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Tag: first round

  • Kai Trump’s first-round score at the LPGA Tour’s Annika tournament? Don’t ask

    After enduring others teeing off on her for two weeks, Kai Trump was finally able to set a golf ball on a tee and swing away in an LPGA Tour event.

    President Trump’s eldest granddaughter shot a 13-over 83 Thursday in the first round of the Annika at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Fla. The high school senior and University of Miami commit bogeyed the first five holes before registering a par, totaling 42 on her front nine and 41 on the back.

    Critics among and beyond her nearly nine million social media followers were relentless in noting the 18-year-old’s obvious privilege for securing a sponsor invitation. Dan Doyle Jr., owner of Pelican Golf Club, cheerfully admitted that Trump’s inclusion had little to do with ability and a lot to do with public relations.

    “The idea of the exemption, when you go into the history of exemptions, is to bring attention to an event,” Doyle told reporters this week. “You got to see her live, she’s lovely to speak to.

    “And she’s brought a lot of viewers through Instagram, and things like that, who normally don’t watch women’s golf. That was the hope. And we’re seeing that now.”

    Trump attends the Benjamin School in Palm Beach and is ranked a distant No. 461 by the American Junior Golf Assn. She also competes on the Srixon Medalist Tour on the South Florida PGA. Her top finish was a tie for third in July.

    On the eve of the Annika, Trump got a boost from a chat with Tiger Woods, who is dating her mom, Vanessa Trump. More privilege, sure, but what did he tell her?

    “I mean, he is the best golfer in the entire world. I would say that. And an even better person,” Kai Trump told reporters. “He told me to go out there and have fun and just go with the flow. Whatever happens, happens.”

    What happened was far from flawless. With Allan Kournikova — younger brother of tennis star Anna Kournikova and a lifelong friend — as her caddie, Trump bogeyed the first four holes before registering her first par.

    She will play again Friday and is the longest of shots to make the cut for the final two rounds over the weekend after finishing the first round in 108th — and last — place.

    It’s been an eventful week for Trump. She played nine holes of a pro-am round Monday with tournament host Annika Sorenstam, who empathized with the difficulty of handling an intense swirl of criticism and support.

    “I just don’t know how she does it, honestly,” Sorenstam said. “To be 18 years old and hear all the comments, she must be super tough on the inside. I’m sure we can all relate what it’s like to get criticism here and there, but she gets it a thousand times.”

    Sorenstam recalled her own exemption for the Bank of America Colonial in 2003 when she became the first woman to play in a men’s PGA Tour event in 58 years. She made a 14-foot putt at the 18th green to save par and end her round of 74, giving her a 36-hole total of five-over 145. She hurled her golf ball into the grandstand, wiped away tears and was hugged by her husband, David Esch.

    “That was, at the time, maybe a little bit of a controversial invite,” Sorenstam said. “In the end, I certainly appreciated it. It just brings attention to the tournament, to the sport and to women’s sports, which I think is what we want.”

    Attention was temporarily diverted Wednesday from Trump to WNBA star Caitlin Clark and her Indiana Fever teammate Sophie Cummingham at the Annika pro-am. Clark, paired with defending tournament champion Nelly Korda, went viral by sinking a long putt from off the green.

    “I actually grew up playing a little bit. I remember for one of my birthdays, I got this cute little set of pink golf clubs,” Clark said. “Then, I kind of stopped playing and then during COVID, I picked it back up.”

    Cunningham’s moment was less majestic. After Clark hit her tee shot on the 10th hole down the middle of the fairway, Cunningham sliced hers into the crowd. She yelled “Happy Gilmore,” drawing laughs from the gallery.

    Trump, for her part, swished a basket from beyond the free-throw line of an outdoor court near the first tee while waiting to begin the pro-am.

    Sponsor invitations have long been used to attract attention to a tournament through a golfer who is from a well-known family or, in recent years, has a strong social media presence. Trump qualifies on both counts.

    Her nine million followers combined on Instagram, Tiktok, YouTube and X include teens, golf fans and members of her grandfather’s administration such as Vice President J.D. Vance, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem.

