Day: January 29, 2023

Joe Burrow's limited wardrobe in KC shows desperate attempt to send Chiefs a messageJoe Burrow's limited wardrobe in KC shows desperate attempt to send Chiefs a message

Joe Burrow's wardrobe arriving in Kansas City on Saturday apparently didn't get the attention he wanted because he wore it again ahead of Sunday's game. Pregame fits can send all sorts of messages, whether proof of unbelievable swag or questionable fashion sense. This weekend, Bengals quarterback set out to send a message with a light [...]

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Max Homa wins Farmers after first mic'd-up, on-course interviewMax Homa wins Farmers after first mic'd-up, on-course interview

LA JOLLA, Calif. - Max Homa was happy to be the guinea pig this week. And he hopes his peers will follow suit. Homa participated in a live on-course interview with the CBS broadcast team during Friday's third round at the Farmers Insurance Open, utilizing Bluetooth technology on the par-5 13th hole at Torrey Pines' South Course. Not only did Homa enjoy the experience and receive positive feedback, he proceeded to win at Torrey Pines, his sixth PGA TOUR title. Homa is happy to continue participating in this nature of content, he said in his winner's press conference, and he hopes his victory is indicative that this interactive content doesn't mean a competitive disadvantage. "It was cool to win after doing it," Homa said on Saturday evening. "You always hear people say, ‘Oh, Tiger would never do this; oh, Rahm would never do this. All they care about is winning.' I get that, but you can do both. "That was definitely nice to win doing that yesterday. It was 20 minutes, it was not invasive ... I thought it was great to look into, push the envelope for the fans." At the time of his on-course interview, Homa trailed the lead by five strokes at Torrey Pines. He made par on No. 13; his second shot on the 595-yard par 5 found a strip of rough between two greenside bunkers and required a ruling. The ball was deemed embedded, allowing him to remove it and place it atop the grass. Homa played even-par from there to the house, and he remained five strokes off 54-hole leader Sam Ryder's pace into Saturday's final round on the Pacific coastline. He closed in 6-under 66, including birdies on both of Torrey South's back-nine par 3s Saturday, for a two-stroke victory over Keegan Bradley. Homa moves to No. 2 on the FedExCup and is set to ascend into the world's top 15 for the first time in his career. As he said, he did both. "I’m very excited about the idea," Homa said. "I’m sure we could tweak things how other people want to do it, how other players want to do it. If they don’t want to do it, I’ll keep doing it. It didn’t bother me. "Hopefully other players want to do it. I’m sure there’s some interest in this whether I won or didn’t. Hopefully we can kind of keep pushing that or tweak it, just anything to help golf kind of gain some attraction to all the viewers, hopefully a little bit younger than our typical audience. I think that’s what the goal is."

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Bengals vs Chiefs: Here's who experts think will winBengals vs Chiefs: Here's who experts think will win

The Bengals and Chiefs face off on Sunday night in the AFC Championship game. Here's who the experts are anticipating will win. The Chiefs and Bengals meet for a second consecutive year in the AFC Championship. Last year, the Bengals took the win and went onto the Super Bowl. Will it be a different outcome [...]

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Happy 100th birthday to Jack Burke, Jr.Happy 100th birthday to Jack Burke, Jr.

