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Lewis wins tournament, donates prize to relief efforts

PORTLAND, Ore. — Stacy Lewis played out a nail-biting finish snapping a three-year winless streak with a one-shot victory at the Cambia Portland Classic Presented by JTBC on Sunday.

Lewis, a The Woodlands, Texas, native and current Houston resident, picked up a $195,000 paycheck which she will donate to Hurricane Harvey relief efforts. Her title sponsor, KMPG, will match that donation.

Lewis entered the day with a solid lead but In Gee Chun put a lot of pressure on the former Razorback in the final round. Lewis finished shooting 70–64–65–69—268 (-20).

“I knew it was gonna be hard,” Lewis said. “When I said that (about donating her winnings), I had the goal of winning the tournament but you have to have a lot of things to go right. It is great to think we are going to make a difference – help people rebuild their homes. It’s amazing.”

The win is Lewis’ first in 83 starts and her first since her 2014 win at the Walmart Northwest Arkansas Championship Presented by P&G. Lewis had 33 top-10 and 12 runner-up finishes in that stretch.

The victory was not without drama and Lewis left some shots out on the course with three missed birdie putts. Chun, meanwhile, played six-under in the final round pushing Lewis in the final nine holes.

Chun birdied the 16th hole and cut Lewis’ lead to one with two holes to play. As they moved to the 17th hole, Lewis hit her tee shot to 151 yards but her second shot bounced on the hard, fast green rolling just off the putting surface.

Chun left herself a 15-foot putt for birdie but pushed it right by 18 inches as both players managed to par the hole.

The final pairing moved to the 18th hole, the toughest playing hole for the round. Lewis dropped her tee shot into the middle of the bunker on the right side of the fairway while Chun was in the first cut of the ruff near the bunker.

Chun flew her second shot to the middle of the green but the firm surface bounced her attempt over into the ruff as she narrowly avoided the back bunker.

Lewis had 135 yards to the hole and had a good lie in the sand. She hit the ball cleanly and watched it roll to the back of the green.

Lewis would have to make par and Chun needed a birdie to force a playoff. Lewis two-putted for par to win the tournament. The emotional win was tabbed as one of the best stories on the Tour this year by the Golf Channel talent.

Former Razorbacks Gabriela Lopez finished tied for 24th and Emily Tubert tied for 41st overall.

IN THE WINNER’S CIRCLE with STACY LEWIS (from the LPGA)
Cambia Portland Classic presented by JTBC
Columbia Edgewater Country Club, Portland, Oregon
Sept. 3, 2017

Hometown: The Woodlands, Texas/Houston, Texas
Birthdate: February 16, 1985– currently 32 years, 6 months, and 18 days
Qualified for LPGA Tour: Earned medalist honors at the 2008 LPGA Final Qualifying Tournament
Turned Professional: June 2008

VICTORIES
LPGA: 12th career victory
PREVIOUS LPGA WINS: 2011 Kraft Nabisco Championship, 2012 Mobile Bay LPGA Classic, 2012 ShopRite LPGA Classic, 2012 Navistar LPGA Classic, 2012 Mizuno Classic, 2013 HSBC Women’s Champions, 2012 RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup, 2013 RICOH Women’s British Open, 2014 North Texas LPGA Shootout, 2014 ShopRite LPGA Classic Presented by Acer, 2014 Walmart NW Arkansas Championship

RACE TO CME GLOBE
With her win, Lewis earns 500 points and is projected to move from 16th to fifth in the Race to CME Globe with 1,993 points

MONEY
With her win, Lewis earns $195,500; she has earned $913,321 this season and $12,321,596 in her career

PREVIOUS FIVE CAMBIA PORTLAND CLASSIC FINISHES
2016 – 2
2015 – T27
2013 – 2
2012 – T61
2011 – T8

2017 IN A NUTSHELL ON THE LPGA
20 events, 20 cuts made, $913,321, one victory, six additional top-10 finishes

OF NOTE
•Lewis is donating her entire $195,000 winner’s check to Hurricane Harvey Relief efforts
•This is Lewis’ first LPGA Tour win since the 2014 Walmart NW Arkansas Championship
•She has had 12 runner-up finishes in that time span including the 2016 Cambia Portland Classic
•This is start No. 83 for Lewis since her last victory in 2014
•Lewis is the fifth American to win in 2017 joining: Brittany Lincicome (Pure Silk-Bahamas LPGA Classic), Cristie Kerr (LOTTE Championship), Lexi Thompson (Kingsmill Championship) and Danielle Kang (KPMG Women’s PGA Championship)

Saban’s dominance over AP top-5 opponents is historic

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Nick Saban now stands alone with 19 wins over top-5 opponents, and his teams have won a remarkable 61 percent of such games in his career.

