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Home Blog Page 10818

Tiger Woods hits PGA with leg ‘better than 12 months ago’

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Tiger Woods is ready to give major competition another go at this week’s PGA Championship in Tulsa, Okla., after making his return to golf at the Masters last month.

Fourteen months after a gruesome single-car accident left his right leg and foot badly injured, to the point that he considered amputation, Woods made the cut at Augusta before struggling through the weekend and finishing 47th. The 15-time major champion made clear that traversing the course was the bigger struggle for him than hitting golf shots.

After taking one day off — the Monday after the Masters — Woods got back to work training ahead of the second major of the season.

“There was a huge lull — Monday. That was it,” Woods joked. “It was not fun. It hurt. Ice baths and just trying to get the swelling out of there. Then we went back at it, leg day on Tuesday and we kept going from there.”

Now, Woods feels his surgically repaired leg is in a better place for him to play up to four days’ worth of golf.

“There’s going to be limitations,” Woods said. “There’s a lot of hardware in there and there’s going to be limitations to what I’m going to be able to do, but I’m going to get stronger. I don’t know how much that is or how much range of motion I’ll ever get back. But sure is a hell of a lot better than it was 12 months ago.”

The last time Southern Hills Country Club hosted the PGA Championship, Woods was the victor, shooting an 8-under-par 272 to beat Woody Austin by two shots. Woods carded a 63 in the second round, which at the time tied the record for the lowest round at any major.

Woods also made a few minor changes to his golf bag for the week, according to Golfweek. He replaced his 5-wood with a 2-iron, something he tends to do at fast, windy courses like Open Championship venues. He also replaced his P-7TW 3-iron with another model also made by TaylorMade, a P-770.

–Field Level Media

RB Tarik Cohen suffers injury during livestreamed workout


Free agent running back Tarik Cohen appeared to suffer an injury while livestreaming a workout on Instagram Tuesday.

Cohen, who last played in the NFL in 2020, was doing a footwork drill. While backpedaling, he suddenly went to the ground and held his right foot and ankle area before a friend turned off the livestream.

Cohen, 26, starred for the Chicago Bears for three-plus seasons before an ACL injury early in 2020 caused him to miss the rest of that campaign, plus all of 2021. It was later revealed that he had also torn his MCL and fractured his tibial plateau, leading to a longer comeback timeline.

The Bears, who had drafted Cohen in the fourth round of in 2017, gave him a three-year, $17.25 million contract extension shortly before that injury. They released him in March of this year.

In 51 career games, Cohen racked up 1,101 rushing yards with five touchdowns along with 1,575 receiving yards and nine touchdowns on 209 catches. He was a Pro Bowl selection and a first-team All-Pro in 2018 as a punt returner, when he led the league with 411 punt-return yards.

Cohen is also coping with both of his brothers passing away, which he recently wrote about in a Players’ Tribune article. His twin brother, Tyrell, died last year after running away from a car accident and being electrocuted at a nearby electrical substation. His younger brother, Dante, who was paralyzed from a gunshot, was lost in a fatal car accident in April.

–Field Level Media

Flames, Oilers eager for elite Battle of Alberta series


The history of the Battle of Alberta is not lost on the Calgary Flames and Edmonton Oilers.

The opportunity to write a new chapter when they open their Western Conference second-round series Wednesday in Calgary means plenty.

The Flames and Oilers last met in a Stanley Cup playoff series in 1991, before many of the participants of this year’s clash were even born.

“I haven’t been to the second round since my first year in the league, so this is really exciting for me, especially being the Battle of Alberta,” Flames defenseman Mike Stone said. “I’ve been in this city long enough to know what that means.”

The Pacific Division-champion Flames finished seven points ahead of the Oilers during the regular season. The clubs split their four meetings, with the Oilers taking the first two clashes before the Flames won the final two.

Calgary advanced after finally dispatching the Dallas Stars, a wild-card team, in a seven-game series that went the distance because of a stellar goaltending performance from Dallas’ Jake Oettinger. The Oilers also needed seven games to beat the Los Angeles Kings.

Through the past three decades, Flames-Oilers clashes boasted extra oomph, but a playoff series takes a rivalry to new levels, something Flames forward Milan Lucic learned from his days with the Boston Bruins when they met the Montreal Canadiens.

