Chino’s William Mouw rallied to win the ISCO Championship on Sunday for his first PGA Tour title, shooting a 9-under 61 and waiting nearly two hours to see if his 10-under 270 total would hold up in Louisville, Ky.

Mouw won when third-round leader Paul Peterson — who was playing the 10th hole at Hurstbourne Country Club when Mouw finished — missed a 55-foot birdie try from the fringe on the par-4 18th.

Mouw, 24, a product of Ontario Christian High and Pepperdine, won in his 20th start on the PGA Tour. He received a two-year exemption and a PGA Championship spot next year, but not a spot in the Masters.

Peterson shot a 69 to finish a stroke back in the opposite-field PGA Tour event also sanctioned by the European tour.

Mouw birdied the first three holes and added two more on Nos. 7-8 in a front-nine 30. He birdied Nos. 10, 11, 13 and 17 on the back nine in the lowest score in his brief PGA Tour career.

Peterson, 37, also making his 20th career PGA Tour start, made a 24-foot birdie putt on 14 and a 30-footer on 16, then parred the final two holes.

Chris Gotterup had a plane ticket for California to play an opposite-field event in Lake Tahoe. The only change in itinerary would be to take down Rory McIlroy at the Scottish Open before a sellout crowd expecting the Masters champion to claim his 30th title on the PGA Tour.

Gotterup handled it all with poise to go with his great strength.

He delivered all the right shots — the short birdie putt on the par-3 12th to build a two-shot lead, the 10-foot birdie on the par-5 16th to restore a two-shot lead — and closed with a 4-under 66 to hold off McIlroy (68) and Marco Penge (66) of England.

The victory sends him to Royal Portrush for his British Open debut, an extended trip to links golf that is starting to suit him.

Time to cancel that flight.

“I might do it right now in front of you,” Gotterup said, the trophy at his side that also sends him to the Masters next year for the first time.

Grace Kim delivered one stunning shot after another in the Evian Championship, starting with an eagle to force a playoff and another eagle to beat Jeeno Thitikul on the second extra hole to make her first LPGA win a major title.

Kim, whose 2-foot eagle putt on the par-5 18th in regulation gave her a 4-under 67, looked to be just as surprised as everyone else when she rolled in a 12-foot eagle putt to win the playoff. The 24-year-old Australian calmly placed her hand over her mouth and stood still before doubling over and breaking into a wide smile.

Thitikul’s biggest challenge had been English amateur Lottie Woad, who was coming off a win in the Irish Women’s Open and at one point had the lead on the back nine of Evian Resort. Thitikul closed with 64 and then waited to see if that would be enough.

Woad was bidding to become the first amateur to win a major since Catherine Lacoste at the 1967 U.S. Women’s Open.

Steve Allan became the first wire-to-wire winner in Dick’s Sporting Goods Open history, closing with a 6-under 66 for a four-stroke victory in the PGA Tour Champions event in Endicott, N.Y.

NFL

Luis Sharpe, the former UCLA star and three-time Pro Bowl selection at left tackle for the Cardinals during the franchise’s time in both St. Louis and Arizona, has died. He was 65.

The Cardinals confirmed Sharpe’s death through his family, a team spokesman said. Sharpe’s wife, Tameka Williams-Sharpe, posted about her husband’s passing on social media.

The 6-foot-5, 275-pound Sharpe played all 13 of his NFL seasons with the Cardinals, spanning from 1982 to 1994. He made three straight Pro Bowls from 1987 to 1989 and was a second-team All-Pro selection in 1988 and 1990.

Sharpe was born in Havana and starred at UCLA. He started all 189 games he played in the NFL and was one of the team’s best players during their transition from St. Louis to Arizona in 1988.

NBA

Cooper Flagg’s time in the NBA Summer League has come to an end after two games. The Dallas Mavericks rookie reportedly has been reportedly shut down by the team for the rest of the summer, per NBA insider Marc Stein.

Flagg, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NBA draft, played in two Summer League games: a win over the Lakers on Thursday, and Saturday’s loss to the San Antonio Spurs.

Stein reported that the Spurs game was Flagg’s last for the Summer League, and that he was not scheduled to play today against the Charlotte Hornets.

Flagg had an outstanding effort in his second game with Dallas on Saturday, scoring 31 points off a hot second quarter. Despite Flagg’s shooting, the Mavericks fell short of No. 2 overall draft pick Dylan Harper and the Spurs in a seven-point loss.

The strong showing came after Flagg struggled slightly in his Mavericks debut. The 18-year-old forward put up 10 points while shooting 5 of 21, calling it “one of the worst games of my life” after the game against the Lakers.

Boxing

Hamzah Sheeraz punctuated the first boxing card held on the grounds of the U.S. Open tennis tournament by stopping Edgar Berlanga in the fifth round.

The English fighter moved up in weight to make his debut at super middleweight and showed he has plenty of power for it, dropping Berlanga twice in the fourth round and then pouncing quickly to start the fifth before referee David Fields stopped the fight.

Sheeraz (22-0-1, 18 KOs) has been touted as a potential opponent for 168-pound champion Canelo Alvarez and would not only deserve it but have a chance to win if he looked as good as he did against Berlanga (23-2), who had boasted that he would have an easy night.

In the co-feature, Shakur Stevenson (24-0) remained undefeated and defended his WBC lightweight title with a dominant performance, beating William Zepeda by unanimous decision.

One judge favored Stevenson 119-109, while the other two had it 118-110 for the 2016 Olympic silver medalist.

Katie Taylor beat Amanda Serrano for the third time, winning a majority decision to remain the undisputed 140-pound champion.

Taylor won by scores of 97-93 on two judges’ cards, while the third had it even at 95-95. It was the third straight narrow decision between the two, after Taylor won a split decision in their first bout and a narrow unanimous decision in the rematch.

Back in Madison Square Garden, site of their first bout, Taylor improved to 25-1 in a fight that perhaps wasn’t as exciting as their first two, but once again was almost too close to call. Serrano fell to 47-4-1.