In summing up Jack Burke, Jr.'s PGA TOUR career, do you focus on his four-win 1950 season, his five-victory 1952 campaign - with four of the wins coming in succession - or should the discussion center around his back-to-back major championships in 1956? Or how about all three years? After all, those seasons, which brought him a whole lot of wins, give a good overview of Burke's career. The Texas legend turns 100 today, and that makes him the oldest living PGA TOUR winner and the oldest living World Golf Hall of Fame member. By far. Yes, hit triple-digits and you will carry with you a lot of distinctions. As the son of professional golfer Jack Burke, Sr., the younger Burke was seemingly born to play the game for a living. It just took him a while to get going. After accepting the head pro job at Galveston Country Club as an 18-year-old (what were you doing at that age?), Burke joined the Navy and served his country for four years. He then slowly started his career, playing the sport for a living but not touring on a week-to-week basis until he was 27. Once he began as a TOUR regular, though, it didn't take the Fort Worth, Texas, native long to win. In 1950, after sharing the Bing Crosby Pro-Am title with Sam Snead, Smiley Quick and Dave Douglas, each earning a victory, he won the outright title at the Rio Grande Valley Open in Harlingen, Texas, doing so in style by hitting driver-driver and then tapping in from two feet for an eagle that gave him a two-shot win over Skip Alexander. Burke also won the St. Petersburg Open in Florida and finally the Sioux City Open. While his four 1950 wins were impressive, Burke didn't win Player of the Year, as Snead won eight times, Lloyd Mangrum five and Cary Middlecoff matched Burke's four-victory total. Two years later, Burke took home four more tournament titles but did something none of those other three players could match. Burke won, count ‘em, four tournaments in succession over a 24-day period. Also, he didn't just win four tournaments in a row, he basically blitzed the field except for his playoff win over Bill Nary and Tommy Bolt in Baton Rouge. His other victory margins were six, six and eight strokes, respectively. "I felt if I played it too safe, I might get in trouble," he later said. Yet during all this winning, Burke had been unable to break through in a major championship. Close calls? Sure. There was his second-place finish at the 1952 Masters; oh, what might have been but for a third-round 78. An opening-round 78 at Augusta a year later prevented him from seriously contending, leaving him alone in eighth. Then, in 1954, same course, same scenario, a 5-over 77 in the second round left him tied for sixth, three shots out of the Snead-Ben Hogan playoff that Snead won. Burke also had final-round 77 at the 1955 U.S. Open (tied for 10th) and another flirtation with a win at the 1955 PGA Championship. After rolling past Douglas, Guy Paulsen and Marty Furgol in match play, Burke battled Middlecoff all day at Meadowbrook Country Club in Michigan before going into overtime and finally losing on the 40th hole of their quarterfinals match. Burke didn't win in 1955, and when the 1956 Masters rolled around, the annual spring invitational in Augusta, Georgia, had a different feel. TV cameras descended on the venerable golf club for the first time, CBS Sports televising the tournament live. Fans in their living rooms could watch 30 minutes of live golf during the second round and listen to and watch Chris Schenkel and Bud Palmer announce the action on the last four holes of the tournament both Saturday and Sunday. For CBS, the third round didn't bring much drama. The final round was a different story. With 18 holes to play, it looked like an amateur, Ken Venturi, would win the tournament for the first time. Another amateur, Bobby Jones, had started and nurtured the Masters into what it had become, and now Venturi had forged a four-shot, 54-hole advantage over Middlecoff, was seven ahead of Doug Ford and eight clear of Mangrum and Burke. Middlecoff, the media agreed, was seemingly the only guy with a reasonable chance of catching the 24-year-old Venturi. Burke had other ideas. With nine holes to play Sunday, Burke had shaved the deficit to five strokes, and by the time he stepped to the 16th tee, in view of TV cameras and Venturi playing two groups behind, Burke trailed the amateur by only two strokes. Venturi would end the tournament in tears as he shot a back-nine 42 to fall to Burke by a shot. Burke had his green jacket, and his first major. It only took him 107 days to get major title No. 2. Burke defeated Leon Pounders, Bill Collins, Fred Haas, Chandler Harper, Fred Hawkins and Ed Furgol to get to the championship match at the PGA at Blue Hill Golf and Country Club in Canton, Massachusetts. From there, he took down Ted Kroll, 3 and 2, in the championship, to capture the Wanamaker Trophy. Two consecutive major championships put Burke in select company. At that time, only Sam Snead had won both the Masters and the PGA Championship in the same season. With the PGA doing away with the match-play format for its championship following the 1957 season, but not before Burke assembled a gaudy career record of 15-6, and a 71% winning percentage. Eventually, Burke curtailed his playing career and settled down at the course he and Jimmy Demaret built in Houston, Champions Club. There, Burke mentored numerous players through the years. Burke's final full PGA TOUR season came in 1963. It was also the year of his final TOUR title at the Lucky International in San Francisco. Burke shot a final-round 67 at Harding Park Golf Course to defeat Don January by three strokes. Two days later, Burke marked his 40th birthday in Palm Springs. Amazingly, he's had 60 such celebrations since. 