“It adds to it. The history and the rivalry, all that type of stuff,” Lucic said. “It feels everything is magnified and everybody is more into it, the fans, the emotions, the media, the storylines.”

The series is noteworthy for more than just the two city rivals. Edmonton is led by its dynamic duo of Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, who finished first and fourth in the league scoring race, McDavid with 123 points and Draisaitl with 110.

But the Flames boast a trio of 40-goal scorers in Johnny Gaudreau, who finished second in the scoring race with 115 points, Matthew Tkachuk and Elias Lindholm. The edge may be in Calgary’s defensive game, which finished third in goals against, while the Oilers placed 18th.

That said, the Oilers dispatched the Kings by taking their defensive play to another level the last two games.

“We took steps just in the way the Los Angeles Kings played and their adherence to their structure,” coach Jay Woodcroft said. “It forced us to do some things and forced us to solve problems to get out of our comfort zone.

“For us, I don’t think anything great ever comes out of comfort zones, so it was nice to get pushed and forced to come up with different types of solutions to things.”

As much as the contempt coming from familiarity will make for exciting viewing, the difference in styles and how players adapt will make the difference.

“The hype is real life. There are a lot of passionate fans in Alberta. As players we’re trying not to get consumed by that,” Oilers goalie Mike Smith said. “There’s a lot of extra noise, but there’s a focus with this group that we have a job to do, and it didn’t matter who we were going to play against.”

On the injury front, Calgary defenseman Chris Tanev, who missed Game 7 due to injury, practiced Tuesday and should be back in the lineup.

The Oilers practiced without forwards Draisaitl, who is nursing a suspected ankle injury, Ryan Nugent-Hopkins and Evander Kane, but general manager Ken Holland said all three are expected to play in the series opener.

–Field Level Media

Luka Doncic vs. Stephen Curry matchup highlights Mavs-Warriors playoff series


Luka Doncic and the Dallas Mavericks will be looking to continue their regular-season mastery of Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors when the Western Conference finals tip off Wednesday night in San Francisco.

Only one game separated the teams in the regular season, and it’s because of the Warriors’ 53-52 edge in wins — rather than the Mavericks’ 3-1 triumph in the season series — that Golden State has earned the home-court advantage in the best-of-seven.

The disparity in win totals is a far cry from the last time the clubs faced each other in the playoffs. That historic event 15 years ago saw the eighth-seeded Warriors, who won 25 fewer games than the Mavericks, shock top-seeded Dallas in six games in what has become known in San Francisco as the “We Believe” series.

The Warriors won all three of their home games in that series, and home court could be critical this time as well, with Golden State yet to lose in six games on its home floor this postseason.

The Mavericks have won five straight at home after a series-opening loss to Utah.

Both teams upset better-seeded opponents to arrive at just their second-ever meeting in the postseason. Fourth-seeded Dallas took out Phoenix, the Western Conference regular-season champ, in seven games, while third-seeded Golden State disposed of No. 2 Memphis in six games.

Doncic, who averaged 32.6 points in the series against Phoenix, outscored Curry in all four regular-season head-to-heads this season. In fact, their personal duel wasn’t close, with the Dallas star running up 26-14, 25-18, 34-27 and 41-21 scoring advantages.

The Mavericks didn’t see the Warriors at their best, with Draymond Green missing the last three meetings and Klay Thompson missing two of the first three.

Then again, the Warriors saw the Mavericks only twice after Dallas’ headline-grabbing trade of Kristaps Porzingis at midseason, with newcomer Spencer Dinwiddie leading the Mavericks to wins in the last two meetings with a total of 41 points.

Based on their history of having made the Western Conference finals six times in the past eight seasons and owning the home-court advantage, the Warriors go into the series as the favorite, even with coach Steve Kerr warning them not to think that way.

“Every opponent at this stage is going to pose a huge threat because only the best teams are left,” said Kerr, who missed the last three games of the Memphis series with COVID. He has been cleared for the start of this series.

“It’s all about figuring it out,” he continued, “and I thought our team and our staff did a really good job over the course of Games 4, 5 and 6 (against Memphis) of making that adjustment to the way the series had shifted and kind of finding a way to get through.”

The Warriors have had two extra days of rest, having wrapped up their second-round series on Friday while the Mavericks were going the distance to a Game 7 in Phoenix on Sunday.

Doncic appeared to pull from Warriors-Mavericks history when gushing over the elimination of the Suns, declaring: “We came here with a statement in Game 7. We believed. So I’m just happy.”

