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Home Blog Page 8599

No. 8 Arizona edges No. 2 UCLA, wins 2nd straight Pac-12 tournament


Azuolas Tubelis scored 19 points with 14 rebounds and Oumar Ballo added 13 points with eight rebounds as No. 8 Arizona won its second consecutive Pac-12 Conference tournament title with a 61-59 victory Saturday over No. 2 UCLA at Las Vegas.

Courtney Ramey scored just three points for the Wildcats (28-6), but it was a 3-pointer with 18 seconds remaining to put Arizona on top for good.

Amari Bailey scored 19 points for UCLA (29-5) and Tyger Campbell added 16 as the Bruins failed to follow a Pac-12 regular-season title with the conference tournament championship. The Bruins have not won the Pac-12 tournament title since 2014.

Dylan Andrews missed a 3-point attempt at the buzzer that would have given UCLA the victory. UCLA missed each of its last four field-goal attempts and went 1-for-7 down the stretch.

The Bruins were not only without Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year Jaylen Clark (leg), but also Pac-12 Freshman of the Year Adem Bona (shoulder), depriving them of their top two defenders. They were further short-handed when Mac Etienne fouled out with 9:35 remaining and Kenneth Nwuba fouled out with 4:25 on the clock.

The Bruins went on a 7-0 run early in the second half to lead 43-35 with 16:17 remaining as Jaime Jaquez Jr. scored four points in the stretch. The UCLA advantage was as many as nine at 46-37 with 14:18 remaining after a 3-pointer from Bailey.

But a 13-2 run by the Wildcats, capped by a 3-pointer from Pelle Larsson, gave Arizona a 50-48 lead with nine minutes remaining. UCLA was up 58-56 with 2:52 left after a jumper from Bailey, but Arizona closed on a 5-1 run.

Jaquez, the Pac-12 Player of the Year, scored 13 points with 10 rebounds for UCLA. Larsson had 11 points for Arizona.

The Wildcats led by as many as five points in the first half, but it was the Bruins that held a 34-33 lead at the break by holding Arizona to 39.3 percent shooting in the opening 20 minutes and holding a 20-15 rebounding advantage.

The Bruins received yet another injury scare just over four minutes into the contest when Jaquez rolled his right ankle and limped to the bench during a timeout, but he remained in the game.

–Field Level Media

Knicks aim to end 3-game skid, get back on track vs. Lakers


The New York Knicks are encountering difficulties without injured Jalen Brunson, especially when Julius Randle is unable to get anything going.

If Brunson (sore left foot) sits in Los Angeles on Sunday night against the Lakers, the Knicks will need Randle to reverse his sudden slump if they are to halt a three-game losing streak.

The Knicks are on their first three-game skid since dropping four straight Jan. 16-22. This skid follows their nine-game winning streak that was highlighted by last Sunday’s 131-129 double-overtime win at Boston. Brunson sat out with the injury he sustained in a 122-120 win at Miami two nights earlier.

Brunson has played 19 minutes during New York’s past three games. He sat out Tuesday’s seven-point home loss to the Charlotte Hornets and then played through the pain in the first half when the Knicks began their four-game western trip with a 122-117 loss to the Sacramento Kings on Thursday.

On Saturday, the Knicks dropped to 3-4 when Brunson does not play as Randle shot 5 of 24 from the field and scored 19 points in a 106-95 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers. The Knicks shot 35.6 percent.

“He’s been there for us; he’s our floor general,” New York’s RJ Barrett said of Brunson. “Definitely miss having him on the floor, but that was that, and we got to figure it out and figure out how to get these wins.”

Randle scored 31 in the first game of Brunson’s absence but has been held under 25 in three straight contests. In those games, he has shot 28.5 percent (18 of 63), including 7 of 31 from 3-point range.

New York is 18-17 when Randle is held under 25 points, and Saturday’s showing might have been his most frustrating this season. Besides the rough shooting performance, he got a technical foul for elbowing Mason Plumlee and then shouted at teammate Evan Fournier and a team security guard as he was being restrained from going after the officials.

“I mean, I wasn’t good today. I was bad,” Randle said.

