Brian Harman starts his British Open title defense by returning the claret jug

Brian Harman starts his British Open title defense by returning the claret jug
Harman is a straight shooter — with a rifle, with his mouth and last year with his putter — but a staged moment as this didn’t bother him. (AP)
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Updated 16 July 2024
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Brian Harman starts his British Open title defense by returning the claret jug

Brian Harman starts his British Open title defense by returning the claret jug
  • The homecoming of the claret jug was an unofficial way to launch the start of the final men’s major of the year
  • After handing off the jug, Harman headed out to see Royal Troon for the first time

TROON, Scotland: Of all the recent traditions in the Royal & Ancient game, what Brian Harman took part in on Monday afternoon might be the least enjoyable.

Returning the claret jug.

The formal handover of the British Open trophy required a little pomp. Harman was in the back seat of an SUV. The destination was not much longer than the 40-foot birdie putt he made last year on the 14th hole on his way to winning the Open. But he had to wait for the film crew to be set, for the traffic on the road to clear.

“It’s all yours,” Harman told Martin Slumbers, the R&A CEO who took back golf’s oldest trophy that apparently has seen its share of the finest wine and bourbon in the year since Harman won at Royal Liverpool.

Harman is a straight shooter — with a rifle, with his mouth and last year with his putter — but a staged moment as this didn’t bother him.

“In my opinion, it’s the coolest trophy in all of sports,” Harman said. “So I think it’s deserving of all of the pageantry that’s involved with it.”

Getting it back by the end of the week is the real challenge.

The homecoming of the claret jug was an unofficial way to launch the start of the final men’s major of the year. The 152nd Open Championship begins Thursday on the Scottish links along the Firth of Clyde on the Irish Sea.

Royal Troon is renowned for its pot bunkers that are so deep they effectively serve as a one-shot penalty when tee shots find them on the longer holes. The outward holes are shorter with the prevailing wind, the inward holes are longer and into the wind.

“You have to take them on,” Scottie Scheffler said.

Harman had gone six years without a win until putting together a masterpiece last year to lead over the final 51 holes and win by six. He hasn’t won since then, a matter of getting his putter to cooperate. He hopes that’s the case this week.

“You can work and work and work. You just never know when that work is going to pay off,” Harman said. “You never know when the peak is coming. You never know when you’re going to catch a little bit of momentum. So you just have to hope it’s a big week.”

No one has won back to back in the British Open since Padraig Harrington in 2007 (Carnoustie) and 2008 (Royal Birkdale). Go back to 1960 and the list of repeat winners includes only Tiger Woods, Tom Watson, Lee Trevino and Arnold Palmer.

“A little sad to give it back, but I’ll remember everywhere it’s been forever,” Harman said. “I’m happy to give it back, happy to be here. Ready to get going.”

Royal Troon is green and lush, and the rough is particularly thick at the base of turf. This isn’t likely to be a bright and sunny week along the Ayrshire coast, and the links have been busy.

Woods arrived Sunday and went 18 holes, spending much of his time chipping and putting. His son Charlie is not with him, instead at home preparing for the US Junior Amateur next week outside Detroit.

Scheffler got into the competitive spirit, playing alongside Sam Burns as they took some cash from PGA champion Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay.

After handing off the jug, Harman headed out to see Royal Troon for the first time. Monday was largely a day of reflection and he was eager to move forward.

But it was a good year, even without another win. He took the jug to Georgia Bulldogs football and Atlanta Braves baseball games. He took it everywhere he could, a reminder of reaching the pinnacle of his sport.

“You never know how it’s going to go, but just the reception from everyone back home was overwhelming, just how excited everyone was,” he said. “I was obviously very excited, but to be able to share that excitement with people that I care about was probably the best.”

Harman was among several players who came across the coast from the Scottish Open last week, a list that included Robert MacIntyre, though his immediately whereabouts could not be confirmed. MacIntire won the Scottish with an eagle-par-birdie finish and promised he would “celebrate hard” as the first Scot to win his national open in 25 years.

He was scheduled for a press conference Monday afternoon. It was rescheduled for Wednesday afternoon. That was a big win for him. Next up is one even bigger.


