Isa Nacewas 47th-minute bonus-point try was the highlight of Leinsters workmanlike 33-15 European Champions Cup win over Castres at the RDS.The Irish provinces dominant maul paved the way for three first-half tries - a brace from Sean Cronin and one to mark Jack McGraths 100th provincial appearance - but Castres were only 19-10 down at the break.The hosts suffered the double whammy of a penalty try and Luke McGraths yellow card right on the stroke of half-time, giving the French side a serious lift. Nacewas fine individual score got Leinster back on track early in the second period, a penalty try rewarded the home scrum on the hour mark and Castres replacement Anthony Jelonch dived over for a consolation try.Tireless flanker Josh van der Flier delivered a man-of-the-match performance for the victors and 20-year-old fly-half Joey Carbery had an assured European debut, stepping into the shoes of the injured Jonathan Sexton (hamstring).Nacewa nudged a fifth-minute penalty wide from the right, with full-back Rob Kearney prominent in the air early on. The Leinster captain was also thwarted after a pacy Robbie Henshaw break. But the Castres forwards gave way soon after, Leinsters decision to kick for the corner proving correct as hooker Cronin was driven over in powerful fashion.Carberys juggling intercept broke up a promising Castres spell, but dogged French defence prevented the fast-breaking Garry Ringrose and Henshaw from adding to the lead. The wet conditions contributed to Alex Tulous spill, ruining the big Castres number 8s encouraging run from deep.However, the visitors were forced to concede a lineout from Nacewas quick-witted kick through in the 26th minute, and Cronin, having broke off the maul, built enough momentum through a Victor Moreaux tackle to spin over the whitewash, with Nacewa converting.Benjamin Urdapilleta punished a high tackle from Kearney to get Castres off the mark, but loosehead McGrath muscled over from a close-in 33rd minute ruck that came from further lineout pressure. Urdapilleta missed a chance to cancel out Nacewas well-struck conversion, however scrum half McGraths side-entry at a dangerous Castres maul led to his sin-binning and the penalty try, converted by the Argentinean fly-half.Nacewa stepped in at scrum half on the restart, helping Leinster to ride out the sin-bin period and it was the skipper who exposed Antoine Dupoints weak defence at a ruck and handed off Geoffrey Palis to claim a superb solo seven-pointer.With Leinsters reinforced scrum getting the upper hand, Castres did well to avoid further concessions as the home side pressed from advanced set piece ball and breaks by Van der Flier and Carbery.A succession of penalties led to Castres replacement Thibault Lassale seeing yellow for a maul infringement, and two more scrum penalties had referee Matthew Carley running in behind the posts. Nacewas conversion completed his 13-point contribution.Jelonch answered back for Castres with a 68th-minute effort before Leinster missed on two more tries - replacement hooker James Tracy went close from another maul and centre Ringrose was called back for a forward pass from Henshaw, following a blistering run out of his own half by Carbery. Greg Ward Jersey . Pettersen, winner of last years Evian Championships, had nine birdies and three bogeys, holding off a series of challengers led by Marion Ricordeau of France. The second-ranked Norwegian made her season debut after missing the LPGA Tours opening event last month in the Bahamas because of a shoulder injury. Matt Pryor Jersey . LOUIS -- St. http://www.cheapeaglesjerseysauthentic.com/?tag=authentic-tyreek-burwell-jersey . Brett Kulak and Jackson Houck of the Vancouver Giants were each charged with assault causing bodily harm on Aug. 18, according to the B.C. court services. Nick Foles Jersey . -- The St. Johns IceCaps weathered a wild first period with the help of goaltender Jussi Olkinuora, before finding offensive inroads in the second. Treyvon Hester Jersey . Their experience showed Tuesday as the No. 10 Badgers blunted a Saint Louis surge to win 63-57 and advance to face West Virginia in Wednesdays finals of the Cancun Challenge. Some of the sports stories The Associated Press is covering Monday. A full Sports Digest will be sent by about 3 p.m. All times EDT:- CLEVELAND -- Still needing one win for their first title since 1948, the Cleveland Indians will be back at home when Josh Tomlin starts Tuesday night with a 3-2 World Series lead. Jake Arrieta pitches for the Chicago Cubs.- CHICAGO -- Success was practically stamped on Kris Bryants DNA. Thats what made his struggles through the first four World Series games so confounding. But his fourth-inning home run awakened a hibernating Cubs offense.- Duke is the runaway No. 1 choice in the APs preseason mens college basketball poll. The Blue Devils are followed Kentucky, Kansas, Villanova and Oregon.- CHICAGO -- The World Series leaves town, but the last-place Bears are still around. They host Sam Bradford and a Minnesota Vikings team looking to shake off its first loss. Jay Cutler returns to Chicago. Game starts 8:30 p.m.- CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Cam Newton let loose on NFL officiating. The Panthers quarterback says hes tired of not getting calls. Now others weigh in on the matter.- ARLINGTON, Texas -- Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has spoken with the NFLs special counsel for domestic violence investigations, and running back Ezekiel Elliott says he was interviewed by the league this season about an abuse claim.- FOXBOROUGH, Mass. -- So much for Deflategate deflating the Patriots this season. New England has reached the halfway point and -- surprise -- has the best record in the NFL.- COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio State, after an upset by Penn State and a near loss to Northwestern, is resetting expectations. Coach Urban Meyer is now calling this years team a project.- BATON ROUGE, La. -- LSU interim coach Ed Orgeron insists his teams resurgence is all about the players. Butt if the No.dddddddddddd 15 Tigers beat No. 1 Alabama on Saturday night it will be hard for LSU to cut Orgeron loose after the season.- RIO DE JANEIRO -- Workers for the Rio de Janeiro Olympics are ready to sue the local organizing committee, demanding to be paid almost 2 1/2 months after the problem-filled games ended.- PARIS -- Andy Murray has spent much of his career trying to catch the likes of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic -- all having held the No. 1 ranking for long spells. Now it could finally be Murrays turn at 29.- The NHL gives teams the ability to test some players for up to nine games before spending money on a year of their contracts. Its decision time for several teams.- NEW YORK -- NBA players who once may have been thinking about a personal charity have shifted their attention to their communities. The games have started, but the work to make things better has not stopped.- CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- It would be easy for Jimmie Johnson to focus only on NASCARs title-deciding race and his bid to win a record-tying seventh championship. No way. He plans to grab as much momentum as possible for the season finale.- Formula One sure knows how to get in its own way. The drivers derring-do, the adrenaline, the speed, the glitz and the wealth all can be overtaken by the sports buffoonery.- SHANGHAI -- No one from Japan has more than Hideki Matsuyamas three PGA Tour victories. No one from Japan won a World Golf Championship. None of this might have been possible if Matsuyama had never left home.- ARCADIA, Calif. -- Entries are taken for 13 Breeders Cup races worth $28 million. Eleven races drawn at 4 p.m.; Distaff and Classi