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Show goes on at Colonial Country Club with Charles Schwab as sponsor
Published in
Golf
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 14:12

FORT WORTH, Texas - Colonial Country Club is the longest-running host of a PGA Tour event played on its original site, a fact that seemed in jeopardy not too long ago.
Local companies backed the tournament last year when it was called the Fort Worth Invitational following an upscale grocer's withdrawal as title sponsor two years into a six-year contract.
Now the event that was first played at Hogan's Alley in 1946 is on solid footing again as the Charles Schwab Challenge. The tournament starts Thursday.
''Been here since 1946. Been in essentially the same spot in our schedule. Been a lot of change in our schedule. This hasn't changed. I don't see it changing,'' PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said Wednesday at Colonial. ''It's the history, the tradition, the passionate fan base, the success we've had, the impact we've had. We'll do everything we can to make certain these events are here.''
The Dallas-Fort Worth Tour stops, the Byron Nelson and Colonial, were split up this year with the PGA Championship's move up to May from late summer. The Nelson two weeks ago was played at Trinity Forest Golf Club for the second time after moving from the TPC Four Seasons.
Nine of the world's top 20 players are at Colonial, topped by third-ranked Justin Rose, the defending champion .
While PGA Championship winner Brooks Koepka and runner-up Dustin Johnson, the top two players, are taking a week off, five of the top 10 are in North Texas. Koepka, who at 17 under was the 2018 Colonial runner-up three strokes behind Rose, was one of only two top-20 players at the Nelson two weeks ago.
Financial services provider Charles Schwab & Co. was already deeply involved in golf when it became title sponsor at Colonial, where Hall of Famer and Fort Worth native Ben Hogan was a club member and won the inaugural PGA Tour event for first of his five wins on his home course.
Charles Schwab has a four-year agreement through 2022 with an option to add to that.
''We love being here in Fort Worth,'' Monahan said. ''We love the support we get. And knowing that this is a brand that's all about elevation and about innovation and challenging, it's a perfect time to come in. This event has a great future, and we know you're going to push it along with us to new heights in the years ahead.''
On the PGA Tour Champions, for players over 50, the Charles Schwab Cup is awarded to the season's top player. The company on Wednesday made a $5 million donation to the First Tee program to help the organization expand its programs and deepen its impact on young people in Texas.
After Dean and Deluca reneged on a title sponsorship after two years, local companies such as American Airlines, AT&T, XTO Energy and Burlington Northern Santa Fe railway supported Colonial Country Club in putting on the tournament last year.
Jordan Spieth, winless since the 2017 British Open, is coming off his first top-20 finish of the season when he tied for third last week at the PGA.
While Spieth played his first Tour event as a 16-year-old amateur at the Nelson in 2010, the Dallas-born player also considers Colonial a hometown tournament. Spieth won the 2016 Colonial.
Ryan Palmer is playing on his home course, the one where caddie James Edmondson has won multiple club championships. Palmer's only PGA Tour victory since 2010 came in the two-man team event with Jon Rahm, though his four top-10 finishes in 14 starts this season are already his most since 2015.
At Colonial, Palmer missed the cut last year, after finishing tied for 70th in 2017, a year after his Colonial-best finish of third. He has missed the cut four times at Hogan's Alley, and has an average finish of 33rd in his other 11 appearances, including three top 10s.
''It's hard at times because the pressure I put on myself and you want to play so well, and so many of my friends and family are here at Colonial Country Club,'' Palmer said. ''James and I both play regularly. I guess this is our fifth major.''
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Weather, Oak Hill combine for tough test at Senior PGA Championship
Published in
Golf
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 14:22

PITTSFORD, N.Y. - It didn't take long for Jay Haas to be reminded of how gusting winds can wreak havoc on players attempting to navigate the narrow fairways of Oak Hill Country Club's East Course.
''Got here on Sunday night and played nine holes Monday, and it was blowing, what, 25, 30 (miles per hour),'' Haas said with a laugh Wednesday, a day before the Senior PGA Championship opens.
''I couldn't wait to get off the golf course,'' he added. ''I was making bogeys and doubles on every hole. It was pretty discouraging.''
In some ways, the 65-year-old's experience was no different than his previous visit to the Rochester suburbs 11 years ago. That's when Haas overcame frigid conditions, heavy wind gusts and a one-stroke final-round deficit to finish with a 7-over 287 and win his second Senior PGA title.
