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  • 2026 French Open results: Joao Fonseca stuns Novak Djokovic in five-set instant classic at Roland-Garros

    joker.jpg

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    The 2026 French Open is guaranteed to be won by a first-time grand slam champion after 24-time major winner Novak Djokovic was ousted in a five-set thriller (4-6, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 7-5) by 19-year-old rising Brazilian star Joao Fonseca on Court Philippe-Chartrier in the third round.

    With so much early carnage in the men’s draw — starting with Carlos Alcaraz being unable to play due to a wrist injury and then top-seeded Jannik Sinner’s shocking second round loss — Djokovic seemed to have a clear path to a record-setting 25th major title. Instead, he joins the two other top men’s stars in watching the second week of this year’s French Open from home, with Fonseca ascending to star status with his performance in an instant classic.

    The loss is Djokovic’s earliest at Roland-Garros since 2009 and Fonseca became the first teenager to take down the legend in a grand slam, where Djokovic had previously gone 18-0 against teenage opponents. The match stretched out to 4 hours and 49 minutes, the longest in Djokovic’s career at Roland-Garros, and after beginning in sweltering 90 degree heat, the veteran’s legs wore down as the match dragged on — with the 19-year-old seemingly finding more strength the longer it went.

    The first two sets of the match were vintage Djokovic, as he cruised to a 2-0 advantage by controlling points and dictating the flow of the match against an opponent 20 years his junior. Even when he did get put on the run, he spent the first two sets looking the part of a 24-time grand slam champion, flying around the court, refusing to concede points.

    However, after coming back from 0-2 down in his second round match, Fonseca was undeterred and found his footing in the third set. The Brazilian leaned on his hard-hitting serve and forehand to start pushing Djokovic deeper into the court and attacking the lines, frustrating the legend and putting him on the back foot.

    While Sinner completely wilted due to fatigue in the heat during his shocking loss, Djokovic battled through tired legs and the occasional vomiting spell to keep clawing close to victory. In both the third and fourth sets, Djokovic made late charges to try and wrap things up, but Fonseca had answers to every question Djokovic asked of him.

    In the fifth set, the dam finally broke for Djokovic in the 11th game when Fonseca, after driving Djokovic back to the baseline all match, hit three sensational drop shot winners to break the Djokovic serve that the legend could only applaud as he watched them bounce across the clay. Facing the ultimate pressure of trying to serve out the match to avoid a tiebreak, Fonseca was shaky early and allowed Djokovic to create a break point at 30-40.

    He then produced his three best serves of the match, painting the lines with three aces to close out Djokovic in style and earn a rousing ovation from the Parisian crowd that had been treated to an all-time match and a potential passing of the torch moment.

    Djokovic gave Fonseca an embrace at the net to show him all the respect for besting him on a warm afternoon in Paris, creating the most wide open men’s draw in recent grand slam championship memory.

    Djokovic’s loss means that none of he, Alcaraz, Sinner or Rafael Nadal will win a grand slam title for the first time since the 2021 US Open when Daniil Medvedev earned the crown. It’s also the first time since 2004 that Djokovic, Nadal, Alcaraz, Sinner or Roger Federer did not play into the fourth round of a grand slam tournament.

    The only top 10 seeds remaining in the draw are No. 2 Alexander Zverev, No. 4 Felix Auger-Aliassime and No. 10 Flavio Cobolli — all of whom still have to play their third round match, and none have ever won a grand slam title. The men’s game has long been dominated by a select few players, but with Alcaraz not playing and shocking first week upsets of Sinner and Djokovic, we will get a new champion at Roland-Garros as the door is wide open for someone to make a name for themselves.

  • 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge leaderboard: Hideki Matsuyama in the hunt with low scores flying at Colonial

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    Colonial Country Club can be one of the tougher places to score on the PGA Tour, but with light winds and a soft golf course after rain this week, low scores have been on the menu at the Charles Schwab Challenge.

    Two of the last four winners at Colonial finished at single digits under par, but that will not be the case this week with friendly conditions in Fort Worth, Texas. The leader is already at 10 under and Friday’s second round saw the cut line end up at 3 under, the lowest at the event since 1983. Players have had to take on a more aggressive mindset in the first two rounds than Colonial typically allows.

    Among those who have answered that call the best is Hideki Matsuyama. The 11-time PGA Tour winner moved into a tie for second at 9 under after shooting a 5-under 65 on Friday afternoon. Matsuyama, per usual, is doing much of his damage with his irons, but his short game and putting have complemented that approach play for a well-rounded start to his week.

    Matsuyama flashed his all-world hands — or, in this case, hand — on the 14th to get up-and-down for par with a chip from an awkward lie above the bunker.

    Matsuyama has the most career wins of anyone in the field this week at Colonial, and after a gutting playoff loss earlier this season at the WM Phoenix Open, he’s put himself in position to challenge for win No. 12 this weekend in Fort Worth.

    The forecast calls for winds to pick up a bit on Saturday, but at no point is it expected to really blow this week, which means Matsuyama and the rest of the leaders will need to keep the pedal down if they want to pick up the win. Because of the quality conditions, the leaderboard is incredibly condenseed with the leader just seven shots ahead of the cut line, and that will mean a lot of players who make the weekend will feel they have a real shot at the win.

    The leader

    1. Jordan Smith (-10)

    The man they’re all chasing heading into Saturday is Jordan Smith, who put together back-to-back 65s to start the week and become the first to reach double figures under par. The 33-year-old Englishman is in his first full season on the PGA Tour and has been in contention before this season, finishing third at the Valspar Championship. He will try to hold his nerve and capture his first win on the PGA Tour this weekend, showing off an impressive all-around game so far this week, gaining strokes in all four phases of the game through two rounds. He’ll need to keep up that quality if he’s going to hold off the chase pack that features some strong veterans and rising stars.

    Weekend contenders

    T2. Hideki Matsuyama, Brian Harman, Ryan Gerard, Michael Thorbjornsen (-9)
    T6. Russell Henley, J.J. Spaun, Akshay Bhatia, Alex Smalley (-8)
    T10. A.J. Ewart, Michael Brennan, Mackenzie Hughes, Brice Garnett, Mac Meissner (-7)
    T15. Ludvig Åberg, Gary Woodland, Keegan Bradley and seven others (-6)
    T33. Justin Thomas and 14 others (-4)

    For a tournament that doesn’t boast the deepest field of the season, the cream has certainly risen to the top through two rounds of play. Joining Matsuyama in a share of second is another fellow former major winner in Harman and a pair of rising stars in Gerard and Thorbjornsen. Gerard has one career win at the Barracuda but is still searching for his first full-field win, while Thorbjornsen is still looking for his breakthrough victory on Tour.

