Jumat, 12 April 2019

Tiger Woods gives the people what they came to see at the Masters - Atlanta Journal Constitution

The next leaderboard I saw confirmed it: Tiger Woods had birdied No. 13 to get to 2-under par, one stroke behind the leaders at the time. There was a buzz among the gallery as we gathered around the 14th green, waiting for Woods. It turned into concern when he came into view heading for the trees along the left side of the fairway. 

From the green, it appeared the only play for Woods to punch a low shot through the pines. After Woods hit the ball, everyone looked between the trees, expecting the ball to come out low. It didn’t. Had Woods flown the green? A few people ducked and covered. 

Then the ball dropped from the sky and plopped down pin high, 25 feet from the hole. Now the buzz was back, followed by anticipation as Woods lined up his putt. 

“Let’s get it, Tiger, I want to hear a roar,” someone whispered. 

They got what they wanted when Woods made the putt, then turned to their companions to shout: “That’s what we came for!” 

Lots of people came here for that. They got what they wanted. Woods was back at the Masters making shots and making them roar.

Woods shot a two-under 70, tied for 11th, four shots behind the leader. Before this tournament Woods said he had a chance, then went out and played like it.

“I feel very good,” Woods said. “I feel like I played well today and I controlled my golf ball all day. I've shot this number and won four coats, so hopefully I can do it again.” 

Woods means green jackets, of course, though his memory is a little off. He opened with a 70 while winning the Masters in 1997, ’99, and 2001. He shot 74 on Thursday when he won in 2002. 

Woods’ details were fuzzy, but his overall point stands. A good start was essential for him to have a realistic chance of winning this week. He no longer has the game to leapfrog rivals from far back in the pack, and he’s lost the intimidating presence that once brought them back to him. 

That’s why it was great to see Woods playing consistent golf at the Masters again. It was fun to see the way he electrifies fans. I want to see him win another green jacket but I’m not letting my imagination run wild, at least not just yet. 

To win this tournament, Woods is going to have to play at a level he hasn’t reached in a long time at a major championship. His game has diminished at the same time the field has deepened. Plenty of younger golfers were winning majors while Woods was away mending his injuries and his life and they are here this week.

One of them is first-round leader Brooks Koepka, winner of three majors in the past two years. He’s leading after shooting 66, a score matched by neophyte Bryson DeChambeau. 

Woods’ old rival, Phil Mickelson, shot 67. Dustin Johnson, the 2016 U.S. Open Champion, posted a 68. Among those who shot 69 is Adam Scott, the winner here in 2013.

That’s a lot of great golfers for Woods to catch. At least he’s got a chance after the first round. Those people pulling for Woods on the course would have been deflated if he stumbled out of the gate. 

That happened when Woods opened with a 73 here last year, his first Masters since 2015. No one really believed Woods, diminished by injuries, could overcome the seven-shot deficit he faced Thursday. He posted a 75 in the second round and finished 16 shots back in a tie for 32nd. 

It was a good result for Woods considering the circumstance. It wasn’t what his supporters wanted to see. Those who came back this year got the good stuff from Woods on the first day, and it could have been even better if his putter were sharper. 

Woods missed a par putt at No. 5 after he pitched to within seven feet of the pin. A short pitch shot left him with a nine-foot birdie put at No. 8, but he pushed it right. A good chip at No. 17 let to an uphill, eight-foot putt for par but he pushed another one right. 

Woods also couldn’t convert a chance to set up an eagle putt at No. 15. He striped his drive 301 yards to the middle of the fairway, leaving him a great chance to attack a tame pin placement 229 yards away. Instead, Woods hit it 40 yards past the hole and had to settle for an up-and-down for par. 

That’s three, four, maybe five strokes that Woods left on the course. But, really, that’s just being greedy. It was hard to ask for much more from Woods as he tries to find a way to win a major in the third stage of his storied career. 

“I felt like I played well and I did all the things I needed to do today to post a good number,” Woods said.

That’s what the people came to see.

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About the Author

Michael Cunningham

Michael Cunningham

Michael Cunningham has covered the Hawks and other beats for the AJC since 2010. 

