every year at Christmas time on the present he’s going to get him based on that love. “I always joke with my grandfather that every Christmas I’m going to have to get him a new keyboard because he’s hitting enter and refresh so often that he’s going to break it every single year,” Smotherman laughed. When Smotherman’s playing on the East Coast with an early tee time on Thursday or Friday, it can make for some early mornings for Acquistapace, who lives in Sacramento. So Smotherman tries to do his best to take care of him for the weekend. “I’ve been getting some early morning tee times, 7 o clock on the east coast, 4 o clock for him.” Smotherman said, “So, he’s like, ‘Alright, I’ll catch you on the sixth hole. I’ll be on my second cup of coffee by then!’ And then I’m like, ‘Don’t worry I’ll get you a late tee time on Saturday so you can sleep in, alright?’” The two still make sure and talk for a couple minutes after every competitive round. Acquistapace is quite the player himself too. Although he doesn’t get to play much anymore, he has six hole-in-ones and shot his age when he was 77. And he’s been a major part of getting his grandson to the Korn Ferry Tour, and maybe even the PGA TOUR soon. “He’s been a big part of it all,” Smotherman said. At No. 25 on the Korn Ferry Tour Points Standings, his grandfather will surely be hitting refresh a lot over the final two events as Smotherman chases one of the 25 PGA TOUR cards that will be handed out in Omaha. His grandfather won’t be there but will be in Boise the following week to kick off the Korn Ferry Tour Finals, and Smotherman’s hoping they’ll have a PGA TOUR card to celebrate together. He got a lot closer to that dream last week with a T4 that helped him jump back inside the top 25. “Last week was huge. I think I kind of proved to myself that I could keep those thoughts of [the top 25] out of my head,” Smotherman said. The California native admits it’s hard to keep the bubble out of your head at this stage, especially when his caddie’s wearing a top-25 bib, but he wouldn’t have it any other way. “It’s obviously going to be crunch time, but I wouldn’t change it for the world,” Smotherman said. “To be in this position at the start of the year, I would have said, ‘Give it to me. Embrace it, go play well.’ And you know what someone’s gotta be the bubble boy, and I feel like I can handle it. And now I gotta go kind of prove that. Whether I finish 25, 26 or 15, I feel confident, and it’s a very cool feeling.” It’d be hard for him to not feel confident with as well as Smotherman has been hitting it. He ranks sixth in ball striking, seventh in total driving, 10th in greens in regulation and 11th in driving accuracy. At Lakewood National earlier this year, he posted the best mark of the Korn Ferry Tour season to this point, hitting 44 greens in a row. He also won his first Korn Ferry Tour event in a wire-to-wire victory in May at the Simmons Bank Open for the Snedeker Foundation, and he’s added two additional top-5s in his last five starts. It’s the type of season that has the 27-year-old on the verge of a lifelong dream – a PGA TOUR card – that would complete a journey that goes far beyond just him. “To make a start as a PGA TOUR member that would be accomplishing a lifelong dream of me,” Smotherman said. “It would definitely be rewarding and to have that sense of pride. My family and everyone that sacrificed things around me through my whole life from traveling to junior events, to spending time away from my wife, we got married young and I traveled a ton, but I think it’d be rewarding for me and everyone around me that have seen my work put in.” And if he starts to feel that pressure of the bubble the next two weeks, he knows where to turn. “My family’s support…those are the things coming down the stretch if I have any nerves the next couple of weeks, how can I not fall back on that and just know, ‘Hey, relax a little bit, Austin, this game’s done a lot for you? Let’s go take care of business now!’” His grandfather will certainly be refreshing and following along.
NEW YORK (AP) St. John’s plans to unveil a statue of Hall of Fame basketball coach Lou Carnesecca this fall in the on-campus arena that bears his name. Commissioned by the university, the statue will be placed across from the main entrance of Carnesecca Arena. ”We’re thrilled to install the statue of Coach Carnesecca in the arena lobby,” athletic director Mike Cragg said in a statement Wednesday.
The Giants wanted Kelvin Benjamin at 251 pounds. He showed up weighing 268.
Host William Lou speaks with Blake Murphy of The Athletic ahead of the 2021 NBA Draft to discuss Jalen Suggs and Scottie Barnes.
The Yankees are finalizing a deal to acquire outfielder Joey Gallo from the Rangers, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan, as New York moves to acquire another big bat to go with Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Judge.