Both teams will be without one of their most famous names, with the Mavericks having lost Tim Hardaway Jr. for the season to a broken foot, while the Warriors likely will remain without Gary Payton II, who fractured his left elbow in Game 1 against the Grizzlies.

Golden State expects to have veteran Otto Porter Jr. (sore foot) back for Game 1, but awaits a re-evaluation of Andre Iguodala’s neck injury on Thursday before projecting his potential entry into the series.

–Field Level Media

Sounders, Dynamo each eye 2nd straight win

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While the Seattle Sounders became the first MLS team to win the CONCACAF Champions League title earlier this month, they went 43 days between MLS victories.

With the drought now over, Seattle (3-5-1, 10 points) aims to notch back-to-back MLS victories for the first time this season when it visits the Houston Dynamo on Wednesday night.

Raul Ruidiaz scored on a penalty kick, and Cristian Roldan and Nicolas Lodeiro added goals as the Sounders overcame an early deficit to post a 3-1 home win over Minnesota United on Sunday.

The victory halted a three-game skid in MLS play for the team that posted a stunning 3-0 win over Pumas UNAM on May 4 to win the Champions League crown.

“I want the team to be proud of that accomplishment because we were the first MLS team to win CCL, the current version of CCL, and that’s something that we’re very proud of,” Sounders coach Brian Schmetzer said after the victory over Minnesota. “Now, the other side of that is just making sure that the players understand that we’re not just going to rest on our laurels. That’s not what the Seattle Sounders do.”

While Seattle is looking to overcome its slow start, Houston (4-4-3, 15 points) snapped out of its own funk with Saturday’s 2-0 home win over Nashville SC.

The Dynamo had lost three straight matches and were 0-3-1 during a four-game stretch before their first MLS win in 35 days.

Adalberto Carrasquilla and Darwin Quintero (penalty kick) scored the Houston goals.

“It was clear that we had to win,” Quintero said afterward. “We came in with three consecutive losses in the league and there was no other option but to get three points. We had no other possibility.”

It wasn’t an easy win as the Dynamo played a man short for the final 65 minutes after Adam Lundqvist was given a red card for a dangerous sliding tackle. Houston led 1-0 at the time and Quintero scored his team-leading fifth goal in the 53rd minute.

The Dynamo defeated Seattle 2-1 last October to halt an eight-game skid in the series.

–Field Level Media

Undecided Rickie Fowler calls LIV Golf option ‘interesting’

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Rickie Fowler confirmed to reporters that LIV Golf approached him about playing on its new tour and said he has not made up his mind about whether to pursue it.

“To be straightforward with you guys, I haven’t necessarily made a decision one way or the other,” Fowler said ahead of this week’s PGA Championship in Tulsa, Okla. “I’ve mentioned in the past, do I currently think that the PGA Tour is the best place to play? I do. Do I think it can be better? Yes. So I think it’s an interesting position.”

Fowler said he was in favor of competition, calling it “the driving force of our game.” Further, he said the LIV Golf Invitational Series — plus another nascent rival known as the Premiere Golf League — are popping up because they see an opportunity to draw golfers’ interest.

Fowler, 33, did not say whether he applied for a release to play in the debut LIV event in London next month.

“I’m, like, trying to learn as much as I can,” he said. “I have no commitment one way or another. Obviously the statement came out last week that they weren’t granting any releases. I think a lot of people thought that the first one being out of the country may not be an issue. Obviously it would be more so once it came into the U.S.”

LIV, headed by CEO Greg Norman, is launching this summer with an eight-event schedule featuring $255 million in total prizes. The Saudi-financed golf league has attracted controversy over the past several months.

Norman at one point issued a public letter to the PGA Tour saying it could not deny its golfers, whom he described as “independent contractors,” from playing where they wanted — a point Fowler brought up Tuesday.

“One of things to me, or I would say, are we independent contractors are not?” Fowler said “Do we — to me, like with competition, if there were other leagues or tours or whatever may be, the Tour continuing to be the best place to play, guys will come and play and be at the Tour but there’s options to go play another event if you want to. I feel like there needs to be some clarity between if you’re an independent contractor or are you basically an employee.”

Fowler added that his peers on tour want to know what the consequences would be if they played in London without having been granted a release. PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan reportedly told a group of players in February that those interested in LIV should “walk out that door now,” implying they would not be allowed to play both there and the PGA Tour.

