Scottie Scheffler in a landslide to win PGA Tour Player of the Year for third straight time

Scottie Scheffler in a landslide to win PGA Tour Player of the Year for third straight time
Scottie Scheffler has won the Jack Nicklaus Award as PGA Tour Player of the Year in a landslide, garnering 91 percent of the vote from players and appeared to be the obvious choice given the victories he piled up. (AFP)
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Scottie Scheffler in a landslide to win PGA Tour Player of the Year for third straight time

Scottie Scheffler in a landslide to win PGA Tour Player of the Year for third straight time
  • Cheffler won 91 percent of the vote from players and appeared to be the obvious choice given the victories he piled up, including an Olympic gold medal when he shot 62 on the final day
  • Schauffele became the first player to win two majors and not be voted player of the year since the award began in 1990

Scottie Scheffler added another trophy to his awesome display Tuesday when he won the Jack Nicklaus Award as PGA Tour Player of the Year in a landslide, joining Tiger Woods as the only players to win the award three straight times.

Scheffler won 91 percent of the vote from players and appeared to be the obvious choice given the victories he piled up, including an Olympic gold medal when he shot 62 on the final day.

His seven PGA Tour wins included a second Masters title, and he became the first repeat winner of The Players Championship. He also won the Tour Championship to claim the FedEx Cup. His other four wins were all signature events against the strongest fields — Bay Hill and Memorial, Hilton Head and Hartford.

While no one could match that year, there was the question of how players would view Xander Schauffele’s rare feat of winning two majors in one year, at the PGA Championship and the British Open. Scheffler’s standard was too much to overlook.

Schauffele became the first player to win two majors and not be voted player of the year since the award began in 1990. Nick Faldo won the Masters and British Open in 1990, but he was not a PGA Tour member and ineligible for the award.

Rory McIlroy was the third name on the ballot.

Woods is an 11-time winner of the award, winning five straight times (1999 through 2003) and three straight times (2005-2007).

McIlroy is the only other player to win the award three times, in 2012, 2014 and 2019.

Scheffler has wound up in the same conversation with Woods a lot lately — from his statistics, the first to win seven times in a season since Woods in 2007, and the first to hold the No. 1 ranking the entire year since Woods in 2009.

He finds comparisons to “a bit silly.”

“There’s really only one Tiger,” Scheffler said on a conference call. “I’m trying to get the best out of myself and that’s really all I’m focused on. I’m not chasing records or chasing history or anything like that, I’m just trying to day in and day out continue to improve a little bit, just go out there and compete, have fun.”

Scheffler doesn’t rank his wins or much else, though he conceded this was the best golf he played across the year. He won the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill in his sixth start of the year, and then never went more than two tournaments without winning.

“Scottie took on challenges from the best players in the world on the biggest stages all season, and being honored as PGA Tour player of the year is the ultimate sign of respect from his peers,” Commissioner Jay Monahan said.

Scheffler also won the Byron Nelson Award for the second straight year for having the lowest scoring average. Overlooked as he kept winning titles was his streak of 28 consecutive rounds under par to start the year.

He was not over par in any round until Saturday at the PGA Championship, the day after he was arrested going into Valhalla as a traffic fatality was being investigated. The charges were dropped a few weeks later, a strange episode in an otherwise spotless season.

The PGA Tour keeps a huge menu of statistics — one of them “distance from the edge of the fairway” — but Scheffler was around the top at most of the big ones involving strokes gained. He was first overall and approach to the green, second off the tee. He was 77th in putting, tried a new “claw” putting grip in the Bahamas last week and won the Hero World Challenge by six.

He shattered the PGA Tour earnings record, somewhat inevitable given the spike in prize money this year with 11 tournaments with prize funds of $20 million or more, not including the four majors.

Scheffler won just over $29.2 million in 18 official tournaments with prize money, along with the $25 million FedEx Cup bonus and the $8 million bonus for leading the regular season.

Scottie Scheffler in a landslide to win PGA Tour Player of the Year for third straight time

 


Pogacar to defend Tour de France and world title on ambitious 2025 program

Pogacar to defend Tour de France and world title on ambitious 2025 program
Updated 11 December 2024
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Pogacar to defend Tour de France and world title on ambitious 2025 program

Pogacar to defend Tour de France and world title on ambitious 2025 program
  • Pogacar: Last year was an exceptional year for me. I had a great time. Everything went super smoothly, I managed to be in great shape in every race
  • He will get his 2025 season underway at the UAE Tour

BENIDORM, Spain: Tadej Pogacar insisted on Tuesday he would not ease off after a record-breaking 2024, declaring he was hungry for more success with a plethora of one-day classics and two Grand Tours on the 2025 menu.

The 26-year-old Slovenian dominated the 2024 season winning two one-day monuments, the Italian Giro, the Tour de France and the world title on his way to 25 wins in total for the year.

He will get his 2025 season underway at the UAE Tour. He will race the Strade Bianche, Milan-San Remo, the E3 Grand Prix, Gent-Wevelgem and the Tour of Flanders before the Ardennes classics.