    In addition to posting what she does on and off the course, Trump creates videos of playing golf with her grandpa and chronicled their visit to the Ryder Cup. She also recently launched her own sports apparel and lifestyle brand, KT.

    “Kai’s broad following and reach are helping introduce golf to new audiences, especially among younger fans,” said Ricki Lasky, the LPGA‘s chief tour business and operations officer.

    Beth Ann Nichols, a senior writer a Golfweek, has gone from believing Trump receiving a sponsor into the Annika as a “terrible idea” to a supporter of it. She wrote that her first reaction was that “her game isn’t ready for this kind of spotlight; there’s too much on the line at the season’s penultimate event to have a circus break out.”

    But once the week unfolded she changed her mind, believing the President’s grandaughter is good for women’s golf.

    “Between the presence of Caitlin Clark in the pro-am and President Donald Trump’s granddaughter in the 108-player field, this might become one of the most talked-about LPGA events in the tour’s 75-year history,” Nichols wrote. “For those who understand how painstakingly tough it is for women’s golf to break through the golf world, let alone the sports world and beyond, these opportunities don’t come often.”

    Trump will need to improve her game to become more than a novelty. She finished last among a field of 24 at 52-over par in the Junior Invitational at Sage Valley in March. Her performance Thursday illustrated that while she is strong off the tee, her short game needs to develop.

    “I don’t think anybody here is thinking that she will be the one holding the trophy on Sunday,” Sorenstam said. “I spoke to her a little bit yesterday. You know, just make the most out of this week. There will be lessons learned. Take them to the future and learn.”

    The oldest of the president’s 11 grandchildren, Kai became known nationally when she made a speech in support of her grandfather’s campaign at the 2024 Republican National Convention. Her parents, Donald Trump Jr. and Vanessa Trump, divorced in 2018, and her mother has been dating Woods for about a year.

    Steve Henson

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  • Heat face Magic in opener following pair of 1st-round exits

    (Photo credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

    Coming off first-round playoff exits, the Orlando Magic host the rival Miami Heat in Wednesday’s season opener.

    Last season, the Boston Celtics eliminated the seventh-seeded Magic in five games. The Heat won twice in the play-in tournament to become the first No. 10 seed in NBA history to advance, but the Cleveland Cavaliers swept them in the first round, punctuating the result with a 55-point blowout in Game 4.

    The Magic are considered a team on the rise in the Eastern Conference. They finished 41-41 and won a second straight Southeast Division title despite injuries to young stars Paolo Banchero, Jalen Suggs and brothers Franz and Moritz Wagner.

    Moritz Wagner is still out after tearing his ACL last December, but the rest of the Magic make a formidable nucleus. Orlando picked up new starting guard Desmond Bane in an offseason trade with the Memphis Grizzlies.

    ‘Our strength is our depth,’ Magic coach Jamahl Mosley said. ‘Our guys are going to play to the level of fatigue and then we have the next group coming in ready to go. I think that’s what we hang our hats on — along with the defense, our depth will be a major strength for us.’

    Orlando had the best scoring defense in the NBA last season, conceding only 105.5 points per game, but struggled mightily from the perimeter. That’s where Bane comes in. He has been a 41% career shooter from beyond the arc with Memphis and averaged 19.2 points last season, as well as 6.1 rebounds and 5.3 assists.

    Miami will be without star guard Tyler Herro, who had foot surgery in mid-September, for an unspecified amount of time. The Heat brought in former Clippers guard Norman Powell to join the established core of Herro, Bam Adebayo and Andrew Wiggins.

    ‘Norman has played a lot of different roles with the teams he has played on and has always been efficient,’ Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. ‘But it always comes down to the right type of fit. You have to be like-minded in your approach in how you view the game and how you compete. He’s won a championship before (with the 2019 Toronto Raptors). He takes it very seriously and he has an edge to him, which we like.’

    One area Miami must focus on is holding onto leads. Last season’s Heat managed to lose 22 games after leading by double digits, including when they coughed up a 25-point lead to Orlando last December.

    That comeback matched the largest in Magic franchise history. Meanwhile, the Heat’s 37-45 final record tied for the worst mark of Spoelstra’s 17-year coaching tenure.

