Denver, CO
BMW Championship final round tee times at Castle Pines Golf Club released
The final round of the BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club is gearing up to be a classic.
Keegan Bradley will enter Sunday’s final 18 holes with a one-shot lead over Australian Adam Scott, with Ludvig Åberg and Alex Noren just two shots behind Bradley and local fan favorite Wyndham Clark lurking five shots behind.
Clark will be paired with two-time major champion Xander Schauffele in the third-to-last group of the FedExCup Playoffs event. Bradley and Scott are scheduled to tee off last at 11:30 a.m. Here’s the full list of tee times:
Tee times
7:25 a.m.: Eric Cole and Sahith Theegala
7:35 a.m.: Max Homa and Justin Thomas
7:45 a.m.: Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Matthieu Pavon
7:55 a.m.: Davis Thompson and Adam Hadwin
8:05 a.m.: Austin Eckroat and Aaron Rai
8:15 a.m.: Jason Day and Stephan Jaeger
8:25 a.m.: Matt Fitzpatrick and Scottie Scheffler
8:40 a.m.: Max Greyserman and Akshay Bhatia
8:50 a.m.: Cameron Young and Tony Finau
9 a.m.: Cam Davis and Thomas Detry
9:10 a.m.: Denny McCarthy and J.T. Poston
9:20 a.m.: Viktor Hovland and Collin Morikawa
9:30 a.m.: Will Zalatoris and Billy Horschel
9:45 a.m.: Sam Burns and Brian Harman
9:55 a.m.: Chris Kirk and Byeong Hun An
10:05 a.m.: Corey Conners and Shane Lowry
10:15 a.m.: Patrick Cantlay and Sungjae Im
10:25 a.m.: Russell Henley and Tom Hoge
10:35 a.m.: Tommy Fleetwood and Rory McIlroy
10:50 a.m.: Sepp Straka and Nick Dunlap
11 a.m.: Si Woo Kim and Taylor Pendrith
11:10 a.m.: Xander Schauffele and Wyndham Clark
11:20 a.m.: Ludvig Åberg and Alex Noren
11:30 a.m.: Keegan Bradley and Adam Scott
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Denver, CO
Several chances for snow in the Denver metro with three storms impacting Colorado this week
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Denver, CO
Community food pantry in Denver’s Globeville neighborhood urgently needs donations
A community food pantry in Denver’s Globeville neighborhood is in dire need of monetary and fresh food donations.
For the last 10 years, Birdseed Collective nonprofit has been serving residents with a box of fresh groceries every Monday.
The food pantry is located inside the Globeville Center.
Recently, they have been serving about 70 families weekly, but are struggling to keep up with the need. Many factors have led to this, including losing out on a key donor for a brief period, which then led to a food shortage of about 1,000 pounds weekly.
Other factors include rising grocery costs, and a denied $50,000 city grant. The stress the nonprofit is experiencing is mounting.
Still, even when they are struggling, the nonprofit finds a way, according to director Kristina Garcia.
“A lot of our residents are elderly and homebound, living off Social Security. They’re living month to month on a fixed income,” said Garcia.
Globeville is considered a food desert due to limited access to grocery stores, economic challenges and transportation barriers.
“I would say the closest grocery store is over 5 miles away, and that would be going downtown,” added Garcia.
This makes the program vital for residents like Angela Garcia.
“Well, I retired and I didn’t have enough money to buy groceries. One day I was walking by and saw they were giving away food. I asked if I could get some, signed up and have been coming ever since,” said Angela Garcia.
Kristina Garcia says they refuse to close their community food pantry, regardless of the situation they are currently in.
“We’ve never closed in all of these years — 10 years of running the food program — because, as we say, hunger doesn’t take a holiday,” said Garcia.
The nonprofit is looking for monetary and direct food donations such as meat, produce and spices.
“We run out of food in 6 minutes. We start at 3 p.m. and by 3:06 p.m. we’re out of food. So that’s how quickly our 70 boxes go,” said Kristina Garcia. “And our families that we serve usually are between three and 10 per household, so our boxes probably last them only a day or two in the household.”
Residents like Angela Garcia believe the nonprofit will bounce back and continue to serve people like her.
“What we lack in sidewalks, lighting, crosswalks and food, we make up with our heart, and I have full strength and trust in Birdseed that they will continue to feed the community,” she said.
For more on how to help, visit birdseedcollective.org.
Denver, CO
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