    Bhatia and Spaun are the only players in the top 10 with a win on the PGA Tour this season and will try to double up this weekend. Henley hasn’t quite had the year he’d hoped for to this point, but can change that in a hurry if he can back up a steady 66-66 start by cashing in for his sixth career win. Smalley is brimming with confidence after his T2 finish at the PGA Championship and can try to lean on that positive experience in a weekend in contention in Fort Worth.

    Åberg came into the week as the favorite and after a putter change he’s positioned himself in solid position going into the weekend, but he will need to find that extra gear if he’s going to get his third career win. Thomas will need something special on the weekend to factor in for the win, but he’ll have a chance with an early tee time on Saturday to go out and post a low number before the leaders get going.

    A.J. Ewart wins the “most improved” award from Thursday to Friday, shaking off an opening 70 to fire a tournament-best 7-under 63 to jump into contention — with some help from this ace on the 16th.

    Notable players who missed the cut

    • Pierceson Coody (-2)
    • Brandt Snedeker (-2)
    • Tony Finau (E)
    • Harry Hall (+2)
    • Rickie Fowler (+3)
    • Max Greyserman (+5)
    • Sungjae Im (+6)

    A cut line at 3 under isn’t very forgiving, and while many of the top names in the field gravitated towards the top of the leaderboard this week, there were some surprising early exits. Fowler is probably the biggest stunner, as a back nine 42 sent him tumbling from 4 under and in the hunt to 3 over and a Friday flight home in a hurry. Im perhaps ran out of gas this week after spending last week in contention at TPC Craig Ranch and will get a couple extra days of rest after a rough two rounds of play in Fort Worth.

  • Charles Schwab Challenge Scores

    2: Complete TV: GOLF, ESPN, 

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    1
    ENG
    -10 65* 65 1:15 PM 130
    T2
    USA
    -9 66 65* 1:15 PM 131
    T2
    USA
    -9 64* 67 1:15 PM 131
    T2
    USA
    -9 65* 66 1:04 PM 131
    T2
    JPN
    -9 66* 65 1:04 PM 131
    T6
    USA
    -8 64 68* 1:04 PM 132
    T6
    USA
    -8 67 65* 12:53 PM 132
    T6
    USA
    -8 65* 67 12:53 PM 132
    T6
    USA
    -8 66* 66 12:53 PM 132
    T6
    USA
    -8 66* 66 12:42 PM 132
    T11
    USA
    -7 67* 66 12:42 PM 133
    T11
    CAN
    -7 70 63* 12:42 PM 133
    T11
    CAN
    -7 66* 67 12:31 PM 133
    T11
    USA
    -7 66 67* 12:31 PM 133
    T15
    JPN
    -6 66 68* 12:31 PM 134
    T15
    USA
    -6 65 69* 12:20 PM 134
    T15
    USA
    -6 65 69* 12:20 PM 134
    T15
    SWE
    -6 66 68* 12:20 PM 134
    T15
    DNK
    -6 65 69* 12:04 PM 134
    T15
    USA
    -6 65* 69 12:04 PM 134
    T15
    USA
    -6 69 65* 12:04 PM 134
    T15
    USA
    -6 65* 69 11:53 AM 134
    T15
    ZAF
    -6 69 65* 11:53 AM 134
    T15
    USA
    -6 64* 70 11:53 AM 134
    T25
    USA
    -5 67* 68 11:42 AM 135
    T25
    USA
    -5 69 66* 11:42 AM 135
    T25
    USA
    -5 68 67* 11:42 AM 135
    T25
    USA
    -5 67* 68 11:31 AM 135
    T25
    USA
    -5 64* 71 11:31 AM 135
    T25
    USA
    -5 64* 71 11:31 AM 135
    T25
    TWN
    -5 65 70* 11:20 AM 135
    T25
    JPN
    -5 69 66* 11:20 AM 135
    T25
    USA
    -5 65 70* 11:20 AM 135
    T34
    USA
    -4 68* 68 11:09 AM 136
    T34
    KOR
    -4 64* 72 11:09 AM 136
    T34
    USA
    -4 68 68* 11:09 AM 136
    T34
    USA
    -4 65* 71 10:53 AM 136
    T34
    USA
    -4 69* 67 10:53 AM 136
    T34
    FRA
    -4 69* 67 10:53 AM 136
    T34
    USA
    -4 68 68* 10:42 AM 136
    T34
    ZAF
    -4 68* 68 10:42 AM 136
    T34
    DNK
    -4 69* 67 10:42 AM 136
    T34
    SCO
    -4 68* 68 10:31 AM 136
    T34
    USA
    -4 69* 67 10:31 AM 136
    T34
    USA
    -4 69 67* 10:31 AM 136
    T34
    ARG
    -4 70 66* 10:20 AM 136
    T47
    USA
    -3 67 70* 10:20 AM 137
    T47
    ZAF
    -3 65* 72 10:20 AM 137
    T47
    PHL
    -3 68 69* 10:09 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 68* 69 10:09 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 68* 69 10:09 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 67 70* 9:58 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 69 68* 9:58 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 70 67* 9:58 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 71 66* 9:42 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 68* 69 9:42 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 70* 67 9:42 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 66* 71 9:31 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 67 70* 9:31 AM 137
    T47
    COL
    -3 66* 71 9:31 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 66 71* 9:20 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 68 69* 9:20 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 66 71* 9:20 AM 137
    T47
    USA
    -3 68 69* 9:09 AM 137
    T65
    JPN
    -2 69* 69 9:09 AM 138
    T65
    IRL
    -2 69* 69 9:09 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 70* 68 8:58 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 70 68* 8:58 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 70* 68 8:58 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 68* 70 8:47 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 69 69* 8:47 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 71 67* 8:47 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 71* 67 8:36 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 71 67* 8:36 AM 138
    T65
    USA
    -2 69 69* 8:36 AM 138
    OFFICIAL CUT LINE -2
    CUT
    FRA
    -1 71* 68 139
    CUT
    NOR
    -1 69* 70 139
    CUT
    COL
    -1 70* 69 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 67* 72 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 69 70* 139
    CUT
    CAN
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 71 68* 139
    CUT
    USA
    -1 68* 71 139
    CUT
    COL
    E 69* 71 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 71 69* 140
    CUT
    SWE
    E 70* 70 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    AUS
    E 72 68* 140
    CUT
    CAN
    E 70 70* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 69 71* 140
    CUT
    USA
    E 71* 69 140
    CUT
    BEL
    E 66* 74 140
    CUT
    CHN
    +1 73* 68 141
    CUT
    JPN
    +1 67* 74 141
    CUT
    ZAF
    +1 69* 72 141
    CUT
    CHN
    +1 69 72* 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 72* 69 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 72 69* 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 69* 72 141
    CUT
    USA
    +1 69* 72 141
    CUT
    USA
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 71* 71 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 71 71* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 68 74* 142
    CUT
    ENG
    +2 68* 74 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 70 72* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 69* 73 142
    CUT
    USA
    +2 70* 72 142
    CUT
    ARG
    +2 72 70* 142
    CUT
    USA
    +3 70 73* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 71 72* 143
    CUT
    USA
    +3 71* 72 143
    CUT
    USA
    +4 74 70* 144
    CUT
    ENG
    +4 69 75* 144
    CUT
    DNK
    +4 70* 74 144
    CUT
    USA
    +4 76 68* 144
    CUT
    ENG
    +4 70 74* 144
    CUT
    USA
    +5 74* 71 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 70 75* 145
    CUT
    USA
    +5 73* 72 145
    CUT
    KOR
    +6 70* 76 146
    CUT
    SWE
    +7 73 74* 147
    CUT
    USA
    +7 73* 74 147
    CUT
    AUS
    +8 79* 69 148
    CUT
    ENG
    +8 73 75* 148
    CUT
    USA
    +9 73 76* 149
    CUT
    USA
    +10 72 78* 150
    WD
    DEU
    75
    WD
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.