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2019-04-12 11:36:32Z
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Giants news, 4/12: Kyler Murray visit raises questions, more - Big Blue View

Giants add to Kyler Murray intrigue with pre-NFL draft visit | New York Post

The Oklahoma quarterback got everyone’s attention with his visit to East Rutherford. Could he really be a Giant? NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport says a couple of unlikely things would have to happen first.

9 Giants with most to gain during offseason program: Lorenzo Carter to starter? Corey Coleman fill WR void? | nj.com

The big news here? The Giants begin their offseason program on Monday.

2019 NFL draft mailbag: What will Giants and Jets do?

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https://www.bigblueview.com/2019/4/12/18307469/ny-giants-rumors-news-4-12-kyler-murray-visit-raises-questions-nfl-draft-cardinals

2019-04-12 10:37:11Z
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04/11/19 First Round, Gm1: Avalanche @ Flames - NHL

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2019-04-12 06:11:56Z
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Kamis, 11 April 2019

Masters 2019: Bettor puts $85,000 on Tiger Woods in record wager for one casino - CBS Sports

It's too early to tell if Tiger Woods is truly back, but one bettor certainly thinks he is primed to win another green jacket. A Nevada resident placed an $85,000 bet on Woods to win the 2019 Masters at 14-1 odds. The outrageously large bet would yield a payout of $1.19 million, the largest potential single-ticket payout in the history of William Hill casino history (in the United States).

The bet shattered the old records in the $10,000 to $25,000 range, to the point that William Hill had to confirm it could even accept the wager. The Masters is always a hotbed for betting, but this wager was so gigantic that it single-handedly pushed Woods up to 10-1 at William Hill while his odds stayed at 14-1 on other books, according to Golf Digest.

"I thought it was probably an $85 or $8,500 bet," said Nick Bogdanovich, William Hill's director of trading. "But they were for real."

Woods is among the favorites this year, along with Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson. In 2018, Woods won the Tour Championship for his 80th PGA Tour win, finding himself just two back of the career majors record. This year's Masters would be a huge win for a myriad of different reasons for Woods.

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2019-04-11 17:49:00Z
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Kings' Divac fires Joerger after 39-win season - ESPN

Sacramento Kings general manager Vlade Divac has fired coach Dave Joerger after the team's best season since 2005-06, it was announced Thursday.

"After evaluating the season, I determined that we need to move in a different direction in order to take us to the next level," Divac said in a statement. "On behalf of the entire Kings organization, I want to thank Dave for his contributions to our team and I wish him all the best."

Despite Joerger engineering an improbable 39-win season, Divac is using the muscle of his new contract extension through the 2022-23 season to consolidate power around him, league sources said.

Divac fired assistant general manager Brandon Williams earlier Thursday morning, sources said, and planned to meet with players after firing Joerger.

What makes Joerger's dismissal confusing to many inside and outside the Kings' world is simply this: He transformed Sacramento's style of play into one of the league's fastest, most exciting brands of basketball, and point guard De'Aaron Fox has developed into one of the NBA's bright young stars.

Tension between management and Joerger regarding playing time for certain young players and relationship strains impacted Divac's decision, sources said. Still, most around the NBA believed the team's rapid improvement under Joerger and significant overperformance based on preseason expectations would have forced the organization to consider a contract extension.

Joerger, who has a 98-148 record without a playoff appearance in his three seasons with the Kings, had one year remaining on his contract. Prior to joining the Kings, he coached the Memphis Grizzlies for three seasons. He has an overall NBA coaching record of 245-247.

The Kings, in announcing Divac's new four-year deal, praised the GM for helping in the team's rebuild.

"Vlade has been vital to what we are building here," owner Vivek Ranadive said in a statement. "Throughout his entire career, Vlade is someone who has always made those around him better, both on and off the court."