While the Knicks still remain in the top six of the Eastern Conference and percentage points behind the fifth-place Brooklyn Nets, the Lakers are ninth in the Western Conference and a half-game behind the two teams directly in front of them — Minnesota and Dallas.

Los Angeles is 5-2 since losing LeBron James for multiple weeks due to right-foot soreness and also is seeking its first four-game winning streak since putting together five straight wins Dec. 30 to Jan. 7.

The Lakers won their third straight Friday night when they shot 56.3 percent from the floor in a 122-112 home win over the Toronto Raptors. D’Angelo Russell returned from missing four games with a sprained right ankle and scored 28 points.

Russell’s showing helped offset a quiet performance from Anthony Davis, who was held to eight points after scoring 107 over his previous three contests.

“That we were able to come away with this win against a really good team with only eight from (Davis), that’s a sign of growth,” Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. “That’s a sign of how deep and talented we are.”

–Field Level Media

With postseason in sight, Thunder seek season sweep of Spurs


The Oklahoma City Thunder will look to continue their push toward the postseason when they travel to San Antonio to face the suddenly surging Spurs on Sunday night.

The Thunder will visit the Spurs for the second game of a road back-to-back after a 110-96 win in New Orleans on Saturday. Oklahoma City remains in the hunt for a playoff spot, sitting in 12th place in the Western Conference.

The Thunder are a half-game out of 10th place and a spot in the play-in tournament and just 2 1/2 off the pace for sixth place and a guaranteed spot in the postseason.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led Oklahoma City with 35 points vs. New Orleans, with Josh Giddey adding 19 and Jalen Williams 17.

“This is probably our best defensive-without-fouling-but-being-physical kind of night we’ve had in a long time.,” Williams said. “When our defense is humming like that, I think we’re really good. Credit to what we did the first half and the third quarter — just kind of stuck with it and played at our own pace.”

Oklahoma City has won four of its past five games after enduring a five-game losing streak.

“It’s hard to hold the lead for the whole game on the road the way we did tonight,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “I thought the guys just did a great job of stacking possessions, especially in the second half. You know, it seemed like New Orleans was gonna make some noise, and they did at multiple different times, but we held them off with sound execution on both ends of the floor.”

The Spurs, who have been eliminated from postseason consideration, will play the second contest in a six-game homestand after a rousing 128-120 win over West-leading Denver on Friday. San Antonio got 23 points from Keldon Johnson, with Doug McDermott adding 20, Jeremy Sochan 19, and Devin Vassell and Tre Jones 14 apiece.

Recently acquired Sandro Mamukelashvili scored all 11 of his points in the fourth quarter, including a dagger 3-pointer with 2:33 to play, and Zach Collins tallied 10 points for the Spurs before being ejected midway through the third quarter.

San Antonio has won three of its past five games but still is next-to-last in the Western Conference and is looking at an early pick in the NBA draft.

For a night, the Spurs — who always battle to the finish — looked like a team that wanted the game more than their opponents.

“The win means a lot. It shows that we are growing,” McDermott said. “We’re doing the right things every day. It’s great to see us get rewarded with a great win against the top seed in the West. I think it’s great being at home in front of our fans. They stuck with us. They know it’s a process this year.”

The Thunder won the first two games of the season series with San Antonio, both of them in Oklahoma City, but they haven’t seen the Spurs since a 130-114 victory two days after Christmas.

–Field Level Media

Blazers, Pelicans meet in game with play-in implications


The Portland Trail Blazers will visit the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday night with both teams needing to catch up if they’re going to qualify for the Western Conference play-in round.

The Blazers sit in 13th place, one game behind 11th-place New Orleans and Oklahoma City. Those teams are a half-game back of the Utah Jazz for the final spot in the four-team play-in.

Portland is trying to finish .500 on a six-game trip after letting a victory slip away Friday night. The Blazers led the 76ers by as many as 21 points but lost 120-119 in Philadelphia.

Joel Embiid made a jumper from the foul line with 1.1 seconds left, and Portland couldn’t get off a final shot after falling behind for the first time all night.

