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Home Blog Page 8688

PGA News: Tony Finau, Aaron Wise among co-leaders at Houston Open

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Tony Finau sank a 35 1/2-foot birdie putt on his final hole to shoot a 5-under 65, joining a tie for the lead at the Cadence Bank Houston Open when the first round was suspended Thursday.

Thirteen players had yet to complete their rounds when play was called due to darkness in Houston. That included Americans Tyson Alexander, a co-leader at 5 under with Finau, Aaron Wise and Sweden’s Alex Noren. Those 13 will complete their rounds Friday morning.

Finau began his round on the back nine at Memorial Park Golf Course and made one birdie and one bogey. He heated up after making the turn and rolled in five birdies on the front nine, punctuated by a downhill, left-to-right putt that tracked straight into the cup at the par-3 ninth hole.

It wasn’t close to his longest putt of the day. Finau made a 59-footer for birdie at the par-3 second.

“I knew the golf course, it’s a tough golf course to play,” Finau said. “You have to drive it in the fairway and your work’s not done, it’s hard to hit the greens. You know if you miss the green, it’s hard to get up and down, so I was just patient with myself. I made a couple bombs — I think that kind of opened it up.”

Wise had a bogey-free card with four straight birdies at Nos. 3-6.

“I’ve just been in a weird place with my game where I’m obviously playing well enough to shoot good scores, but there’s just a couple shots a round that are frustrating me,” said Wise, the No. 34 golfer in the world rankings, who’s seeking his second PGA Tour victory.

“Overall, even though I let it frustrate me for a second or two, I did a good job of staying patient, kind of letting it go. And I had a couple great saves to shoot bogey-free. Sometimes you shoot bogey-free and you hit 18 greens and it was just an easy round. Today, it was bogey-free on the card, but it didn’t feel stress-free.”

Noren also started on the back nine and was even par through 10 holes before birdieing Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 6. He stuck his tee shot at the par-3 ninth to 8 feet from the pin to set up his final birdie.

“The whole thing about this course, anything under par is good,” Noren said. “Today I managed to make birdie on holes like 18, and 9 is a little tricky. You know, when you get those, it definitely helps, and you’ve got a couple wedges, but it’s a strong course.”

The four co-leaders are one shot ahead of a large tie at 4 under. David Lipsky, Wyndham Clark, Max McGreevy, Keith Mitchell and Canadians Mackenzie Hughes and Taylor Pendrith were in the clubhouse with rounds of 66. Zack Fischer and England’s Ben Taylor still had one and two holes to go, respectively.

Englishman Justin Rose was part of another big knot at 3-under 67. The veteran had six birdies but was hampered by three bogeys.

“Drove the ball well today. Hit the first 11 straight fairways, so I think that’s what you have to do on this golf course,” Rose said. “What I didn’t do well today was sort of some mid- to long-iron play and into these types of green complexes, you do have to hit pretty solid iron shots. If you do miss and you’re on the wrong side of a knob or a mound, it’s quite hard to get the ball up and down. So that’s just the little area I’d like to have done better today.”

Other notable names included Australian Jason Day, Gary Woodland, Zach Johnson and Italy’s Francesco Molinari at 1-under 69. The two most recent Masters champions, Scottie Scheffler and Hideki Matsuyama of Japan, were at even-par 70.

–Field Level Media

TechTarget Shares Plummet 13 percent Following Q3 Results Announcement

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TechTarget, Inc. (NASDAQ:TTGT) shares plunged more than 13% Thursday afternoon following the company’s reported Q3 results, with revenues of $77.41 million missing the Street estimate by 3.54%.
Deutsche Bank downgraded the company to hold from buy and lowered its price target to $45 from $85. Given the company’s exposure to technology sales and marketing spend, the analysts believe Q3 results were somewhat expected by investors especially post ZoomInfo’s recent disappointment and negative headlines regarding IT demand/ headcount reductions. However, the analysts mentioned that the magnitude of the guidance cut was more than they could have anticipated.
The analysts expect persistent IT spending headwinds and technology firms cutting back on sales & marketing to continue weighing on the company’s otherwise strong value proposition.

ATP News: Brandon Nakashima, Dominic Stricker sweep groups at Next Gen ATP Finals

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Brandon Nakashima and Dominic Stricker swept their respective groups and advanced to the semifinals of the Next Gen ATP Finals on Thursday in Milan, Italy.

They’ll be joined by Jiri Lehecka and Jack Draper, who won do-or-die matches Thursday to earn second place in their respective groups.

The tournament includes the world’s top eight 21-and-under players, who were separated into two groups for round-robin play. The winner of each group will face the runner-up from the other group in the semifinals.

