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GOLF: Tee times for today’s Irvin Cobb Championships. | 2B CONTACT US Sports.....................270-575-8665 [email protected] Mike Stunson ........
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GOLF: Tee times for today’s Irvin Cobb Championships. | 2B CONTACT US Sports.....................270-575-8665 [email protected] Mike Stunson ..........270-575-8662 [email protected] Edward Marlowe ......270-575-8661 [email protected] follow @PSunSports on Twitter

Sports

The Paducah Sun | Sunday, July 19, 2015 | paducahsun.com

Section

B

Chandler tops Ams; Newcomb, Bulle lead pros BY EDWARD MARLOWE [email protected]

Playing only his third full round at Paxton Park, Mason Chandler’s Saturday morning was a charm. Tabbed as a junior amateur in this weekend’s 79th Annual Pepsi Paducah Bank Irvin Cobb Championships, the 17-year-old Kenton, Tennessee, native from Gibson County teed off at 6:42 a.m., and by lunch time had carded an amateur-leading Chandler 4-under 67. Even more mind-boggling, it’s his first time to ever play in the prestigious west Kentucky golf showcase. Chandler held the outright lead for most of the afternoon until professionals Kent Bulle (Nashville, Tennessee) and EDWARD MARLOWE/The Sun Patrick Newcomb (Benton) Former Murray State phenom and professional golfer Patrick Newcomb lines up a putt on slogged through a 108-degree No. 7 at Paxton Park Saturday during the 89th Annual Pepsi Paducah Bank Irvin Cobb Golf Championships. Tied with Kent Bulle at 5-under, Newcomb has a chance today to nab his Please see COBB | 2B first Irvin Cobb title after finishing runner-up five times.

Pepsi Paducah Bank Irvin Cobb Championships TOP 20 PROFESSIONALS T1) Kent Bulle (66, -5) T1) Patrick Newcomb (66, -5) T3) Ryan Allison (68, -3) T3) Nick Newcomb (68, -3) T5) Bradley S. Farmer (69, -2) T5) Kyle Hosnick (69, -2) T5) Lexus Keoninh (69, -2) T5) John Mullendore (69, -2) T9) Brandon Beckham (71, E) T9) Jordan Blann (71, E) T9) Lucas Cromeenes (71, E) T9) Mark Faulkner (71, E) T9) Clay Hinton (71, E) T14) Matt Jebavy (72, +1) T14) Ryan Martin (72, +1) T14) Britt Pavelonis (72, +1) T14) Kyle Ramey (72, +1) T14) Jason Stilley (72, +1) T14) Kevin Wassmer (72, +1) T20) seven tied at (73, +2) TOP 20 AMATEURS 1) Mason Chandler (67, -4) T2) Trey Aguirre (70, -1) T2) Andrew Mitchell (70, -1) T2) Matthew Zakutney (70, -1) T5) Buddy Bryant (71, E) T5) Joey Mayo (71, E) T7) Nathaniel Hantle (72, +1) T7) Daniel Taylor (72, +1) T7) Austin Knight (72, +1) T10) Chase Landrum (73, +2) T10) Brady Dixon (73, +2) T10) Patrick Hibbs (73, +2) T10) Joshua Rhodes (73, +2) T10) Nick Thompson (73, +2) T10) Sam Thompson (73, +2) T16) Scott Carpenter (74, +3) T16) Josh Earnes (74, +3) T16) Jamie Frazier (74, +3) T16) Chris Griffin (74, +3)

Position change helps Forrest BY MIKE STUNSON [email protected]

A position change has done wonders for Josh Forrest, who heads into the 2015 season as one of the premier defenders in the Southeastern Conference — playing a position he never envisioned himself playing. Forrest built his legacy at Paducah Tilghman as a star wide receiver and safety, but prior to his freshman season at the University of Kentucky, he was asked to move to linebacker. It wasn’t a move Forrest was too fond of at first, but he eventually found his role with the Kentucky defense. Forrest initially played a safety/linebacker hybrid position. As he became more com-