Things I think I know: Week One edition

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Each week, you can count on me to give you all sorts of short thoughts on this week’s college football games. Some will be insightful, some will be straight up hot takes.

Some will make you think I need to go through concussion protocol.

So, without any further delay of game, here is my week one things I think I know about college football.

• Alabama’s defense will not miss a beat. Put them in the playoff today.

• Florida does not have a quarteback but will probably still win the SEC east.

• The week one SEC offensive MVP is Drew Lock of Missouri.

• The week one SEC defensive stinker goes to Missouri.

• Arkansas is better on defense in the 3-4 under Paul Rhoads.

• Vanderbilt is going to a bowl game again.

• Kentucky will miss a bowl game this year.

• Without DeOndre Francois, Florida State is not going to the playoff.

• We should still have these blockbuster week one games even though Florida State lost it’s quarterback week one.

• Michigan is a physically nasty defense that could give Ohio State problems at the end of the year.

• Arkansas’ offense is worse this year then last year.

• Texas is still terrible football and it makes me very very happy to say this.

• Baylor football is circling the drain. They will be back to going 4-8 every year soon.

• Mason Rudolph at Oklahoma State will be invited to the Heisman ceremony in NYC in December.

• Purdue vs. Louisville was the most fun to watch on Saturday. Petrino looks odd wearing glasses.

• South Carolina’s Jake Bentley made the best throw of the weekend on a touchdown to Deebo Samuel.

• I was pulling for Arkansas State to pull the upset in Lincoln.

• Are the Red Wolves the most exciting football program in Arkansas now?

• Nobody looked totally great during week one, so don’t feel bad if your team looked especially lousy on offense for a quarter or two, everything is fine.

¶ It’s great to have football to argue over once again and not politics.

Brown’s career day lifts Rebels to opening win

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Rebels sophomore A.J. Brown finishes with two TDs and a school record 233 receiving yards in a 47-27 win over South Alabama.

LSU beats BYU, 27-0, in relocated game

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The Tigers’ offense accumulates 479 yards and rolls through the Cougars in OC Matt Canada’s debut.

SCOUTING REPORT: TCU thumps Jackson State

After TCU rolled through and over a woefully out-manned Jackson State, 63-0, Gary Patterson wasn’t sitting back.

“We’ve got work to do,” he said.

Quarterback Kenny Hill was on almost from the start as the Horned Frogs ran up a 21-0 lead in the first quarter, opened it to 35-0 at halftime and coasted.

Still, Patterson found things to nitpick.

“This next one is a test,” Patterson said of this week’s game against Arkansas.

TCU felt they let last year’s game get away from them, losing 41-38 in double overtime.

Hill was out of his pads midway through the third quarter after throwing four touchdown passes and hitting 18-of-23 with one interception.

“Been waiting too long for this,” Hill said. “I feel comfortable in the offense, each game trying to get more comfortable, more confident in the offense and the game plan.”

While other Big 12 teams struggled on Saturday, Patterson had to acknowledge that his team took care of business as TCU won its 16th straight home opener, the nation’s fifth-longest streak.

”I was proud of the group. Proud of how they handled themselves,” Patterson said. ”They acted more like that was what we were supposed to, which probably excited me more than anything else.”

TCU scored on all three possessions in the first quarter, including a 13-yard touchdown in the first quarter where Kenedy Snell took shovel pass and broke five tackles on a weaving sideline-to-sideline run.

TCU posted its first shutout since 2014 and scored twice on defense as Ridwan Issahaku returned an interception 53 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter and Arico Evans returned a fumble 32 yards in the third.

”A shutout is a shutout (no matter who),” Issahaku said. ”We just want to win by one point, but it’s good to see the hard work pay off.”

Jackson State was limited to 24 yards rushing and 41 passing as it fell to 0-14 all-time against FBS competition.

Jackson State reached the TCU 7-yard line on the game’s opening drive, but a fumbled snap led to a 28-yard loss and was followed up by a failed fake punt.

Stidham, defense shine as Auburn rolls past Georgia Southern

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Auburn QB Jarrett Stidham throws for 185 yards and two TDs while the defense holds Georgia Southern to 78 total yards in a 41-7 win.