In the event’s unique format that features no-ad scoring and sets to four games, with tiebreakers at 3-3, Nakashima beat Italy’s Francesco Passaro 4-3 (4), 4-2, 4-1 to go 3-0 in the Green Group. The American had six aces and broke Passaro’s serve three times in five opportunities.

Lehecka, from the Czech Republic, beat Italian Matteo Arnaldi 4-3 (5), 4-1, 4-3 (4). Lehecka saved all six break points he faced.

In the Red Group, Switzerland’s Stricker beat Chun-Hsin Tseng of Taiwan 4-2, 4-1, 4-2 in just under 57 minutes.

Great Britain’s Draper took down Italian Lorenzo Musetti — the highest-seeded player in the field coming in — 4-1, 4-0, 4-3 (3). Both players were 1-1 in the group entering the match, making it a win-and-in situation.

Nakashima and Draper will face off in one semifinal on Friday, while Stricker and Lehecka will play in the other.

Next Gen ATP Finals group standings:
Green Group
1. Brandon Nakashima, 3-0
2. Jiri Lehecka, 2-1
3. Francesco Passaro, 1-2
4. Matteo Arnaldi, 0-3

Red Group
1. Dominic Stricker, 3-0
2. Jack Draper, 2-1
2. Lorenzo Musetti, 1-2
4. Chun-Hsin Tseng, 0-3

–Field Level Media

CHAMP News: John Huston, two others tied for lead after one round at Charles Schwab


John Huston, Canada’s Stephen Ames and New Zealand’s Steven Alker shot matching scores and sprinted out to a one-stroke lead after one round of play at the Charles Schwab Cup Championship in Phoenix Thursday.

The trio carded 6-under 65s, though each golfer took a different path to get into a share of the lead.

Huston, picked for a middling finish, surged up the pack immediately by scoring birdies on holes 1-2, again finished a stroke under on 5 and 6, then rallied from a bogey on 8 to finish with three birdies on the final five holes (14, 16, 18).

In what was a fast round, Huston credited his normally quick play as helping.

“I think I’m really decisive,” Huston said. “I try not to second guess anything and I’m always ready to hit when it’s my turn and I don’t take a bunch of practice swings. I don’t take any.”

Ames, who scored four birdies over a five-hole stretch from 2-6, cited his overall game as a reason for his strong play.

“A bit of everything,” Ames said. “Hit the ball nicely and my putter got a little hot a couple holes, which is nice. I mean, that’s the majority of the round. Didn’t do anything foolish, kept the ball in play. Made it quite simple, easy, which is nice. Like those 65s.”

Alker, on the other hand, was tabbed the favorite for the championship from the start, and his hallmark, consistency, was on full display Thursday. If there’s any pressure in being the frontrunner, Alker hasn’t felt it yet.

“I’ve been hunted since May, so it’s no — there’s no problem,” he said. “It felt fine. It was like, you know, just another week. Yeah, I’ve got a bullseye there, but to be honest, no.”

Two golfers are a stroke back at 5 under, Germany’s Bernhard Langer and Ireland’s Padraig Harrington.

The rest of the top ten is represented by five players in a tie for sixth at 4 under: Brian Gay, Lee Janzen, Gene Sauers, Spain’s Miguel Angel Jimenez and Thailand’s Thongchai Jaidee.

–Field Level Media

Bumble Shares Up 10 percent Despite Q3 Revenue Miss & Weak Guidance

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Bumble (NASDAQ:BMBL) shares rose around 10% on Thursday despite the company’s reported disappointing Q3 results and worse-than-expected guidance. Q3 EPS came in at $0.14, better than the Street estimate of $0.01, while revenue of $232.6 million missed the Street estimate of $238.27 million.
While underlying trends certainly appear healthy, the combination of intensifying FX headwinds, product rollout delays, and macro-related softness led to a Q3 revenue miss as well as weak Q4 guidance. The company expects Q4/22 revenue to be in the range of $232-237 million, worse than the Street estimate of $254.46 million.
While below the Street, analysts at Deutsche Bank believe the buyside was already anticipating this level of growth and therefore, they think the initial look into fiscal 2023 could remove the guidance overhang on the stock. Beyond the financials, the company appeared upbeat on the early results from the newly launched features (Compliments/ Student Package) and highlighted that 2023 would be a year characterized by continued product enhancements and new international market launches which should yet again tilt the growth algorithm to payer additions.

Xavier looks to keep rolling on home court, faces Montana


Xavier University continues its season-opening four-game homestand on Friday night when it welcomes the Montana Grizzlies in the first meeting between the two schools.

Xavier, which will enjoy a sold-out crowd for the second straight game, is looking for its sixth win in a row at Cintas Center.