A longtime fan favorite, Fowler is seeking to regain his old form and contend for his first major title in the state where he starred in college. The Oklahoma State product tied for eighth at the PG Championship a year ago but also missed the FedEx Cup playoffs in 2021.

–Field Level Media

Browns QB Deshaun Watson, NFL talks begin


Before he travels to the Bahamas to work out with new teammates, Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson met with NFL investigators on Tuesday to discuss his legal matters with lead investigator Lisa Friel, ESPN reported.

Friel conducts investigations for the NFL on matters related to the personal conduct policy and, when violations are found, helps mete out punishment. Watson can be fined or suspended if the NFL rules that he violated the league policy on personal conduct.

Two grand juries in Texas did not indict Watson, who still faces 22 civil lawsuits around allegations of sexual misconduct with women who claim they met the quarterback while providing professional massage services.

The Athletic reported the NFL has interviewed multiple women involved in the civil case.

Players who were not convicted of crimes have still faced fines and suspensions under the same policy, including retired Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger. In 2010, Roethlisberger was not indicted on sexual assault charges in Georgia, but the NFL investigated and determined he would be suspended six games without pay. A 20-year-old college student accused Roethlisberger of wrongdoing following an incident in a bar bathroom.

Upon appeal, Roethlisberger’s suspension was reduced to four games, but commissioner Roger Goodell made clear his actions warranted punishment.

“My decision today is not based on a finding that you violated Georgia law, or on a conclusion that differs from that of the local prosecutor,” Goodell wrote in a letter to Roethlisberger. “That said, you are held to a higher standard as an NFL player, and there is nothing about your conduct in Milledgeville that can remotely be described as admirable, responsible, or consistent with either the values of the league or the expectations of our fans.”

Watson said at his introductory press conference with the Browns, who signed him to a $230 million contract, that the claims were unfounded.

But in a pre-trial deposition last week, Watson admitted at least one massage therapist left their session in tears and he sent her an apology, according to attorney Tony Buzbee, who represents the women.

Buzbee previously shared the message in question.

“Sorry about you feeling uncomfortable,” he wrote, according to the screenshot from plaintiff lawyers. “Never were the intentions. Lmk if you want to work in the future. My apologies.”

–Field Level Media

Warriors G Gary Payton II out for Game 1, not series


Gary Payton II could still return during the Western Conference finals, but the defensive whiz will not play in Game 1 against the Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday due to his elbow injury.

Head coach Steve Kerr said the Warriors are encouraged by Payton’s activity, which was largely limited to right-hand dominant work at practice on Tuesday.

Payton could play in the best-of-seven series, but the Warriors plan to take his availability game-to-game. However, he’s not expected to return this week.

Payton has a fractured left elbow and ligament damage and was originally projected to return for the NBA Finals.

He was hurt in Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals series at Memphis on a rough foul that led to a suspension for Grizzlies guard Dillon Brooks.

The journeyman found a home with the Warriors as a role player who earned Kerr’s endorsement for his play in tight games.

Payton, 29, averaged career highs of 7.1 points, 3.5 rebounds and 1.4 steals in 71 regular-season games (16 starts).

–Field Level Media

Rangers, Hurricanes aim to keep up thrills in Game 1


The New York Rangers and Carolina Hurricanes are set to meet in Game 1 of their best-of-seven, second-round Stanley Cup Playoff series on Wednesday in Raleigh, N.C.

Both are coming off thrilling Game 7 victories in the first round.

Carolina eliminated the Boston Bruins with a 3-2 win on Saturday.

New York rallied to win its first playoff series since 2017 by beating the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins 4-3 in overtime on Sunday.

The Rangers were down 3-1 in the series and 3-2 late in Game 7 before Mika Zibanejad tied the score with 5:45 remaining in regulation. Artemi Panarin won it with a power-play goal 4:46 into overtime.

Several players on both teams likely have clear memories of the last time the Rangers won a playoff series.

Carolina forward Derek Stepan had the game-clinching empty net goal against the Montreal Canadiens in 2017 to lift the Rangers to a 3-1 victory and a 4-2 series win.

Another forward for the Hurricanes, Jesper Fast, and defensemen Brendan Smith and Brady Skjei, also played for the Rangers in the 2017 postseason.

