Dayton Daily News

LPGA Tour:

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they wanted the golf course to play all week,” Jobe said. “It was hard out there.”

Triplett started the final day with a one-stroke lead but it didn’t last long.

Perry birdied the first hole and then took the lead for good when Triplett dropped a stroke on No. 5. By the ninth hole, Perry’s lead was four strokes.

Perry has nine overall victories on the 50-and-over tour after winning 14 times on the PGA Tour. He lost a playoff to Mark Brooks in the 1996 PGA Championsh­ip at Valhalla in his home state of Kentucky. Danielle Kang birdied the final hole to win the KPMG Women’s PGA Championsh­ip for her first LPGA Tour title, edging defending champion Brooke Henderson in Olympia Fields, Ill.

Kang bogeyed the tricky par-3 17th, and Henderson closed with two birdies to move into a tie for the lead, coming up just short on a 30-foot eagle putt on the par-5 18th. But Kang had two solid shots to get to the green in two, and then twoputted for the victory.

Kang’s previous best finish in a major was a tie for 14th in the 2012 U.S. Women’s Open.

PGA Tour:

Kyle Stanley got up-and-down for par from just over the 18th green to win the Quicken Loans National on the first hole of a playoff with Charles Howell III in Potomac, Md.

On a chaotic final day at TPC Potomac that included a 5-minute storm delay, Stanley and Howell finished at 7-under 273 after matching final-round 4-under 66s. Howell had a 21-foot putt to win on the final hole of regulation that rolled over the left edge of the cup.

Englishman Tommy Fleetwood shot a bogey-free 5-under 66 at the French Open in Guyancourt for a 12-under total and a one-shot victory over Peter Uihlein of the United States.

European Tour:

Point guard Kyle Lowry said he wants to finish what he started in Toronto.

Lowry announced on the Players’ Tribune site Sunday that he will re-sign with the Raptors. Reports indicated Lowry will sign a three-year deal worth $100 million.

“It was up to me to decide whether this thing we have — is it worth sticking around for, and running it back again, and seeing if we can take that next step?” Lowry wrote. “And like I said — to me, that was an easy decision. The answer is yes.”

The three-time All-Star averaged 22.4 points and 7.0 assists last season for the Raptors, who also struck a deal to retain forward Serge Ibaka earlier Sunday.

“If you’re looking for people to believe in — choose the people who believed in you first,” Lowry wrote. “And if you start something? Man, you finish it.”

So Toronto’s backcourt is set for at least the next three years, after shooting guard DeMar DeRozan got a fiveyear deal worth $139 million last summer.

Lowry was one of the most-coveted point guards on the market this summer, perhaps only behind Golden State’s Stephen Curry. And he’s going back to a team that has posted consecutiv­e 50-win seasons and reached the playoffs in each of the last four years.

“I’m coming back to Toronto because my heart is telling me that it’s home,” said Lowry, noting that he still hasn’t had poutine — a popular dish in Canada.

When Toronto got Ibaka before the trade deadline last season, the Raptors made clear they had no intentions of letting him walk away this summer in free agency.

Now that’s been proven. Ibaka agreed to terms on a three-year contract reportedly worth $65 million.

Ibaka, 27, was traded to Toronto from Orlando late last season. He averaged 14.2 points and 6.8 rebounds in 23 games with the Raptors.

Shooting guard Kyle Korver will return after agreeing on a three-year, $22 million contract. Korver, 36, led the league in 3-point percentage (.451) last season.

Fresh off his first career championsh­ip, David West will return for what is expected to be his final NBA season. Andre Iguodala, the 2015 NBA Finals MVP, also said late Saturday that he would return to the Warriors.

Houston agreed with Nene on a three-year deal worth $11 million, a day after an initial agreement fell apart because it violated rules of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, and former Toronto forward P.J. Tucker agreed to a four-year, $32 million deal.

Philadelph­ia agreed on a one-year, $11 million contract with forward Amir Johnson, who spent the last two seasons with Boston.

Taj Gibson, formerly of Chicago and Oklahoma City, agreed on a two-year, $28 million deal.

A two-year deal was reached with shooting guard Jodie Meeks, previously with Orlando.

Darrall Imhoff, a former University of California and U.S. Olympic champion center who played 12 seasons in the NBA, died in Bend, Ore., at 78 of a heart attack, the Portland Trail Blazers said.

Cavaliers: Warriors: Rockets: 76ers: Timberwolv­es: Wizards: Etc.:

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