Heyward gets 5 hits for Cards BY R.B. FALLSTROM Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Jason Heyward was on base so much in 93-degree heat, the body finally gave in. “I was cramping all over,” Heyward said after matching a career best with five hits as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the New York Mets 12-2 on Saturday night. “I haven’t been feeling well the last few days.” Both Heyward and manager Mike Matheny said there was “zero” concern going forward. Heyward told trainers and Matheny he could have stayed in if the game was closer. Randal Grichuk had two homers and six RBIs and John Lackey worked seven strong innings for St. Louis, benefiting from the cushion. “I definitely pitched to the scoreboard a little bit,” Lackey Please see CARDS | 3B

fortable at his new position, he moved to middle linebacker on a permanent basis. “I took it one day at a time and learned what I could from (defensive coordinator D.J.) Eliot. I just asked a lot of questions. I guess it all worked out,” said Forrest with a chuckle. Going into 2014, Forrest essentially replaced Kentucky’s previous leading tackler, Avery Williamson, who graduated. After totaling 29 tackles his freshman and junior seasons, Forrest came into his own during his junior year on the way to a team-high 110 tackles with two interceptions. That season led to an AllSEC Third Team selection, and leading up to his senior season he is on the watch lists for the

Butkus Award (best linebacker in the nation) and Bednarik Award (best defensive player in the nation). Forrest credits Eliot for helping his transition into becoming one of the best linebackers in the country. “We went over plays and film in walk through. He instilled the right way with me and how it’s supposed to be done,” Forrest said. All this for an athlete who played just two years of football before college, but none of this surprises his high school coach, Randy Wyatt. “When Josh played for me I UK Athletics / For the Sun knew he was a D-1 athlete. He Josh Forrest (right), former Paducah Tilghman standout and was such a good athlete, a hy- University of Kentucky linebacker, has been named to the 2015 Chuck Bednarik Watch List. The award is presented at Please see FORREST | 3B the end of the season to the top linebacker in NCAA football.

Johnson endures long delays at British Open BY DOUG FERGUSON Associated Press

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Even with 155 years of history, the British Open can still serve up some strange twists at St. Andrews. Dustin Johnson gave Saturday some semblance of order. The second round lasted nearly 39 hours from the first tee shot to the final putt. Brooks Koepka hit one putt in 30 minutes, and he might still be on the 11th green except that he refused to keep going because his golf ball wouldn’t stay put. Jordan Spieth, who won the Masters and U.S. Open on the strength of his great short game, three-putted five times in one round and still kept alive his hopes of a Grand Slam. If that wasn’t enough, 40 mph gusts that led to a 10 1/2Associated Press Dustin Johnson follows his drive from the 18th tee during hour stoppage meant the BritSaturday’s completion of the second round of the British ish Open will end on Monday Open Golf Championship at the Old Course, St. Andrews, for the first time in 27 years. Scotland. Johnson birdied the final hole to take a one-shot lead heading into the third round today. Please see DELAYS | 7B

NOW HIRING!

British Open glrance ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) — A glance at the completed second round Saturday of the British Open on the Old Course at St. Andrews: Leading: Dustin Johnson, who shot a 69 to get to 10 under midway through the tournament. Just behind: England’s Danny Willett, who finished his round Friday, was a stroke back. Former champion Paul Lawrie was at 8 under. Where’s Tiger? Tiger Woods shot 76-75 to miss the cut by nine shots. And Jordan? Jordan Spieth, aiming for the third leg of the Grand Slam after winning the Masters and U.S. Open, was 5 under, five shots back. Noteworthy: Play resumed in the rain-delayed round at 7 a.m., only to be stopped 32 minutes later when balls were moving on the greens because of high wind. It was more than 10 hours later before it resumed, with Johnson among those finishing. Also of note: The tournament will now end on Monday for the first time since 1988. Weather Watch: Forecasters are calling for lighter wind though some possible rain for yoday’s third round. Key Pairings: Jordan Spieth, Sergio Garcia, 7:30 a.m.; Dustin Johnson, Danny Willett, 9 a.m.

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Sports

2B • Sunday, July 19, 2015 • The Paducah Sun

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Coming up

THE FINE PRINT >ÃiL>

Today vs. N.Y. Mets at St. Louis Time: 1:15 p.m. TV: Comcast 95

Today vs. Atlanta at Atlanta Time: 4:05 p.m.

Today vs. Kansas City at Chicago Time: 1:10 p.m.

