Kyle Higashioka's three-run home run (8)

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NBC Sports
4 hours ago
- NBC Sports
U.S. Walker Cup team solidified for matches at Cypress Point
World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler discusses his BMW Championship victory, reflecting on what made the win special, if comparing him to Tiger Woods is fair, how he measures his improvement and why golf "is not just a game." SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Walker Cup team for next month's match at Cypress Point is complete. The USGA announced Sunday the remaining five selections to captain Nathan Smith's 10-man squad – newly minted U.S. Amateur champion Mason Howell, Oklahoma's Jase Summy, Texas' Tommy Morrison, Notre Dame's Jacob Modleski and mid-amateur Stewart Hagestad. World No. 1 Jackson Koivun of Auburn was among the earlier selections, along with Virginia's Ben James, Ole Miss' Michael La Sasso, and Oklahoma State teammates Preston Stout and Ethan Fang. This will be Hagestad's fifth Walker Cup as he was on winning teams in 2017, 2019, 2021 and 2023. Summy was coming off winning the Western Amateur while Modleski was a semifinalist at the Western and a quarterfinalist at Olympic. Morrison solidified his spot by making match play at the Western and U.S. amateurs. Howell earned an automatic spot with his 7-and-6 win over Jackson Herrington. Among those left off the team were high-schooler Miles Russell, who also made the quarters this week and would've been the youngest Walker Cupper ever at 16 years old, and mid-amateur Evan Beck, the reigning U.S. Mid-Amateur champion. The 50th Walker Cup, which pits a team U.S. amateurs against those from Great Britain and Ireland, will take place Sept. 6-7 at Cypress Point Club in Pebble Beach, California. The GB&I team will be finalized Monday.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rangers 1B Jake Burger heading to Texas for tests on sore left wrist, will miss 2 or 3 games
TORONTO (AP) — Rangers first baseman Jake Burger is headed home to Texas for tests on his sore left wrist and will miss at least two or three games, manager Bruce Bochy said. Burger went 1 for 3 with an RBI single in Sunday's 10-4 win at Toronto, but was replaced by pinch-hitter Ezequiel Duran in the seventh inning. 'It's too bad because he was swinging the bat well,' Bochy said of Burger. 'He's going to go back home and get it looked at. We'll have an MRI done and find out what's going on there. He's probably out at least two or three days.' The Rangers begin a three-game series at Kansas City on Monday. Burger is batting .242 with 12 home runs and 41 RBIs. He has 12 RBIs and nine runs scored in his past 18 games. Burger said he first felt soreness in his first at-bat Saturday, but was able to keep playing. "I don't feel like I'm totally swinging like I normally do,' Burger said. 'I'm really hopeful that it's just a quick check it out and go from there.' Burger has already been sidelined by two injuries this season. He missed 10 games between June 21 and July 2 because of a strained left oblique, then sat out 20 games between July 13 and Aug. 8 because of a strained left quadriceps. __ AP MLB:


Boston Globe
9 hours ago
- Boston Globe
College football's new era: Big money, same old powerhouses line up as the favorites
The first includes college football's biggest brands, which are dominating the list of favorites once again: No. 1 Texas, No. 2 Penn State, No. 3 Ohio State, and No. 4 Clemson. Advertisement Second are teams we've talked about over the past few decades that are using money and celebrity coaches to elbow their way into the conversation: Colorado, North Carolina, and No. 23 Texas Tech. And then there are those who see the second year of the 12-team playoff and a different playing field created by revenue sharing and think they might be able to fashion a turnaround not unlike No. 20 Indiana's worst to (almost) first resurgence last year: Pick a name, any name, but a good starting point might be UCLA (now with star QB Nico Iamaleava ) or Virginia (which, like Indiana last year, avoids pretty much every top team on its conference schedule). Advertisement Jeffrey Kessler, the attorney who helped broker the 'It's a big change,' Kessler said. 'But I think the system will adapt and the better-managed athletic departments will do well, as they always do. And athletic departments that are poorly managed won't do so well, and probably didn't do so well in the old system, either.' Heisman watch equals title watch Pay or no pay, one thing hasn't changed in college football or any sport: Great players win games. It's no big surprise, then, to see Texas at the top of almost everyone's watch list. Leading the Longhorns is none other than Arch Manning, the sophomore quarterback with the reported $6 million-plus NIL deal, and the latest burgeoning star in a family that has produced lots of them, from Archie to Peyton to Eli. 'For Arch, he grew up in this era of seeing high-level football,' Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said. 