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LPGA News: Solheim Cup opener pits U.S. vets against Swedish rookies

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United States captain Stacy Lewis has five rookies on her team this week, but she went with experience to kick off the 2023 Solheim Cup in Spain on Friday.

The U.S. will hit the first tee shots of the event in Foursomes, and Lewis went with Solheim Cup veterans Lexi Thompson and Megan Khang as her first pairing.

Thompson was an automatic qualifier despite slipping to 26th in the Rolex Rankings and missing seven of her past 11 cuts, but Lewis said she likes what she has seen out of the former major champion ahead of her sixth Solheim Cup. Khang, who won the Portland Classic earlier this month, is in her third Solheim Cup.

“I wanted to get off to a good start. I wanted to get out four really good pairings and that’s kind of been my focus this whole time,” Lewis said. “Lexi has looked unbelievable this week and that was part of reason that she’s in there. I think she’s got the most experience on our team, and I wanted her to go out there and have that first tee shot.

“I think she’s earned it.”

European captain Suzann Pettersen took a distinctly different approach, as the Europeans will open with the Swedish duo of Linn Grant and Maja Start, two of the team’s three rookies.

“I think I’ve almost had ’em set first out for a year now, literally, since they both played in Europe,” Pettersen said. “I just thought it would be so — such a cool experience for them to lead off here in Spain.

“They’re two great friends. They’ve obviously played a lot together through the juniors, so know each other really well, and they had a big desire to play, so I’m just going to let them.”

Lewis will get three of her rookies involved in the first session, with Andrea Lee, Allisen Corpuz and Cheyenne Knight each paired with a Solheim Cup veteran. Europe’s third rookie, Gemma Dryburgh, is not slated to play in the morning.

FRIDAY FOURSOMES
(All times local in Spain)
8:10 a.m.: Lexi Thompson/Megan Khang vs. Linn Grant/Maja Stark
8:22 a.m.: Danielle Kang/Andrea Lee vs. Celine Boutier/Georgia Hall
8:34 a.m.: Nelly Korda/Allisen Corpuz vs. Leona Maguire/Anna Nordqvist
8:46 a.m.: Ally Ewing/Cheyenne Knight vs. Charley Hull/Emily Kristine Pedersen

While Lewis said each of her 12 players will see action Friday, Pettersen is taking a wait-and-see approach before committing to her Fourball pairings.

“We don’t quite know yet what the Friday afternoon looks like. We’ll see how the morning goes and kind of we’ll take it from there. We have a plan A, B, C and D,” Pettersen said laughing. “But I mean, as a player, you would love to get out there and play, for sure.”

One of the surprises from the opening session was the absence of Lilia Vu from Lewis’ pairings. The top-ranked player on either side at No. 2 in the Rolex Rankings, Vu has a pair of majors among her three wins this year.

“I don’t see anybody playing all five sessions. So they all needed some rest at some point and just wanted to give her the morning to just kind of regroup and get herself together,” Lewis said.

“She somewhat asked for it a little bit, somewhat didn’t. It was kind of my idea. You’re going to see her a lot, other than that first session. You don’t win two majors and sit on the sideline for very long.”

COMPETITION SCHEDULE
(All times local in Spain)
Friday:
Foursomes – 8:10-8:46 a.m. (Four matches, 12-minute tee-off intervals)
Fourball – 1:40-2:25 p.m. (Four matches, 15-minute tee-off intervals)

Saturday:
Foursomes – 8:10-8:46 a.m. (Four matches, 12-minute tee-off intervals)
Fourball – 1:40-2:25 p.m. (Four matches, 15-minute tee-off intervals

Sunday:
Singles – 11:10 a.m.-1:22 p.m. (12 matches, 12-minute tee-off intervals)

–Field Level Media

LPGA News: Young U.S. Solheim Cup team bonding in underdog role

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Both captains have acknowledged that the United States is the underdog entering this week’s Solheim Cup.

The Europeans are the two-time defending champions as they seek a three-peat on home soil in Spain. They also have a significant edge in experience, averaging 28.25 years of age to the Americans’ 25.83.

Among the 12-player rosters, Europe has three rookies and a combined 62-43-13 Solheim Cup record. By comparison the U.S. is a combined 24-26-3 in past Cups and have five rookies on their roster.

“Our rookies also have three major championships,” said Nelly Korda, herself a major champion.

While United States captain Stacy Lewis acknowledged the Europeans are the favorites this week, some of her veteran players are also reminding people that the Americans have impressive resumes in their own right.