“I thought for the most part we played great,” Blazers coach Chauncey Billups said. “We just came unraveled a little bit at the end.

“You’re disappointed in the loss and how we ended the game, but I’m happy with how we competed the entire night. We’ve got no reason to hang our heads. We will learn from it and move on to the next one.”

Anfernee Simons led Portland with 34 points. Jerami Grant had 24 and Damian Lillard 22.

“It’s a tough one to let go, a tough one to swallow because we played so well and we needed this game,” Lillard said. “But it’s kind of been the story of our season. We play well in stretches, and we haven’t been able to close games out great. We had our opportunities. We just let this one slip away.”

The short-handed Pelicans lost their most recent game, but they can’t say it slipped away. Oklahoma City led for nearly the entire game, building a 21-point cushion and winning 110-96 on Saturday night in New Orleans.

The Pelicans, playing without leading scorer Zion Williamson since early January, also played without second-leading scorer Brandon Ingram, who has a sprained right ankle. Ingram’s availability for Sunday’s game is uncertain.

New Orleans had no answer for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, whose 14 first-quarter points helped the Thunder build a 10-point lead after the period. He finished with 35 points and Oklahoma City was more aggressive going to the basket, finishing with an 11-point scoring edge at the foul line.

“We just didn’t bring it tonight, no excuses,” Pelicans coach Willie Green said. “We didn’t come out and match their energy on our home floor. We came out lax and turned the ball over too much.

“(We need to) take care of the ball. We’ll have more opportunities to score when we do that.”

New Orleans had 22 turnovers and Oklahoma City had 12. The Thunder outscored the Pelicans 23-8 on points off turnovers.

“This is an opportunity for guys to come up and play hard,” Green said. “We want to give ourselves an opportunity to win games, but tonight we did not. It’s a quick turnaround, so it does not get any easier. Our margin for error is small when we have guys out.”

The Pelicans and Blazers split their first two meetings this season, with the visiting team winning by 11 points in both games. The season series will conclude on March 27 in Portland.

–Field Level Media

Hornets seek to shore up defense in first of two against Cavaliers


The Charlotte Hornets are a guard-heavy team, even with point guard LaMelo Ball lost for the rest of the season with an ankle injury.

Being a little thin in the middle can be a hindrance, and the Cleveland Cavaliers are bound to try to exploit that when the teams meet Sunday in Charlotte, N.C.

After all, Cleveland makes a living at times by being sturdy in the lane and riding its defense.

“We hang our hat on being a tough-minded defensive team,” Cavaliers coach J.B. Bickerstaff said.

The Hornets slipped on their interior defense in Saturday night’s 119-111 loss to the Utah Jazz in a game that marked the beginning of a season-long five-game homestand.

“Our rim protection was nothing at all,” Hornets coach Steve Clifford said. “We’ve been playing better defensively because that has not been happening. We weren’t even close. Not close with our talk. You make mistakes with good players and they’re going to be at the rim, and that’s what happened.”

The Cavaliers and Hornets also will meet Tuesday night on the same court. It’s a strange segment of the season for Cleveland, which played back-to-back games at Miami on Wednesday and Friday nights.

“I think it’s great preparation for us for where we are right now,” Bickerstaff said of facing the same teams in consecutive games. … “Obviously, we have a long way to go and have to keep taking care of our business.”

Cleveland split those games in Miami, falling 119-115 in the rematch Friday to end a three-game winning streak.

“We could have been better in some of those (late-game) moments,” Bickerstaff said. “It’s hard to survive that offensive performance they put on in the fourth.”

These will be important games in Charlotte for the Cavaliers, as they want to stay on target for the postseason. They enter play Sunday fourth in the Eastern Conference, while the Hornets are close to being eliminated from playoff conention.

Certainly, part of the challenge from the Charlotte viewpoint will come in shoring up defensively.

“We lacked physicality, didn’t have the same mentality,” Clifford said. “You can’t play like that.”

Cleveland guard Donovan Mitchell has reached the 40-point mark in three of the past five games.