    Legend

    • DQ
    • WD
    • CUT
    • MDF
    • (a)
    • *
    • Watch Live On Pga Tour Live App
    • Disqualified
    • Withdrew
    • Missed Cut
    • Made Cut Did Not Finish
    • Amateur
    • Golfer Started Round On Back 9
    • Winner
    Search for tee
  • Hurricanes roll past Canadiens 6-1 in Eastern Conference Final, earn trip to Stanley Cup Final

    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Rod Brind’Amour wore a big smile as he walked on the ice to join his Carolina Hurricanes for a photo behind the Prince of Wales Trophy.

    It took eight years, but the Hurricanes have finally broken through their Eastern Conference Final roadblock. Now comes the chance to play for the Stanley Cup for the first time in two decades.

    Taylor Hall, Logan Stankoven and Eric Robinson scored in a dominating first period that helped push the Hurricanes past the Montreal Canadiens 6-1 on Friday night, closing a five-game series that sent the East’s top seed on to face Vegas for the Cup.

    Three times before under Brind’Amour, the Hurricanes had reached this round, only to win just a single game.

    This time, they shook off an ugly series-opening loss that harkened back to those past struggles by winning four straight, steadily asserting control of the series and dominating the last two games to earn that on-ice celebration in front of a rowdy home crowd.

    “I wasn’t prepared for media (interviews) and I’m probably going to start crying,” veteran forward Jordan Martinook said in the locker room. “A lot of years with a lot of pain. … It’s been a crazy journey in my time here, but this team, it’s been really special.”

    Jackson Blake and Shayne Gostisbehere added second-period goals that pushed the Hurricanes to a 5-0 lead entering the final period, while Seth Jarvis scoring into an empty net with 3:41 left. Frederik Andersen carried a shutout until midway through the third in net, an emotional performance coming a day after his agent and former NHL player Claude Lemieux died after taking his own life.

    Carolina swept through the first two rounds of the playoffs, then regrouped from a 6-2 loss in Game 1 after an extended between-rounds break to win four straight. That included a run of 10 straight goals going back to Andrei Svechnikov’s overtime goal in Game 3 before Montreal finally got on the board with Cole Caufield’s power-play score midway through the third.

    That made the Hurricanes the first team to reach the Stanley Cup Final with only one loss since 1983, according to SportRadar, and the only team to do so since the league went to best-of-seven series in all four postseason rounds in 1987.

    It was a long-awaited moment for the franchise, even for the new arrivals. That included defenseman K’Andre Miller – a summer trade addition as a missing piece – sitting near the ice afterward, holding his newborn son and shaking his head in an emotional moment of taking it all in.

    “It’s kind of hard to unpack right now,” Brind’Amour said. “It’s a weird feeling because it’s kind of where we all thought we should be.”

    The Hurricanes have been a perennial contender in the East, yet they entered this series having gone 1-12 in the Eastern Conference Final under Brind’Amour – falling in sweeps to Boston in 2019 and Florida in 2023 before losing in five games to the Panthers in last year’s rematch.

    But they were tested, and wounded, from those past postseason failures. Throw in their depth and talent, and the Hurricanes were finally ready to punch through for their third shot at the Cup since the former Hartford Whalers relocated to North Carolina before the 1997-98 season.

    The last time the Hurricanes reached this point? Brind’Amour was the captain on a team that hoisted the Cup in a seven-game series against Edmonton in 2006.

    After regrouping from a 6-2 loss in Game 1, the Hurricanes took control of the series from the young and skilled Canadiens – who had arrived at this round ahead of schedule after Game 7 road wins against Tampa Bay and Buffalo through the first two rounds.

    “As close as it feels, we’re so far away still,” Montreal defenseman Lane Hutson said. “So much more to do to battle to get the ultimate goal. Even when you win two rounds, you still got to find another level for the next round.”

    Carolina won consecutive 3-2 overtime games, then took Game 4 in a 4-0 road romp Wednesday.

    Beyond the score, Carolina was getting to its smothering game in pressuring the Canadiens in their own end or shutting off most high-danger chances they could muster going the other way.

    By midway through the second period, the festive and rowdy crowd was offering “Olé! Olé! Olé! Olé!” chants in a mocking nod to Canadiens fans with Carolina up 4-0. By the final two minutes, they were chanting “We want the Cup! We want the Cup!” as the Hurricanes closed this one out.

    “They’re a good team, a lot experience,” Canadiens coach Martin St. Louis said. “You’ve got to give credit to how well they’ve played. They made it really hard on us.”

    AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks
    Betting Picks for Every Game
    • Picks from Vegas experts and insiders
    • Optimal rankings, props, DFS strategy
    • Spread, OU, ML picks from 10k simulations
    Matt Severance
    Matt SeveranceSeverance Pays
    +240.5 (59%)
    Last 54 NHL ATS
    Montreal +1.5-115
    Point Spread
    Picked May 29 @ 7:30 pm, 1 unit on bet365
    LOSS
    I expect Carolina to win but simply will not do -1.5 (then I wouldn’t care about OT when I do want to care if so) even though the Habs might pull their goalie with about eight minutes left in the third if they are down a goal to try and avoid elimination. They do look worn down but am hoping there is one last burst and we get to overtime — or ideally a Canes one-goal win and staying Under 7.5. Montreal has been stellar on the road this postseason.

    Matt’s Pick

    1 2 3 T
    0 0 1 1
    3 2 1 6
    STARS OF THE GAME
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    J. Anderson RW 0 0 -2 3
    Z. Bolduc C 0 0 0 0
    A. Carrier D 0 0 -3 1
    C. Caufield RW 1 0 -2 3
    K. Dach C 0 0 0 0
    P. Danault C 0 0 -3 2
    I. Demidov RW 0 0 -2 1
    N. Dobson D 0 0 -2 2
    J. Evans C 0 0 0 2
    K. Guhle D 0 0 -2 0
    L. Hutson D 0 1 -1 2
    M. Matheson D 0 0 -2 2
    A. Newhook C 0 0 -2 1
    J. Slafkovsky LW 0 0 -2 1
    J. Struble D 0 0 0 1
    N. Suzuki C 0 0 -2 3
    A. Texier LW 0 0 0 0
    J. Veleno C 0 0 -1 0
    SKATERS G A +/- SOG
    S. Aho LW 0 1 2 3
    J. Blake RW 1 1 3 2
    W. Carrier LW 0 1 1 0
    J. Chatfield D 0 0 0 1
    N. Ehlers LW 0 1 0 2
    S. Gostisbehere D 1 0 3 1
    T. Hall LW 1 2 3 2
    M. Jankowski C 0 0 1 2
    S. Jarvis C 1 1 1 2
    J. Martinook LW 0 0 0 4
    K. Miller D 0 0 2 0
    A. Nikishin D 0 1 3 1
    E. Robinson LW 1 0 1 3
    J. Slavin D 0 0 0 0
    J. Staal C 0 0 0 2
    L. Stankoven C 1 2 2 4
    A. Svechnikov RW 0 1 1 1
    S. Walker D 0 0 2 0
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    J. Dobes 29 5 24 0.828 58:22
    GOALIES SA GA SV SV% TOI
    F. Andersen 24 1 23 0.958 60:00
  • Ole Miss 7 ASU 6 Final boxscore

    Arizona St. AT Ole Miss (37 – 20, 20 – 12) (37 – 21, 15 – 15)

    • Date

    • Attendance

      7564

    • Sport

      Baseball

    1ST 2ND 3RD 4TH 5TH 6TH 7TH 8TH 9TH 10TH 11TH 12TH 13TH 14TH R H E
    Arizona St. 2 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 10 1
    Ole Miss 1 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 14 0

    Scoring Summary

    ARIZONA ST. OLE MISS
    Arizona St. 1st Toigo singled to right field, RBI (1-0 B); Contrades advanced to second, out at third rf to 3b; Hairston scored. 1 0
    Arizona St. 1st Roellig grounded out to ss, RBI (2-2 FKBB); Smaldino advanced to third; Toigo scored. 2 0
    Ole Miss 1st J. Utermark homered to right center, RBI (1-0 B). 2 1
    Arizona St. 3rd Contrades homered to left field, RBI (1-1 BF). 3 1
    Ole Miss 3rd W. Furniss doubled to right center, 2 RBI (0-1 K); D. Decker scored; T. Sirmans scored. 3 3
    Ole Miss 3rd T. Bissetta homered down the rf line, 2 RBI (1-1 KB); W. Furniss scored. 3 5
    Ole Miss 4th D. Decker singled to right field, RBI (0-0); A. Fawley scored. 3 6
    Arizona St. 5th Toigo homered to right field, RBI (1-2 SKB). 4 6
    Arizona St. 7th Contrades homered to left field, 2 RBI (1-0 B); Hairston scored. 6 6
    Ole Miss 14th B. Randle singled through the right side, RBI (0-0); H. Federico advanced to second; T. Bissetta advanced to third; L. Romine scored. 6 7

    Hitting

    POS PLAYER ARIZONA ST.
    AB R H RBI BB K LOB
    CF/LF Landon Hairston 4 2 0 0 3 1 1
    2B Nu’u Contrades 7 2 3 3 0 2 2
    RF Dean Toigo 7 2 3 2 0 3 0
    1B Dominic Smaldino 5 0 2 0 1 1 0
    3B Austen Roellig 4 0 0 1 2 1 0
    DH Matt Polk 6 0 0 0 0 1 5
    LF Ky McGary 3 0 0 0 0 1 0
    PH/CF Dominic Longo 2 0 1 0 1 0 0
    C Brody Briggs 5 0 0 0 0 1 0
    SS PJ Moutzouridis 6 0 1 0 0 0 1
    P Cole Carlon 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Taylor Penn 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Sean Fitzpatrick 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Derek Schaefer 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Jaden Alba 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    Total 49 6 10 6 7 11 9
    POS PLAYER OLE MISS
    AB R H RBI BB K LOB
    2B Dom Decker 5 1 2 1 2 0 0
    3B Judd Utermark 6 1 1 1 1 3 2
    1B Will Furniss 4 1 2 2 0 0 0
    PR Cannon Goldin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    1B Luke Romine 2 1 0 0 1 2 2
    RF Tristan Bissetta 6 1 1 2 1 1 0
    CF/LF Hayden Federico 7 0 4 0 0 1 0
    DH Collin Reuter 3 0 1 0 0 1 0
    PH/DH Brayden Randle 4 0 2 1 0 0 0
    C Austin Fawley 4 1 0 0 2 3 1
    SS Owen Paino 6 0 0 0 0 4 6
    LF Tate Sirmans 3 1 1 0 0 1 0
    CF Brett Moseley 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    PH/LF Daniel Pacella 3 0 0 0 0 2 0
    P Hunter Elliott 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Walker Hooks 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    P Hudson Calhoun 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
    Total 53 7 14 7 7 18 11