Souley Boum made an impressive Xavier debut in Xavier’s season-opening win over Morgan State on Monday night, scoring a game-high 23 points. Colby Jones added a career-high nine assists to go with 15 points, six rebounds, three steals and three blocks.

In the first game of his second stint as Xavier head coach, Sean Miller watched his Musketeers use a 31-5 run to close out the first half and coast to a 96-73 win.

“The crowd was incredible. Maybe it’s because I’ve been gone for so long, but I can’t imagine in college basketball (anyplace better) than what we have here at the Cintas Center. It has everything, and when you have the home court we have, you feel responsible for having a good team,” Miller said.

Montana opened the season with a 91-63 loss to Duquesne in Pittsburgh. The Dukes used hot shooting and full-court pressure defense to disrupt Montana and end the first half on a 31-7 run.

Trailing 45-19 at the half, Montana had little hope of getting back in the game as Duquesne shot a blistering 64.4 percent from the floor.

The Grizzlies were cold offensively, going the final 13 minutes of the opening half without a field goal. Montana improved offensively in the second half, scoring 44 points, but it could not make a threat down the stretch.

“You don’t know where you’re at until you compete and get after it. You don’t know how tough you are until you’ve been in a fight,” Montana head coach Travis DeCuire said.

“For us, I thought we got off to a decent start offensively. I don’t know that we were ever defending very well. Game was close and then the pressure came. Pressure busts pipes. They forced a couple of turnovers for easy baskets, momentum, and we never really snapped out of it,” DeCuire said.

–Field Level Media

DJ Horne helps Arizona State cruise to win over NAU


DJ Horne scored 18 of his 25 points in the first half to lead Arizona State to an 84-68 victory over Northern Arizona on Thursday night at Tempe, Ariz.

Devan Cambridge added 16 points and Marcus Bagley and Warren Washington each had 12 for the Sun Devils (2-0). Frankie Collins contributed eight assists for Arizona State, which never trailed in the contest.

Jalen Cone scored 17 points for the Lumberjacks (0-2), who trailed by as many as 35 points before cutting the deficit to 11 in the final minutes. Liam Lloyd and Ezekiel Richards added 11 points apiece before fouling out for Northern Arizona.

Arizona State shot 54.2 percent from the field, including 9 of 17 from 3-point range. Horne sank four 3-pointers and Cambridge made three.

The Sun Devils had a 40-23 rebounding advantage and a 22-8 edge in fastbreak points.

Northern Arizona made 12 of its last 15 shots to finish at 42.1 percent from the field. The Lumberjacks were just 7 of 28 from behind the arc. Cone made three treys.

Horne scored 18 first-half points as the Sun Devils held a 47-22 advantage.

Horne scored six straight points as Arizona State began to separate from the Lumberjacks at 15-7 with 11:31 left in the first half.

Cambridge hit two 3-pointers in 57 seconds and Horne added one 18 seconds later as the Sun Devils held a 35-17 lead with 4:22 remaining.

Northern Arizona’s Keith Haymon made two free throws with 2:49 left before Arizona State erupted with 20 straight points — the final 10 of the first half and the first 10 of the second half.

Horne capped the big burst with a trey to make it 57-22 with 17:25 left in the contest.

Northern Arizona trailed by 27 with just over six minutes remaining before rattling off 12 consecutive points to move within 73-58 with 4:22 left. A three-point play by Richards trimmed the deficit to 76-65 with 1:58 remaining before Arizona State scored the next eight points.

–Field Level Media

No. 12 Texas crushes Houston Christian, 82-31


Marcus Carr and Sir’Jabari Rice scored 11 apiece to lead six Texas players in double figures as the 12th-ranked Longhorns swamped visiting Houston Christian 82-31 on Thursday in Austin, Texas.

Texas (2-0) was up by 27 points at the half and then really turned it on, leading by as many 59 points late in the game despite going just 3 of 22 from beyond the arc for the game. Twelve players saw the court for the Longhorns and 11 of them scored.

Arterio Morris, Timmy Allen, Dillon Mitchell and Tyrese Hunter added 10 points each for Texas; Mitchell contributed 12 rebounds and Allen grabbed 10.

Things promise to get significantly tougher for the Longhorns when they host No. 2 Gonzaga on Wednesday.

Tristan Moore led the Huskies (0-2) with 8 points. Houston Christian shot only 21.7 percent from the floor.

The Longhorns dominated from the outset, reeling off the first 16 points while forcing seven Houston Christian turnovers and holding the Huskies scoreless over the first 6:43.

Texas pushed its lead 24-4 after a dunk by Mitchell with 9:18 left in the first half and by 22 points when Rice canned a free throw with 3:11 remaining.