And no, 7 over is not a misprint.
''There's not many tournaments that you can be trailing by a stroke, shoot 4 over, no birdies and win the tournament,'' Haas said. ''That's a testament to how difficult the golf course was playing that week.''
No need to remind Bernhard Langer, who shot a final-round 6 over to finish second to Haas all those years ago.
''I think that was some of the highest scoring and most difficult conditions I've ever experienced anywhere for four days in a row,'' said the 61-year-old, who has one victory among his five top-10 finishes this season and ranks second on the money list. ''This golf course is very difficult even if you have good weather.''
It shouldn't be any different this time at the $3.25 million major, of which $585,000 goes to the winner. The 6,800-yard course is notable for its narrow fairways, tiny greens and an unforgiving rough that places a premium on hitting it straight off the tee.
While temperatures are finally warming after an unseasonably rainy and chilly start to spring in western New York, the forecast for the next four days is all over the map.
There is the possibility for severe thunderstorms with wind gusts approaching 40 mph for the opening round Thursday. The forecast Friday is more settled, though about 10-degrees cooler, with temperatures in the mid-60s expected. And then there are more storms forecast for the weekend.
The weather and the course's stingy reputation led to several competitors projecting an even-par 280 to be the winning score.
Colin Montgomerie wasn't surprised by Haas' finish in 2008, which remains the highest score in relation to par to win the Senior PGA.
''If the weather was at all inclement, that's a hell of a score,'' Montgomerie said.
''You can't play this course from the rough. You just can't do it,'' added Montgomerie, a two-time Senior PGA champion and member of the European Ryder Cup team that rallied to beat the United States at Oak Hill in 1995. ''Bogeys are going to happen. You're going to miss the fairway. Make a bogey. Don't make it a double and get on with it.''
The field of 156 includes Scott McCarron, who enters the weekend with two victories and six top-10 finishes while leading the Champions Tour money list at just under $1 million.
And then there's Steve Stricker, who is splitting time between the PGA and Champions tours. Stricker was planning to compete at Colonial on the PGA Tour this weekend before electing to head to Oak Hill after winning the Champions Tour's first major - The Regions Tradition - two weeks ago.
He will be competing in his third major in three weeks, making the six-hour cross-state drive from Long Island after missing the cut by a stroke at the PGA Championship at Bethpage last weekend.
NOTES: Haas is playing Oak Hill for the sixth time and was honored by having his name engraved on a plaque and placed on a tree on Oak Hill's ''Hill of Fame,'' which circles the 13th hole. Among those previously honored were Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Nancy Lopez, Bob Hope and President Gerald Ford. ... Paul Broadhurst is the defending Senior PGA champion after shooting a 19-under 265 at Harbor Shores in Benton Harbor, Michigan. ... Oak Hill will have a new look when it hosts the PGA Championship in four years. The East Course is undergoing major renovations starting in August in a move to return it to its original Donald Ross design after changes were made to holes 5, 6 and 15 in the late 1970s. The course is scheduled to reopen in May 2020.
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Duke digs deep to close curtain on Kupcho, Wake Forest in NCAA women’s final
Published in
Golf
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 16:20

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Jennifer Kupcho came back to school for this moment.
The Wake Forest senior deferred her LPGA membership this spring in hopes of leading the Demon Deacons to their first NCAA team title, and Wednesday at Blessings Golf Club, she and her teammates were on the cusp of achieving their ultimate goal.
But storied Duke University, chasing a seventh national championship, had other plans. The Blue Devils went down to Arkansas and stole victory away from Kupcho and the Deacons in an extra-hole thriller.
Three matches went past the 18th hole, with Duke sophomore Miranda Wang earning the clinching point in a 3-2 triumph on the second playoff hole, the par-5 15th, after Wake freshman Letizia Bagnoli snap-hooked her second shot into the penalty area.
With Bagnoli facing a bogey putt, Wang calmly lagged a birdie roll close and was conceded the winning par. As Kupcho watched in tears, Wang’s teammates mobbed her on the green in celebration.
“I couldn't feel more proud than I do right now,” said Duke’s head coach of 35 seasons, Dan Brooks, who got choked up talking about what his team had just accomplished, fighting through weather delays, multi-round days and close-calls.
“It's been a heck of a week.”
