John Daly and his Loudmouth Golf Apparel wardrobe will be coming to Hazeltine National Golf Club for the 91st PGA Championship Aug. 13-16.

Daly, the popular and often troubled two-time major winner, sent his entry form last Thursday, a PGA of America spokesman said Wednesday. Daly is exempt as a past champion.

Last December, the PGA Tour suspended Daly for six months for unprofessional conduct. He went to the European Tour, had lap-band surgery to lose 40 pounds and started wearing some, well, Loudmouth Golf Apparel.

Daly returned to the PGA Tour two weeks ago at the St. Jude Classic. He finished tied for 64th at 1 over par.

The 43-year-old is expected to play in next month's British Open. He's exempt as a former champion (1995). Daly played the 2002 PGA Championship at Hazeltine and missed the cut.

Exempt players have until July 7 to send their entry forms. After July 7, the PGA of America will consider more players for special exemptions. Tom Lehman and David Duval are two players who should receive strong consideration.

MARK CRAIG

• Kenny Perry shot a 61 to tie the course record and take a two-shot lead after the first round of the Travelers Championship. Perry, who has finished in the top 10 seven times at this tournament, shot a 29 on the front nine and had no bogeys. Charles Warren and Paul Goydos each shot a 7-under 63 to tie for second place.

• Sandra Gal shot an 8-under 64 and led by one stroke after the first round at the Wegmans LPGA was suspended by darkness. Play was interrupted for three hours by an afternoon storm, then called off for the day at 7:37 p.m. with dozens of players unable to finish their round. Gal's career-best round was one better than Jiyai Shin. Becky Lucidi was in third place at 6 under through 15 holes. Tiger Woods' 18-year-old niece, Cheyenne, carded a 75 in her pro-tour debut, which came courtesy of a sponsor exemption.

AROUND THE HORN

Soccer: Daniel Alves scored the only goal on a free kick with only two minutes left at the Confederations Cup, sending Brazil into the final against the surprising United States and ending host South Africa's upset bid.

Track: Olympic decathlon champion Bryan Clay withdrew from the U.S. national track championships because of an injured left hamstring, a decision that could force him to shut down his entire 2009 season.

Basketball: Marquette guard Maurice Acker will skip his final year of eligibility because he's on track to graduate in December.

Swimming: The U.S. Olympic swimming trials will return to Omaha in 2012, with a temporary pool once again being set up inside the Qwest Center.

NFL: The Chiefs added depth to the defensive backfield, signing former Pro Bowl safety Mike Brown. Seahawks fullback Owen Schmitt has apologized for "poor judgment" after getting arrested in a Seattle suburb for investigation of drunken driving.

Hockey: Nineteen years after defecting from the Soviet Union, Sergei Fedorov is leaving the NHL to play in his homeland. The 1994 league MVP and three-time Stanley Cup winner with the Detroit Red Wings has signed a two-year contract with Russian club Metallurg Magnitogorsk of the Kontinental Hockey League.

WNBA: Cappie Pondexter scored 24 points and Diana Taurasi had 23 to help Phoenix beat Washington 93-87.

Minnesota scene: The Sioux Falls Canaries rallied for a 4-3 victory over the St. Paul Saints at Midway Stadium. Saints starter Charlie Ruud became the career strikeouts leader (291) in team history. ... The Thunder defeated Inferno 95 in an exhibition game at the National Sports Center 3-0.

STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS