Englands Paul Broadhurst overcame a four-shot deficit on the final day to clinch the Senior Open title at Carnoustie.Broadhurst, 50, began the last round four shots adrift of overnight leader Miguel Angel Jimenez, but a final-round 68 was enough to clinch him his first major title as the Spaniard fell away to card a three-over-par 75.Broadhurst, who shot 75 on the opening day, finished on 11 under par, two shots ahead of American Scott McCarron, who closed with a 69, while Jimenez finished a shot further back and tied for third with Swedens Magnus Persson Atlevi.Atlevi closed with a 67 to join Jimenez on eight under, ahead of four Americans. Brandt Jobe and Tom Byrum both finished seven under ahead of Joe Durant and Wes Short Jr (both six under).Bernhard Langer, who won the Senior Open at Carnoustie in 2010, shot four consecutive rounds of 71 to finish on four under, seven shots back.Broadhurst is the first player to win the Senior Open on their debut since Fred Couples in 2012 at Turnberry and is the first English winner on the European Senior Tour this year.Hydro Flask Coffee Sale . Both players have lower body injuries that will keep them out of the lineup until at least January 31, which is the first game they can be activated from IR. Hydro Flask Sale Canada .ca! Kerry, Two nights after the Scott-Eriksson incident in Buffalo, the Bruins returned home to play San Jose. In that game, Zdeno Chara put a check on Tommy Wingels that clearly targeted his head. http://www.hydroflaskombrecanada.com/sale-hydro-flask-18-oz/standard-mouth.html . -- Ohio States Urban Meyer has never had any issue acclimating to the biggest stages in college football. Hydro Flask 18 Oz Wide Mouth . Those lessons were more than enough to overwhelm the Utah Jazz. Lou Williams scored 25 points and the Hawks continued their offensive upswing as they rolled to an easy 118-85 victory over the Jazz on Friday night, winning their third straight and for the fourth time in five games. Hydro Flask Coffee Mug Canada . Lack made 20 saves for his third shutout of the season as the Canucks blanked the St. Louis Blues 1-0 in the first post-Olympic game for both teams night.After focusing on a pair of no-cut events with smaller fields, DFS golf returns to a traditional tournament format with a full field and a cut for this weeks Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas.Our experts have put together the players they believe have the skills to succeed and provide big fantasy point totals. This weeks panel is comprised of Jason Sobel, Jonathan Coachman and Bob Harig as well as FantasyGolfInsiders Jeff Bergerson, Zach Turcotte, Taras Pitra and Jason Rouslin.Note: Golfer salaries listed are for DraftKings.Jason Sobel -- Alex Cejka ($8,300)From Ryan Moore to Charley Hoffman to Scott Piercy, there are a handful of Vegas residents in this weeks field, but my pick is the guy who was part of the runner-up logjam at this event last year. Cejka had a decent finish at the CIMB Classic two weeks ago and he should be accustomed to desert golf. On a week when just finishing Low Vegas Resident is an accomplishment, I like Cejka to take it.Bob Harig -- Ryan Moore ($11,000)The Las Vegas native returns home, and if he can get over the jet lag of being in Asia for two weeks, he should be quite comfortable at the Shriners tournament. He is ranked 32nd in the world after his playoff loss at the Tour Championship which led to a strong Ryder Cup performance. He is coming off a tie for 23rd at the WGC-HSBC Champions in China.Jonathan Coachman -- Brooks Koepka ($10,700)This is one of my favorite tournaments of the year. I also think that the bigger names are starting to take the fall series very seriously. These events can set a player up for the rest of the season. For those reasons I am picking Brooks Koepka to win this week. I think he is now motivated after the Ryder Cup to become a perennial top player week in and week out.Taras Pitra -- William McGirt ($8,700)MccGirt has the course history working in his favor this week as hes only missed one cut in five appearances.dddddddddddd McGirts strengths are primarily from tee to green, which should play well here. My guess is that the general public will be off of him due to his lack of driving distance, so he could be a solid cash game play with GPP upside as well.Jeff Bergerson -- Kevin Streelman ($8,000)I am looking for a guy that has shown a track record of making cuts at TPC Summerlin. Streelman has made six consecutive cuts here and has top 25s in each of his last five. Last week at Sanderson Farms, he turned in a respectable T-18. He is not a guy who will garner much attention, which is another reason I like him this week. At only $8,000, he will allow you flexibility with the rest of your roster.Zach Turcotte -- Nick Watney ($7,500)After missing most of last season due to an injury, Watney returned to the tour this fall to little fanfare. With fantasy golf still in the early phases of growth, missing last season will keep him below the radar until he has a solid result. Watney made the cut in his first event back at the Safeway a few weeks ago and arrives this week at a course where he has tremendous history, making six straight cuts with five finishes in the top 16.Jason Rouslin -- Ben Martin ($7,600)Martin will look to have a soild start to his 2016-2017 season and make it all the way to the Tour Championship after he was knocked out at the BMW last season. He comes off the Sanderson where he placed 18th, and comes back to TPC Sumerlin where he won in 2014. Clearly he loves the course, and the recent form is there, so this means some great value at $7,600. ' ' '