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2019-04-11 17:37:03Z
CBMiU2h0dHA6Ly93d3cuZXNwbi5jb20vbmJhL3N0b3J5L18vaWQvMjY0OTczOTkva2luZ3MtZGl2YWMtZmlyZXMtam9lcmdlci0zOS13aW4tc2Vhc29u0gFgaHR0cDovL3d3dy5lc3BuLmNvbS9uYmEvc3RvcnkvXy9pZC8yNjQ5NzM5OS9raW5ncy1kaXZhYy1maXJlcy1qb2VyZ2VyLTM5LXdpbi1zZWFzb24_cGxhdGZvcm09YW1w

Series Preview: Pistons sneak in, only to face NBA-best Bucks - NBA India

Playoff purists should welcome this matchup: It’s exactly what we would get if the NBA seeded its postseason 1-through-16. Milwaukee finished with the league’s best record and home-court advantage for as long as it’s alive, while Detroit was the last team to qualify and got in playing .500 ball. 

The Pistons come in with a stellar tandem of big men, Blake Griffin and Andre Drummond, and an erratic point guard with a flair for dramatics in Reggie Jackson. But these guys lost seven of their final 11 games, needing a desperate comeback against Memphis Grizzlies and a beatdown of the New York Knicks on the final two nights. 

What will matter most in the Bucks-Pistons series?

Milwaukee was a rock by comparison, more consistent than any of the other 29 teams behind Kia MVP candidate Giannis Antetokounmpo and new coach Mike Budenholzer. The Bucks led the league in point differential while flexing the stingiest defense and controlling the defensive glass. Antetokounmpo is the multi-threat initiator, with solid pros such as Khris Middleton, Eric Bledsoe, Brook Lopez, Ersan Ilyasova and George Hill around him to help out. 

It’s a formula that has worked for the better part of seven months. It might get tested in May, but in April? Probably not.

Three things to watch

  1. Who guards Giannis Antetokounmpo? There is no good answer here for the Pistons. Drummond is big and strong enough to bother "The Greek Freak" inside, but hardly can be expected to keep up with him for 94 feet. The same goes for Griffin, both because he’s not 100-percent healthy and Detroit can’t have him in foul trouble. Fact is, Detroit has no one with the length and speed to stymie the Bucks star. 
     
  2. Where can Detroit give Milwaukee trouble? Drummond and Griffin can pound opponents into submission, especially given the way Drummond goes after offensive rebounds. But the Pistons’ greatest asset in this series might be their enhanced 3-point game. They made about 200 more than they gave up, while allowing foes to shoot 40 percent or better from the arc in just 18 games (and just once in four tries by Milwaukee). That could counteract one of the Bucks’ top weapons.
     
  3. Which team’s injuries will hurt more? Milwaukee has more of them, Detroit has one to its premier player. The Bucks might be able to get by for now without Malcolm Brogdon, Tony Snell and Nikola Mirotic, but that likely will change if they advance to face stiffer East competition. The Pistons only had Griffin for 4 1/2 of their final seven games, dragging that bum left knee until he was forced to sit out the finale.

 

The number to know

29.6 -- The Bucks allowed just 29.6 points per game in the restricted area, fewest in the league. Restricted-area shots are the most valuable on the floor and Milwaukee was the best at both preventing them and defending them. Only 27 percent of their opponents' shots, the league's lowest opponent rate, came in the restricted area. And Bucks' opponents shot a league-low 58.0 percent on the restricted area shots they did get.

The Bucks had the league's best defense (104.9 points allowed per 100 possessions) and its most improved defense from last season, when it ranked 18th (109.1 allowed per 100) and allowed a league-high 38.9 points per game in the restricted area. Coach Mike Budenholzer transformed the Milwaukee offense, spacing the floor around Giannis Antetokounmpo. But the Bucks' bigger transformation actually came on defense, where improvement started with better protection of the rim.

-- John Schuhmann

The pick

The Bucks went to seven games against the Boston Celtics in 2018's first round, but that wouldn’t come close to cutting it now. There’s a conference finals-or-bust feel around this Milwaukee team, which has to prove it is more than a change-of-pace, regular-season challenge for opponents. In Middleton and Bledsoe, the Bucks have secondary players capable of winning a playoff game or two to ease Antetokounmpo’s burden. The 4-0 dispatching of Detroit in the regular season looks like it might be duplicated. Bucks in 4.

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>More 2019 first-round series previews

Steve Aschburner has written about the NBA since 1980. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Turner Broadcasting.

