Follow live: Yankees desperate for Game 3 win against Astros in ALCSFollow live: Yankees desperate for Game 3 win against Astros in ALCS
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Facing Astros righty Cristian Javier, the Yankees will lead off with Anthony Rizzo, move Harrison Bader to No. 6, start Oswaldo Cabrera at shortstop, shift Giancarlo Stanton to left field and slide Matt Carpenter into the designated hitter role.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver addressed possible solutions to tanking, such as relegation, in recent comments to Phoenix Suns employees, sources said.
RIDGELAND, S.C. – At THE CJ CUP in South Carolina, Shane Lowry – who had his putter snap in the ninth fairway on Thursday – wasn’t the only player needing to make some equipment changes on the fly. Cameron Young felt as if something had gone awry with his driver during his back nine Friday in the second round at Congaree Golf Club. Young is one of the hardest swingers on the PGA TOUR – ranking fourth in swing speed average (123.68 mph) last season, and third in driving distance (319.3 yards) – so every few months he said he takes a hard look at changing out driver heads. Friday, he did not crack his driver face but somehow altered it enough to remove it from play. Early into his back nine, it seemed strange to him to see a few of his drives react as they did. “I hit a couple off the heel that didn’t act correctly,” Young said.” I know the ‘heely’ ones tend to cut a little bit, but I hit a couple that curved like 60 yards. It just didn’t seem right.” On Saturday, he had a newly assembled driver in the bag, having borrowed a TSi3 9.5-degree head from fellow Titleist staffer Webb Simpson, attaching it to his regular gamer shaft. Young instantly could feel a difference. It showed in his play, too. Young birdied four of his first five holes and shot his low round of the tournament, a 5-under 66 that moved him to 5-under for 54 holes. “As soon as I hit the other one, the driver flights were just a lot straighter,” Young said. “I think the (original) driver was not fully intact. He (Simpson) was nice enough to give me one.” It was Simpson, a captains’ assistant to Davis Love III at the recent Presidents Cup, who surprised Young during his Wednesday news conference by delivering the Arnold Palmer Trophy that Young had earned as 2021-22 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year. (Simpson was joined by former ROY Sungjae Im of South Korea). Young earned the vote of his peers as the top rookie after a solid rookie campaign in which he finished second five times (including a solo second at The Open Championship at St. Andrews) and third twice (once at the PGA Championship, where he was finished one shot out of a playoff). For Young, it has been a memorable year, and the last few months have been busy. He climbed into the top 20 in the World Ranking, made the TOUR Championship, and played in his first Presidents Cup. Off the course, he and his wife moved into a new home in Florida as they ready for the arrival of their second child later next month. This week, Young has managed to go lower each day, opening with 73, shooting 69 on Friday despite his driver troubles (he ranked 73rd in Strokes Gained: Off-The-Tee) and 65 on Saturday, even though he felt as if he left a few shots on the course. He said he has struggled to summon energy after a 15-hour return flight from Japan to start the week. Young will start Sunday too far back to earn that first victory this week, but many on TOUR expect him to notch that first win soon. Earning Rookie of the Year honors was nice validation that he is doing a lot of things he needs to do to break through. “I think mostly I just played some very good golf,” he said earlier in the week. “When I played well, I feel like I was able to kind of keep it going through the week and, you know, all it takes is a good start and then you can kind of hang around for a long time, or one good round Friday or Saturday. “Obviously, it takes a lot more than that to win a tournament, but I felt like I was able to take advantage of my good days and shoot some really low scores, and take advantage of my solid golf and put some really solid weeks together.”
Houston and Philadelphia can each move within one win of a World Series berth. Here’s what you need as the ALCS and NLCS continue.
Round 3 of the THE CJ CUP in South Carolina takes place Saturday from Congaree Golf Club. Jon Rahm and Kurt Kitayama lead heading into Saturday with scores of 11-under par. Here’s everything you need to follow the action. Tee times Leaderboard HOW TO FOLLOW: Television: Saturday-Sunday, 3 p.m.-6 p.m. ET. Radio: Saturday, 1 p.m.-6 p.m. ET. Sunday 12 p.m.-5:30 p.m. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio) MUST READS Jon Rahm, Kurt Kitayama share lead at THE CJ CUP Bad back and all, Max Homa rides his Presidents Cup momentum Shane Lowry and his unexpected putter spree For Rory McIlroy, chasing No. 1 again, it’s time to ‘go’ The backstory on Tom Kim’s ultra-custom putter Five Things to Know: Congaree Golf Club
Our NFL Nation reporters have the latest injury updates to key players entering Week 7.
What to watch for in every game. Bold predictions. Fantasy advice. Key stats to know. And, of course, final score picks.
GM John Lynch, explaining the 49ers’ trade for Christian McCaffrey, said, “You only do this when you have a belief in your team as it’s constructed,” and said the team doesn’t view the All-Pro RB as a “rental.”
Ravens RB J.K. Dobbins is expected to undergo arthroscopic surgery on his left knee next week that will sideline him four to six weeks, sources told ESPN’s Adam Schefter.