LE GOLF
Keegan Bradley finished his career coming out for the 100-meter eagle on 9th Street, completing a 66 out of 5 under par on Friday that gave him a percentage of the lead with Sam Burns at the Valspar Championship in Palm Harbor, Florida.
Burns fired an 8 under par of 63 to sign for Bradley with 12 under par and 130.
Lucas Glover (65), Charley Hoffman (66) and Max Homa (68) were 4 shots behind, and only 10 players were within five 36-hole lead shots.
LPGA: Hee Young Park made its final place to tie with Inbee Park at the HSBC Women’s World Championships at Sentosa Golf Club in Singapore.
Hee Young Park (68) and Inbee Park (69), ranked No. 2, totaled 11133 in two rounds.
Another South Korean player, Hyo Joo Kim, was two shots away in a third-place draw with Lin Xiyu of China.
Pep Angles, from Spain, is his closest hunter. Scott Jamieson, who shot a field record of 61, has four shots with Scott Hend, Eduard Rousaud and Kalle Samooja.
tennis
MADRID OPEN: Second seed Naomi Osaka returned on clay and beat Misaki Doi 7-5, 6-2 in the first round.
Osaka surpassed Doi’s strong start by scoring six aces and breaking his serve five times. A leg injury caused Osaka to miss last season’s swing on clay and his last single surface tournament, the 2019 French Open.
Simona Halep, third seed, who won the tournament in 2016 and 2017, beat Sorribes Tormo, 6-0, 7-5.
MUNICH OPENER: Top seed Alexander Zverev in the quarter-finals against Belarusian Ilya Ivashka, 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-3.
HORSE RACING
KENTUCKY OAKS: Favorite Malathaat outperfied Travel Column as he entered the stretch and surpassed the search effects in a tight duel to the line, winning the 147th Kentucky Oaks through a neck in Louisville, Kentucky.
The $1. 25 million flagship race for 3-year-olds in their classic spring spot at Churchill Downs on the eve of the Kentucky Derby Both races were delayed until Labor Day last year due to the coronavirus pandemic.
colleges
FOOTBALL: Kansas hired Lance Leipold of Buffalo, entrusting one of the worst school football systems to a Division III coach with roots in the Midwest.
Leipold signed a six-year contract and succeeds Miles, who won a national championship at LSU. Miles separated from Kansas after two lost seasons and amid accusations of sexual harassment dating back to his time with the Tigers. beyond the age of six, turning an oppressed program into an eternal contender in the bowl. He is 37-33 with Buffalo, leading the school in his seasons since reaching the Mid-American Conference in 1999.
Before moving to Division I, Leipold, 56, won six national championships in 8 seasons and won 109-6 as head coach of his alma mater, Wisconson-Whitewater.
LE HOCKEY
WORLD WORLD WORLD CHAMPIONS OF THE WORLD: The women’s world championships have been postponed until the end of August, but the International Ice Hockey Federation has not yet decided on a place.
The IIHF announced that it is running with Hockey Canada to compare potential tournament hosts, now scheduled for August 20-31. In the past, the 10-nation event was scheduled to take a position in Nova Scotia from 6 to 16 May before being cancelled. throughout the province due to COVID-19 problems.
LE FÚTBOL
GERMANY: Leipzig substitute Emil Forsberg scored in the extra time to send his team to the German Cup final with a 2–1 win over Werder Bremen.
Leipzig will face Borussia Dortmund or the Holstein Kiel department team in Berlin on 17 May.
Jonny Evans’ headbutt in the 68th minute earned Leicester a point in 3rd place after James Ward-Prowse’s penalty for the hosts.
Leiceister has 8 transparent points for West Ham, which ranks fifth in the war for the four most sensitive in the Premier League.
sumo
BACKGROUND: A Japanese sumo wrestler died a month after falling head-to-head in a match in a case that raised doubts about the sport’s reaction to medical emergencies.
Hibikiryu, 28, died Wednesday of acute respiratory failure, the Japan Sumo Association announced. The wrestler, whose genuine call is Mitsuki Amano, was thrown through his opponent in a tourcallnt match on March 26.
On a stretcher, the wrestler was attentive and told sumo officers that he felt his lower body paralyzed, but that his condition had advanced in the hospital, Nikkan Sports reported.
The Japanese sumo agreement said it is not known whether Hibikiryu’s death is similar to his injury. He said the main points of the injury, adding that if he suffered from paralysis, they simply won’t be revealed. There are no immediate comments from your family.
According to Japanese media, no medical expert was willing to give him first aid. Wrestlers are expected to stand on their own, while medical experts are in the tournament venue but not by the ring.
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