Las Vegas Review-Journal

Florida’s Hack wins turbo at Major Series of Putting

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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.

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