    The Heat and Magic are meeting to open a second straight season. Miami dropped last year’s opener by 19 points but rebounded to split the four-game season series.

    Miami is 20-17 all-time in season openers, while Orlando is 21-15.

    –Field Level Media

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  • NFL Draft 2024: Live updates on the Eagles picks and more from the 1st round

    NFL Draft 2024: Live updates on the Eagles picks and more from the 1st round

    PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — The first round of the NFL Draft is now underway.

    Philadelphia is scheduled to make eight of the draft’s 257 picks, beginning with the No. 22 selection of the first round.

    Here are live updates from round one:

    9:46 p.m. — With the No. 14 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Saints select Taliese Fuaga

    9:37 p.m. — With the No. 13 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Raiders select Brock Bowers

    9:33 p.m. — With the No. 12 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Broncos select Bo Nix

    9:26 p.m. — With the No. 11 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Jets select Olumuyiwa Fashanu

    9:20 p.m. — With the No. 10 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Vikings select J.J. McCarthy

    9:12 p.m. — With the No. 9 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Chicago Bears select Rome Odunze

    9:07 p.m. — With the No. 8 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Atlanta Falcons select Michael Penix Jr.

    9:01 p.m. — With the No. 7 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Titans select JC Latham

    8:53 p.m. — With the No. 6 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Giants select Malik Nabers

    8:47 p.m. — With the No. 5 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Chargers select Joe Alt

    8:38 p.m. — With the No. 4 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Cardinals select Marvin Harrison Jr.

    8:33 p.m. — With the No. 3 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Patriots select Drake Maye

    8:27 p.m. — With the No. 2 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft the Commanders select Jayden Daniels

    8:20 p.m. — Chicago Bears select quarterback Caleb Williams of Southern California with No. 1 pick in NFL draft.

    8:11 p.m. — Eminem greets crowd to start NFL Draft

    What is this year’s draft order for the Eagles?

    • First Round – No. 22 overall
    • Second Round – No. 50 overall (from New Orleans)
    • Second Round – No. 53 overall
    • Fourth Round – No. 120 overall (from Pittsburgh)
    • Fifth Round – No. 161 overall (from Tampa Bay)
    • Fifth Round – No. 171 overall (Compensatory Selection)
    • Fifth Round – No. 172 overall (Compensatory Selection)
    • Sixth Round – No. 210 overall (Compensatory Selection)

    WATCH: Imhotep Charter’s Tykee Smith waiting to hear his name called at NFL Draft

    Imhotep Charter’s Tykee Smith waiting to hear his name called at NFL Draft

    Eagles’ top three needs

    CB, OT, LB. The Eagles have to decide whether to bring back veteran corner James Bradberry, who had a rough 2023. Either way, they need a youth infusion. Darius Slay is 33, Bradberry is 30, and the secondary moved a beat too slow last season.

    The Eagles need offensive line depth and have to start putting a succession plan in place for stalwart right tackle Lane Johnson.

    Ideally, they’d find someone who can compete for the vacant right guard spot for this season and kick outside once Johnson retires — OT feels like a decent bet for Philly’s first-round pick.

    RELATED: 2024 NFL draft: First-round picks could be on the trading block on Day 1

    Linebacker was a mess last season, and while the additions of Devin White and Oren Burks provide some hope, they need to continue to invest in the position — something they’ve been reluctant to do recently.

    ESPN contributed to this report.

    Copyright © 2024 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

    6abc Digital Staff

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  • March Madness: Duke takes on Vermont, NC State and UNC advance to second round

    March Madness: Duke takes on Vermont, NC State and UNC advance to second round

    RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — The most exciting two days of college basketball are finally upon us. The NCAA tournament Round of 64 begins with North Carolina and North Carolina State on the docket Thursday and Duke playing Friday.

    Duke

    The Blue Devils enter the NCAA tournament on a two-game losing streak. They dropped their last two games against rivals North Carolina and North Carolina State. Worse for the Blue Devils is the fact that no college team has ever lost its first game of a conference tournament and then won a national championship.