Mbappe ready for Bernabeu bow as Ancelotti seeks Madrid balance

Mbappe ready for Bernabeu bow as Ancelotti seeks Madrid balance
Updated 23 August 2024
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Mbappe ready for Bernabeu bow as Ancelotti seeks Madrid balance

Mbappe ready for Bernabeu bow as Ancelotti seeks Madrid balance
  • The French superstar striker will make his first home appearance for Los Blancos at the Santiago Bernabeu on Sunday against promoted side Real Valladolid
  • Mbappe will hope to mark his first Bernabeu appearance for Madrid with a goal

BARCELONA: Kylian Mbappe’s La Liga debut for Real Madrid did not go as planned as Los Blancos drew at Mallorca last weekend, with coach Carlo Ancelotti believing the Spanish champions lacked “balance.”

The French superstar striker will make his first home appearance for Los Blancos at the Santiago Bernabeu on Sunday against promoted side Real Valladolid, owned by former Madrid forward and Brazil great Ronaldo.

Mbappe is on course to enjoy a similarly sizable legacy in football, but is hoping to make a far greater impact at Madrid than Ronaldo was able to, during the club’s ‘galactico’ era.

Ronaldo won just one La Liga title and failed to lift the Champions League during five seasons in the Spanish capital between 2002-07.

One of the biggest problems during that period was a top-heavy side which boasted several superstar attackers but lost lynchpin Claude Makelele.

Ancelotti has lined up with Mbappe, Vinicius Junior, Rodrygo Goes and Jude Bellingham in the 2-0 UEFA Super Cup win over Atalanta and the 1-1 Mallorca draw, but criticized his team’s balance after both matches

“We just had to do better, with more attitude, you can learn from these games — it’s clear where the problem is,” Ancelotti told reporters last week.

“We need to defend better, we need more balance.”

One issue for Madrid is that Mbappe, Vinicius and Rodrygo all prefer to be shifted toward the left flank.

Another is that by playing all three forward, Bellingham is pushed back into a midfield role, when it seems after last season’s superb debut campaign where he helped Madrid win La Liga and the Champions League, he is most content contributing in attacking areas.

“(Balance) is found by all players thinking the same thing — when it comes to getting the ball back we all have to think about it together,” continued the Italian coach.

“It’s a team problem that they didn’t understand was a key aspect in this game, Mallorca played a great game in a defensive sense, better than us.”

While visitors Real Valladolid, who beat fellow promoted side Espanyol in their first match, do not pose too much threat to Madrid on paper, the sooner Ancelotti can get his team firing on all cylinders the happier he will be.

After years of links to Madrid, Mbappe completed his dream move this summer at the end of his Paris Saint-Germain contract.

The forward clinically struck against Atalanta in Warsaw but was shut out by Mallorca and their goalkeeper Dominik Greif.

Mbappe will hope to mark his first Bernabeu appearance for Madrid with a goal, weeks after he was greeted there by over 80,000 fans at his presentation.

Once Madrid’s forward are on song, they will be difficult for any side to stop.

“When I saw them running toward me, I just prayed to God and asked myself — ‘what am I doing here?’” admitted Mallorca defender Pablo Maffeo.

Madrid’s remarkable firepower could prove a double-edged sword with teams rising to the challenge of stopping the attacking quartet dubbed the “fantastic four.”

“We’re going to face the best team in the world, with one of the best coaches in history and the best attack in the world today,” said Valladolid coach Paulo Pezzolano.

“We know what we’re going to face, but we’re going there convinced that we’re going to compete and bring something back home, knowing that it’s difficult, but that we can do it.”

The former Manchester City striker made his Atletico debut as a substitute at Villarreal in their opening fixture but could be given a bigger role against Girona on Sunday as he makes his first appearance at the Metropolitano stadium for Diego Simeone’s new-look Rojiblancos.

Friday (all times GMT)

Celta Vigo v Valencia (1700), Sevilla v Villarreal (1930)

Saturday

Osasuna v Real Malloca (1500), Barcelona v Athletic Bilbao (1700), Espanyol v Real Sociedad, Getafe v Rayo Vallecano (both 1930)

Sunday

Real Madrid v Real Valladolid (1500), Leganes v Las Palmas (1700), Alaves v Real Betis (1715), Atletico Madrid v Girona (1930)


Keegan Bradley goes from last man in to leading BMW Championship

Keegan Bradley goes from last man in to leading BMW Championship
Updated 23 August 2024
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Keegan Bradley goes from last man in to leading BMW Championship

Keegan Bradley goes from last man in to leading BMW Championship
  • Bradley missed only two fairways and two greens, took advantage of the par 5s and made it look relatively easy on the 8,130-yard course
  • The opening round was halted for just over three hours because of thunderstorms

CASTLE ROCK, Colorado: Keegan Bradley went from a bundle of nerves waiting to see if he would advance in the PGA Tour postseason to a blissful day of birdies in mile-high air Thursday that led to a 6-under 66 and a one-shot lead in the BMW Championship.

