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Canada’s Pendrith finds groove in late summer, just in time for PGA Tour playoffs

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Taylor Pendrith has always been able to find his groove as summer winds down. This year, it’s made him the top Canadian in the PGA Tour’s playoffs.

Pendrith, from Richmond Hill, Ont., tied for fifth at the Barracuda Championship on July 21, was solo fifth at the 3M Open on July 28, and most importantly tied for 22nd at last week’s FedEx St. Jude’s Championship, the first round of the top men’s tour’s playoffs. That moved him up to 27th in the FedEx Cup standings and on to this week’s BMW Championship, the playoffs’ second round.

“I don’t know if the warmer weather allows my body to move better in the past couple years or what,” said Pendrith. “I seem to play well in the summertime. Last week (at TPC Southwind in Memphis) was super hot and I don’t necessarily love those conditions, but I have strung together a bunch of good weeks in a row.”

The St. Jude’s Championship had a 70-player field and the top 50 players in the FedEx Cup standings after that event advanced to this week’s tournament at Castle Pines Golf Club in Castle Rock, Colo.

That included Corey Conners of Listowel, Ont., and Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., who tied for 50th at 1 under at the St. Jude’s Championship. Conners is now 33rd in the FedEx Cup rankings and Hadwin is 42nd.

Mackenzie Hughes of Dundas, Ont., and Nick Taylor of Abbotsford did not move on.

The top 30 players after the BMW Championship will then move on to the season-ending Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta next week.

“I think this is probably the best putting year that I’ve had in my career,” said Pendrith, who won the CJ Cup Byron Nelson on May 5 for his first-ever PGA Tour victory. “I feel really comfortable over every putt and I’ve made quite a lot of crucial putts this season.

“My iron play has also been really good. Last week my iron play was really strong and so everything’s kind of coming together.”

Pendrith will be paired with Tom Hoge of the United States at Castle Pines on Thursday, Hadwin will be with Australia’s Adam Scott, and Conners will play alongside American J.T. Poston.

The BMW Championship is also the last event where players can earn official world golf ranking points to play in this year’s Presidents Cup at Royal Montreal Golf Club on Sept. 24-29. Canadian Golf Hall of Famer Mike Weir is the captain of the International Team and Pendrith hopes to play in the biannual event for the second time in a row.

“I don’t think it necessarily adds more pressure, but it’s been on my mind for the last couple months,” said Pendrith, who made his International Team debut with Conners at Quail Hollow in Charlotte in 2022. “I’ve played great leading up to here and I’m hoping to have a really solid week again this week and earn my way on to that team.”

The top six players in the International Team rankings are automatically selected, with Weir filling out the rest of his 12-player roster. Conners is currently seventh on the rankings, Taylor is 11th, Hadwin is 12th, Pendrith is 13th and Hughes is 15th.

RBC CANADIAN OPEN — Ryan Paul of Ancaster, Ont., was named the new tournament director of the RBC Canadian Open, the men’s national championship, last Thursday. He was the tournament director of the CPKC Women’s Open, the women’s national championship, for the past seven years. He replaces Bryan Crawford, who left Golf Canada in June to become the Ontario Hockey League’s new commissioner. Paul’s father Bill was the Canadian Open director for a total of 23 years.

“The RBC Canadian Open has always been a big part of my life having grown up with it and is one I am very passionate about,” said Ryan Paul. “For Golf Canada and RBC to have the confidence in me to play a lead role in our national men’s open championship is truly an honour.”

DP WORLD TOUR — Aaron Cockerill of Stony Mountain, Man., is the lone Canadian entered in this week’s Danish Golf Championship. He’s No. 45 on the European-based DP World Tour’s Race to Dubai Rankings heading into play at Lübker Golf Resort in Aarhus, Denmark.

KORN FERRY TOUR — Myles Creighton of Digby, N.S., leads the Canadian contingent into this week’s Albertsons Boise Open. He’s 36th on the second-tier tour’s points list. Edmonton’s Wil Bateman (48th), Etienne Papineau (65th) of St-Jean-Sur-Richelieu, Que., Sudarshan Yellamaraju (93rd) of Mississauga, Ont., and Jared du Toit (142nd) of Kimberley, B.C., will join Creighton at Hillcrest Country Club in Boise, Idaho.