    Pitching

    ARIZONA ST.
    PLAYER IP H R ER BB SO WP BK HB IBB AB BF FO GO NP
    Cole Carlon 6.2 6 6 6 2 9 1 0 0 0 26 28 2 8 100
    Taylor Penn 0.1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 5
    Sean Fitzpatrick 0.1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 1 0 10
    Derek Schaefer 1.2 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 5 7 1 1 34
    Jaden Alba (L, 3-3) 4.0 6 1 1 3 5 1 0 0 0 18 21 4 3 86
    Total 13.0 14 7 7 7 18 2 0 0 0 53 60 8 12 235
    OLE MISS
    PLAYER IP H R ER BB SO WP BK HB IBB AB BF FO GO NP
    Hunter Elliott 5.0 6 4 4 4 4 1 0 0 0 20 24 6 4 97
    Walker Hooks 5.1 3 2 2 2 4 0 0 0 0 17 20 5 6 75
    Hudson Calhoun (W, 4-3) 3.2 1 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 12 13 3 5 51
    Total 14.0 10 6 6 7 11 1 0 0 0 49 57 14 15 223
    WMT
  • MLB Scores

    FINAL
    R H E
    Braves39-19
    8 13 0
    Reds29-27
    3 10 0
    Great American Ball Park, Cincinnati, OH
    • W: D. Fuentes  (4-0)
    • L: C. Paddack  (0-7)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Twins27-31
    5 8 2
    Pirates30-28
    6 8 0
    PNC Park, Pittsburgh, PA
    • W: G. Soto  (4-0)
    • L: T. Rogers  (1-2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Padres32-24
    7 10 1
    5 9 2
    Nationals Park, Washington, DC
    • W: J. Estrada  (2-1)
    • L: M. Parker  (2-2)
    • S: M. Miller  (17)
    FINAL
    R H E
    6 10 2
    Orioles26-32
    5 8 0
    Oriole Park at Camden Yards, Baltimore, MD
    • W: M. Fluharty  (3-0)
    • L: Y. Cano  (1-2)
    • S: B. Fisher  (1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Red Sox23-33
    3 11 1
    4 10 1
    Progressive Field, Cleveland, OH
    • W: C. Holderman  (3-0)
    • L: T. Samaniego  (0-3)
    • S: C. Smith  (20)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Angels22-36
    5 10 2
    Rays35-19
    8 10 1
    Tropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
    • W: N. Martinez  (5-1)
    • L: R. Zeferjahn  (2-3)
    • S: B. Baker  (15)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Marlins26-32
    7 12 2
    Mets24-33
    9 8 1
    Citi Field, Flushing, NY
    • W: A. Warren  (1-1)
    • L: P. Fairbanks  (2-3)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Cubs31-27
    5 11 0
    6 9 0
    Busch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
    • W: G. Graceffo  (4-1)
    • L: S. Imanaga  (4-6)
    • S: R. O’Brien  (14)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Tigers22-36
    3 4 1
    4 10 0
    Rate Field, Chicago, IL
    • W: B. Hudson  (3-1)
    • L: D. Anderson  (2-2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Royals22-35
    1 6 2
    Rangers26-31
    9 10 0
    Globe Life Field, Arlington, TX
    • W: M. Gore  (4-4)
    • L: S. Kolek  (3-1)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Brewers34-20
    5 4 2
    Astros26-33
    4 6 0
    Daikin Park, Houston, TX
    • W: A. Uribe  (3-2)
    • L: A. Santa  (0-1)
    • S: T. Megill  (7)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Giants22-34
    6 12 2
    Rockies20-37
    8 13 0
    Coors Field, Denver, CO
    • W: J. Mejia  (1-4)
    • L: C. Kilian  (1-3)
    FINAL
    R H E
    Yankees35-22
    8 11 0
    2 8 2
    Sutter Health Park, West Sacramento, California
    • W: C. Rodon  (1-2)
    • L: L. Severino  (2-6)
    FINAL
    R H E
    6 13 0
    7 13 0
    T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA
    • W: C. Criswell  (2-1)
    • L: J. Morillo  (1-2)
    FINAL
    R H E
    2 3 0
    Dodgers37-20
    4 6 1
    Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, CA
    • W: J. Wrobleski  (7-2)
    • L: Z. Wheeler  (4-1)
    • S: T. Scott  (5)
  • Arozarena’s walk-off double, Crawford’s 2 HRs help Mariners beat D’backs 7-6 in 10 innings

    SEATTLE (AP) Randy Arozarena hit a walk-off double, J.P. Crawford homered twice – the first multi-home run game of his career -and the Seattle Mariners beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 7-6 in 10 innings on Friday night for their fourth straight win.

    After Seattle reliever Cooper Criswell (2-1) threw a scoreless 10th inning, Arozarena went to the opposite field on a slider by Diamondbacks righty Juan Morillo with two runners aboard.

    The Mariners (29-29) are .500 for the first time since April 29, when they were 16-16 after a 5-3 win against the Minnesota Twins.

    Crawford hit 74 home runs in 978 major league appearances prior to Friday, but never twice in one game before depositing a pair of offerings from Diamondbacks starter Zac Gallen into the seats at T-Mobile Park.

    The veteran shortstop led off the first inning with a solo shot off the Arizona right-hander, then added a two-run homer in the fifth inning for his ninth of the season, the latter of which gave Seattle a 5-1 lead.

    The Diamondbacks responded with four runs in the top of the sixth, three of them charged to Mariners starter George Kirby (6-4), to tie the game. Arizona evened the score on an RBI single by Jose Fernandez.

    Seattle responded in the bottom of the sixth, as Luke Raley hit his team-leading 12th home run of the season, but Arizona forced extra innings with an RBI fielder’s choice by Ildemaro Vargas in the ninth inning. That set the stage for Arozarena’s heroics.

    Mariners right-hander Bryan Woo (4-3, 3.82 starts Saturday night opposite Diamondbacks RHP Ryne Nelson (2-3, 4.65)

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

    Copyright 2026 STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.