Duke’s seventh national title – its first since 2014 and first in the match-play format – ended a four-year winless gap that shockingly spanned the decorated career of former Duke great Leona Maguire. Maguire, a two-time winner and money leader on the Symetra Tour this season, was a two-time Annika Award recipient in college, yet she had never gotten the Blue Devils past the semifinals in three trips to match play.
The Blue Devils’ Achilles heel during the Maguire era – shaky play from the bottom of the lineup – became a strength this year.
“The cool thing about this team is, you know, we went into all of our tournaments with the idea that any one of them individually could win … and that's the kind of team that is a lot of fun [to coach],” Brooks said. “You're going to get contribution [from everyone]. It makes the pairing party a lot easier, too, because we really don't have to sweat much on who plays who.”
On a team featuring four top-50-ranked players, Wang, at No. 148 in Golfstat, was the most unlikely of heroes. The five-spot sophomore missed the final four tournaments of her freshman season with a knee injury. She didn’t notch a top-10 finish this season and skipped this week’s practice round after injuring her right wrist moving out of her dorm.
She carried a bag of ice and an 0-2 match-play record to the first tee Wednesday before falling 2 down after five holes. As Wang held on with halve after halve, Brooks made the executive decision to catch up with Wang on the back nine and walk with her the rest of the way.
“Miranda and I have had a good thing going in the last two months where she has made some changes in the way she thinks out here, and I thought I could possibly affect the change by going with her,” Brooks said. “I felt like if I could get that win, you’ve got some heavy hitters playing against each other that could swing [those matches] one way or another.”
In Wednesday morning’s semifinal match against defending national champion Arizona, Wang nearly came back from a 4-down deficit. She took confidence from that and won Nos. 13 and 15 to square the match, setting up her eventual comeback.
“I was like, ‘I’m going to do this for my team,’” Wang said.
Her teammates reciprocated the effort.
Junior Ana Belac receives a text message from Maguirie before nearly every round. Maguire’s message to Belac before Wednesday’s final was, “Go get it.” Belac went 3-0, capping her week with a 5-and-4 dispatch of Vanessa Knecht to give Duke its first point of the championship match.
Wake Forest’s Emilia Migliaccio also went 3-0 and gave the Demon Deacons their first point with a stiff approach and birdie on No. 18 to defeat Duke freshman Gina Kim, who earlier that morning had delivered an impressive approach on the same hole to set up a match-clinching birdie for the Blue Devils.
Virginia Elena Carta, the 2016 NCAA individual champion and lone senior, is known as the team’s ice-breaker. She led off in each of the three sessions and went 2-1. She prevailed in 24 holes in the quarterfinals and again went into extras Wednesday afternoon, though she ultimately fell to Siyun Liu in 20 holes.
With two Wake points on the board and Wang in a battle, Duke’s top-ranked player, sophomore Jaravee Boonchant, needed to win her match against Kupcho. Boonchant faced the opposing team’s best player all week – she lost to Stanford’s Andrea Lee in the quarters and then fell to Arizona’s Haley Moore in the semis.
But Brooks remained confident that Boonchant, the squad’s only first-team All-American, could finally deliver.
“I think we'd all agree that we'd put money on her,” Brooks said.
Kupcho had not trailed for 48 holes before Boonchant birdied the par-3 17th to take a 1-up lead. Though Kupcho clawed back with a winning par on No. 18, the world’s No. 1-ranked amateur hooked her drive at the first into the hazard. Boonchant routinely made par to send Kupcho packing.
“There are no words to describe it,” Kupcho said. “… It’s the end of my college career. It’s hard to swallow, but I’ve gotten a bunch of texts and I know that I have a big professional career ahead of me.”
Kupcho will tee it up in next week’s U.S. Women’s Open, her first event as a pro. She’ll leave behind an impressive college and amateur career that included last year's NCAA individual title, three first-team All-America awards and numerous school records.
“When people think of women’s golf at Wake Forest, they definitely are going to think of Jennifer Kupcho,” said Wake’s first-year head coach Kim Lewellen.
Though Kupcho could barely compose herself to reflect on Wednesday's heartbreak, she has no regrets. Kupcho’s unwavering decision to see her college career to the end paid massive dividends. She gained national notoriety and captured hearts everywhere by winning the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur, the highlight of a “whirlwind” spring, as described by her dad, Michael Kupcho.
“I think that the world has seen it,” Lewellen said, “… she's impacted women's golf by winning at Augusta National, Wake Forest University by being a national champion, but also by deferring her LPGA status to be here with her team and help us get to the final match.”