One race off the agenda is the Paris-Roubaix, suited to heftier riders due to its harsh old cobbled mining roads.

“I wanted to get back on the cobbles and I’ll do it again in the future. I’m saving Paris-Roubaix for later. But I love racing the classics.” he said in Benidrom, Spain, on Tuesday.

“After the Giro-Tour thing this season, I’d like to do the Tour-Vuelta, or even the Giro-Vuelta. But the Tour is the Tour, and it will still be my priority next year, along with the Worlds,” he confirmed.

As well as the Tour de France, which will run from July 5-27, Pogacar will choose between the Giro and Vuelta once the routes have been revealed.

If he foregoes the Giro (May 9-June 1) in favor of the Vuelta (August 23-September 14), the Slovenian will take part in the Criterium du Dauphine (June 8-15) in preparation for the Tour de France.

“What’s certain is that he won’t be doing the three big Tours next year,” Team UAE sports director Joxean Fernandez Matxin said.

Pogacar is also due to defend his title at the World Championships, which will be in Rwanda in September, on a very demanding course in Kigali.

“I’d like to race all three Tours one day but there are 30 riders in the team you know, and I can’t race everything,” Pogacar said.

He should then end his season on Oct. 11 at the Tour of Lombardy, the last Monument of the year, where he will be aiming for a fifth consecutive success.

“Last year was an exceptional year for me. I had a great time. Everything went super smoothly, I managed to be in great shape in every race,” said Pogacar who at only 26 years old, feels “still young” and believes he can “progress,” particularly on the “small details.”


US swimmers win relay gold medals as short-course world records are broken in Budapest

US swimmers win relay gold medals as short-course world records are broken in Budapest
Updated 11 December 2024
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US swimmers win relay gold medals as short-course world records are broken in Budapest

US swimmers win relay gold medals as short-course world records are broken in Budapest
  • Gretchen Walsh anchored the US women to the gold medal and a world record in the 4x100-meter freestyle relay in a time of 3 minutes, 25.01 seconds
  • The short-course championships are held in a 25-meter pool, which is half the length of an Olympic pool

BUDAPEST, Hungary: Multiple world records were shattered at the short-course swimming world championships in Budapest on Tuesday, including by the US men’s and women’s relay teams.

Gretchen Walsh anchored the US women to the gold medal and a world record in the 4x100-meter freestyle relay in a time of 3 minutes, 25.01 seconds after she broke the world record twice in the women’s 50-meter butterfly earlier in the day.

In the men’s 4X100-meter freestyle relay, the US finished ahead of Italy and Poland in a new world record time of 3 minutes, 1.66 seconds.

Other world records were set by 18-year-old Canadian Summer McIntosh in the women’s 400-meter freestyle, Kate Douglass of the US in the women’s 200-meter medley and Switzerland’s Noe Ponti in men’s 50-meter butterfly.

The short-course championships are held in a 25-meter pool, which is half the length of an Olympic pool.


Real Madrid revive Champions League title defense with win at spirited Atalanta

Real Madrid revive Champions League title defense with win at spirited Atalanta
Updated 11 December 2024
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Real Madrid revive Champions League title defense with win at spirited Atalanta

Real Madrid revive Champions League title defense with win at spirited Atalanta
  • Goals from Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior and Jude Bellingham were just enough for Madrid to triumph in a red-hot atmosphere in Bergamo

BERGAMO, Italy: Real Madrid got their Champions League title defense back up and running on Tuesday after coming through a tough battle to win 3-2 at Atalanta.
Goals from Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior and Jude Bellingham were just enough for Madrid to triumph in a red-hot atmosphere in Bergamo and move up to nine points from six matches.
Carlo Ancelotti’s side would have been at risk of dropping out of the play-off places but came through a tough test at Serie A leaders Atalanta.
The away side are now three points from the top eight positions which give direct qualification for the last 16 with two matches remaining in their league campaign and a round of fixtures coming up on Wednesday.
Madrid inflicted on Atalanta a first defeat in this year’s revamped competition and are now only two points behind Gian Piero Gasperini’s ambitious team who performed well against 15-time European champions Madrid but now sit ninth.
Atalanta scored through a Charles De Ketelaere penalty which levelled Mbappe’s opener in first-half stoppage time and a fine Ademola Lookman strike in the 65th minute which put the hosts back in the match after Vinicius and Bellingham’s quickfire goals.
The hosts even came to within inches of snatching a dramatic draw deep in added time when substitute Retegui somehow shot over Lookman’s fizzing cross from from practically on the goalline.