10 Jack Burke, Jr. facts 1. Jack Burke, Jr. was a second-generation American and a first-generation Texan. His paternal grandfather, John Joseph Burke, was born in Ireland in 1855, as was his grandmother and John's wife, the former Kate Pendegrast. The Ireland Burkes immigrated to the U.S. and had six children: Eugene, Edmund, Winifred, Thomas, Mary and John. Born in Philadelphia in 1895, John was nicknamed Jack and became a professional golfer. Twenty-eight years later, his son, John Joseph Burke, Jr.—actually John Joseph Burke III - came into the world on January 29 in Fort Worth, Texas. He, too, carried the nickname Jack, and golf was also his chosen profession. The younger Burke eventually made it all the way to the World Golf Hall of Fame. 2. Burke's first two PGA TOUR starts came as an amateur, at the 1940 Western Open (tied for 37th) and the 1941 Texas Open (withdrew after one round). At what would have been the likely start of his PGA TOUR career, after taking his first professional job—as the head pro at Galveston Country Club—Burke took a break to serve his country, beginning in 1942. He moved to California, assigned to the Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego, where he taught self-defense classes and martial arts, primarily judo. Burke didn't return to the PGA TOUR until 1946 and didn't play a full season—24 tournaments—until 1950, when he was 27. Burke's professional path at the time, though, was not unusual, as Sam Snead, Ben Hogan and Lloyd Mangrum, among many other athletes both inside and outside golf, served in various arms of the military during the U.S. involvement in World War II. 3. His scores of 67-65-64-64 at the 1952 Texas Open set the PGA TOUR's 72-hole scoring record—since broken—on a course at par-71 or higher. Burke defeated Doug Ford by six strokes, the first of four wins in succession, posting his 64-64 finish all on the same day—the Brackenridge Golf Course-hosted tournament used a Sunday, 36-hole finale. 4. Prior to his 1952 four-tournament winning streak, Burke discarded a blade putter he used up until that season's Los Angeles Open. After three-putting the 72nd hole at Riviera Country Club, a miscue that dropped him into a playoff with Tommy Bolt and E.J. "Dutch" Harrison, an overtime session he would ultimately lose to Bolt, Burke switched to a mallet-head putter. He proceeded to make the cut in his next five tournaments, with his only top-10 a tie for seventh at the Phoenix Open. Yet he stayed with the putter, and that was a smart move. Burke then rattled off wins at the Texas Open, Houston Open, Baton Rouge Open and St. Petersburg Open, finishing a cumulative 60 under in those 16 rounds. 5. After winning in St. Petersburg in 1952, instead of trying to win a fifth tournament in five weeks, Burke traveled to Pinehurst, North Carolina. There, he was part of a golf exhibition for the American Red Cross. But instead of staying in the Tarheel State, he elected to withdraw from the Greater Greensboro Open and return home to Houston. In his next official start, two weeks later, he tied for 28th at the Jacksonville Open. 6. Burke, a lifelong Texan, for many years represented and played at a course far from the Lone Star State: the Concord Resort Hotel in Kiamesha Lake, New York, in the Catskill Mountains. Concord was the largest resort in the region and capitalized on Burke as a celebrity endorser to attract visitors. 7. At age 81, Burke was invited by U.S. Ryder Cup Captain Hal Sutton to serve alongside Steve Jones as an assistant captain. As a player between 1951 and 1959, Burke played in five straight Ryder Cups, serving as a player-captain in 1957. He was also a non-playing captain in 1973. 8. His creation of Champions Golf Club in Houston, with fellow pro Jimmy Demaret, is well-known, the venerable course hosting significant tournaments through the years, including a Ryder Cup (1967) and the 1969 U.S. Open. But in 1957, the same year Champions opened, Demaret, as president, and Burke, as vice president, also opened the Dick Wilson-designed De Soto Lakes Golf and Country Club in Sarasota, Florida. Now known as Palm Aire Country Club, De Soto Lakes was the site of the PGA TOUR's 1960 De Soto Open Invitational won by Sam Snead. Burke tied for 14th that week. 9. At the 1950 Bing Crosby National Pro-Am—now AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am—the scheduled 54-hole tournament, using a Friday-to-Sunday format, ended with Burke, Dave Douglas, Smiley Quick and Sam Snead deadlocked, at 2-under 214. With not enough daylight to conduct a sudden-death playoff and players scheduled to travel down the California coast, to Long Beach, the next day for the Long Beach Open, tournament officials declared four champions, each player receiving an official-victory designation. It remains the only time in PGA TOUR history that a tournament has declared four champions. 10. By the time PGA TOUR Champions began, in 1980, Burke was 57 years old and well past his competitive best. While he played in numerous unofficial Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf tournaments, primarily teaming with Paul Harney, his only official PGA TOUR Champions start came at the 1984 Vintage Invitational in Indian Wells, California, where he tied for 21st, 13 strokes behind winner Don January.