“He was carrying us,” Bickerstaff said of Mitchell’s performance in Miami. “I thought he did a great job of doing that. It wasn’t easy against a really good defensive team that was keyed to stopping him.”

Bickerstaff said flexibility in lineups has been crucial for the Cavaliers.

Cleveland’s Darius Garland was out for Friday night’s game with a quad injury, and his status might be uncertain for Sunday. He is listed as questionable on the injury report. Caris LeVert moved into the starting lineup and scored 16 points.

“Everybody has to pick up a little bit,” Bickerstaff said. “There’s not one guy who’s going to fill in and take up Darius’ production.”

Kelly Oubre Jr., who has moved back into the Charlotte starting lineup, has led the Hornets in scoring in six consecutive games. He had 24 points against the Jazz.

The Hornets are 2-4 in March. They lost Saturday night after coming off road victories against the New York Knicks and Detroit Pistons.

The Cavs and Hornets will meet again April 9 in the regular-season finale at Cleveland.

–Field Level Media

NBA roundup: Stephen Curry’s heroics propel Warriors past Bucks


Stephen Curry scored 20 of his game-high 36 points in the final 1:51 of regulation and overtime, lifting host Golden State to a 125-116 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday night in San Francisco.

Curry took over a game that the Warriors trailed 108-100 with 2:05 remaining after a 3-pointer by the Bucks’ Joe Ingles. After he almost single-handedly forced the overtime, he sandwiched a pair of Klay Thompson hoops with two- and 3-pointers of his own, giving Golden State it wouldn’t relinquish. Curry later iced Golden State’s seventh straight home win with an interior hoop and two free throws.

Thompson finished with 22 points, Donte DiVincenzo 20 and JaMychal Green a season-best 18 for the Warriors, who salvaged a split with the Eastern Conference’s top team in their two-game season series.

Brook Lopez and Khris Middleton had 19 points apiece in a balanced attack for Milwaukee, which was seeking its third straight win since Giannis Antetokounmpo left the lineup with a sore right hand.

Kings 128, Suns 119

Harrison Barnes scored 19 points and Sacramento took another step in its conversion into a playoff-caliber team by posting a road victory over Phoenix.

De’Aaron Fox and Malik Monk added 18 points apiece as Sacramento won for the eighth time in the past nine games. Domantas Sabonis registered 17 points and eight rebounds, Trey Lyles and Davion Mitchell added 13 points apiece, and Kessler Edwards contributed 12 points and seven boards for the Kings, who reached the 40-win mark for the first time since the 2005-06 season.

Devin Booker recorded 28 points and eight assists, and Deandre Ayton added 22 points and 12 rebounds for the Suns, who had a four-game winning streak halted and lost for just the sixth time in the past 22 games. Terrence Ross scored 18 points and Chris Paul had 16 points and 16 assists for Phoenix.

Clippers 106, Knicks 95

Kawhi Leonard scored 38 points on 14-of-22 shooting from the floor, and Paul George added 22 points, eight rebounds and eight assists as Los Angeles handed visiting New York its third consecutive loss.

The Clippers controlled the fourth quarter with a stifling defense, limiting the Knicks to 5-of-18 shooting from the field. Los Angeles capitalized on its stingy defense with effective offense, converting 11-of-18 field-goal attempts.

Immanuel Quickley led the Knicks with 26 points and Julius Randle added 19, but Randle finished 5 of 24 from the field.

Grizzlies 112, Mavericks 108

Desmond Bane scored 25 points and rookie David Roddy added a season-high 24 to fuel host Memphis to a victory over Dallas in the opener of a home-and-home series.

Bane added eight assists and seven rebounds, and Roddy sank four 3-pointers for the Grizzlies, who have won two in a row following a three-game skid. The teams will reconvene in Dallas on Monday night.

Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 23 points and rookie Jaden Hardy added 22. Josh Green recorded 21 points and 10 rebounds for the Mavericks, who played without stars Luka Doncic (left thigh injury) and Kyrie Irving (right foot soreness).

Celtics 134, Hawks 125

Jayson Tatum’s 34-point, 15-rebound performance helped Boston begin a six-game road trip with a victory in Atlanta.