    Expert Picks

    View all 4 picks

    Betting Picks for Every Game
    • Picks from Vegas experts and insiders
    • Optimal rankings, props, DFS strategy
    • Spread, OU, ML picks from 10k simulations
    Matt Severance
    Matt SeveranceSeverance Pays
    #1
    +1503.5 (72%)
    Last 92 MLB ML
    Seattle-135
    Money Line
    Picked May 29 @ 6:58 pm, 0.5 unit on bet365
    WIN
    Arizona is the better team but righty Zac Gallen historically has been quite a bit worse outside the desert and that’s certainly the case in 2026 as he’s 0-3 with a 7.25 ERA on the road. Overall in May, his ERA is 6.66 — which I didn’t like typing that devil number. Guess will be going to confession (again) on Sunday. Seattle’s George Kirby (5-4, 3.54 ERA) has run a bit hot and cold but 3-1 with a 2.53 ERA at night. M’s star Julio Rodriguez has reached base in 12 consecutive games and has eight homers in May, tied for his most dingers in any month career.

    Matt’s Pick

    Eric Cohen
    Eric Cohen

    EC

    Over 1.5+128
    Ketel Marte • Bases • Player Prop
    Picked May 29 @ 2:43 pm, 1 unit on DraftKings
    LOSS
    I’m riding the hot streak with Ketel Marte, who has been the best player in baseball over the last two weeks. I hope I’m not a jinx, but Marte has hit this prop in 11 straight games. During that time, he’s had eight multi-hit games and 10 extra base hits. Mariners starter George Kirby hasn’t been anything special thus far in 2026 so let’s take Marte at a price to continue his elite play.

    Eric’s Pick

    2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 R H E
    0 0 1 0 4 0 0 1 0 6 13 0

    29-29

    0 2 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 7 13 0
    • W: C. Criswell (2-1)L: J. Morillo (1-2)S: (0)
    • HR: ARI – G. Perdomo (3), SEA – J. Rodriguez (11), L. Raley (12), J. Crawford 2 (9)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    K. Marte 2B 4 0 0 0 .271
    C. Carroll RF 6 1 2 0 .294
    G. Perdomo SS 6 3 3 1 .232
    G. Moreno C 5 1 3 2 .268
    A. Del Castillo DH 2 1 0 0 .190
    a- N. Arenado PH-DH 1 0 1 0 .275
    T. Tawa PR-DH 0 0 0 0 .175
    R. Waldschmidt CF 5 0 1 0 .294
    I. Vargas 1B 5 0 0 2 .295
    J. Fernandez 3B 5 0 3 1 .268
    T. Troy LF 4 0 0 0 .313
    • a-singled for Del Castillo in the 7th
    HITTERS AB R H RBI AVG
    J. Crawford SS 4 4 2 3 .218
    J. Rodriguez CF 5 1 3 2 .265
    J. Naylor 1B 4 0 1 0 .258
    R. Arozarena LF 5 0 2 1 .297
    L. Raley RF 4 1 2 1 .271
    V. Robles RF 0 0 0 0 .292
    C. Young 2B 4 0 1 0 .243
    D. Canzone DH 3 0 0 0 .231
    a- R. Refsnyder PH-DH 1 0 0 0 .120
    J. Pereda C 3 1 1 0 .200
    b- P. Wisdom PH 1 0 1 0 .154
    M. Garver C 0 0 0 0 .203
    C. Emerson 3B 4 0 0 0 .229
    • a-struck out for Canzone in the 9th
    • b-singled for Pereda in the 9th
    BATTING
    • 2B – G. Perdomo (9), G. Moreno (8), J. Fernandez 2 (7)
    • HR – G. Perdomo (3)
    • RBI – G. Perdomo (21), G. Moreno 2 (19), I. Vargas 2 (37), J. Fernandez (15)
    • 2-Out RBI – J. Fernandez
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – K. Marte 2 (2), C. Carroll 2 (2), G. Perdomo, R. Waldschmidt, T. Troy 2 (2)
    BATTING
    • 2B – J. Rodriguez (12), R. Arozarena (16)
    • HR – J. Crawford 2 (9), J. Rodriguez (11), L. Raley (12)
    • RBI – J. Crawford 3 (22), J. Rodriguez 2 (29), R. Arozarena (26), L. Raley (30)
    • 2-Out RBI – J. Rodriguez 2 (2)
    • Runners left in scoring position, 2-Out – J. Naylor
    BASERUNNING
    • SB – R. Arozarena (15)
    FIELDING
    • Outfield Assist – R. Waldschmidt
    • DP – 2 (Marte-Perdomo-Vargas; Perdomo-Vargas)
    FIELDING
    • DP – (Young-Naylor)
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    Z. Gallen 5.0 8 5 1 2 5.16
    B. Pfaadt 1.2 3 1 0 3 5.59
    T. Clarke 0.1 0 0 0 0 1.96
    J. Loaisiga 1.0 0 0 0 1 2.53
    B. Garcia 1.0 1 0 0 2 0.90
    J. Morillo(L, 1-2) 0.1 1 0 1 1 2.86
    PITCHERS IP H ER BB SO ERA
    G. Kirby 5.1 6 4 1 4 3.77
    M. Brash(BS, 2) 0.2 2 1 2 1 0.64
    J. Ferrer(H, 7) 0.2 1 0 0 0 1.75
    E. Bazardo(H, 10) 1.0 2 0 1 0 2.13
    G. Speier(H, 6) 0.1 0 0 0 1 2.63
    A. Munoz(BS, 4) 1.0 2 1 0 1 4.98
    C. Criswell(W, 2-1) 1.0 0 0 0 0 3.20
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – Z. Gallen 84-53, B. Pfaadt 31-20, T. Clarke 4-3, J. Loaisiga 16-13, B. Garcia 16-10, J. Morillo 9-6
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – Z. Gallen 8-5, B. Pfaadt 3-1, T. Clarke 1-0, J. Loaisiga 2-0, B. Garcia 2-0
    • Batters Faced – Z. Gallen 21, B. Pfaadt 8, T. Clarke, J. Loaisiga 3, B. Garcia 4, J. Morillo 3
    PITCHING
    • Pitches-Strikes – G. Kirby 87-61, M. Brash 22-11, J. Ferrer 12-9, E. Bazardo 27-15, G. Speier 3-3, A. Munoz 25-16, C. Criswell 9-7
    • Ground Balls-Fly Balls – G. Kirby 4-4, M. Brash 1-0, J. Ferrer 3-0, E. Bazardo 0-3, A. Munoz 3-0, C. Criswell 3-0
    • Batters Faced – G. Kirby 22, M. Brash 6, J. Ferrer 3, E. Bazardo 6, G. Speier, A. Munoz 7, C. Criswell 3
  • Dbacks recap and notes

    • Diamondbacks’ Paul Sewald: Notches 14th save

      Sewald earned the save in Wednesday’s 3-2 win over the Giants, striking out one in a perfect ninth inning.