Bradley, the newly appointed US Ryder Cup captain, was the last man to get in in the 50-man field at Castle Pines and he had to sweat it out Sunday. He was in his hotel room with the TV going, the FedEx Cup standings on another screen and his phone buzzing.

“One of the toughest afternoons of my PGA Tour career,” Bradley said. “It was really brutal. It’s such a relief to be here. I just felt a lot calmer today. But I played really, really well.”

It showed on a course that could dole out punishment without a moment’s notice. Bradley missed only two fairways and two greens, took advantage of the par 5s and made it look relatively easy on the 8,130-yard course, the longest in PGA Tour history.

The opening round was halted for just over three hours because of thunderstorms, a common occurrence in the late afternoon when The International was held at Castle Pines during its two decades on the PGA Tour schedule.

Hideki Matsuyama, the winner in the playoff opener last week, was at 5 under when play was stopped. He returned to his approach on the 18th to 2 feet. He missed the birdie putt and had to settle for a 67.

Rory McIlroy was just settling over a 20-foot par putt on the 18th when he heard the horn to stop play, smiled and marked his ball. Three hours and two putts later, he had a 70.

Adam Scott, among two players who were at Castle Pines during its two-decade run on the PGA Tour, made a long par-saving putt on the 18th for a 68 and was joined by Sungjae Im, Alex Noren and Corey Conners.

Double major winner Xander Schauffele opened with a 69 while playing alongside Scottie Scheffler, who worked through some mild soreness in his back for a 71. Scheffler is assured of being the No. 1 seed at the Tour Championship next week unless Schauffele were to win.

It’s all about numbers at Castle Pines, and that’s not just the math required to figure out how far the ball is going in elevation at 6,300 feet above sea level. The simple math is take 10 percent off the yardage, simple enough except when a pond is guarding the front of the green.

The other number is 30, the players who advance to East Lake next week to compete for the $25 million FedEx Cup title. The higher the seed, the better the chance.

Bradley had reason to think he could join them the way he played, even with three rounds to go. The key was getting to the BMW Championship, which allows him to plan a schedule that will put him in the same place as players aspiring to be on the Ryder Cup team.

“I want to be out there with the guys on the Ryder Cup team,” he said. “I want to be playing with them, on the range with them, in the locker room, in the tournament. It was really important for me to be in this top 50.”

It was a good start for Noren, who has never been to the Tour Championship and is No. 45 in the FedEx Cup. Ditto for Scott at No. 41.

The Australian’s experience at Castle Pines is a little overrated. Scott was a 20-year-old who received a sponsor exemption in 2000 to play his first regular PGA Tour event. He remembered a few of the holes, the elevation changes, the tough walk and the beauty.

“I remember being around all the players that I’d looked up to my entire childhood and feeling really not prepared for it, to be perfectly honest,” he said. “But it gave me inspiration to get better and work on my game and make sure I’m good enough to be out here.”

Scheffler stretched his neck to the side a few times, but then on the 17th he appeared to grab his lower back on a long iron shot to the par 5. His last two full shots looked fine, as did so much of the rest of his round. Scheffler said it was nothing to be alarmed about.

“I woke up just a little sore this morning. I had trouble kind of loosening it up,” he said. “I was laboring most of the day to get through the ball. On 17, I was trying to hit a high draw, and that’s a shot where I’ve really got to use a big turn, big motion. Really just felt it a little bit. But other than that, all good.”

Scheffler had a neck issue at The Players Championship and nearly withdrew in the middle of the second round. Two days later, he rallied from five shots behind to win. And then he won the Masters three weeks later.

“He was stiff at the Masters, at The Players and had to get worked on all those times,” Schauffele said. “I guess it’s a bad sign for everyone else.”