    The Blue Devils enter as a No. 4 seed and look to avoid an upset against Vermont.

    But that doesn’t mean Duke is dead. The team has the talent to get back on track with its winning ways.

    The Blue Devils (24-8) are a No. 4 seed playing at 7:10 p.m. Friday in Brooklyn against 13 seed Vermont (28-6). This is the fourth time those teams have met; Duke has never lost against the Catamounts.

    NC State

    Some felt NC State wasn’t supposed to be here. The Wolfpack proved they belonged.

    Some felt NC State wasn’t supposed to be here. The Wolfpack proved they belonged.

    NC State (23-14) used a strong night from its frontcourt to take control in the second half and subdue No. 6 seed Texas Tech 80-67 on Thursday night.

    Ben Middlebrooks scored a career-high 21 points, Mo Diarra added 17 points and 12 rebounds, and DJ Burns Jr. chipped in with 16 points as the Wolfpack frontcourt feasted on the Red Raiders.

    DJ Horne also tossed in 16 points as the Wolfpack shot nearly 51% from the floor to Texas Tech’s 38.7% shooting.

    NC State’s Ben Middlebrooks battles inside against Texas Tech’s Warren Washington at the NCAA tournament on Thursday night.

    Gene J. Puskar

    It was the Wolfpack’s first NCAA tournament win in nine years and the first under head coach Kevin Keatts.

    Joe Toussaint led the Red Raiders with 16 points, but Texas Tech made just 7-of-31 3-pointers and couldn’t keep pace in the second half.

    NC State broke the game open with a 13-2 surge midway through the second half, highlighted by a pretty bounce pass from Michael O’Connell that turned into a dunk by Diarra and a soft running hook shot by Burns that made it 65-51.

    Texas Tech’s Joe Toussaint shoots past the defense of NC State’s Casey Morsell on Thursday night at the NCAA tournament.

    Matt Freed

    The sixth-seeded Red Raiders (23-11) had relied on defense to reach the tournament in coach Grant McCasland’s first season. Texas Tech came in 18-0 when holding opponents under 70 points and just 5-10 when teams reach that threshold.

    N.C. State hit the 70-point mark on a layup by Middlebrooks with 4:06 to go.

    It’s been a remarkable turnaround in the past 10 days for N.C. State, which entered the ACC Tournament as the 10th seed and was dealing with questions about coach Kevin Keatts’ future. The Wolfpack responded by beating rivals Duke, Virginia and North Carolina, the last in a decisive victory in the title game.

    Keatts admitted he was worried about how his team would respond emotionally against an opponent it barely knows. Turns out N.C. State was just fine thanks to Middlebrooks, a transfer from Clemson who has been a key reserve but rarely the focal point.

    WATCH | NC State’s big win

    NC State Wolfpack beats UNC Tar Heels, wins the ACC Tournament and earns NCAA March Madness bid

    That changed against the Red Raiders. The 6-10 Middlebrooks tied his career high of 14 points set in January against Wake Forest in the first half. He kept going in the second. And when Burns – who plays a throwback under-the-rim game – got going after halftime, Texas Tech was scrambling to keep up.

    It couldn’t, sending N.C. State to the second round for the first time since 2015, when the Wolfpack won two games in Pittsburgh to reach the Sweet 16. Another chance awaits this weekend against Horizon League champion Oakland. The Golden Grizzlies (24-11) stunned No. 3 Kentucky (23-10) 80-76. The results ensure that a double-digit seed will reach the Sweet 16.

    “Everybody’s got confidence now. Everybody,” Diarra said.

    UNC

    North Carolina was the first of the Triangle schools to take the court in this year’s tournament, beating Wagner 90-62 in Charlotte.

    The West Region No. 1 seed Tar Heels (28-7) came out sloppy in the first half, committing six turnovers that Wagner (17-16) converted into nine points.

    Armando Bacot had 20 points and 15 rebounds, and North Carolina never trailed.

    Hubert Davis’ team steadied the ship quickly and started to use its size advantage against the Seahawks — finishing the first half with a 24-12 advantage on points in the paint.

    UNC led Wagner 40-28 at halftime and steadily pulled away.