On television TODAY AUTO RACING 12:30 p.m. — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, New Hampshire 301, at Loudon (NBCSN) CYCLING 7 a.m. — Tour de France, stage 15, Mende to Valence (NBCSN) GOLF 5 a.m. — British Open Championship, final round, at St. Andrews, Scotland (ESPN) 1 p.m. — LPGA, Marathon Classic, final round, at Sylvania, Ohio (TGC) 3 — PGA Tour, Barbasol Championship, final round, at Auburn, Ala. (TGC) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 12:30 p.m. — L.A. Dodgers at Washington (TBS) 7 — Boston at L.A. Angels (ESPN) PAN AMERICAN GAMES 12:30 p.m. — Volleyball, cycling, women’s basketball, taekwondo, at Toronto (ESPN) 6 — Volleyball, boxing, women’s soccer, cycling, women’s basketball, taekwondo, at Toronto (ESPN2) SOCCER 3:30 p.m. — CONCACAF, Gold Cup, quarterfinal, teams TBD, at East Rutherford, N.J. (Fox Sports 1) 4 — MLS, Chicago at Columbus (ESPN2) 6:30 — CONCACAF, Gold Cup, quarterfinal, teams TBD, at East Rutherford, N.J. (Fox Sports 1) VOLLEYBALL 12:30 p.m. — AVP, New York City Open, finals (WPSD) MONDAY CYCLING 7 A.M. — Tour de France, stage 16, Bourg-de-Peage to Gap (NBCSN) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 6 p.m. — N.Y. Mets at Washington (ESPN) PAN AMERICAN GAMES 6 p.m. — Men’s soccer, boxing, women’s basketball, beach volleyball, women’s volleyball, taekwondo, at Toronto (ESPN2) TUESDAY MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 6 p.m. — Regional coverage, Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees or Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati (MLB) PAN AMERICAN GAMES 6 p.m. — Men’s soccer, boxing, men’s basketball, athletics, beach volleyball, men’s volleyball, taekwondo, equestrian, at Toronto (ESPN2) SOCCER 5 a.m. — International Champions Cup, AS Roma (Serie A) vs. Manchester City (Premier League), at Melbourne, Australia (Fox Sports 1) 7:30 p.m. — International Champions Cup, Fiorentina (Serie A) vs. Paris (Ligue 1), at Harrison, N.J. (Fox Sports 1) 10 — International Champions Cup, Los Angeles (MLS) vs. Barcelona (Primera Division), at Pasadena, Calif. (Fox Sports 1) WNBA BASKETBALL 10 p.m. — Phoenix at Los Angeles (ESPN2)

Local sports TODAY AMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL — Paducah at Shelbyville tournament GOLF — Pepsi Paducah Bank Irvin Cobb Golf Championships at Paxton Park Golf Course, Men’s Club Championship at Benton Country Club, Drake Creek Double Couple at Drake Creek Golf Club. MONDAY GOLF — High School Summer Series 9-Hole at Drake Creek Golf Club.

Purchase memos BOWLING: The Paducah Women’s Bowling Association will hold its annual association meeting on July 29 at 6 p.m. at Cardinal Lanes in Paducah. Officers will be elected. HOLE-IN-ONE: Mark Owen used a 6-iron to make a hole-inone Saturday on the 165-yard second hole at Country Club of Paducah.

Today’s Cobb tee times 6:33 a.m. – Patrick Carroll Jr., Nick Daugherty. 6:42 a.m. – Carson Holmes, David C. Stroup. 6:51 a.m. – Michael Hogancamp, Matthew Poat, Ben Rush. 7 a.m. – Rob Coffee, David Rambo, Eric Williamson. 7:09 a.m. – David Kent Brundige, Derek Riley, Mike Shelbourne. 7:18 a.m. – Cyrus “Cy” Britt, Ryne Choate, Pat Lilly. 7:36 a.m. – Jeremy Grantham, Chris Martin, Andrew Simpson. 7:45 a.m. – Michael DeMary, Michael Wassmer, Alex Wright. 7:54 a.m. – Tony Brown, Will Knights, Ben Patton. 8:03 a.m. – Lance Davis, Christian Fielder, Bobby Goodwin. 8:12 a.m. – Bryce Faulkner, Scott Hamel, Shawn Tipton. 8:21 a.m. – Jaret Brewer, Dustin Schultz, Duane Withrow. 8:30 a.m. – Lee Hughes, Connor Kirkham, Aaron Owen. 8:48 a.m. – Adam Butler, Danny Calway-Fagen, James “Pete” Meeks. 8:57 a.m. – Chase Carrico, Nick Jones, Harry Rush. 9:06 a.m. – Nick Choate, David Sykes, Owen Workman. 9:15 a.m. – Jan Jansco Jr., Danny Lewis, Bobby Pavelonis. 9:24 a.m. – Quinn Eaton, Jason Goodyke, Matthew Scott. 9:33 a.m. – Dalton Bagwell, Nathaniel Caudle, Clayton Turnbo. 9:42 a.m. – Michael Rickard, Brock Simmons, Seth Strader. 10 a.m. – Will Cox, Rick