O’Connor romps to Vuelta win, takes significant lead

O’Connor romps to Vuelta win, takes significant lead
Updated 23 August 2024
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O’Connor romps to Vuelta win, takes significant lead

O’Connor romps to Vuelta win, takes significant lead
  • O’Connor opened up a defendable lead of four minutes 51 seconds in the general classification ahead of veteran Roglic
  • Friday’s hilly seventh stage takes riders 180.5km from Archidona to Cordoba

BARCELONA: Australian cyclist Ben O’Connor soloed to a stunning victory in stage six of the Vuelta a España on Thursday, taking the red jersey from three-time winner Primoz Roglic.

The Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale rider and Gijs Leemreize attacked from a breakaway group before O’Connor later left the Dutchman behind with 27 kilometers to go.

O’Connor opened up a defendable lead of four minutes 51 seconds in the general classification ahead of veteran Roglic, as the peloton came in well over six minutes down.

“I felt a little bit in my own world today... I just went for it, I felt today was just a day to seize my opportunity and I laid it all out there,” O’Connor told Eurosport.

“I felt I could win this stage from the start — it’s pretty special when you can just go out and crush it like that.”

O’Connor became the fifth Australian to win stages at all three Grand Tours after winning at the Giro in 2020 and at the Tour de France in 2021.

“I enjoyed today a lot, it was beautiful racing all round,” he continued.

“(Wearing red at La Vuelta) is going to be a once in a lifetime experience maybe, so I will enjoy every moment... it’s an excellent opportunity and I will savour it as much as I can.”

O’Connor finished four minutes 33 seconds ahead of Italian Marco Frigo while Florian Lipowitz came in third, with the German rising to fourth in the general classification.

UAE Team Emirates’ Joao Almeida is third overall, trailing Roglic by eight seconds, while defending champion Sepp Kuss languishes six minutes 31 seconds behind new leader O’Connor.

O’Connor finished fourth at the Giro d’Italia this year and also recorded a fourth-place finish at the Tour de France in 2021.

“Yes (it’s worrying) because in the end O’Connor isn’t just anyone, he took five or six minutes out of us, but at least we had some minutes of advantage,” said Almeida.

“It will be hard to take back those minutes... it was very tough, very fast today and very hot, so now we have to recover.”

Three riders left the race, Jon Aberasturi, Kenny Elissonde and also Rigoberto Uran, whose team said he suffered a crash.

“He did not finish the stage and is currently being assessed by medical staff,” said EF Education-EasyPost on social media.

The stage, which began inside a supermarket, started quickly and the peloton was forced to reel in multiple breakaway attempts.

Eventually a strong group featuring O’Connor and Lipowitz escaped up the road, setting the stage for the Australian’s heroics.

Friday’s hilly seventh stage takes riders 180.5km from Archidona to Cordoba.


Charley Hull shoots 67 to lead wind-swept Women’s British Open. Nelly Korda is one back

Charley Hull shoots 67 to lead wind-swept Women’s British Open. Nelly Korda is one back
Updated 23 August 2024
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Charley Hull shoots 67 to lead wind-swept Women’s British Open. Nelly Korda is one back

Charley Hull shoots 67 to lead wind-swept Women’s British Open. Nelly Korda is one back
  • Hull rolled in a 6-foot putt on No. 18 for the last of her six birdies at the home of golf to shoot 5-under 67 and take a one-stroke lead
  • Gusts of up to 40 mph (64 kph) played havoc with the best female golfers in the world at the Women’s British Open at St. Andrews

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland: Golf balls wobbled on the tees and greens. Players wore big earmuffs and neck warmers and donned oven-style mitts between shots. American star Rose Zhang said she lost balance simply standing up.

Gusts of up to 40 mph (64 kph) played havoc with the best female golfers in the world at the Women’s British Open at St. Andrews on Thursday.

Charley Hull dealt with it the best.

The No. 10-ranked English player rolled in a 6-foot putt on No. 18 for the last of her six birdies at the home of golf to shoot 5-under 67 and take a one-stroke lead after the first round of the year’s fifth and final major.

Hull, seeking her first major title, has plenty of high-profile company at the top of the leaderboard.

Not least her playing partner, top-ranked Nelly Korda, who birdied No. 17 — the famous Road Hole — and also the 18th to join fellow major champion Ruoning Yin of China on 4 under.

Among those a further shot back was defending champion Lilia Vu, who produced two monster birdie putts on the front nine of the Old Course — hosting the Women’s British Open for the third time — in her round of 69.

Some were just glad to get through it.

“Definitely some of the toughest conditions I’ve ever played in, for sure,” said England’s Georgia Hall, the 2018 champion who eagled her last hole — No. 9 — for a 71.