PGA TOUR AMERICAS — Winnipeg Jets defenceman Dylan Samberg is in the field at this week’s CentrePoint Canada Rail Park Manitoba Open. It has become a tradition for a Jets player to compete at the local event on the third-tier circuit every year. Matthew Anderson of Mississauga remains atop the Fortinet Cup standings heading into play at Southwood Golf & Country Club this week.

CHAMPIONS TOUR — Calgary’s Stephen Ames is second on the Schwab Cup points list heading into The Ally Challenge. No. 23 Mike Weir of Brights Grove, Ont., will also tee off on Friday at Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club in Grand Blanc, Mich.

LPGA TOUR — Brooke Henderson of Smiths Falls, Ont., is the only Canadian playing at the AIG Women’s Open, the fifth and final major of the women’s golf season. She is eighth on the Race to CME Globe standings. The Old Course at St Andrews, widely considered the oldest golf course in the world, is hosting the event for the third time.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 21, 2024.

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Mariners righty Bryan Woo perfect through 6 innings against Padres

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SEATTLE (AP) — Seattle Mariners right-hander Bryan Woo has not allowed a baserunner through six innings against the San Diego Padres on Wednesday night.

Woo has relied mostly on his fastball at the top of the strike zone to shut down the Padres. The closest San Diego has come to a hit was Manny Machado’s 113 mph line drive leading off the fifth inning that was grabbed by Randy Arozarena in left field with a diving catch.

Third baseman Josh Rojas also made an excellent defensive play charging a slow grounder from Xander Bogaerts and throwing him out to end the second inning.

Woo, in his second season in the majors, has struck out four. He’s thrown 64 pitches and has yet to get to a three-ball count.

Seattle leads 3-0.

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AP MLB:

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Southern Baptist trustees back agency president but warn against needless controversy

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Less than two months after the Southern Baptists’ policy arm issued an embarrassing retraction of an announcement of its leader’s firing, it gave him a strong vote of confidence this week — but with a caution against stirring unnecessary controversy.

Trustees for the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission affirmed both their president, Brent Leatherwood, and the direction of the organization, which has long been on the vanguard of the religious right in voicing the conservative views of the nation’s largest Protestant denomination.

“We strongly affirm the ERLC under the leadership of Brent Leatherwood,” said incoming chair Scott Foshie. “The world and Southern Baptists need to hear that.”

His words echoed a formal statement issued by the trustees Wednesday after a lengthy closed-door session Tuesday. The statement acknowledged that, while the commission speaks out on numerous contentious issues where controversy is inevitable, that’s all the more reason not to stir up more controversy on nonessential issues.

Trustees acknowledged that support for the organization is wavering among individual churches, who fund almost all its budget. They supported the commission’s plan, already in the works, to create a new office to work more closely with pastors to help them better understand and guide the agency’s work.

“In a time of deep division in our culture, from polarization in our political environment, to falling trust in institutions, to the fracturing of families, the ERLC is needed now as much as ever both to serve in the public square,” the statement said.

But it urged the commission to be careful.

It said the staff needs to follow a companion set of guidelines, also issued Wednesday, which says the commission needs to base its public stances on the Bible as well as on the official faith statement and other resolutions approved by Southern Baptists at annual meetings in recent decades. The guidelines state that if advocacy on a particular issue is likely to “upset certain segments of the SBC,” the staff needs to evaluate the issue carefully — but may still speak out if it’s deemed essential.

The commission has staked out staunchly conservative stances on religious and political issues, with strong opposition to abortion and LGBTQ+ rights. Still, it has drawn the criticism of a vocal segment of the convention that wants to move the denomination even further to the right and sees it as drifting leftward.

Leatherwood has resisted calls to support the criminalization of women seeking abortion. He’s been criticized for supporting U.S. aid for Ukraine’s military defense and for supporting a Tennessee bill that would prevent access to firearms for people deemed a threat to others or themselves — an issue that is personal to Leatherwood after his children’s school was targeted in a deadly 2023 shooting.

Then in July, criticism erupted after Leatherwood issued a statement commending President Joe Biden for the “selfless act” of withdrawing from the presidential race after a dismal debate performance. Numerous voices in the Southern Baptist Convention, where overwhelmingly pro-Republican views prevail, denounced the statement, saying Biden acted not out of selflessness but out of political necessity.

Within a day, the commission’s chairman, Kevin Smith, moved to oust Leatherwood, and the agency issued a statement saying he had been removed. But after it emerged that Smith acted without a vote of the board’s executive committee, as required by bylaws, Smith resigned and the agency retracted its announcement.

