Florida’s Hack wins turbo at Major Series of Putting
Jhared Hack of Orlando, Florida, won Miniturbo No. 1 at the Major Series of Putting event at Legacy Golf Club.
Hack finished at 10-under 62 to earn $2,400. Sweden’s Gunnar Bengtsson and Canada’s Aaron Crawford finished one shot back.
In a qualifier event, Crawford, Gianfranco Guida, Philippe Isabel-dion, Gord Burns and
Hans Olofsson earned spots in the Stroke Play Championship that starts Wednesday.
Sports betting: Bookmaker William Hill US is suing sports betting rival Fanduel for allegedly copying its “how to bet” guide for customers in Atlantic City. William Hill US filed a copyright infringement lawsuit in U.S. District Court in
New Jersey alleging that Fanduel’s duplication of the guide was so blatant that it even used the same hypothetical examples of one pitcher facing another pitcher.
NBA: Chicago Bulls point guard Kris Dunn will miss four to six weeks because of a sprained medial collateral ligament in his left knee.
UNR stadium: The University of Nevada, Reno plans to spend $2 million on top of nearly $700,000 it spent last year to fix accessibility mistakes made during a $14 million Mackay Stadium upgrade in 2016.
An Americans With Disabilities Act audit conducted by a consultant in July listed 167 compliance concerns at the 52-year-old stadium, the Reno Gazette Journal reported.
The newspaper collected complaints about distant parking, high curbs, difficult ramps, crowded elevators and troubled restrooms.
College football: Texas Christian receiver and returner Kavontae Turpin was dismissed from the team after a second charge surfaced against him following his weekend arrest on an assault charge for an alleged altercation with his girlfriend.
MLB: Mark Mcgwire won’t return as San Diego’s bench coach next season, seeking to spend more time with his family, manager Andy Green said.
Broadcaster dies: Longtime San Francisco Giants broadcaster Hank Greenwald died at
83 on Monday after battling heart and kidney complications, the team said.
Soccer: U.S. women’s national team defender Kelley O’hara is expected to be out eight to 12 weeks after surgery on her right ankle.