    Armando Bacot had 20 points and 15 rebounds, and North Carolina never trailed.

    UNC’s Armando Bacot drives to the basket against Wagner in Thursday’s opening round of the NCAA tournament.

    Chris Carlson

    Jae’Lyn Withers had a season-high 16 points and matched his best rebounding work with 10 boards for the West Region’s headliner. That helped the Tar Heels finish the game shooting 55% while dominating up front against a short-handed upstart aiming to pull off only the third opening-round takedown of a 1-seed in March Madness history.

    “I think he did set the tone,” Davis said, and he added: “J-Wit, his energy and effort on both ends of the floor really ignited us and got us the lead going into halftime. He came off the bench and his production was real.”

    UNC’s Armando Bacot shoots over Wagner forward Keyontae Lewis on Thursday during the first round of the NCAA tournament.

    Chris Carlson

    RJ Davis, named this week as a first-team All-American by The Associated Press, had 17 of his 22 points after halftime for the Tar Heels.

    UNC also played with the backing of a blue-clad crowd about 2 1/2 hours from its Chapel Hill campus. And the Tar Heels will have that again for the next step: a marquee matchup with Michigan State (20-14) and Hall of Fame coach Tom Izzo on Saturday. It’s a rematch of the 2009 national championship game. The Tar Heels won that game, to give head coach Roy Williams his second national title.

    RJ Davis scored 22 points for the Tar Heels against Wagner.

    Mike Stewart

    The Tar Heels dominated this one inside, finishing with 48 points in the paint and a 43-24 rebounding advantage to go with 17 second-chance points.

    Withers had scored in double figures only three times all year, the last time coming against his former Louisville program on Jan. 17.

    The UNC basketball team practiced at Johnson C. Smith, a Charlotte HBCU that means a lot to Hubert Davis.

    “(Davis) typically challenges us before the game and sometimes at half, saying, ‘It doesn’t need to be only an Armando Bacot rebounding game or a Harrison Ingram rebounding game,’” Withers said.

    Melvin Council Jr. and Julian Brown each scored 18 points for the Seahawks, who won their first-ever NCAA game by holding off Howard in the First Four on Tuesday night. Wagner shot 39.7% for the game.

    “I was happy for them to be able to compete in this, and I was really proud the way they competed,” Seahawks coach Donald Copeland said. “Obviously what we’ve gone through all year isn’t ideal, but we expected to play well. We expected to win the game. Obviously, we didn’t. But I’m glad the way we played.”

    UNC had the clear edge inside against a team with only seven available scholarship players and only one – 6-foot-9, 255-pound Keyontae Lewis – offering any notable size. By halftime, the 6-10 Bacot had a double-double after getting multiple deep-block touches while the 6-9 Withers showed plenty of energy in the paint by tallying his first double-digit scoring output since Jan. 17.

    The Tar Heels gradually stretched that lead out after the break. That included Davis and Harrison Ingram hitting back-to-back 3-pointers, followed shortly by an alley-oop dunk in transition from Elliot Cadeau to a high-flying Withers for a 70-50 lead with 8:33 left.

    The Tar Heels got another comfortable setting to start the tournament. They improved to 35-2 in NCAA games in their home state, including 13-1 in Charlotte. Notably, the lone loss came in their last tournament game here: a second-round loss as a 2-seed to Texas A&M.

    Tar Heel fans excited about team’s chances in NCAA tournament

    Looking ahead, Izzo’s Spartans have lost all four meetings with UNC in the NCAA tournament. The time of the game and the channel on which it will air have not yet been announced.

    Back in Chapel Hill, Maggie Casey was celebrating her 17th birthday this weekend, and a UNC victory was just what she wanted to start the party. She and her friends cheered on the Heels from Top of the Hill on Franklin Street.

    “I’m thrilled for everything. Go Heels all day,” she said.

    Look at the full 2024 Men’s NCAA Bracket

    WATCH | NC State Wolfpack fans elated after ACC Tournament win

    North Carolina State is heading to the NCAA Tournament after beating North Carolina 84-76 in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament title game.

    The Associated Press contributed.

    Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.

    WTVD

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