Romo
rallies to win celebrity golf tourney; Barkley finishes last
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[July 16, 2018]
Former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo overcame a
four-point deficit to win the American Century Championship by three
points on Sunday in Lake Tahoe, Calif.
A three-time runner-up in seven previous starts, Romo totaled 27
points in the final round to clip former MLB pitcher Mark Mulder --
who had won the tournament each of the last three years -- and San
Jose Sharks captain Joe Pavelski, who led entering Sunday.
"It's a special win," said Romo, who last played in the NFL in 2016
and joined CBS as a game analyst last year. "It feels like you're
playing a tournament back home here. The day felt good for a lot of
reasons."
The tournament uses a modified Stableford scoring system where
players earn points for eagles (six points), birdies (three) and
pars (one) and lose points (two) for double-bogeys or worse. Bogeys
have no effect.
Romo, who will play in a 36-hole U.S. Amateur qualifying tournament
on Monday in Wisconsin, had a comfortable tap-in for par at the
18th.
Mulder totaled 21 points on the day to finish alone in second place
with 68 total points.
Pavelski (18) finished at 66 in a tie with 10-time NBA All-Star Ray
Allen -- who posted the best round of the day with 28 points -- for
third. Pavelski missed a chance to tie Romo's lead with an eagle
putt from seven feet at the par-5 18th, but missed.
"It feels like nothing went in for me today," Pavelski said
afterward. "But I couldn't ask for more than to have that putt to
tie on the last hole."
As an amateur, Romo's $125,000 first-place prize will go to local
charities and the Stowers Institute for Medical Research.
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Dallas Cowboys
quarterback Tony Romo (9) leaves the game with an injury during the
second half of an NFL game against the Carolina Panthers on
Thanksgiving at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-USA
TODAY Sports / Reuters
Former NFL quarterback Trent Dilfer and former tennis player Mardy
Fish tied for fifth with 62 points. John Smoltz, who qualified for
the U.S. Senior Open last month, took 10th with 53 points.
NBA star Stephen Curry tied with two players in 11th place and lost
a bet with his father, Dell Curry, which led to the two-time MVP
jumping in Lake Tahoe. Dell Curry jumped in the lake last year but
beat his son by two points this year after negotiating a 20-point
handicap.
TNT analyst and 11-time NBA All-Star Charles Barkley finished last
with minus-93 points, just behind nine-time NFL Pro Bowler DeMarcus
Ware, who had minus-90. The two players -- who tied for a
tournament-low minus-30 on Sunday -- each finished more than 10
points worse than the rest of the 92-player field.
--Field Level Media
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