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Broncos held secret interview with Jim Harbaugh: Door not closed on coaching returnBroncos held secret interview with Jim Harbaugh: Door not closed on coaching return

Despite publicly proclaiming he would return to Michigan football, Jim Harbaugh has continued to entertain the Denver Broncos interest. Not much made sense about the sudden lack of interest in Sean Payton on the Denver Broncos end. Then, a cryptic implication from a New Orleans reporter about there being more than meets the eye with [...]

Broncos held secret interview with Jim Harbaugh: Door not closed on coaching returnFanSidedFanSided – Sports News, Entertainment, Lifestyle & Technology – 300+ Sites

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NFL free agency: 1 team is already out on Tom BradyNFL free agency: 1 team is already out on Tom Brady

Tom Brady hasn't said whether or not he'll return to the NFL in 2023, but one team has already opted out of the possibility of signing him. The Miami Dolphins were penalized months ago for tampering with quarterback Tom Brady and currently-retired head coach Sean Payton. Now, though, according to Adam Schefter of ESPN, they're [...]

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Did Jim Harbaugh pursuit bounce Sean Payton from Broncos coaching job?Did Jim Harbaugh pursuit bounce Sean Payton from Broncos coaching job?

The Denver Broncos are still pursuing Jim Harbaugh. Is it possible that's why Sean Payton isn't in the mix there anymore? The market drying up on Sean Payton, thought to be the most sought-after head coaching candidate, was a strange twist in the open-ended head coaching carousel this offseason. There were some possible reasons for [...]

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McIlroy shoots 65, has 3-shot lead after third round in DubaiMcIlroy shoots 65, has 3-shot lead after third round in Dubai

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Rory McIlroy delivered an exhibition of short iron play to shoot 7-under 65 in his third round and build a three-stroke lead at the Dubai Desert Classic on Sunday. The top-ranked McIlroy made eight birdies at Emirates Golf Club — four in a row from No. 1, three straight from No. 13, and another at No. 17 — and none of the birdie putts were from more than 7 feet. “I drove the ball better today, which put me in better positions to attack and make birdies,” said the Northern Irishman, making his first start of 2023. “It’s nearly there, not quite there. I’m just playing really efficient golf right now.” McIlroy did, though, give the chasers some hope by making bogey at the par-5 No. 18, for his only dropped shot of the round, after hitting a fairway wood from around 250 yards into the water in front of the green. After missing a par putt from 8 feet, McIlroy had a look of disappointment across his face as he walked off the green, despite holding a commanding lead. The four-time major champion made the same mistake on the 18th hole in his final round in last year’s tournament to finish a shot behind the leaders, when a birdie would have won him the title. “I love this golf course, this tournament. I have won here a couple of times … but I don’t think I’ve won on my first start (of a year),” he said. “I’ve given myself an opportunity to try to do something I’ve never done before.” McIlroy was on 15 under overall, with English players Callum Shinkwin (67) and No. 484-ranked Dan Bradbury (68) tied for second place at 12 under. Seven players sit in a tie for fourth at 11-under par, a group that includes France’s Victor Perez (66), the winner last week at the equally prestigious Abu Dhabi Championship. Spanish player Adri Arnaus briefly held the lead on 13 under after eight holes of his round, but he fell away after bogeying No. 9 and making double-bogey at the par-5 13th. Arnaus is one of those at 11 under. The tournament is finishing on Monday after bad weather cut short play on the opening two days.

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