Korda has been ranked No. 1 multiple times in her young career. She’s currently No. 3, with the top 10 also including USA teammates Lilia Vu (No. 2) and Allisen Corpuz (No. 9). Corpuz won this year’s U.S. Women’s Open, while Vu captured the first major of the year at the Chevron Championship.

They are two of Lewis’ five rookies. Another, Rose Zhang, won her first career start as a pro in June and followed it up with top-10s in each of the next three majors. Cheyenne Knight has also won this year, while Andrea Lee enters the Solheim Cup with no worse than a T13 in her past five starts.

“I joke that our rookies aren’t really rookies,” Megan Khang said ahead of her third Solheim Cup. “I think both teams are stacked very well. We have a little more rookies on our team, but it’s going to be a good week to watch some golf.”

The American team is also leaning heavily on the wealth of experience Lewis has compiled among her assistants. Natalie Gulbis, Morgan Pressel and Angela Stanford are all Solheim Cup veterans who will be walking with the groups along the hilly terrain at Finca Cortesin.

“Morgan came out and walked with Angel (Yin) and Lexi (Thompson) and me,” Khang said after Thursday’s practice round. “There were some missed shots we hit, and Morgan is right there telling us, like, ‘Hey, it’s OK. … Let’s hit another one. Let’s do this. Let’s do that.’ Telling us and reassuring us that it’s OK today to have these missed shots.

“Missed shots are going to happen. Knowing that your assistant captain, your partner and your captain, your whole entire team is going to be like, ‘Hey, we’re all trying our best.’ I think that’s definitely a huge part in this environment and team golf that we don’t get to play often.”

Khang said the U.S. team is working its way through jet lag since arriving in Spain on Sunday, but bonding over bus rides and team meals.

“We brought a speaker on the bus and kind of pumped each other up to like get us in a mood, like, ‘Hey, we’re in Spain, we are here representing our country being, let’s get it going,” she said. “So, just kind of like bringing the mood up, letting everyone know that we are here to crush it out here and just do our best and have fun while we’re doing it.

“And let’s kind of keep the positive energy going from the start and kind of finish out the week that way.”

–Field Level Media

CFL News: Roughriders look to end skid against struggling Redblacks


The Saskatchewan Roughriders will try to plug their leaky run defense when they visit the Ottawa Redblacks on Friday night.

The Roughriders (6-7) have lost two in a row while chasing a playoff berth, giving up 51 points to Winnipeg on Sept. 9 and allowing four more touchdowns in last Friday’s 36-27 home loss to Edmonton.

Saskatchewan has surrendered a league-high 40 touchdowns and 389 points this season. They gave up a whopping 263 rushing yards to the Blue Bombers and 265 more to the Elks.

“We invite people to run the ball,” Riders defensive coordinator Jason Shivers said, per the Leader Post. “We just got to do better with fits, on the perimeter, stopping the ball, boxing it, setting a new boundary, setting the ball back so our interior guys can run down the line and make plays.”

Saskatchewan won the first meeting with Ottawa (3-10) by a 26-24 score on Aug. 6 in Regina, limiting the Redblacks to just 222 net yards of offense and only 92 on the ground (on 26 rushing plays).

The Roughriders have lost their last four road games, however, outscored by a 142-40 margin.

Ottawa is on a seven-game losing streak after allowing 23 unanswered points in the fourth quarter of a 41-37 loss at the B.C. Lions last Saturday.

Despite being all but eliminated from playoff contention, defensive lineman Nigel Romick said the Redblacks are still fighting.

“These guys care so much,” he said, per the Ottawa Sun. “… We’re here every day, putting in a lot of work. That’s the most frustrating part, putting all this work in.

“You just go out there and prepare the exact same. There’s still a chance.”

The Roughriders listed eight players out on the injury report, including running back Jamal Morrow, defensive lineman Anthony Lanier II and defensive back Nelson Lokombo.

The Redblacks will be without kicker Lewis Ward, linebacker Deshawn Stevens, running back Jackson Bennett and wide receiver Nate Behar.

–Field Level Media

DOTA News: Spirit, Shopify cruise to DreamLeague Season 21 upper-bracket final


Shopify Rebellion and Team Spirit advanced to the upper-bracket final at DreamLeague Season 21 on Thursday.

Shopify rallied past BetBoom Team 2-1 and Team Spirit swept Tundra Esports 2-0, one day after they won their respective groups in the Group Stage.

Meanwhile, Gaimin Gladiators defeated Quest Esports 2-0 in a Group B tiebreaker Thursday that slotted Gaimin Gladiators into the playoffs’ lower bracket and knocked Quest out of the competition.