Loyd, Zachary Rambo. 10:09 a.m. – Brock Burnham, Preston French, Jared Gosser. 10:18 a.m. – Will Taylor, Gabe Wheeler, Matthew Winder. 10:27 a.m. – Tyler Gray, Andrew Novara, Joe Scholl. 10:36 a.m. – Cameron Carrico, Ryan Chandler, Nathan Wolfe. 10:45 a.m. – Brandon Caballero, Jamie Frazier, Chris Griffin. 10:54 a.m. – Mark Knecht, Matt Mankin, Marshall Talkington. 11:12 a.m. – Scott Carpenter, Josh Earnest, Brendan Lewis. 11:21 a.m. – Josh Rhodes, Nick Thompson, Sam Thompson. 11:30 a.m – Adam Gary, Phil Hendrickson, David Plumb. 11:39 a.m. – Brady Dixon, Patrick Hibbs, Chase Landrum. 11:48 a.m. – Ryne Burnett, Ben Fuqua, Kevin Wassmer. 11:57 a.m. – Britt Pavelonis, Kyle Ramey, Jason Stilley. 12:06 p.m. – Nathaniel Hantle, Austin Knight, Daniel Taylor. 12:24 p.m. – Clay Hinton, Matt Jebavy, Ryan Martin. 12:33 p.m. – Jordan Blann, Lucas Cromeenes, Mark Faulkner. 12:42 p.m. – Brandon Beckham, Lexus Keoninh, John Mullendore. 12:51 p.m. – Buddy Bryant, Joey Mayo, Matthew Zakutney. 1 p.m – Trey Aguirre, Mason Chandler, Andrew Mitchell. 1:09 p.m. – Bradley S. Farmer, Kyle Hosick, Nick Newcomb. 1:18 p.m – Ryan Allison, Kent Bulle, Patrick Newcomb

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COBB CONTINUED FROM 1B

heat index to post 5-under 66s, where they will share the leaderboard going into today’s final round. After posting a 1-under front nine, Chandler only improved on the back, snagging birdies at holes 10, 12 and 16. His lone blemish on the day was a bogey on No. 3 before handling both No. 5 and No. 8. He admitted playing in the cool of the morning helped him play more efficiently, as the course was softer and had less wind. But it was his putter that helped him the most. “I made a lot of oneputts,” he said. “I hit greens up and down, and the putter was really working.” Able to enjoy most of his afternoon by watching others play the course, Chandler knows his low score could put him in a more challenging group and later time, where the high-noon sun and hot temperatures could change the way the course plays. Chandler isn’t worried. He plans to stay calm and play his game, especially on this type of course. “It is set up well for me, and how I hit,” he said. “You play it left-

EDWARD MARLOWE/The Sun

Brendon Caballero laughs with Paxton golf professional Danny Mullen before teeing off in one of the final three flights Saturday afternoon. The defending Irvin Cobb amateur champion, Caballero battled through a 4-over 75 and sits eight shots back of Mason Chandler (67). to-right, and there are a lot of holes you play leftto-right, and that’s what I like. It just fits me, I guess. I feel really comfortable. You just play it safe.” Bulle and Newcomb, who are no strangers to the tournament or the pressure of winning a championship, sit at the top with a chance to win it this afternoon. A fivetime runner-up, including to Paducah’s Rick Cochran III in 2014, Newcomb opened with a 1-under front nine before scorching the back with a 4-under, tacking birdies on Nos. 11, 12, 17 and 18 to tie for the lead. Beginning his afternoon with a bogey on No. 1, Newcomb eagled

the par-4 No. 3, then saved par on No. 7 after his fairway shot sailed into the trees behind the green. Newcomb’s flop shot from the shade bounced off the hill and over the fringe. He followed it up with a tough uphill putt, and pumped his fist and shouted, “C’mon!” after making it. Maybe he was just getting started. “I finally actually hit some decent golf shots,” Newcomb said of his round. “I was thinking that might have been one of the best front-nine scorings (34) I’ve ever had, honestly.” Still seeking his first win as a professional and first Irvin Cobb title,

Newcomb said there is always pressure to win a golf tournament. He added he knows Bulle, and expects there to be a good competition and a “duel to the end.” Newcomb said this is the fullest growth he has seen at Paxton since playing there, with the heavy rains and recent heat wave keeping the grass in great condition heading into today’s championship round. Asked about Chandler’s superb round as youngster, Newcomb said it was great to see a special score considering the factors. “The balls are just flying out of the fairways, and the greens are bouncing,” he said. “I was very, very happy with my 66 today. For a 67? I couldn’t even think about it.” Brendon Caballero, defending Ohio Valley Conference individual champion and the amateur winner in last year’s Irvin Cobb Championship, carded an openinground 75, going plus-3 in his first five holes and a field-high plus-4 on No. 15. Patrick Carroll Jr. and Nick Daugherty break the ice with a 6:33 a.m. tee time today. The amateur prize will total $750 in golfing gift certificates, while the professional title awards $8,500.