Alabama rolls over Florida State in dominating fashion

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ATLANTA — The Alabama defense turned in a dominating performance, the Florida State special teams endured a terrible night, and one of the most anticipated opening games in college football history went to the top-ranked Crimson Tide.

Damien Harris ran for a touchdown and blocked a punt, and Jalen Hurts chipped in with a scoring pass on a night that basically required the sophomore quarterback to make no major mistakes, leading Alabama to a 24-7 beatdown of No. 3 Florida State on Saturday at Atlanta’s new $1.5 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

This one was all about that dynamic Bama D.

And those not-to-special teams for the Seminoles.

Alabama picked off a pair of passes by Deondre Francois in the second half, snuffing out any hopes of a Florida State comeback. Throw in a blocked punt, a blocked field goal and a fumble recovery on a kickoff return, and there was really no path to victory for the Seminoles in the first matchup ever between two teams in the top three of The Associated Press preseason rankings.

The Tide led 10-7 at halftime, catching a huge break in the closing seconds when the officials didn’t call a pass interference penalty on Tony Brown while defending Francois’ pass into the end zone for Nyqwan Murray.

Brown never looked for the ball on the play, running into Murray as he tried to go for a scoring catch that would’ve given the Seminoles a lead. When Florida State attempted a 37-yard field goal on the next play, Minkah Fitzpatrick leaped up to make the block on the final play of the half, preserving the edge and prompting a chorus of boos from the FSU faithful as the officials trotted off the field.

Appearing deflated, Florida State never got anything going over the final two quarters. Levi Wallace and Mack Wilson both had interceptions, and Francois’ night ended with him being helped off the field — putting no weight on his left knee — after being sacked from behind by blitzing safety Ronnie Harrison.

Francois immediately grabbed at his knee, and after being treated for several minutes on the turf, he wrapped his arms around a couple of trainers and hobbled off the field.

It was a potentially crushing blow on a night that already went back enough for the Seminoles.

“The defense did a fantastic job, especially in the second half,” Alabama coach Nick Saban said. “Special teams was a big difference. It’s good to get a win, but we have a lot of work to do.”

“We’ll get better,” he added ominously for the rest of the nation.

With the Tide still clinging to that three-point lead, the game was essentially decided by a seven-play sequence toward the end of the third quarter. Backed up in his own territory, Logan Tyler‘s punt was smothered by Harris, racing in from the left side, and Dylan Moses fell on it at the Florida State 6.

The Seminoles made an impressive stand, forcing Alabama to settle for Andy Pappanastos‘ 25-yard field goal.

It was all for naught when, on the ensuing kickoff, Keith Gavin muffed the ball in the end zone, picked it up, ran into one of his own men, and then fumbled on a hit by Moses. Keith Holcombe recovered at the 11, and Harris ran up the middle for a touchdown on the very next play, splitting two would-be tacklers at the 5.

Florida State managed only 65 yards in the second half and finished with 250 in the game. Alabama had only 269 yards, and missed a pair of field goals, but it didn’t really matter with all the chances created by the defense and special teams.

“This game tells us where we are,” Saban said, “and where we need to go.”

THE TAKEAWAY

Alabama: The Tide looked very much like a team worthy of its No. 1 ranking. While the no-call on the potential pass interference penalty was a huge break, there was no doubt about the better team in this game. Alabama, which has been a part of the national championship race essentially every year of Saban’s decade-long tenure, figures to be right in the mix again — led, as always, by its defense. The offense still needs a bit of work, especially the passing game.

Florida State: The Seminoles were looking to regain a bit of their swagger after back-to-back 10-3 seasons, which would be a cause for celebration at most schools but not in Tallahassee. Florida State thought it had the squad to contend again for a national title, but the offense was no match for the Crimson Tide and Francois’ injury could be a huge blow. `

UP NEXT

Alabama: Hosts Fresno State next Saturday in first game of the season at Bryant-Denny Stadium.

Tide’s stout defense finishes off Seminoles

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Alabama DB Minkah Fitzpatrick and RB Damien Harris discuss how the defense got it done against FSU.

Bulldogs push past App State with backup QB

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Bulldogs freshman Jake Fromm leads three first-half TD drives to help No. 15 Georgia beat Appalachian State 31-10.

Bulldogs cruise to 49-0 opening-day victory

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Mississippi State QB Nick Fitzgerald throws for 239 yards and two touchdowns in a shutout victory over Charleston Southern.