Kupcho’s winning walk-off never happened. The storybook ending she had hoped would conclude with glory? Well, it did.
The moment just didn't belong to her and her teammates, it belonged to Duke.
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Borussia Dortmund have signed Thorgan Hazard from Borussia Monchengladbach for a reported transfer fee of €25.5 million, excluding add-ons.
Thorgan, who has signed a five-year contract with Dortmund, becomes the first Hazard to move this summer with his older brother Eden linked with a transfer from Chelsea to Real Madrid.
"We are delighted, Thorgan has opted for Borussia Dortmund with his full conviction," BVB sporting director Michael Zorc said. "He's an experienced Bundesliga player and a Belgium international. He will help us with his pace and his nose for goals."
HA⚡️ARD pic.twitter.com/1tQniD6gkP
— Borussia Dortmund (@BlackYellow) May 22, 2019
Like his brother Eden, Hazard had been on the books at Chelsea, but left the club for Gladbach in 2014, initially on a loan and then on a permanent transfer. In his five years for the Foals, Hazard contributed 46 goals and a further 44 assists in 182 appearances across all competitions.
"I am thankful for five great years at Gladbach," Hazard said, adding that it was time to make the next step in his career. "I am proud to be able to play for Borussia Dortmund, a top club with incredible fans."
Hazard becomes Dortmund's second transfer this summer. Earlier this week, BVB signed Hoffenheim and Germany left-back Nico Schulz for a similar fee and soon after signing Hazard they announced a deal had been struck to sign Germany international Julian Brandt from Bayer Leverkusen.
The Bundesliga runners-up have said they finally want to break Bayern Munich's seven-year-long dominance of German football next term and are closing in on adding Barcelona defender Mateu Morey.
Other than United States international Christian Pulisic, who has joined Chelsea for €64m, no player has left the club yet.
However, former Manchester United midfielder Shinji Kagawa and 2014 World Cup winner Andre Schurrle are among those deemed surplus to requirements.
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Spin to define Australia's World Cup - Ricky Ponting
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 22:54

Ricky Ponting has declared that Australia's World Cup chances will be defined by how well Aaron Finch's team use spin bowling and also bat against it, having only recently placed fresh emphasis on this component of their ODI set-up after ignoring it for some years.
Part of Justin Langer's coaching group as an assistant for the tournament, Ponting provides enormous experience both of playing in World Cups - the 1996, 1999, 2003, 2007 and 2011 editions - but also winning three in a row from 1999 to 2007. Finch, Steven Smith, David Warner, Pat Cummins and Mitchell Starc, as well as assistant coach Brad Haddin, were all part of the victorious team at the 2015 tournament on home soil.
That success was underpinned largely by top order runs and Starc's furiously fast, hyper-aggressive bowling, with the Australians choosing their specialist spin bowler Xavier Doherty for only one match in the entire tournament. However this time around, Adam Zampa and Nathan Lyon loom as key components of the team, while Ponting also pointed out that the proliferation of spin bowlers among the world's leading teams in the past three years have also raised the emphasis on playing spin bowling adroitly.
"The thing that will define Australia's success in the World Cup is, one, how well they bowl spin and, two, how well they play it," Ponting told The Telegraph. "That's been their Achilles' heel the last 12 or 18 months. With [Adam] Zampa bowling well now, Nathan Lyon's obviously in the squad and Glenn Maxwell's done a good job with the ball whenever he's played.
"And I think some of our middle order are probably slightly better players of spin now than they were 12 or 18 months ago. With Warner there now and Steve Smith coming back in, the middle order looks a lot better against spin bowling than it probably was."
"Australia's got a very proud history. I know that'll be something that will be spoken about within the group." Ricky Ponting
Smith and Warner have returned to Australia's set-up after 12-month bans over the ball tampering scandal in South Africa last year. Ponting acknowledged the level of criticism the pair were likely to attract from English crowds, but said it was more important to see signs that both Smith and Warner were finding form at the right time.
"They're both playing really well. Steve Smith still thinks he's not probably 100% fit just yet - but he's not far away. And Warner's been the dominant batsman in the IPL," Ponting said. "Those two coming in, obviously they're class players - they'll have their fair share of issues to deal with from the crowds and stuff when they get over there. But they're big boys. They've been there and seen it all before. I'm sure they'll be fine."