Two members of the executive committee declined to comment on the episode in interviews, deferring to the agency’s strong statements in support of Leatherwood.

Even before that episode, Leatherwood recognized the problem of wavering support for the commission. At the Southern Baptists’ annual meeting in Indianapolis in June, church representatives voted down a proposal to abolish the commission entirely — but with a notable minority of voters supporting its abolition.

Those results “weren’t just disappointing, they were unacceptable,” Leatherwood said in an official address to the commission Tuesday.

“I say that not to the outrage artists and the grievance grifters who will never be on our side, who spin up political attack committees to come and throw bombs at us,” he said. “No, I’m talking to the local pastor and the everyday church member who just need to better understand our mission and the work that we do, and know that our work represents real Baptist leadership.”

He said the agency has already been taking such steps, surveying pastors and issuing lengthy guidebooks on issues they said were priorities, including election polarization and gender issues. It also issued a state-by-state guide to various abortion-related measures on November ballots.

“Our culture is not well right now,” Leatherwood said. Partisanship has been overwhelming “so many Christians,” he said. “Mistruths and conspiracy theories, they are everywhere right now.”

He urged Baptists to respond with gentleness and reason to such partisanship.

“The anxiety that people are feeling is real, but we help them understand it’s not supposed to be this way,” he said.

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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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Alberta Premier Smith says she wants Calgary Green Line to proceed as first pitched

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EDMONTON – Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she’s committed to Calgary’s multibillion-dollar Green Line light-rail transit project, but as it was originally envisioned.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Smith declined to say how much her government is now willing to fund.

But she said she is concerned the line is getting shorter while its budget has ballooned from the original price tag of $4.5 billion.

Smith called the Green Line “the incredible shrinking project,” and that it needs a complete “rethink” to be more cost-effective.

“It would cost $20 billion to build that entire line at the per kilometre rate we’re seeing now. That is the kind of project that could bankrupt a city,” said Smith in Lloydminster, Sask.

“I think we just have to do it a different way.”

The premier was making her first public comments on the Green Line since Transportation Minister Devin Dreeshen announced last week the province will pull its $1.53 billion in funding from the $6.2-billion transit project if the city doesn’t change course.

The city’s current city council approved an updated, shortened line in July with an added $700 million in costs.

Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek has said that in light of the province’s decision, the city now can’t afford to build the line and the province needs to assume the financial risk.

Gondek has said she met with the premier earlier this week to say what the province wants won’t work. City council is set to meet next week to hear advice on how to abandon the project and offload the costs and delivery onto the province.

Smith, like Dreeshen, said the province is opposed to tunnelling underground for downtown stops as per the latest city plans. Her government also wants to see the rail line go farther into south Calgary.

Dreeshen in a recent interview, said if the city rejects the new alignment proposals, now expected from an engineering firm chosen by the province by the end of the year, the rail line will be on the shelf indefinitely.

If the city votes to try to wash its hands of the financial responsibility next week, Dreeshen suggested there’s another long battle ahead.

“Then it goes to the lawyers, and we’ll have to assess whatever they come up with at that time,” said Dreeshen in a Sept. 6 interview.

He declined to say whether the province would backstop liabilities for delayed or cancelled contracts.

To date, more than $1.4 billion has been spent on land acquisition, utility upgrades and a new fleet of rail vehicles — costs that could be tied to the existing plan.

The dispute has become highly politicized given that former Calgary mayor Naheed Nenshi became leader of the provincial NDP in June. The NDP is the Official Opposition and chief rival to Smith’s United Conservatives.

Nenshi left city hall in 2021. Dreeshen has now labelled the Green Line project the “Nenshi nightmare.” He calls Nenshi responsible for what he terms the mismanagement of the project from the start, saying it was never properly engineered.

Nenshi, in turn, has blamed Dreeshen for turning the Green Line into a political football and putting jobs at risk in the dispute.

Bill Black, head of the Calgary Construction Association, told The Canadian Press last week he doesn’t take sides on the design, but also doesn’t want to see a politicized spat sideline construction.

“It’s hard not to feel like the kids when the parents are going through a divorce, where the kids are always the collateral damage when the parents are fighting,” he said.

The federal government, which has also committed $1.53 billion, said it was taken by surprise with the Alberta government’s decision.

Federal Infrastructure Minister Sean Fraser has said Ottawa wants to work with Alberta on next steps, saying the withdrawal of provincial funding will impact thousands of jobs.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 11, 2024.

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