A key player for the Rangers this season has been forward Chris Kreider, who scored a career-high 52 goals during the regular season, well above his previous high of 28 during the 2016-17 season and matched two years later.

Kreider had four goals and two assists in four games against Carolina this season, scoring in every meeting.

Panarin and Zibanejad also set NHL career highs in assists and points during the regular season.

Zibanejad was a big reason the Rangers advanced out of the first round, totaling three goals and eight assists against the Penguins.

“When Mika started to play his game, he was outstanding, and that’s what we want him to do,” New York coach Gerard Gallant said. “He’s got to think of himself as one of those best players, and that’s what he is.”

Sebastian Aho led the Hurricanes in goals (37), assists (44) and points (81) during the regular season, and he pestered the Rangers with three goals and four assists in the season series.

A pair of defensemen led Carolina in scoring against the Bruins.

Tony DeAngelo, who also previously played for the Rangers, and Jaccob Slavin each had eight points, while forwards Vincent Trocheck, Andrei Svechnikov, Seth Jarvis and Nino Niederreiter led Carolina with three goals apiece against Boston.

Carolina coach Rod Brind’Amour realizes the biggest challenges still lie ahead.

“Everyone’s playing lights out,” Brind’Amour said. “Everybody’s into it, and then as it goes along, it’s just different things that are hard. It’s hard to stay emotionally engaged for two months. It’s hard for the fans to stay emotionally engaged. Everything about it gets harder and harder. The team that can stay with it obviously is the team that generally comes out on top.”

Rangers goalie Igor Shesterkin has the second-worst goals-against average in the postseason at 3.66 but has countered with a respectable .910 save percentage.

“He’s Mr. Reliable back there,” New York defenseman Jacob Trouba said. “Everybody knows he’s going to show up in big games and play well and make saves he’s probably not supposed to make.”

Carolina goalie Frederik Andersen has been sidelined since April 16 because of a lower-body injury, and Brind’Amour doesn’t believe Andersen will return for this series.

In the meantime, Antti Raanta has been solid in net for the Hurricanes, posting a 2.37 GAA and .927 save percentage in six playoff games.

–Field Level Media

Loons look to snap three-game skid vs. Galaxy

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Minnesota United will try to snap a three-match losing streak on Wednesday night when they host the LA Galaxy in Saint Paul, Minn.

The Loons (4-5-2, 14 points), who started the MLS campaign without a loss in their first four games (2-0-2), have dropped to 10th place in the Western Conference. The losing streak is the team’s longest since it began the 2021 season with four straight losses.

Minnesota’s latest loss came on the road to its old nemesis, the Seattle Sounders, 3-1, on Sunday. That dropped the Loons to 0-8-0 all time at Lumen Field, including a bitter 3-2 loss in the 2020 Western Conference final when they blew a 2-0 lead.

Robin Lod scored his fourth goal of the season in the 34th minute to give Minnesota United a 1-0 lead only to see the Sounders rally for three second-half goals.

“Well, I’m sick to death of coming here and playing like we do,” Loons coach Adrian Heath said.

“Playing as well as we did in the first half and then deciding that we are going to give them opportunities. … The last thing we need to be doing is giving them opportunities by our stupidity and we continually keep doing it. We can’t keep shooting ourselves in the foot.

“We’ve got another (game) Wednesday. I’m not going to keep putting up with it, I know that much.”

The Galaxy (6-4-1, 19 points) come in off a 3-1 home loss to FC Dallas on Sunday but are in fourth place in the West. Goaltender Jonathan Bond is tied for second in the MLS with five shutouts while Javier “Chicharito” Hernandez leads the team with five goals.

Hernandez has failed to score in five straight games and Los Angeles has scored just 12 goals in 11 games this season. The Galaxy have scored one goal or less eight times.

“I think sometimes we get into these attacking positions and we take the easy way instead of putting balls into dangerous positions and going for it,” LA head coach Greg Vanney told the Hermosa Beach (Calif.) Daily Breeze.

“I think there’s some indecisiveness sometimes in the final action, timing isn’t right, sometimes the choice in the final pass, the execution isn’t great. Sometimes just the finish misses. We put the ball in a good place and we don’t finish.”

The teams tied at 3 in their last meeting on Nov. 7, 2021, in Carson, Calif., while the Loons defeated the Galaxy, 3-0, in the last meeting in Saint Paul on Sept. 18, 2021.

–Field Level Media