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Briefs

The Paducah Sun • Sunday, July 19, 2015 • 3B

Packers honor Favre at Lambeau

Ski Nuts host two events at Twin Oaks BY GENARO C. ARMAS The Kentucky Lake Ski Nuts will host a pair of events this week on their home grounds of Twin Oaks Lakes. First up will be the Southern Regionals Championships, which will run Wednesday through Saturday. It is one of five qualifiers for the Nationals and will mark the ninth time the Ski Nuts will host this competition. More than 200 skiers from seven states will compete, including Carl Marquess and Jackson Hawes of Paducah, plus Austin Collins of Murray. The Ski Nuts also will host the Ordinary Joes vs. Bikini Pros tour stop from Friday evening through next Sunday afternoon. It will be a battle of the sexes format featuring such top skiers as defending champion Regina Jacquess of Santa Rosa Beach, Florida, and Nate Smith of McCordsville, Indiana. Sixteen men and women will go head-to-head in an elimination format with an “under the light” finale. — Staff report

Dempsey’s 3 goals lift U.S. over Cuba BALTIMORE — Clint Dempsey scored on a fourth-minute header, added a pair of secondhalf goals for his first international hat trick, and the United States routed Cuba 6-0 on Saturday to reach its eighth straight CONCACAF Gold Cup semifinal. Dempsey converted a penalty kick early in the second half and added a late goal to raise his tournament-leading total to six. Dempsey’s 57 international goals are 10 behind Landon Donovan’s American record. Gyasi Zardes, Aron Johannsson and Omar Gonzalez also scored as the Americans built a 4-0 halftime lead against a Cuban team depleted by five absent players who may have defected. In Wednesday’s semifinal at Atlanta, the Americans will play the winner of Saturday’s late game between Jamaica and Haiti, the first allCaribbean knockout stage Gold Cup match. — Associated Press

Banned FIFA official pleads not guilty NEW YORK — A former top FIFA official pleaded not guilty Saturday to racketeering and bribery charges in a corruption case aimed at soccer’s governing body that has sent shock waves through the sport. Jeffrey Webb posted a $10 million bond at his arraignment in federal court. He surrendered three passports — two from the United Kingdom and one from the Cayman Islands — and will be required to wear an electronic monitoring device as a condition of his release. — Associated Press

Dodgers’ Kershaw fans 14 Nationals WASHINGTON — Clayton Kershaw struck out a season-high 14 in eight shutout innings and the Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the Washington Nationals 4-2 to earn a split of the two games decided Saturday. Kershaw (7-6), coming off a shutout of the Phillies, scattered three singles and didn’t walk a batter. The lefty has won six straight starts against Washington, fashioning an 0.96 ERA in the process. — Associated Press

Cubs’ Lester flirts with no-hitter ATLANTA — Jon Lester lost his bid for a nohitter in the eighth inning — a try revived by an official scorer’s reversal — but ended the longest winless streak of his career as the Chicago Cubs shut out the Atlanta Braves 4-0 on Saturday night. A chopper in the first inning by Atlanta’s Nick Markakis was originally ruled a hit, then the scorer changed it in the top of the seventh to an error on third baseman Kris Bryant. A.J. Pierzynski, Lester’s batterymate in Boston last year, led off the eighth with a line-drive single to right field for Atlanta’s first hit. — Associated Press

Associated Press

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Brett Favre headed up the Lambeau Field tunnel, a path that he had walked dozens of times. He turned left at the end, and then walked through a set of double doors. The Green Bay Packers’ locker room was just down the hall on the right. And that’s when it finally it him. He was back at his football home. The three-time MVP quarterback was being inducted into the Packers Hall of Fame on Saturday night, a ceremony inside Lambeau Field that was to also include the retirement of his No.