      Sewald’s now converted his last five save chances, allowing just one run on one hit in that span (six innings). Overall, the veteran closer has logged 14 saves while posting a 3.80 ERA with a 0.75 WHIP and 24:6 K:BB across 21.1 innings this year.

    • Diamondbacks’ Michael Soroka: Up to seven wins

      Soroka (7-2) earned the win Wednesday over the Giants, allowing two runs on four hits and no walks over six innings. He struck out three.

      It was another strong outing from Soroka, who’s held opponents to two runs or fewer in each of his last five outings, posting a 1.78 ERA with 24 strikeouts and just five walks in that span (30.1 innings). Overall, Soroka’s ERA is down to 3.25 on the year with a 1.20 WHIP and 60:14 K:BB across 11 starts (61 innings). He’ll look to keep rolling in his next outing, tentatively scheduled as a tough home matchup next week with the Dodgers.

    • Diamondbacks’ Nolan Arenado: Absent from Wednesday’s lineup

      Arenado (groin) is not in the lineup for Wednesday’s contest versus the Giants.

      Arenado had to be lifted from Tuesday’s contest with right groin tightness. With a team off day looming Thursday, he’ll receive at least two days of rest. Jose Fernandez is covering third base for the Diamondbacks on Wednesday and is in line for a playing-time boost for as long as Arenado is absent from the lineup.

  • 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge leaderboard, scores: Tom Kim shows signs of life, Ludvig Åberg switches putters

    tom-kim-charles-schwab-challenge.jpg

    Getty Images

    A marathon day at Colonial Country Club ended with half a dozen names atop the leaderboard following the first round of action at the 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge. A weather delay that stretched over two hours long pushed play to the brink of darkness with Lee Hodges holding the solo lead before a bogey on his last brought five other names into the equation.

    The one-time PGA Tour winner’s long day of work resulted in a 6-under 64 that put him in lockstep with J.J. Spaun, Matt McCarty, Ryan Gerard, Andrew Putnam and Tom Kim, who is beginning to find some form. The still 23-year-old captured his first top-10 finish of the season at the Myrtle Beach Classic earlier this month and has continued to make in roads towards the player that claimed three early victories in his career.

    “Working on a few things, new swing coach, and just kind of getting back to the things that I’ve done so well,” Kim said. “It’s kind of nice, I’ve worked really hard on fundamentals. That’s kind of what I’ve been working on.

    “It’s nice to not be able to change so much but be able to make some tweaks where I felt like…I wanted to get better at and the little things that are just kind of combining, and I haven’t really changed much with my golf swing, but the little things that I’ve changed has allowed me to start hitting it better. I would say the confidence out there is getting a lot higher, too, which is nice.”

    More than half the field finds themselves within five strokes of Hodges’ total after 18 holes of play as soft conditions due to early-week rains allowed players to pin their ears back around a historically difficult Colonial. The Round 1 scoring average came in at a shade under 69.00 with U.S. Open winners Spaun and Gary Woodland among those to cause some damage.

    Spaun’s 64 clipped Woodland’s tally by a single stroke as the two Americans played alongside Swedish superstar Ludvig Åberg who came in with a respectable 66 of his own. At 4 under, Åberg spearheads a logjam of players that includes seasoned winners like Max Homa, Russell Henley, Nico Echavarria and Hideki Matsuyama.

    Two-time major champion Justin Thomas got his tournament off in less-than-ideal fashion with two straight bogeys out of the blocks, but he battled back tough to get into red figures with a 69, while his good friend Rickie Fowler will have work to do to make the cut after an opening 70.

    The leaders

    T1. Lee Hodges, Ryan Gerard, Tom Kim, Andrew Putnam, J.J. Spaun, Matt McCarty (-6):

    Hodges rolled in a birdie from 28 feet just as the horn sounded for the weather delay, but he wasn’t done yet. Returning to finish his round after two hours, he tacked on two more birdies, played the Horrible Horseshoe (Nos. 3-5) in 2 under and sprinted through the finish line to the top of the leaderboard.

    On the day, he made more than 100 feet worth of putts, while hitting 10 greens in regulation in a row during the meat of his round. Making this more impressive is that he closed his round on the front nine in 4 under — the side that played slightly more difficult on Thursday.

    It’s a great start for Hodges and one that is desperately needed. He is without a top-10 finish since the opening event of the 2026 season and finds himself No. 117 in the season-long race, one year after narrowly failing to earn his full-time status.

    Other contenders

    T7. Alex Smalley, Ricky Castillo, Keegan Bradley, Brian Harman, Kevin Yu, Jordan Smith, Luke Clanton, Doug Ghim, Erik van Rooyen, Gary Woodland, Billy Horschel (-5)

    For the fifth straight round dating back to the PGA Championship, Smalley finds his name on the first page of the leaderboard. While he was the 18-, 36- and 54-hole leader at Aronimink before settling for a runner-up result, the Duke graduate started his Charles Schwab Challenge just outside of pole position with hopes of finally capturing his first PGA Tour title.

    His continuous run of top-tier golf has included five straight top 20s, a pair of runner-up finishes and another top 10 sprinkled in. Unlike at Aronimink, where Smalley’s putter carried the load, it was his ball striking that was superb on Thursday as he split 10 fairways, hit 15 greens in regulation while making zero putts outside 15 feet. All of this added up to five birdies, zero bogeys and another opportunity to position himself for a weekend run.

    “Everybody wishes to get off to a good start,” Smalley said. “I realize that that’s probably not going to happen every single first round that I’m going to play for the rest of my career — hopefully it does. But, yeah, just I felt like the first few holes I had some chances, just made some pars.

    “I knew it was playing relatively easy so I just tried to stay patient and was able to get a couple the last few holes on the back nine. I mean, always getting off to a good start is good, but you still have to keep pushing forward, you can’t let off the gas once you do get off to a good start.”

