Nelsons lead in Florida
Three-time major champion Larry Nelson enjoyed the rare occasion of being a spectator in the Del Webb Father-Son Challenge at Orlando, Fla., watching his 29-year-old son make two eagles on the final three holes for a 12-under 60.
Larry and Josh Nelson had a one-shot lead in the scramble format over David Duval and his stepson, Deano Karavites.
The two-day tournament, held at ChampionsGate Golf Resort, is limited to major champions and their sons.
The tournament again made an exception for Arnold Palmer, who played with 20-year-old grandson Sam Saunders. They were among four teams tied at 62.
More Golf
Frank Lickliter II shot an even-par 72 at Orange County National in Winter Garden, Fla., to take a three-stroke lead after the fourth of six rounds in the PGA Tour National Qualifying Tournament.
Trevor Immelman and Justin Rose shot 5-under 67s to share the third-round lead in the Nedbank Challenge in Sun City, South Africa. Three-time champion Ernie Els (69) was third at 11 under.
Australian Adam Groom shot a 2-under-par 70 to take a one-shot lead after the third round of the Cambodian Open.
College Hockey
Robert Morris staged a late rally scoring two goals in the third period, but fell short to host Colgate, 4-3. Ryan Cruthers scored two goals for the Colonials and Chris Margott added another.
Basketball
The Washington Wizards retired Earl "The Pearl" Monroe's No. 10 jersey at halftime of their game against the Toronto Raptors. Monroe was drafted in 1967 by the Baltimore Bullets -- the Wizards' predecessor -- and played for the franchise until 1971. "You don't know what this day means to me. I can't explain it to you," Monroe told the Verizon Center crowd.
Volleyball
The United States defeated Argentina at the men's volleyball World Cup in Tokyo, moving a step closer to qualifying for the Beijing Olympics. William Priddy scored 17 points and Gabe Gardner added 13 to lead the United States to a 25-16, 25-19, 25-18 win against Argentina (5-5). The United States (8-2) will face Russia today. The top three teams in the 12-nation tournament will secure places in next summer's Olympics.
Skating
Barely eight months after capturing the world championship at home, Miki Ando failed to make the Grand Prix final in Sendai, Japan. Ando tripped up to finish fourth behind winner Carolina Kostner of Italy at the NHK Trophy. A poor free skate dropped the Japanese star out of the top six qualifying spot for the Grand Prix final in two weeks in Turin, Italy, site of the 2006 Olympics. Nana Takeda of Japan was third. Alissa Czisny of the United States was sixth.
Earlier, Tomas Verner of the Czech Republic defeated Japan's Daisuke Takahashi in the men's short program. Stephen Carriere of the United States, last year's world junior champion, was third.
European champions Isabelle Delobel and Olivier Schoenfelder of France won the ice dance.
Skiiing
Lindsey Vonn of the United States won a World Cup downhill at Lake Louise, Alberta, withstanding temperatures that plunged to 18 below zero. Vonn, formerly Lindsey Kildow, was timed at 1 minute, 48.69 seconds and was followed by Austria's Renate Goetschl .
Bobsleding
Steven Holcomb piloted the U.S. four-man team to a 0.10-second victory over Germany in a World Cup event at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary, Alberta. Holcomb had a two-run time of 1 minute, 48.14 seconds. Germany's Andre Lange was second in 1:48.24.
Biathlon
Norway's Ole Einar Bjorndalen, the greatest biathlete in history, shot cleanly and won a sprint for a record 75th World Cup victory in Kontiolahti, Finland. Bjorndalen completed the 10-kilometer race in 23 minutes, 13.4 seconds.