Guardiola says he won’t leave Man City for another club

Guardiola says he won’t leave Man City for another club
Updated 11 December 2024
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Guardiola says he won’t leave Man City for another club

Guardiola says he won’t leave Man City for another club

LONDON: Pep Guardiola said he would not “take another club” after ending his stint as Manchester City manager, although he left open the possibility of coaching a national team.
Shortly after signing a contract extension in November, Guardiola gave an interview in Manchester to visiting Spanish celebrity chef Dani Garcia, who posted the conversation on his YouTube channel.
“I feel this is enough. I’m going to stop. I’m not going to take another team,” Guardiola said. “I’m not talking about the long-term future, but what I’m not going to do is leave Man City, go to another country, and do the same thing as now.
“I wouldn’t have the energy. The thought of starting somewhere else, all the training and so on. No, no, no! Maybe a national team, but that’s different.
“I want to leave it and go and play golf but I can’t. I think stopping would do me good.”
Guardiola has previously expressed an interest in coaching at international level later in his career.
“That’s different. It’s not (training) every day, (playing) every three days,” he said. “To rest, to see what we have done, what we can do better, because day-to-day we don’t have much time to rest.”
In a conversation that included his taste in food and his philosophy of life, Guardiola told Garcia that from the start of the career he had looked to one day having time to study French, play golf and learn to cook.
“To stop would do me good.”


Morocco sets stage for 2030 World Cup with Spain and Portugal

Morocco sets stage for 2030 World Cup with Spain and Portugal
Updated 11 December 2024
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Morocco sets stage for 2030 World Cup with Spain and Portugal

Morocco sets stage for 2030 World Cup with Spain and Portugal
  • “This is a unique opportunity to accelerate national economic growth, create jobs, and boost the country’s tourism,” said Fouzi Lekjaa, head of Morocco’s 2030 World Cup Committee

RABAT: After decades of unsuccessful bids, Morocco will finally achieve its long-cherished dream of hosting the football World Cup in 2030, along with Spain and Portugal, in what the North African country hopes will boost its international image and economy.
FIFA is set to formally ratify the trio’s candidacy on Wednesday, with Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay also hosting a game each to mark a century since the very first World Cup was staged in South America.
It will have taken over 40 years since Morocco became the first African nation in 1987 to bid for the World Cup, aiming to host the 1994 edition.
Rabat has made five failed bids in total, including one for 2026 but also 2010, when it narrowly lost out to South Africa for the right to host the first World Cup on the continent.
“This is a unique opportunity to accelerate national economic growth, create jobs, and boost the country’s tourism,” said Fouzi Lekjaa, head of Morocco’s 2030 World Cup Committee.
Speaking after a cabinet meeting chaired by King Mohammed VI, Lekjaa emphasized the transformational potential of hosting the world’s biggest sporting event.
The Moroccan government has unveiled ambitious plans to modernize infrastructure in six host cities: Rabat, Casablanca, Fes, Tangier, Marrakech and Agadir.
This includes expanding airports, roads and transportation networks, as well as boosting hotel and commercial services, according to an official statement.
Six stadiums in the host cities are already undergoing renovation work, said the statement.
Additionally, a new 115,000-seat stadium near Casablanca, costing 480 million euros ($507 million), is also in the works as the kingdom banks on the state-of-the-art venue to host the final.
“These projects will leave a lasting legacy for future generations,” said Moncef El Yazghi, a researcher specializing in sports policy.

Morocco’s interest in hosting the World Cup dates back to its groundbreaking performance at the 1986 tournament in Mexico, where it became the first African and Arab nation to reach the knockout stage.
The success sparked the idea of using football as a platform to enhance the nation’s reputation.
For sociologist Abderrahim Bourquia, the infrastructure improvements for the tournament offer economic benefits while also granting Morocco global confidence.
Spectators from all over the world “will associate Morocco with the sport’s positive values,” he said.
The project also aligns with Morocco’s ambition to cultivate stronger ties continentally.
In recent years, the kingdom has increasingly sought to deepen its diplomacy with other African countries, bolstered by its return to the African Union in 2017.
The country has signed some 44 partnership agreements with African football federations.
Morocco was due to stage the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) in 2015 but pulled out of hosting the tournament because of concerns about the spread of Ebola amid an outbreak in West Africa.
However, it will stage the next AFCON, beginning in December next year and running into January 2026.
It also hosted the Women’s Cup of Nations in 2022 and has been the host of the Club World Cup on several occasions.
These events have become a key tool for Morocco to achieve what El Yazghi describes as “football diplomacy.”

Morocco’s joint bid with Spain and Portugal came after Madrid backed Morocco’s position on the conflict of Western Sahara.
The territory, a former Spanish colony de facto controlled for the most part by Morocco, is claimed by the Sahrawi separatists of the Polisario Front.
The conflict has long been at the heart of Morocco’s diplomatic woes with neighboring Algeria.
Madrid’s diplomatic shift in 2022 “undoubtedly paved the way for the joint World Cup bid,” said international relations expert Tajeddine El-Husseini.
While the 2030 World Cup offers Morocco global visibility, it also presents an opportunity to invest in the development of domestic football.
The men’s national team enjoyed historic success at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, when they became the first African and Arab nation to reach the semifinals.
However, despite a population of 38 million, the country has only 90,000 registered players, according to El Yazghi.
To address this gap, the Moroccan Football Federation partnered with OCP Group, the state-owned phosphate producer, to finance new training centers for players in the hope of unearthing a new generation to follow in the footsteps of the current side, featuring stars like Paris Saint-Germain defender Achraf Hakimi.