Tatum had five of Boston’s 20 3-point field goals in the win. The Celtics, who led 101-89 after three quarters, were 20 of 42 from behind the arc.

The Hawks’ Trae Young made 12 of 27 field goals and led all scorers with 35 points. He added 13 assists.

Jazz 119, Hornets 111

Talen Horton-Tucker poured in 37 points in a dominating performance, and Utah cruised past host Charlotte.

Horton-Tucker entered the night averaging 8.5 points per game. He came within range of the first triple-double for a Jazz player since 2008 with 10 assists and eight rebounds while shooting 14-for-24 from the field.

Kelly Oubre Jr.’s 24 points and Terry Rozier’s 22 points led the Hornets, who were coming off consecutive road victories but were not efficient offensively to begin a season-long, five-game homestand.

Magic 126, Heat 114 (OT)

Wendell Carter Jr. recorded a double-double of 27 points and 11 rebounds to lead seven scorers in double figures as Orlando pulled off an overtime victory against visiting Miami.

Orlando dominated the extra period, shooting 7-for-9 from the floor. Miami went 2-for-4. Carter, Jalen Suggs and Cole Anthony each sank 3-pointers in overtime to help seal the win. Franz Wagner and Paolo Banchero each added 17 points. Banchero was just shy of a triple-double, grabbing 10 rebounds and adding a game-high nine assists.

Miami’s Jimmy Butler led all scorers with 38 points and was responsible for forcing overtime. Five Heat scorers finished in double figures, with Bam Adebayo and Tyler Herro each going for 14 points.

Pacers 121, Pistons 115

Jalen Smith led a balanced attack with 20 points and nine rebounds as Indiana handed host Detroit its 11th consecutive loss.

Isaiah Jackson had 19 points and 11 rebounds while Andrew Nembhard contributed 19 points and eight assists. Buddy Hield had 17 points and eight rebounds, while Jordan Nwora and Oshae Brissett tossed in 11 points apiece.

Isaiah Livers topped the Pistons with 18 points and Killian Hayes had 17 points and 13 assists. James Wiseman and Jalen Duren added 16 points apiece and combined for 20 rebounds.

Thunder 110, Pelicans 96

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 35 points and Oklahoma City defeated host New Orleans.

Josh Giddey scored 19, Jalen Williams added 17 and Gilgeous-Alexander made 13 of 13 free throws as the Thunder shot 27 of 32 from the foul line. The Pelicans made 16 of 19 free throws.

CJ McCollum scored 26, Trey Murphy III and Naji Marshall had 15 each, Jonas Valanciunas had 13 and Jaxson Hayes added 11 for the Pelicans, who played without Brandon Ingram (sprained ankle). New Orleans committed 22 turnovers.

Bulls 119, Rockets 111

Zach LaVine scored a game-high 36 points while DeMar DeRozan chipped in 27 points as Chicago rallied for a road victory over Houston.

Vucevic (18 points, 12 rebounds) and Beverley (16 points, 10 rebounds) produced double-doubles in support of LaVine and DeRozan, who finished with eight and seven boards, respectively. Beverley, DeRozan and LaVine recorded five assists apiece while Vucevic dished out six assists.

Rookie Jabari Smith Jr. led Houston with 20 points and 10 rebounds while Jalen Green added 18 points and seven assists. Five others scored in double figures, but the Rockets had 16 turnovers converted into 23 points.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: WBC roundup: Shohei Ohtani, unbeaten Japan head to quarterfinals


Shohei Ohtani smashed a 448-foot, three-run homer in the first inning and drove in four runs as Japan remained unbeaten and handed Australia its first loss, 7-1, in World Baseball Classic Pool B play in Tokyo on Sunday.

Ohtani’s bases-loaded walk in the fourth extended the lead to 6-0 for Japan (4-0), which already had clinched its spot in the quarterfinals.

Starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto allowed just one hit and struck out eight over four shutout innings. Australia (2-1) had only five hits, including Alex Hall’s solo homer in the ninth.