Hall is the last British player to win her home major. Now her close friend is looking to do the same.

By the time Hull walked down the last, the wind had dropped and she was looking cool in her sunglasses as she waved to the spectators lining the fairway. She would be a popular winner, not least because of her approach and attitude.

Not forgetting the aggressive way she plays golf, either.

Hull was regularly the longest driver in the marquee group containing Korda and Vu, with one tee shot — on the 14th — going 336 yards.

Level par after a bogey on No. 8, she made five birdies on her last 10 holes. There was a 12-footer on No. 12, an 8-footer at No. 15 to join Yin in a share of the lead before Hull played the last — that glorious hole back into town — perfectly by driving to the front of the green, hitting the second to 6 feet and making no mistake with the putt.

Hull was slightly concerned watching the early starters on TV in the worst of the windy weather.

“I said to my coach, it feels like they could call it at any minute because I don’t know how the balls are staying on the green,” said Hull, who was second by six shots to Vu at the British Open last year.

“You know what it’s going to be like before the beginning of the round, so you kind of just mentally prepare for that before.”

That was half the battle on a tough day.

Korda, who won the Chevron Championship for a second major amid a dominant 2024 for the American, wound up enjoying the grind.

“There’s something fun about playing in these conditions,” she said, adding: “Not that I would do it every single time.”

Yin, ranked No. 6 and the winner of the Women’s PGA Championship last year, took it all in her stride.

“The conditions were tough but it’s the same for everyone,” she said. “You’ve just got to try to make the wind your friend.”

Vu was in a six-way tie for fourth place with Jenny Shin and Mi Hyang Lee of South Korea, Andrea Lee of the United States, Patty Tavatanakit of Thailand and Mao Saigo of Japan.


Ronaldo on target but Al-Nassr kick off Saudi Pro League season with disappointing draw

Ronaldo on target but Al-Nassr kick off Saudi Pro League season with disappointing draw
Updated 23 August 2024
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Ronaldo on target but Al-Nassr kick off Saudi Pro League season with disappointing draw

Ronaldo on target but Al-Nassr kick off Saudi Pro League season with disappointing draw
  • Al-Wehda and Al-Riyadh play out dramatic 3-3 draw, while 10-man Al-Taawoun score last gasp winner against Al-Fayha

RIYADH: Al-Nassr began their 2024-25 Saudi Pro League campaign with a disappointing 1-1 draw with Al-Raed at Al-Awwal Park in Riyadh on Thursday.

Last season’s runners-up took the lead in the 34th minute when Cristiano Ronaldo headed home a Sadio Mane cross from the left. The Portuguese star celebrated his goal with a traditional Saudi dance.

Al-Raed were back on level terms four minutes into the second half thanks to a Mohammed Fouzair penalty. Al-Nassr were relieved to see the man who gave away the foul that caused it, Aymeric Laporte, escape with a booking following a red card check by the video assistant referee but, despite that let-off, the home team could not find the winner their fans might have expected.

Elsewhere, in what turned out to be the match of the day, Al-Wehda and Al-Riyadh played out a dramatic 3-3 draw at King Abdulaziz Sport City Stadium in Makkah.

Australian international Craig Goodwin gave the home team the lead five minutes before the break but the side from the capital hit back six minutes into the second half courtesy of Ghanaian midfielder Bernard Mensah.

Goodwin restored Al-Wehda’s lead just after the hour mark, minutes after Al-Riyadh were reduced to 10 men when Hussien Al-Nowiqi was sent off. However, the visitors rallied and Ibrahim Bayesh equalized with five minutes of normal time left.

The 12 minutes of time added by the referee meant there was still the chance of some late twists and turns, and that is exactly what happened. Murad Khadhari looked to have won it for Al-Wehda in the 94th minute, only for Al-Riyadh to again pull level three minutes later when Lucas Kal scored their third equalizer of the night to secure a share of the points.

In the first match of the day, last season’s surprise package, Al-Taawoun, launched their campaign with a last-gasp victory over Al-Fayha at King Abdullah Sport City Stadium.

Despite being reduced to 10 men after Abraham Alshuyl was sent off in the 81st minute, Al-Taawoun were not content to hold on for a point from a goalless draw, and they were rewarded for their fighting spirit five minutes into stoppage time when substitute Adam Mohammed grabbed the winner with a firm header.