Associated Press

Former Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Favre waves to fans at Lambeau Field prior to his induction into the Packers Hall of Fame on Saturday in Green Bay, Wis. 4 jersey. It was the first time in the franchise’s storied history that a player was to receive

both honors at the same time. “It was like I never left. It was a great feeling. It was kind of weird because I had been here for a couple of hours and just walked off of Lambeau,” Favre said before the ceremony. “It’s kind of funny how things are triggered. And then it was kind of a sigh of relief almost.” It was a moment that some Packers fans thought would never come, not after the “will he-or-won’t he retire” drama that marked the end of his 16-year tenure in Titletown. He was traded to the New York Jets in 2008, then played two more seasons with

division rival Minnesota starting in 2009 before calling it quits for good. “I’d much rather go out that tunnel right there,” Favre told frenzied fans on the field before the ceremony, pointing to the home tunnel. He played two games at Lambeau as a visitor with Minnesota. Now a reconciliation that has been years in the making is finally complete. Fans, many of them wearing No. 4 jerseys, welcomed Favre back as if he never left. He signed autographs, and caught up with old friends. “All I can say is, ‘Wow.’ This is absolutely amazing,” Favre said.

walked nine guys all year, let alone the first guy of the game.” Colon said through an interpreter that the Cardinals capitalized on his tendency to go after hitters. “They were really aggressive and attacked my pitches,” Colon said. “They know I’m going to be aggressive in the zone and they took advantage of it.

Heyward has seven hits, including a triple and double, two RBIs and two steals in the first two games of the series. He was removed after singling in the eighth. Grichuk was 3 for 3 with a two-run homer off Carlos Torres that capped a four-run fifth and a three-run shot off Alex Torres in the eighth. Jhonny Peralta added three hits and an RBI.

CARDS CONTINUED FROM 1B

said. “Trying to challenge guys, trying to throw strikes and trying to keep the momentum going, trying to get those guys back in the dugout to hit.” Mets starter Bartolo Colon (9-8) trailed by four runs after just onethird of an inning and

surrendered seven runs in 41⁄3 innings. The 42-year-old right-hander was roughed up by the Cardinals for the second time, giving up eight runs in 41⁄3 innings in a 9-0 loss May 20. “That wasn’t the Bartolo Colon we’ve known,” manager Terry Collins said. “That guy has only

FORREST CONTINUED FROM 1B

brid athlete who can play a lot of positions,” Wyatt said. “He maybe surprised some people, but not me.” During SEC Media Days earlier this week, UK coach Mark Stoops singled out Forrest and said he impressed him during spring practice. Now in his third year as coach for the Wildcats, Stoops will likely be leaning on Forrest as the Wildcats aim to reach a bowl game for the first time since 2011. “Everybody is pulling together. We really believe in each other and are coaching each other up. We’re buying into the season,” Forrest said. “With how we have been practicing, we’re much farther along than we were last year at this time. I can see a big difference.” Forrest hopes to play in the NFL following his upcoming senior season at UK, but said he hasn’t yet talked to anyone about that possibility. For now, it’s all about helping lead the Wildcats back to a bowl game. Now broken in at the linebacker position, the former Paducah Tilghman star is ready to be a

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4B • Sunday, July 19, 2015 • The Paducah Sun

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Goodyear waits on tire choices from NASCAR BY DAN GELSTON Associated Press

LOUDON, N.H. — The most intriguing wrinkle for the Chase may not be which championship contenders are in or out after each elimination round. It could be if NASCAR decides to use a package responsible for a race that drew nothing but rave reviews from the drivers. Goodyear has not been informed that the race package that was such a hit last week at Kentucky Speedway will be used for the 10 races that determine the Sprint Cup champion. Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing, said the manufacturer would need to know in about a week if NASCAR would proceed with a re-

quest for soft tires that are typically paired with a lower-downforce aerodynamic package Stucker said Goodyear typically needed 90 days from the date of the decision to produce the appropriate tires needed for each race. The Chase for the Sprint Cup championship begins Sept. 20 at Chicagoland Speedway. “We haven’t had that serious conversation yet because that really hasn’t been proposed to us,” Stucker said Saturday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. “So we’d have to kind of sit down and see what our options might be.” NASCAR used lower downforce — which was specifically recommended by the drivers — last week at Kentucky and

it produced perhaps the best racing of the season. There were 2,665 greenflag passes throughout the field, compared with 1,147 last year at Kentucky. There were also a record 22 green-flag passes for the lead, up from the record of 19 set in 2011. Goodyear, though, did not have enough time to make the kind of tires needed to match the aero package. It hardly mattered to the drivers who raved about the product. “We didn’t have the full tire that we wanted, we didn’t have the full package and it was better,” Daytona 500 champion Joey Logano said. Teams participated in a three-day test this week at Chicagoland that gave drivers feedback on both tires and aero pack-