Italy 7, Netherlands 1

Italy erupted for six runs in the fourth inning to defeat the Netherlands in Taichung City, Taiwan. All five teams in the pool finished at 2-2, but with the win, Italy advanced to join Cuba in the quarterfinals from Pool A.

After the Dutch took a 1-0 lead on Chadwick Tromp’s third-inning homer, Italy batted around in the bottom of the fourth. Brett Sullivan, Ben DeLuzio and Sal Frelick had RBI singles and Nicky Lopez capped the inning with a two-run triple.

Italy starter Matt Harvey allowed one run on two hits in four innings, striking out three and walking none.

Venezuela 5, Dominican Republic 1

Anthony Santander went 2-for-4 with a triple, a home run and two runs to lead Venezuela past the Dominican Republic in the opening day of Pool D play in Miami.

The Dominican Republic (0-1) took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first on Juan Soto’s RBI double and did not score again. Reigning National League Cy Young winner Sandy Alcantara took the loss for the Dominican Republic, giving up three runs and five hits in 3 2/3 innings.

Jose Ruiz earned the win in relief for Venezuela (1-0) and Luis Garcia struck out seven batters in three innings of relief.

South Korea 7, Czech Republic 3

Ha-Seong Kim and Tommy Edman drove in two runs apiece to lead South Korea past the Czech Republic in Tokyo in Pool B play, where one spot in the quarterfinals remains up for grabs.

South Korea scored five runs in the first inning off Lukas Ercoli, who gave up six runs on eight hits in 1 1/3 innings.

Se Woong Park earned the win for South Korea.

Both teams stand 1-2 in pool play.

Cuba 7, Taiwan 1

Erisbel Arruebarrena’s two-run homer capped a four-run first inning and Cuba clinched a spot in the quarterfinals with a victory over Taiwan in Taichung City.

Yoan Moncada was 3 for -4 with a solo homer in the second inning and Alfredo Despaigne and Roel Santos each had two hits and two RBIs as Cuba won its second straight game in Pool A action and advanced to the next round.

Taiwan managed only four hits and avoided a shutout with Yu Chang’s one-out RBI double in the ninth.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Red Sox LHP Chris Sale won’t start Opening Day


Boston Red Sox left-hander Chris Sale will not pitch on Opening Day, manager Alex Cora confirmed Sunday.

Cora said that was the plan along for the seven-time All-Star, who has pitched only 48 1/3 innings since 2019.

Instead, Cora said there’s a “good chance” that right-hander Corey Kluber will get the honor of facing Baltimore in the March 30 opener at Fenway Park.

Kluber, who turns 37 in April, signed a one-year, $10 million contract with the Red Sox in December. The two-time Cy Young Award winner went 10-10 with a 4.34 ERA in 31 starts last season for the Tampa Bay Rays.

Sale, 33, was limited to two starts and 5 2/3 innings in 2022 due to a rib stress fracture, a finger fracture and a broken right wrist. The latter resulted from a bicycle accident and ended his season.

–Field Level Media

MLB News: Nolan Arenado leads U.S. past Britain in WBC, 6-2


PHOENIX — Nolan Arenado had three hits, including two doubles, and Kyle Schwarber blasted a three-run home run to lead the U.S. to a 6-2 win over Great Britain in the World Baseball Classic opener for both teams in Phoenix.

Arenado, batting cleanup, finished 3-for-4 with two RBIs in the Pool C game of the World Baseball Classic.

His St. Louis Cardinals teammate Paul Goldschmidt scored three runs batting ahead of Arenado in the order.

Great Britain’s second batter of the game, Trayce Thompson, opened the scoring by hitting a home run to center field off Adam Wainwright, another member of the Cardinals.

Wainwright, a 41-year-old veteran right-hander, lasted four innings and was credited with the win, per World Baseball Classic pitch-count rules.

Wainwright threw 49 pitches (36 for strikes) and scattered five hits with four strikeouts and a walk.

Arenado sparked a two-run rally in the bottom of the third inning.

He hit an RBI double with one out against Great Britain starter Vance Worley, the losing pitcher who was relieved by Jake Esch with two outs in the third after walking Trea Turner.