'He's watched Super Bowls. He's watched gold jackets getting put on. He's been to playoff games. He's been recruited at the highest level as the No. 1 player in the country.' Texas quarterback Arch Manning is among the favorites for the Heisman Trophy. Tim Warner/Getty Though it doesn't always work out, there are plenty of schools where a player with hopes of winning the Heisman Trophy also will have a legitimate chance to win the CFP. Besides Manning, other favorites include receiver Jeremiah Smith, whose success with defending champion Ohio State figures to depend a lot on whether the Buckeyes' next quarterback, Julian Sayin, who is also in the Heisman mix, is as good as advertised. Advertisement Clemson QB Cade Klubnik is among the favorites, as are the Tigers for a repeat title in the ACC. Quarterback Drew Allar is in his fourth season at Penn State, where the Nittany Lions are expected to face Ohio State for the Big Ten title (They play Nov. 1, and coach James Franklin is 1-10 against the Buckeyes). Meanwhile, LSU appears to be only a secondary threat to Texas as Georgia and Alabama are in the SEC, but Garrett Nussmeier is in that Heisman mix and can stay there with a good performance against Klubnik and Clemson on Aug. 30. Is the hype machine same as the win machine? Nobody has defined this new era of NIL as much as Colorado coach Deion Sanders. Sanders brought his unapologetic swagger to a program that had been in the dumps for decades. He made the Buffaloes relevant, producing TV ratings, celebrity sightings, a Heisman winner in Travis Hunter, and maybe the most talked-about player in the sport in his own son, Shedeur, whose Winning? That was another thing. Deion Sanders is 13-12 over his two seasons, and now that Hunter and Shedeur are gone, the only big expectations for CU are coming from Boulder. 'The next phase is we're going to win differently, but we're going to win,' Sanders said. Another celebrity coach, Bill Belichick, will start answering the question of whether fans and wins will Advertisement The 73-year-old coach said he was building an NFL-style program — meaning everything he does, from nutrition to training to, yes, contracts, will look more like the pros. It was the sort of notion that used to be spoken softly but can now be used as a selling point. 'Everything we do here is predicated on building a pro team,' said Carolina's new general manager, Mike Lombardi, who worked with Belichick in the pros. 'We consider ourselves the 33rd [NFL] team because everybody who's involved with our program has had some form or aspect in pro football.' Over in Lubbock, Texas, the Texas Tech athletic program has never been afraid to swing big. The program that gave us swashbuckling coach Mike Leach and Super Bowl quarterback Patrick Mahomes is being bankrolled by the billionaire head of its board of regents, Cody Campbell, who now has the school's football field named after him. Texas Tech has made a series of high-profile and expensive player signings — some for high schoolers who haven't arrived yet — and is estimated to be spending more on NIL than any program in the country besides Texas. 'I know there's a lot of expectations on this team,' said coach Joey McGuire, who is coming off an 8-5 season. 'We look at it as opportunities.' Do new payrolls mean even footing for everyone? The new world of revenue sharing and an expanded playoff does give more reason for hope across the country. When searching for blueprints of how that can work, most long-suffering programs will look to Indiana. The Hoosiers were an also-ran for decades, with one Rose Bowl appearance ever and one winning record in a non-COVID-19 season since 1995. Then coach Curt Cignetti arrived, brought 54 new players from the transfer portal and turned Indiana into a winner overnight. Advertisement It was a remarkable turnaround that ran counter to the realities seen in these stats: ⋅ There are 70 teams that make up the Power Four conferences, plus Pac-12 leftovers Oregon State and Washington State. ⋅ Since 2000, 36 of those teams have captured a total of 137 outright or shared league titles that have been won between the five largest conferences. ⋅ Of those 137 titles, 92 (67 percent) have been captured by 10 programs that have won five or more. The other 26 have combined to win 45. ⋅ That leaves 34 programs (48.5 percent) that haven't won any. In the NFL over the same period, only 10 teams (31 percent) have failed to reach the Super Bowl. Those numbers reflect how hard it is to break through in big-time college football but also the size of the glass ceiling that could be shattered in this new era of college sports. 'I think the rev-share world definitely has a chance to bring things to a more balanced circumstance,' said Purdue athletic director Mike Bobinksi, whose football program has a new coach, Barry Odom, after going 1-11 last season. 'Will there always be some programs that operate in a little bit of a different reality? Of course. But we're not concerned about that, nor are we crying in our beer about that. We've just got to find a way.'