  • Charles Schwab Challenge Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    T1
    USA
    -6 64* 1:24 PM 64
    T1
    USA
    -6 64* 1:57 PM 64
    T1
    KOR
    -6 64* 8:22 AM 64
    T1
    USA
    -6 64 8:44 AM* 64
    T1
    USA
    -6 64* 8:55 AM 64
    T1
    USA
    -6 64* 9:17 AM 64
    T7
    USA
    -5 65* 1:13 PM 65
    T7
    USA
    -5 65* 1:24 PM 65
    T7
    USA
    -5 65* 1:24 PM 65
    T7
    TWN
    -5 65 1:35 PM* 65
    T7
    USA
    -5 65* 1:35 PM 65
    T7
    ENG
    -5 65* 2:08 PM 65
    T7
    USA
    -5 65 2:30 PM* 65
    T7
    USA
    -5 65 8:22 AM* 65
    T7
    ZAF
    -5 65* 8:22 AM 65
    T7
    USA
    -5 65 8:44 AM* 65
    T7
    USA
    -5 65* 8:44 AM 65
    T7
    DNK
    -5 65 9:28 AM* 65
    T19
    USA
    -4 66 12:40 PM* 66
    T19
    USA
    -4 66* 12:51 PM 66
    T19
    CAN
    -4 66* 1:02 PM 66
    T19
    USA
    -4 66 1:13 PM* 66
    T19
    COL
    -4 66* 1:13 PM 66
    T19
    USA
    -4 66 1:35 PM* 66
    T19
    JPN
    -4 66* 1:35 PM 66
    T19
    USA
    -4 66* 1:46 PM 66
    T19
    USA
    -4 66 2:08 PM* 66
    T19
    USA
    -4 66* 2:08 PM 66
    T19
    BEL
    -4 66* 2:30 PM 66
    T19
    JPN
    -4 66 8:00 AM* 66
    T19
    SWE
    -4 66 8:44 AM* 66
    T32
    USA
    -3 67* 12:40 PM 67
    T32
    USA
    -3 67 12:51 PM* 67
    T32
    USA
    -3 67 8:00 AM* 67
    T32
    USA
    -3 67* 8:11 AM 67
    T32
    USA
    -3 67* 8:44 AM 67
    T32
    USA
    -3 67 8:55 AM* 67
    T32
    USA
    -3 67* 8:55 AM 67
    T32
    USA
    -3 67 9:06 AM* 67
    T32
    JPN
    -3 67* 9:39 AM 67
    T41
    ZAF
    -2 68* 12:40 PM 68
    T41
    ENG
    -2 68* 1:13 PM 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68 1:24 PM* 68
    T41
    SCO
    -2 68* 1:35 PM 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68 2:08 PM* 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68* 2:19 PM 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68* 8:00 AM 68
    T41
    PHL
    -2 68 8:22 AM* 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68 8:33 AM* 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68 8:33 AM* 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68* 9:06 AM 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68* 9:06 AM 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68* 9:17 AM 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68 9:28 AM* 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68 9:39 AM* 68
    T41
    USA
    -2 68* 9:50 AM 68
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 1:02 PM* 69
    T57
    DNK
    -1 69* 1:02 PM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 1:13 PM* 69
    T57
    ZAF
    -1 69 1:35 PM* 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 1:46 PM* 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69* 1:46 PM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 1:57 PM* 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69* 1:57 PM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 2:19 PM* 69
    T57
    JPN
    -1 69 2:19 PM* 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69* 2:19 PM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69* 2:30 PM 69
    T57
    JPN
    -1 69* 8:00 AM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 8:11 AM* 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 8:11 AM* 69
    T57
    COL
    -1 69* 8:11 AM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 8:22 AM* 69
    T57
    IRL
    -1 69* 8:22 AM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69* 8:55 AM 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 9:06 AM* 69
    T57
    USA
    -1 69 9:17 AM* 69
    T57
    FRA
    -1 69* 9:28 AM 69
    T57
    CHN
    -1 69 9:39 AM* 69
    T57
    NOR
    -1 69* 9:39 AM 69
    T57
    ZAF
    -1 69* 9:39 AM 69
    T57
    ENG
    -1 69 9:50 AM* 69
    T83
    USA
    E 70* 12:40 PM 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70 12:51 PM* 70
    T83
    DNK
    E 70* 12:51 PM 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70 1:24 PM* 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70 1:46 PM* 70
    T83
    KOR
    E 70* 1:46 PM 70
    T83
    ARG
    E 70 1:57 PM* 70
    T83
    CAN
    E 70 1:57 PM* 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70* 2:08 PM 70
    T83
    ENG
    E 70 2:19 PM* 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70* 8:11 AM 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70 8:33 AM* 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70* 8:44 AM 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70 8:55 AM* 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70 8:55 AM* 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70 9:06 AM* 70
    T83
    USA
    E 70* 9:17 AM 70
    T83
    SWE
    E 70* 9:28 AM 70
    T83
    CAN
    E 70 9:50 AM* 70
    T83
    COL
    E 70* 9:50 AM 70
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 12:40 PM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 12:51 PM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71* 12:51 PM 71
    T103
    CAN
    +1 71 1:02 PM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 1:46 PM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 2:08 PM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71* 2:19 PM 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71* 2:30 PM 71
    T103
    FRA
    +1 71* 8:00 AM 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71* 8:33 AM 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 9:17 AM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 9:17 AM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 9:28 AM* 71
    T103
    USA
    +1 71 9:39 AM* 71
    T117
    USA
    +2 72 12:40 PM* 72
    T117
    AUS
    +2 72 1:24 PM* 72
    T117
    ARG
    +2 72 2:30 PM* 72
    T117
    USA
    +2 72 8:11 AM* 72
    T117
    USA
    +2 72* 9:50 AM 72
    T122
    USA
    +3 73 1:02 PM* 73
    T122
    USA
    +3 73* 1:02 PM 73
    T122
    USA
    +3 73* 1:57 PM 73
    T122
    ENG
    +3 73 2:30 PM* 73
    T122
    CHN
    +3 73* 9:28 AM 73
    T122
    SWE
    +3 73 9:50 AM* 73
    T128
    USA
    +4 74 8:00 AM* 74
    T128
    USA
    +4 74* 9:06 AM 74
    130
    DEU
    +5 75* 8:33 AM 75
    131
    USA
    +6 76 1:13 PM* 76
    132
    AUS
    +9 79* 8:33 AM 79
    WD