Twelve teams from around the world are competing at the $1 million DreamLeague Season 21 event. The group stage ran Monday through Wednesday with two round-robin groups of six teams. The top two teams from each group advanced to the upper bracket of the playoffs, the third- and fourth-place teams advanced to the lower bracket and the rest were eliminated.

The playoffs run Thursday through Sunday in a double-elimination bracket. All matches are best-of-three until the grand final, which is best-of-five.

On Thursday, BetBoom opened its match with a 44-minute win on green before Shopify answered with a 33-minute win on red. In the deciding match, Shopify needed 53 minutes while playing on green to knock off BetBoom. Canadian-Uzbek player Artour “Arteezy” Babaev had 10 kills and nine assists on the final map to fuel Shopify.

Team Spirit took care of Tundra with wins on red in 48 minutes and on green in 45 minutes. Magomed “Collapse” Khalilov of Russia averaged a 13.0-1.5-13.0 kills-deaths-assists ratio for Spirit.

In the Group B tiebreaker, Gaimin Gladiators topped Quest, winning in 33 minutes and 31 minutes, both times on green. Marcus “Ace” Hoelgaard Christensen of Denmark averaged a 6.5-3.0-12.5 K-D-A to power Gladiators.

Action continues Thursday with three matches:
–Entity vs. Gaimin Gladiators (lower-bracket Round 1)
–OG vs. 9Pandas (lower-bracket Round 1)
–BetBoom Team vs. Entity-Gaimin Gladiators winner (lower-bracket quarterfinals)

DreamLeague Season 21 prize pool:
1. $300,000
2. $175,000
3. $120,000
4. $85,000
5-6. $57,500
7-8. $47,500
9-10. $30,000 — Team Liquid, Evil Geniuses
11-12. $25,000 — Talon Esports, Quest Esports

–Field Level Media

CSGO News: Complexity, G2 notch key wins at ESL Pro League Season 18


Complexity Gaming and G2 Esports advanced to the Group D upper-bracket final with wins Thursday at the ESL Pro League Season 18 event in Malta.

Complexity swept Cloud9 2-0 and G2 got by Virtus.pro 2-1, knocking those opponents into the mid bracket.

Meanwhile, Eternal Fire got by 9INE and Team Liquid topped Lynn Vision Gaming, both by 2-0 scores, to open mid-bracket play. The losing clubs dropped into the lower bracket.

The $850,000 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive event features 32 teams broken up into four groups of eight. Group-stage winners advance to the quarterfinals; runners-up advance to the Round of 12 as the high seeds; third-place teams advance to the Round of 16 as the high seeds; and fourth-place teams advance to the Round of 16 as the low seeds.

The group stage is triple elimination with upper, middle and lower brackets. All matches are best-of-three until the grand final, which is best-of-five.

The tournament runs through Oct. 1. The winner earns $200,000 and qualifies for the 2024 IEM Katowice event and the 2023 BLAST World Final.

On Thursday, Complexity beat Cloud9 16-13 on Anubis and 16-6 on Ancient. Ricky ‘floppy’ Kemery of the U.S. racked up 49 kills and a plus-21 kills-to-deaths differential to lead Complexity.

G2 opened with a 16-6 win on Mirage before Virtus.pro fought back with a 16-10 result on Inferno. The final map was Ancient, where G2 cruised, 16-5. Ilya “m0NESY” Osipov of Russia powered G2 with 57 kills on a plus-22 K-D.

Eternal Fire beat 9INE in 19-15 in overtime on Anubis and 16-11 on Vertigo. The all-Turkish victors were led by Ozgur “woxic” Eker’s 51 kills on a plus-16.

Liquid defeated Lynn Vision 16-9 on Anubis and 16-6 on Ancient. Bulgarian Aleks “Rainwaker” Petrov put up 46 kills on a plus-25 differential for Liquid.

Group D action continues Friday with two matches:
–Virtus.pro vs. Eternal Fire (mid-bracket quarterfinals)
–Cloud9 vs. Team Liquid (mid-bracket quarterfinals)

ESL Pro League Season 18 prize pool
1. $200,000, 3,000 BLAST Premier points — TBD
2. $90,000, 2,000 BLAST points — TBD
3-4. $50,000, 1,200 points — TBD
5-8. $35,000, 500 points — TBD
9-12. $25,000 — TBD
13-16. $20,000 — TBD
17-20. $15,000 — Gamer Legion, MIBR, 5yclone, TBD
21-28. $8,000 — Ninjas in Pyjamas, Grayhound Gaming, Heroic, Evil Geniuses, Imperial Esports, Apeks, two teams TBD
29-32. $4,000 — ORKS, Rooster, M80, TBD

–Field Level Media

CSGO News: Astralis captain blameF signs contract extension


Benjamin “blameF” Bremer signed a contract extension to remain with Astralis until the end of the 2025 season, the Danish organization announced Thursday.

blameF, who serves as in-game leader for Astralis’ Counter-Strike team, is now the longest-tenured competitor on the club. The 26-year-old joined Astralis in November 2021.