end’s race at the Brickyard. NASCAR again will use the lower-downforce package on Sept. 6 at Darlington Raceway and Goodyear has a softer tire set for the race. But Goodyear knew that change was coming months ago. If changes are ahead for the Chase, Goodyear will need to know — soon. “I think everyone understands by the nature of how much product we have to produce, and the time it takes to produce them, we’re not as flexible as everyone else is,” Stucker said. “I think everybody recognizes that. We’re trying to move things around and be as flexible as we can. So, we’ll react as we need to.” Here are some things

ages. Stucker said the tires used for the Chase opener at Chicagoland also line up for championship races at Texas Motor Speedway and the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. “They tested tires at Chicago that came apart,” driver Greg Biffle said. “At about 24-25 laps, the tires blistered and split and cords came out.” Stucker said Goodyear tested a softer tire with the lower-downforce package at Chicagoland. “Chicago caught us a little bit. We have to go back and look at that,” Stucker said. Stucker also said Goodyear will stick with the tires selected following a tire test in April at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for next week-

to keep an eye on for today’s race. SOPHOMORE SLUMP — Kyle Larson hoped a return to New Hampshire could start to reverse a sophomore slump for a driver once considered NASCAR’s next big thing. Larson, who finished 39th and 35th in the last two races, has only one top-five finish and five top 10s driving for team owner Chip Ganassi. Larson had eight topfive and 17 top-10 finishes last season, and his blistering results in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship had him hopeful he would emerge as a championship contender in 2015. He finished third and second in his two New Hampshire races last season.

Tributes pour in for Bianchi BY JEROME PUGMIRE Associated Press

Associated Press

Denny Hamlin spins during Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity series race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, N.H. Hamlin fought his way back from the back of the pack to win.

Hamlin beats Dillon in fiery finish BY DAN GELSTON Associated Press

LOUDON, N.H. — Denny Hamlin turned sideways into Kyle Busch and had Austin Dillon all bent out of shape. Hamlin roughed up the field and bruised some feelings, when he nudged Dillon out of the lead Saturday and raced to his second NASCAR Xfinity Series victory of the season. Hamlin had the dominant car and led 145 of the 200 laps at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. But when Dillon briefly took the lead, Hamlin put his No. 20 into the left side of Dillon’s car at lap 179 and knocked him out of the way. Hamlin was mad because he said Dillon jumped the restart, forcing him to make the hitand-run pass any driver should attempt in that situation. Dillon lashed out after the race and said Hamlin purposely tried to wreck

him and vowed payback, though he stopped short of saying it would come in Sunday’s Sprint Cup race. “What is racing if you can’t race side by side for more than a corner? He never even went through a corner with me. The whole race,” Dillon said. “Didn’t want to, just moved me, missed the corner, wrecked me. I’m fine with racing rough. I promise you, I can do it to anybody.” Hamlin and Dillon feuded in 2012 after they tangled in the secondtier series race at Texas Motor Speedway. It carried over when Hamlin leveled a nepotism charge against Dillon, grandson of team owner Richard Childress, saying, “He got his ride because of his name,” “He called me a spoiled rich kid at Texas two years ago. And I hate it,” Dillon said. “He said check the last name. I said my last name’s Dil-

lon, not Childress. But he is my grandfather. I’ll always act with class. Everybody in the media knows that. I’ve worked my way here like anyone else. With Denny acting like that, what does he want me to call him? I don’t do that. I know how to act.” What to call Hamlin? He had a simple retort: “A winner.” Hamlin, with a spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship secured, also challenged Dillon to come after him on the track Sunday. “I have nothing to lose,” Hamlin said. “It’s the heat of the moment. As upset as he was that I moved him out of the way, I was just as upset that he jumped the restart.’ Hamlin also irked Busch, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, early in the race when he got sideways and knocked both drivers to the back of the field.

Beat the DOGGONE Heat...

NICE, France — Tributes poured in for French driver Jules Bianchi, who died from injuries sustained in a head-on crash during the Japanese Grand Prix last October. The 25-year-old Bianchi died in a hospital in his hometown of Nice, his family said in a statement released early Saturday. Nice was about 30 kilometers (20 miles) from the track where he sealed the best performance of his young Formula One career, the Monaco Grand Prix. It was on Monaco’s tight

and sinewy circuit last year that Bianchi, driving for Marussia — now known as Manor Marussia — finished in ninth place and gave the unheralded team its best finish and first points in F1. “Words cannot describe the enormous sadness within our team this morning, as we come to terms with losing Jules,” said John Booth, team principal of Manor Marussia. “He has left an indelible mark on all our lives, and will forever be part of everything we have achieved, and everything we will strive for going forward.”