Assessing the way that a successful team would navigate the tournament, which is using a round robin and semi-finals format for the first time since the 1992 event in Australia and New Zealand, Ponting said that Finch's team could recall past Australian victories to provide inspiration and knowledge of the need to avoid peaking too early.
"I guess that's probably one of the reasons they've got me involved - having been around some successful World Cup campaigns," Ponting said. "Tournament play is a different thing, it's not just another five-game series or three-game series. This is all about a pretty long tournament of one-day cricket.
"You've got to find a way to build your way into the tournament and make sure you're playing your best cricket at the back alley. That's one thing Australian teams have always done. They've tended to play their best cricket in the World Cups and when it has mattered in the big games.
"Australia's got a very proud history. I know that'll be something that will be spoken about within the group. But it's also a chance for this current group of players to make a name for themselves on the world stage and a chance for them all to become World Cup winners as well."
As captain, Finch had faced plenty of speculation over his place during an extended run of low scores. But the team's unexpected series win in India was accompanied by the first signs that Finch was returning to batting touch, and a subsequent series win over Pakistan in the UAE brought runs for the entire top order before it was bolstered by Smith and Warner.
"The fact that Aaron Finch has just had a bit of success lately as captain and had got himself back into the runs after a pretty lean 12 months with the bat, that'll give him a lot of confidence going into this World Cup," Ponting said. "To beat India in India for him as a captain is a big feather in his cap."
"They've got a really good chance - I've been saying that for 12 months. It looks like a lot of the work that Justin and the senior players have done around the group is starting to pay off."
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The NBA has made the late decision to cancel the NBA Global Camp, a showcase for draft-eligible prospects from outside the United States that was scheduled for May 30 to June 2 in Monaco.
"We have cancelled the NBA Global Camp 2019 due to logistical issues and other contributing factors that jeopardized our ability to successfully conduct the camp," NBA executive vice president of basketball operations Kiki VanDeWeghe said in a statement to ESPN. "The camp will return in the future."
The Global Camp was a new event that came under the NBA umbrella for the first time in 2018, essentially becoming the international version of the NBA combine, with interviews, medical examinations, drills and scrimmages conducted in a similar format to the draft combine in Chicago.
It was spun off of the longtime Adidas EuroCamp event that was conducted annually in Treviso, Italy, starting in 2003, but was abandoned by the sneaker company in the wake of the FBI investigation into college basketball corruption. The NBA elected to officially take over the camp in April 2018, hoping to use it as a vehicle to promote the league on a global scale and also provide exposure for their academies.
"Twenty-five percent of our league are international players," VanDeWeghe told ESPN at the time. "Some of the best players in the NBA are internationals. That will only grow. It's a big world. The NBA is expanding globally. That's an important part. We're invested in academies around the world; we have seven of those currently. Having the ability to spread the knowledge of basketball, to provide great training against great competition -- this is a natural part of that."
After conducting the camp in Treviso last year for its inaugural event, the Global Camp was moving to Monaco this year -- and many NBA teams, players, families, agents and basketball industry executives already have booked their travel to the exotic but expensive destination.
Sources say that confusion over which venues actually were booked by the organizers are among the key reasons for the last-minute cancellation. AS Monaco Basket, a professional team that competes in the French first division, said it was not consulted about the availability of its arena, which was slated to host the Global Camp.
After starting the season 8-9, AS Monaco won 16 of its last 17 games and finished the league in second place. Should the team advance past the quarterfinals of the French playoffs starting on Friday, the arena will be unavailable to the NBA for the dates of the Global Camp due to television production obligations and practice schedules for the teams slated to play in the semifinals, a source told ESPN.
Two auxiliary gyms, which typically are used for high school and amateur league basketball games because of limited seating and infrastructure, would have been the main venues available, something that, sources say, the NBA deemed unacceptable once the extent of the problem was fully discovered.
The decision to withdraw leaves a significant void in the scouting calendar for teams and players alike. A number of international agents told ESPN they only elected to enter their players' names into the draft pool in hopes they would be selected to play at the Global Camp, partially explaining why a record-breaking number of international players were on the early-entry list.
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NBA Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert and MVP finalists Giannis Antetokounmpo and Paul George were the leading vote-getters for the All-Defensive first team.
The Boston Celtics' Marcus Smart and the Milwaukee Bucks' Eric Bledsoe rounded out the first team that was announced Wednesday.
