Golf
JOHNNIE WALKER CLASSIC: Tiger Woods' winning streak of four straight tournaments ended as Michael Campbell of New Zealand captured the Johnnie Walker Classic. Woods, who had won eight of his last 11 tournaments, finished five strokes behind in the event, which is not part of the PGA Tour.Campbell had 2-under-par 70 in the final round for a 276 total and his first victory since 1995. Geoff Ogilvy of Australia (68) came in second at 277, followed by Ernie Els (68) another shot back. Vijay Singh (68) was in fourth at 279, followed by Peter Senior (67) at 280 and Woods (71) at 281.
SHARK SHOOTOUT: David Duval and Fred Couples won the Shark Shootout with a closing round 11-under-par 61.
Duval and Couples finished with a 32-under 184 and won by six strokes, the largest margin since the tournament began in 1989. Scott Hoch and Scott McCarron shot a 61 to finish second at 190.
SENIOR MATCH PLAY: Larry Nelson led virtually all the way in beating Tom Jenkins 3 and 2 in the Senior Match Play Challenge.
Nelson won two of the first four holes, including an eagle at the par-5, 525-yard No. 4. The victory was Nelson's third since joining the Senior PGA Tour in 1997.
LPGA TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP: Se Ri Pak birdied the first playoff hole to beat Karrie Webb and Laura Davies and win the LPGA Tour Championship over. It was Pak's fourth victory of the year and eighth in just two seasons on the LPGA Tour, the best start since Nancy Lopez 20 years ago.
Auto Racing
PENNZOIL 400: Dale Jarrett wrapped up his first Winston Cup championship on a day when rookie Tony Stewart won his second straight race.
Jarrett came into the inaugural Pennzoil 400 needing to finish eighth or better to close out runner-up Bobby Labonte in the championship chase. He stayed in the top 10 throughout the 267-lap race and finished fifth.
STOCKHOLM OPEN: Thomas Enqvist got off to a fast start in the first set and beat Magnus Gustafsson 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 to win the all-Swedish final in the Stockholm Open.
Enqvist dropped only one of the first 13 points in the match, en route to winning the tournament for the third time, just one short of the record held by John McEnroe and Boris Becker.
ADVANTA CHAMPIONSHPS: Lindsay Davenport used a strong serve and powerful baseline game to frustrate Martina Hingis into critical unforced errors to win the Advanta Championships 6-3, 6-4. It was Davenport's first win in the Advanta finals after finishing runner-up the past two years.