Bianchi’s drive that day was a mixture of flair, steely determination, and panache; exactly the traits that were spotted in him early on, when he was touted as a future star after graduating from the Ferrari academy in 2009. He competed in 34 grand prix. “Jules was a shining talent. He was destined for great things in our sport: Success he so richly deserved,” Booth said in a statement. F1 champion Lewis Hamilton tweeted: “A sad, sad day today, guys. Please pray for Jules’ loved ones. RIP Jules. God bless.”

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Sports

6B • Sunday, July 19, 2015 • The Paducah Sun

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Barnes, Piercy share PGA lead Associated Press

Associated Press

NFL referee Sarah Thomas works an Aug. 16 game during the NFL preseason at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans. Thomas is participating in a clinic for all refs with training camps about two weeks away from opening.

NFL’s female official stays low-key BY SCHUYLER DIXON “That’s how I want them to see me.” Associated Press The 41-year-old IRVING, Texas — Sarah Thomas shared Thomas won’t be the hugs and idle chatter at first woman to call a regher first preseason clinic ular-season game. That since the NFL made her was Shannon Eastin in the first full-time female 2012 when the NFL used replacement officials on-field official. All of her colleagues during a labor dispute. were doing the same But she will be the first thing Friday in what one getting a full season amounts to the unofficial — and a lot of attention end of their offseason. along the way. “I certainly wouldn’t The pharmaceutical representative and mother want that attention,” of three was just another said a chuckling Aaron one of the guys, which is Santi, one of nine other how she hopes coaches first-year officials likely and players see her when to get that wish. “It’s gothe regular season starts ing to be tougher for her. She’s going to be under in two months. “I know it may be new the microscope a little for some, but I think be- more because the reality ing a part of the devel- is this is a really difficult opmental program and job and we all make misgoing that way, maybe takes. Hopefully the fans they’ll see me just as an and the public and the official,” Thomas said. media will allow her to

make mistakes and not treat her with a different standard than anyone else.” Thomas, who will be a line judge in 2015, is already the first female official in major college football, and the first to work a bowl game. She’s been in the NFL’s development program for two years, so she has done training camps and preseason games. As for the novelty of being an NFL regular, long-time referee Ed Hochuli says that will wear off fast. “It’ll be a big deal for the first few games,” Hochuli said. “Then it will go away. And then it’s a matter of are you right or wrong in your calls and you’re just another official out there and you get treated the same.”

Thomas, who grew up and still lives in Mississippi, recalled the story of her first game as an official, when she was asked to be the clock operator and told one of her mentors that she didn’t even know where the clock was. Thomas was a basketball player in high school and college and never worried about finding the clock. “So he said, ‘Well, we can train monkeys to do the clock, and we’re just short of them tonight, so it’s your job,’” Thomas said. “That’s how I got introduced.” Thomas said not much has changed since the NFL hired her three months ago — “working out and rules study, film review, talking to mentors that I have. Same thing.”

OPELIKA, Ala. — Playing partners Ricky Barnes and Scott Piercy started the third round with similar birdies and ended it with matching scores — and the lead. They each shot 6-under 65 on Saturday to share the lead in the PGA Tour’s inaugural Barbasol Championship. Barnes and Piercy reached 13-under 200 on Grand National’s Lake Course, and will be paired together again while jockeying for the top spot Sunday. The pairing worked well for both in the third round. “We were both hitting solid shots, giving ourselves good looks,” Barnes said. “And we both got off to a great start. We both holed about an 18-20-footer on the first hole. So we saw balls going in the hole, saw good shots. Not so much competing, but kind of feeding off each other.” Piercy birdied four of the first five holes. He has won twice on the PGA Tour. Count Barnes, who had birdies on Nos. 16 and 17, among the winless. He’s

seeking his first PGA Tour win in 202 events. Barnes came closest to victory with a runner-up finish in the 2009 U.S. Open.

Marathon Classic SYLVANIA, Ohio — Ha Na Jang shot a 2-under 69, leaving her a stroke ahead with one round left in the LPGA Tour’s rainplagued Marathon Classic. The South Korean player had an 11-under 202 total at Highland Meadows. Fighting back pain, she opened with rounds of 66 and 67 and has only two bogeys over the first 54 holes. Play was delayed for 1 hour, 59 minutes in the afternoon. Delays Friday forced 54 players to complete the second round Saturday morning. South Korea’s Q Baek was second. She birdied the final hole for a 68. Defending champion Lydia Ko, ranked No. 2 in the world, was 9 under along with top-ranked Inbee Park, Chella Choi, Austin Ernst and Shanshan Feng. Ko and Park shot 67, Choi 65, Ernst 66, and Feng 68.

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