Gobert finished with 97 first-team points and 196 points and as a result earned himself a $500,000 bonus from the Jazz. This is the Utah center's third straight first-team selection.
George, an Oklahoma City Thunder forward, had 96 first-team votes and 195 points, followed by Bucks swingman Antetokounmpo (94, 193).
Smart and Bledsoe both earned their first All-Defensive team selections.
The second team included the Golden State Warriors' Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, who earned his first selection. They were joined by the Toronto Raptors' Kawhi Leonard, the Philadelphia 76ers' Joel Embiid and New Orleans Pelicans guard Jrue Holiday, who earned a $100,000 bonus for the honor.
The teams were selected by a panel of 100 writers and broadcasters.
ESPN's Bobby Marks and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Lowry playing through pain; Kawhi 'feeling good'
Published in
Basketball
Wednesday, 22 May 2019 16:49

MILWAUKEE -- Much has been made of Kawhi Leonard's occasional limp during Games 3 and 4 of the Eastern Conference finals. And yet, in a conference call with reporters Wednesday ahead of Thursday's Game 5 at Fiserv Forum, Toronto Raptors coach Nick Nurse maintained that his star will be ready when the ball goes up.
"He's feeling good," Nurse said. "No concerns at this point. He's good."
Nurse wasn't quite ready to say the same, however, about star point guard Kyle Lowry, who has been battling a thumb injury on his left (non-shooting) hand that he suffered during the conference semifinals against the Philadelphia 76ers.
Lowry has been wearing a specially designed oven mitt since to try to speed the healing process, but Nurse admitted the All-Star guard is playing through pain.
"Kyle's hand is not great," Nurse said. "You know, he's -- it's hurt and it's sore and it causes him a lot of pain. But he seems to be able to manage it through the game and do what he can do.
"He's obviously scoring and playing great on top of the other things he always does, and we're really [seeing] a heck of a lot of toughness and again, the spirit that he just wants to be out there and help his team any way he can."
For Lowry on Tuesday night in Game 4, that meant scoring 12 quick points in the first quarter to help the Raptors get a lead, then another six late in the second quarter to help Toronto preserve that advantage at halftime.
Those early points helped lead a wave of scoring from Toronto's supporting cast. That was particularly useful for the Raptors, given that the two players who played 50 minutes in the double-overtime thriller in Game 3, Leonard and Pascal Siakam, both showed signs of fatigue at times in Game 4.
"I think you just don't know how people are going to react," Nurse said. "I think kind of the main narrative is that Kawhi was super tired and extra minutes and all those kind of things. I think we kind of had that in the back of our minds, but you know, you just don't know how guys are going to react when the ball goes up, their adrenaline kicks up, etc.
"I do think Kyle feels like he sees opportunities for himself in these series, and I think Kyle is usually an early, early scorer. He knows leads are precious and he's trying to jump-start that. He was humongous last night. We didn't get off to a great start, and I think he automatically changed that by himself."
Forward OG Anunoby, on the other hand, remains "a ways away" from contributing after undergoing an emergency appendectomy last month.
"OG does not have a timetable for coming back," Nurse said. "He is being more active every day. I think we are getting closer to a point where we're -- you know, unpack is the next step for him. He's moving pretty good, he's shooting, etc., but still a ways away from being able to take hits and contact in the areas that he needs to test out, I guess."
The Raptors, though, remain focused on the task at hand, which is to find a way to do what they couldn't in the first two games of this series: get a win in Milwaukee. (The Bucks have only lost twice in a row all season; they have never lost three times in a row.)
That is the goal for Toronto -- one that, if the Raptors can accomplish it, would allow them to have a chance to clinch a trip to the NBA Finals for the first time in franchise history Saturday night back at Scotiabank Arena.
Nurse, though, said that there has been very little talk of the possibilities down the road for the Raptors. Instead, he said the focus has been on the task that it is immediately at hand -- one that won't be easy to solve.
"I think there's been very little," he said. "I'm trying to think of things I've heard and I can really only remember Kyle through the Philly series was immediately over, we were in the locker room and he kind of quieted everybody down and said, 'Hey, listen, you know, enjoy this game, but we've still got a ways to go where we're trying to get to, so let's get back here tomorrow and let's get back to work.' You know, that kind of mentality."
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NEW YORK -- Criticized for not running hard, New York Mets second baseman Robinson Cano got hurt hustling up the first-base line.
The 36-year-old slugger left Wednesday night's 6-1 win over the Washington Nationals after straining his left quadriceps.