“(blameF) has proven his potential and is becoming a strong, modern leader who sets his own clear direction while also being good at listening and involving his teammates,” said Kasper Traube, Astralis’ sporting director.

“His dedication and collaboration with the team’s other natural leader, (Nicolai “dev1ce” Reedtz), has been extremely important to the rebuilding of the team, and I am extremely happy about this extension.”

blameF, who previously competed with Heroic and Complexity Gaming among other clubs, also was happy about the extension.

“Today, Astralis is where I most want to be and the team I most want to be a part of,” he said. “We are in a really exciting process, and I am developing as a player.

“Astralis has done a lot of right things over the years, and there are many who should be given credit for what the team has achieved. It is never about one person, but with Kasper Straube, we feel re-energized, and together with all those who work hard every single day for us to succeed, his approach to performance has had a great significance for me.”

Astralis’ all-Danish roster consists of blameF, dev1ce, Christian “Buzz” Andersen, Johannes “b0RUP” Borup and Victor “Staehr” Staehr. Countryman Peter “casle” Ardenskjold is the coach, while fellow Dane Lukas “gla1ve” Rossander is inactive.

–Field Level Media

Splunk Stock Jumps 20 percent on Cisco’s Acquisition Announcement

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Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) and Splunk (NASDAQ:SPLK) have reached a definitive agreement, with Cisco planning to purchase Splunk for $157 per share in cash, amounting to a total transaction value of approximately $28 billion. This announcement caused Cisco’s stock to drop by nearly 5%, while Splunk shares jumped more than 20% pre-market today.
Once the acquisition is finalized, Gary Steele, the current President and CEO of Splunk, will join Cisco’s Executive Leadership Team, reporting to Chair and CEO Chuck Robbins. The transaction is anticipated to close by the end of the third quarter of the 2024 calendar year. Cisco expects the acquisition to have a positive impact on cash flow and gross margin in the first fiscal year after completion, with non-GAAP earnings per share (EPS) becoming accretive in the second year.

Lululemon Athletica’s Strong Buy Rating Reiterated at Raymond James

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Raymond James analysts reaffirmed their Strong Buy rating on Lululemon Athletica (NASDAQ:LULU) and maintained a price target of $440.00.
The analysts’ assessment highlighted Lululemon’s status as one of the highest-quality companies in the global brand landscape. They recognize Lululemon as a robust and still-evolving brand with substantial growth opportunities.
The analysts pointed out that Lululemon boasts one of the highest growth rates compared to its peers as it continues to expand its core business and diversify across various geographies, categories, and sales channels. Additionally, the company’s operating margins rank among the highest for global brands, and the analysts believe there is room for further expansion, driven by strong revenue growth, which should lead to earnings-per-share (EPS) growth surpassing revenue growth.

Mizuho is Enthusiastic About Western Digital

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Mizuho analysts are enthusiastic about Western Digital (NASDAQ:WDC) as a strong long-term investment. They see the company as a compelling opportunity due to under-ownership and the positive impact of NAND production cutbacks on spot pricing.
The analysts believe that Western Digital’s NAND business is poised for growth, with rising spot pricing and increased NAND demand from smartphone manufacturers. Additionally, they noted the impending split of Western Digital’s business, with the NAND division set to merge with Kioxia, potentially boosting its valuation.

Five9 Upgraded to Buy at Deutsche Bank

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Deutsche Bank analysts revised their position on the software company Five9 (NASDAQ:FIVN) in a note issued on Thursday. The firm has upgraded its rating from Hold to Buy and increased the price target for Five9’s shares from $75 to $80 per share. This adjustment suggests a potential 20% upside for the stock.
The analysts explained that the recent strength in bookings is expected to reinvigorate the company’s revenue growth, and the current valuation is roughly half of what it was a year ago.
Earlier in the week, Canaccord analysts also expressed a positive view on Five9, stating that the stock appears undervalued and is a high-conviction buy in a market that is increasingly embracing AI.
While Deutsche Bank acknowledges certain risks and bearish arguments, including potential short-term macroeconomic challenges and concerns related to AI and automation, it believes that the recent share price pullback creates a more attractive risk-reward profile for investors.