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2019-04-11 13:08:00Z
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Series Preview: Surging Rockets face defensive-minded Jazz - NBA India

The Houston Rockets have been preaching it for weeks, that their destiny this season is in their own hands. They rolled down the stretch of the season, confident they could return to the Western Conference finals for a rematch with the reigning two-time NBA champion Golden State Warriors.

Should they win their first-round series, that rematch could come soon enough. First, they must topple a Utah Jazz team they know well. Doing so would set up a potential West semifinals series with the No. 1-seeded Warriors, should they vanquish the LA Clippers in the first round. 

What will matter most in the Rockets-Jazz series?

That’s not necessarily the way the Rockets expected things to play out when they wrapped up their season with a chance to finish as high as the No. 2 seed. On the season's final night, the Denver Nuggets took the No. 2 seed and the Portland Trail Blazers got No. 3leaving the Rockets to face a Jazz team that is the best defensive unit in the West.

They split the regular season series 2-2. And the Jazz will show up every bit as confident (and fearless) as the offensive juggernaut led by the reigning Kia MVP James Harden.

For all of the work Harden did dragging an injury-ravaged Rockets from Christmas to now, the bottom line is Houston didn’t exactly control its own playoff destiny after all.

Three things to watch

1. Better offense or better defense? Overall, this series pits the league’s No. 2 offensive team against the No. 2 defensive team. The Jazz tried an assortment of defenders against Harden in the 2018 West semis, with varying degrees of success. But they had absolutely no answer for Chris Paul, whose heroics lifted the Rockets out of trouble. The Jazz don’t have an individual defender for both of the Rockets’ star guards, which makes their rock-solid team defense critical in this matchup.

2. Is Derrick Favors healthy enough to be a factor in this series? As good as Rudy Gobert has been this season, it’s Favors who ranks as the league’s best rim protector. He missed four of the last five games with back spasms, forcing Jazz coach Quin Snyder to play smaller lineups that can matchup better with the Rockets offensively. Doing so, however, won’t be nearly as impactful defensively. Jae Crowder and Thabo Sefolosha simply don’t have the size to pair with Gobert to deliver the impact Favors can when healthy.

3. Are the Rockets playing with fire by putting so much on a potential rematch with the Warriors? Absolutely. Donovan Mitchell caught them looking ahead in that series last season and couldn’t be stopped (until he got injured and was lost for the final game of the series). The Rockets have had the Warriors on the brain ever since that 0-for-27 meltdown on 3-pointers in Game 7 of the 2018 West finals. But they better beware of focusing on anything other than the Jazz thistle around. The Warriors will be there in the next round. But you have to get through the Jazz to get there.

 

The number to know

99.0 -- The Rockets scored just 99.0 points per 100 possessions in the regular season series vs. the Jazz. That was the fewest that the league's No. 2 offense scored against any Western Conference opponent this season. The first three meetings between the two teams were three of Houston's eight worst offensive games of the season. James Harden averaged 33.5 points on an effective field goal percentage of 54 percent against the Jazz, but his assist/turnover ratio (19/24) was his worst against any opponent this season.

Harden's teammates shot 28 percent from 3-point range, with Eric Gordon making only five of his 26 attempts from beyond the arc. The three games in which the Jazz held the Rockets under a point per possession were all before Christmas, though. In the final meeting between the two teams on Feb. 2, Houston scored an efficient 125 points on 109 possessions, without either Chris Paul or Clint Capela and with Harden scoring 41 points and Gerald Green shooting 7-for-12 from 3-point range off the bench.

-- John Schuhmann

The pick

Harden and the Rockets have authored one of the great in-season revivals we’ve seen, climbing out of the West basement to challenge for a top seed in the season's final days. They’ve shown themselves capable of running anyone off the floor when they are clicking offensively. And they’re finally healthy. They have the sort of leadership in Paul and Harden that won’t allow for a breakdown now, not even against a Jazz team built to combat what they do best. It won’t be easy and Mitchell could once again use this as a platform to remind anyone who has forgotten that he’s one of the league’s most explosive scorers. But the Rockets grind this one out with more weapons than the Jazz can match. Rockets in 6.

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>More 2019 first-round series previews

Sekou Smith is a veteran NBA reporter and NBA TV analyst. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter.

The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Turner Broadcasting.

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2019-04-11 13:07:00Z
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