Cano got hurt when he grounded out in the third inning following J.D. Davis' two-out double. The Mets trailed 1-0 at the time.
"He took a few hard steps out of the box, got about halfway down the line and it grabbed on him,'' manager Mickey Callaway said.
An eight-time All-Star, Cano twice failed to run out grounders last weekend against the Marlins in Miami, both of them resulting in double plays. Callaway said he addressed the issue, and Cano did not start Monday against the Nationals.
Callaway cited Cano's hustle when he doubled to right-center as a pinch hitter on Monday night and slid into second.
"I guess he had his fastest time from home to second [in three years], so I'm sure he was aware that he needs to get going a little bit,'' Callaway said.
Cano is batting .241 with three homers and 13 RBIs in his first season with the Mets. The former New York Yankees star was acquired from the Seattle Mariners in December.
Cano had an MRI during the game. Callaway said he did not yet know the results.
Mets infielder Luis Guillorme was removed from Triple-A Syracuse's game at Lehigh Valley in the fifth inning, a sign Cano could be headed to the injured list.
"They're always proactive during the game,'' Callaway said. "If something like that happens, they'll pull a player out just to make sure he's good to go in case we need him."
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BALTIMORE -- CC Sabathia's balky and bothersome right knee could soon be sending him to the New York Yankees' still-full injured list, the veteran left-hander and his manager said following his latest start Wednesday night.
"We have so many injuries, and to kind of pile this on there kind of sucks right now, but this is just something that I need to take care of," the 38-year-old Sabathia said after the Yankees' 7-5 win over the Baltimore Orioles. "Probably take some time [off] just to get the medicine in there and let it kind of work its magic."
Sabathia, who earned his 249th career win Wednesday by striking out seven in a five-inning outing, said he won't be traveling with the Yankees to Kansas City on Thursday night. The Yankees have a three-game series against the Kansas City Royals that follows Thursday's midday series finale in Baltimore.
Instead of joining his teammates, Sabathia will be heading back to New York. He's expecting to get a cortisone shot that day, which will force him to be shut down a few days. Asked if Sabathia could miss his next start, Yankees manager Aaron Boone said: "It's possible." Could this be an IL stint for Sabathia? "It could be," Boone added.
Knee flare-ups like the ones Sabathia said he has been fighting through his past couple of starts have occurred almost yearly for him since 2014. Across much of that time, he has been dealing with inflammation and arthritis in the knee, forcing him to take his share of midseason breaks.
Sabathia has been placed on the IL four times the past six seasons due to right-knee inflammation. In previous years, those stints have included treatments of cortisone, draining of excess fluid in the knee and the administering of a separate fluid that's designed to help lubricate his knee. Pitching with braces around his knee has helped stabilize it, too.
The 19-year veteran also has undergone offseason surgeries to the knee, including one this past winter. That operation preceded an unexpected heart procedure in December. Because of both surgeries, Sabathia was placed on the IL during spring training, and remained there the first two weeks of the season.
Since making his season debut April 13, Sabathia is 3-1 with a 3.48 ERA. He has allowed 35 hits while striking out 34.
"[The knee] always hurts pretty bad when it's like this," Sabathia said. "I would say [the pain] is in the middle. But no, I'm not concerned. I've dealt with this before, the medicine's worked, the brace has worked and I feel pretty good."
The hardest part of pitching with the knee injury is the way it impacts the conclusion of his delivery, Sabathia said.
"It was just hard to land. It's like a shooting pain goes through every time when I land, so it makes it hard to kind of finish my pitches," Sabathia said.
Although he felt the pain all throughout this latest start, it didn't appear to trouble him until the fifth inning, when he gave up his share of hard batted balls.
Sabathia cruised through the first four innings, registering all of his strikeouts within them. He also had allowed only one hit before everything unraveled with two homers and two doubles in the fifth. Of the seven batted balls he allowed in the inning, four were hit with exit velocities of 102 mph or faster. Normally a master of weak contact, those heightened velocities were notable.
"That last inning was a struggle for him," Boone said. "But he battled."
If Sabathia goes back on the IL, he will join the likes of Giancarlo Stanton, Aaron Judge, Miguel Andujar, Greg Bird, Troy Tulowitzki and Didi Gregorius on it. In all, 12 players are currently on the IL, with as many as 17, including Sabathia, having already spent time sidelined this season.
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