Kyle Tucker, the first batter Esch faced, lined a single to center to score Arenado to give the U.S. a 2-1 lead.

Esch was relieved by Ryan Long with one out in the fourth after walking Mike Trout and hitting Goldschmidt with a pitch.

After Arenado popped up for the second out, Schwarber followed with his three-run home run to center field that gave the U.S. a 5-1 lead.

The lead increased to 6-1 in the sixth when Goldschmidt singled off reliever Daniel Cooper to lead off the inning and then scored on Arenado’s double.

Great Britain’s D’Shawn Knowles tripled with one out in the seventh off reliever Kyle Freeland and scored on Anfernee Seymour’s groundout to cut the lead to 6-2.

The U.S. is trying to defend its 2017 World Baseball Classic title while Great Britain qualified for the event for the first time.

–Field Level Media

PGA News: Scottie Scheffler closes strong, takes lead at The Players

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Scottie Scheffler shot 7-under par 65 with birdies on two of the final three holes Saturday to hold a one-shot lead going into the final day of The Players Championship on the TPC Sawgrass course at Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.

Min Woo Lee of Australia shot 66, but his bogey on the 18th hole to close out the third round dropped him out of a share of the lead before Scheffler sank another birdie putt for a late two-shot swing.

“I just stick to my routine, that’s pretty much it,” Scheffler said, on his approach to the daunting group of closing holes. “Just remember to breathe, and breathing is part of my routine, and I’ve imagined being in those moments and so I know that I’m prepared to be in them.”

Cam Davis of Australia (67) is alone in third place at 10 under. The English duo of Tommy Fleetwood (65) and Aaron Rai (65) are in a group of four tied for fourth place at 9 under, along with Chad Ramey (68) and South Africa’s Christiaan Bezuidenhout (69).

Tom Hoge broke the course record with 10-under 62, shooting 31 on each side and going through the third round without a bogey. His 10 birdies in the round allowed him to rocket forward into a tie for eighth place at 8 under, while putting an opening-round 78 in the past.

“I didn’t even know it was a course record until after we got done,” Hoge said. “Today was going to be the day to do it … because it was soft with little wind, so you felt like you could make birdies and keep trying to make birdies. So just felt fortunate and tried to take advantage of it the best I could.”

Because Friday storms resulted in a suspension of play the second round was completed Saturday morning. The third round followed and was conducted with players in groups of three, starting on the first and 10th tees.

While Scheffler was 2 under on the back nine, with his birdies at Nos. 16 and 18 to close his third round, he put together a wild ride on the front. He had a birdie at No. 1, an eagle 3 at No. 2, birdies at Nos. 5, 8 and 9, with a bogey 5 at No. 7. It was his lowest career round at The Players Championship.

“I got off to a nice start, which is always good. Kept it rolling from there, gave myself a lot of looks,” Scheffler said. “Good finish as well. So overall very solid day, only one bogey, which is really good around this golf course.”

Lee began the third round with an eagle on the par-4 first hole and had birdies at No. 5 4, 6 and 9 to shoot 31 on the front nine.

Rai delivered a hole-in-one at the iconic 17th with its island green, while playing the final three holes in 4 under.

“In the second after (the ace), I looked to the right towards my caddie and he came running at me. So it happened very fast,” Rai said. “But it feels very vivid now. … I couldn’t quite believe that it happened, but very, very special. Very special. Something I’ll always remember.”

Adam Svensson held the lead after the second round was complete Saturday morning. He was two shots in front of Scheffler, the 2022 Masters champion, at the start of the third round. Svensson fell off the pace with a 75 in the third round to land in a 12-way tie for 14th place at 6 under.

Unable to make the two-round cut was Rory McIlroy, who shot 76 and 73 and finished his two rounds at 5 over. World No. 1 Jon Rahm withdrew before the second round because of illness, only Scheffler advancing to the third round among the top three ranked players in the world.

McIlroy said his leadership that has been evident in his unwavering support of the PGA Tour in the battle against the rival LIV Golf has taken a toll.

“I’m ready to get back to being purely a golfer,” McIlroy said.

–Field Level Media