Texas finished the half on a 7-0 run, capped by a buzzer-beating putback layup by Hunter that produced a 39-12 lead at the break.

Hunter led all scorers with eight points in the half, while no Houston Christian player scored more than three. Texas outshot the Huskies 47.2 percent to 20 percent in the half despite missing all 11 of its 3-point attempts.

The Longhorns forced 15 Houston Christian turnovers that led to 19 points and outrebounded the visitors 29-12.

If it was possible, the Longhorns turned up the heat a little more over the first 12-plus minutes of the second half, expanding their advantage to 68-19 with 7:41 left in the game via a 19-0 run. Texas finally hit a 3-pointer after missing its first 14 attempts.

–Field Level Media

Ryan Kalkbrenner, No. 9 Creighton overpower North Dakota


Ryan Kalkbrenner collected a career-high 24 points and grabbed seven rebounds to help No. 9 Creighton coast to a 96-61 victory over North Dakota on Thursday in Omaha, Neb.

Kalkbrenner, the reigning Big East Defensive Player of the Year, made 10 of 11 shots from the floor and all four attempts from the free-throw line. His point total on Thursday eclipsed his previous high of 22, achieved on two occasions in 2021-22.

Creighton’s Trey Alexander sank four 3-pointers to highlight his 14-point performance. Arthur Kaluma had 12 points, Ryan Nembhard contributed nine points and Baylor Scheierman had eight points and 10 rebounds for the Bluejays, who ignited a 29-3 run en route to claiming a 53-22 lead at halftime.

Creighton shot a robust 58.3 percent from the floor in the first half. The Bluejays finished at 51.4 percent for the game, including 44.4 percent from 3-point range (12 of 27).

The Bluejays held a decisive 49-20 edge in rebounds, including a 21-2 advantage on the offensive end.

Creighton improved to 2-0 for the 12th time in 13 seasons under head coach Greg McDermott. The Bluejays looked like an entirely different team after requiring a late 14-0 surge to post a 72-60 victory over St. Thomas-Minnesota on Monday.

The Bluejays answered an early 8-5 deficit with their 29-3 run, highlighted by Kalkbrenner exploiting the interior with layups and alley-oop dunks. Scheierman, Francisco Farabello, Alexander and Mason Miller each made a 3-pointer during the surge.

Kalkbrenner converted an alley-oop in transition from Nembhard to give Creighton a 42-17 lead with 5:37 remaining in the first half. He added two more dunks and Farabello made a layup to cap the scoring over the first 20 minutes for the Bluejays.

Tsotne Tsartsidze sank three 3-pointers and a pair of free throws to score North Dakota’s first 11 points in the second half. Tsartsidze converted again from beyond the arc and finished with 16 points for the Fighting Hawks (1-1).

–Field Level Media

No. 13 Indiana blasts Bethune-Cookman, 101-49


Trayce Jackson-Davis missed just one shot on his way to 21 points in a light workout for No. 13 Indiana, which breezed past Bethune-Cookman 101-49 on Thursday night in Bloomington, Ind.

Jackson-Davis went 9 of 10 from the field and was aided by wingman Miller Kopp, who made 4 of 7 from 3-point range to add 12 points for Indiana (2-0). Twelve players scored for the Hoosiers. Jalen Hood-Schifino kicked in eight points, eight assists and five rebounds for Indiana.

Pace favored the thoroughbred Hoosiers from the opening tip, and Indiana ended with 27 assists on 35 field goals.

Kopp and Jackson-Davis had nine points apiece at half and Indiana led 49-23.

For the second consecutive game to begin the season, the Hoosiers flexed depth and fresh legs to force turnovers (19 on Thursday) and surge into the second half.

Bethune-Cookman managed nine bench points to 51 for Indiana and trailed by 40 at the under-8 timeout in the second half.

By then, Hoosiers coach Mike Woodson made it apparent the rest of the game would belong to his reserves due to a 81-41 advantage.

A three-point play by Jackson-Davis and Kopp’s pull-up 3-pointer on a fastbreak opportunity blew the game wide open as part of an 11-0 run 2:30 into the second half.

Bethune-Cookman (0-2) was paced by Joe French with 11 points. Marcus Garrett had 10, while Zion Harmon was 2 of 11 from the field and scored six points for the Wildcats. Bethune-Cookman has one game left against Big Ten competition this season — Dec. 29 at Illinois — after losing to Iowa and Indiana to begin the season.

The Wildcats didn’t net a 3-pointer in the second half, and the comeback bid was further stunted by 14 team fouls in the final 20 minutes. Indiana was 21 of 22 from the line; Bethune-Cookman didn’t attempt a foul shot in the first half and finished 6 of 13.

–Field Level Media