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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, August 3, 2009

On this date: 1949 — The National Basketball Association is formed


Associated Press

Aug. 3

1852 — The first intercollegiate rowing race is held on Lake Winnipesaukee, N.H., where Harvard beats Yale by four lengths on the 2-mile course.

1949 — The National Basketball Association is formed by the merger of the National Basketball League and the Basketball Association of America.

1955 — Scott Frost, driven by Joe O'Brien, wins the Hambletonian at Good Time Park in Goshen, N.Y. He goes on to become trotting's first Triple Crown winner.

1985 — France's Lutin D'Isigny becomes the first trotter to sweep the International Trot and Challenge Cup in consecutive years with a 3:03.1 time in the 1½-mile test.

1990 — The PGA Tour announces it will not hold tournaments at golf clubs that have all-white memberships or show any other signs of discrimination.

1995 — Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, signs a controversial 10-year, $25 million deal with Pepsi to make it the official cola of Texas Stadium, despite the NFL's sponsorship agreement with Coca-Cola.

1996 — Andre Agassi, the Dream Team and the U.S. women's 400-meter relay team win Olympic gold medals, while the American men's 400 relay settles for silver. With Carl Lewis idled by a coach's decision and Leroy Burrell injured, the men's 400 team is shocked by Canada — the first time the U.S. lost the event at the Olympics.

1997 — Colleen Walker wins the du Maurier Classic by two strokes over Liselotte Neumann. Her 65 is one stroke off the best final round recorded in an LPGA major, a 9-under 64 by JoAnne Carner in the 1978 du Maurier.

2003 — Annika Sorenstam completes a career Grand Slam at the Women's British Open, beating Se Ri Pak by a stroke in a thrilling head-to-head showdown.

2006 — Champ Car driver Cristiano da Matta needs surgery to remove a ruptured blood vessel in his head after his race car collides with a deer that wandered onto the track during a test session at Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wis.

2008 — Ji-Yai Shin wins the Women's British Open by three strokes after a final round 6-under 66 to maintain Asia's recent domination of the majors on the LPGA Tour. The 20-year-old South Korean, whose 21 previous victories were all in her homeland or Japan, captures her first major with an 18-under 270.