Schauffele starting with blank canvas for Open defense

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Updated 16 July 2025
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Schauffele starting with blank canvas for Open defense

Schauffele starting with blank canvas for Open defense
  • The 31-year-old produced a blemish-free final-round of 65 at Royal Troon last year to win his second major title to go along with his gold medal from the Tokyo Olympics
  • With the perils of a links course’s sloping greens, cavernous bunkers, knee-deep rough and the wild weather associated with Britain’s coast, it is hardly surprising that defending the title is treacherous

PORTRUSH: Xander Schauffele is super-excited at the prospect of trying to defend his Open Championship title at Royal Portrush this week but says he will have to come up with a different plan to the one that took him to victory 12 months ago.

“I think a blank canvas is a great place to start. You can paint many different pictures to win a tournament. You’ve just got to do the right one,” the American told reporters on the County Antrim coast on Tuesday after practice.

The 31-year-old produced a blemish-free final-round of 65 at Royal Troon last year to win his second major title to go along with his gold medal from the Tokyo Olympics.

He was the third American in four years to win golf’s oldest major but while that experience will hold him in good stead for the days ahead, he said Portrush’s Dunluce Links will throw up a completely new test of his renowned links golf skills.

“It’s an interesting thing just because my thoughts of playing really well were at Royal Troon,” he said.

“Coming here, I feel like I’m trying to re-learn this golf course, get comfortable with certain sight lines, some blind tee shots. If I can get myself in the mix, that’s when I think I would have an advantage. That’s where my biggest edge would be.

“I can lean on experience at other points in time, but I think the most fun and the biggest advantage I would have is coming down the stretch if I can get close to that lead.”

With the perils of a links course’s sloping greens, cavernous bunkers, knee-deep rough and the wild weather associated with Britain’s coast, it is hardly surprising that defending the title is treacherous.

The last player to do so was Ireland’s Padraig Harrington in 2008 and Schauffele knows the luck of the draw and getting lucky with the weather could be vital this week.

“This week is a pretty good example of having to deal with a wave. There’s typically a good wave and a bad wave in an Open Championship,” he said. “You just keep your fingers crossed that you’re in the good wave and try and play well.

“If you’re not, fight for your life and make the cut and then try and do something on the weekend.”

For a player who grew up in San Diego, it might be surprising how he has embraced the challenge of links golf.

But he said 16-hour trips in the car with his dad as a youngster helped him learn to be creative.

“We drove up to Bandon Dunes from San Diego. It took about 16 hours. I was 13 years old,” he said. “We played three or four days in a row. I think it was just Pacific Dunes and Bandon Dunes at the time. We got the real weather. My rain gear stopped working. It was that much wind and rain.

“I had a blast. As much as it was nice to look forward to a hot shower at the end of the day, I had so much fun for some reason trying to figure out how to play golf in that weather.”

With wind and rain expected to batter Portrush at times over the next five days, he will draw on those experiences again.


Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman

Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman
Updated 15 sec ago
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Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman

Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman
Pakistan scored 160-7 after opting to bat and Oman were bundled out for 67 in 16.4 overs
Haris struck seven fours and three sixes on his way to 50 off 32 balls

DUBAI: Pakistan thumped Oman by 93 runs to begin their Asia Cup campaign thanks to Mohammad Haris’ 66 off 43 balls at Dubai International Stadium on Friday.
Pakistan scored 160-7 after opting to bat and Oman were bundled out for 67 in 16.4 overs.
Haris struck seven fours and three sixes on his way to 50 off 32 balls.
Pakistan take on India in the Twenty20 tournament’s most high profile clash on Sunday at the same venue.
Haris crossed the 20-run mark in T20s for the first time in 12 innings. His best in 11 innings prior was 15 against Afghanistan in the preceding tri-series. He was 107 not out in June against Bangladesh at Lahore.
Opener Shahibzada Farhan (29) and Haris put on 85 off 64 balls to drive the innings.
Saim Ayub was out for a golden duck, as was skipper Salman Agha, both falling to left-arm spinner Aamir Kaleem.
Kaleem also bowled Haris in the 13th over and finished with 3-31 in four overs — his career best against a full ICC member.
Fakhar Zaman hit 23 not out off 16 balls and Mohammad Nawaz scored 19 off 10 balls to help Pakistan pass 150. They lost their last five wickets for 56 runs in seven overs.
In a chase that never got going, Hammad Mirza top-scored for Oman with 27 off 23 balls.
Oman collapsed from 41-2 to 51-9, losing seven wickets for 10 runs across 34 deliveries. The innings ended in the 17th over, with the last pair adding 16 runs.
Spinners Saim Ayub and Suyiyan Muqeem, and medium pacer Faheem Ashraf shared six wickets across seven overs in the rout.

Max Verstappen set to race at iconic Nurburgring Nordschleife

Max Verstappen set to race at iconic Nurburgring Nordschleife
Updated 13 min 49 sec ago
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Max Verstappen set to race at iconic Nurburgring Nordschleife

Max Verstappen set to race at iconic Nurburgring Nordschleife
  • Red Bull cleared the four-time world champion to make his debut in the Nurburgring Langstrecken-Serie
  • Verstappen, 27, will be joined by Chris Lulham, a 22-year-old British driver

NURBURG, Germany: Max Verstappen is set to race at the iconic Nurburgring Nordschleife after acquiring the required license on Friday.

With the Formula 1 circuit off this weekend, Red Bull cleared the four-time world champion to make his debut in the Nurburgring Langstrecken-Serie (NLS). Arguably the world’s top race car driver, Verstappen still had to undergo a course and take a theory exam to drive in the seventh round of the 10-race NLS.

After completing both, Verstappen is scheduled to compete in a four-hour race on Saturday, driving a Porsche GT4 Cayman in the Verstappen.com Racing x Red Bull livery.

Verstappen, 27, will be joined by Chris Lulham, a 22-year-old British driver who is competing in the GT World Challenge Europe Endurance for Verstappen.com Racing.

Verstappen set an unofficial lap record during a test run in a Ferrari 296 GT3 for the Swiss Emil Frey Racing team on the Nordschleife track in May. However, he does not yet have the required special racing license called the DMSB (Deutscher Motor Sport Bund) Permit Nordschleife to officially compete in the GT3 class on the track.

To obtain a “Permit A,” Verstappen needs to collect two classified race results by completing 14 laps and completing at least 20 percent of a race. Both results can come in a single race, which is why he could spend time in multiple cars this weekend.

The system was implemented in 2015 with the goal of requiring drivers of all levels to experience the Nordschleife, referred to as “Green Hell,” in slower cars before moving up.

Verstappen said he is pursuing his Permit A in order to compete in the GT3 class in the future. He has previously stated his desire to compete in Nurburgring’s annual 24-hour race among other endurance races at iconic circuits around the world.

“Racing is not just my profession, but also my hobby,” Verstappen said on his official website. “This weekend I am at the Nordschleife with the goal to qualify for the mandatory race permit needed to race here in a GT3 car, which I would love.

“The Nordschleife is at the top of my list of tracks I want to race on, as it’s extremely challenging and demanding, with its enormous length and tight historic layout. I can’t wait!“


Italian boxer speaks out over online abuse since Olympic bout against Khelif

Italian boxer speaks out over online abuse since Olympic bout against Khelif
Updated 12 September 2025
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Italian boxer speaks out over online abuse since Olympic bout against Khelif

Italian boxer speaks out over online abuse since Olympic bout against Khelif
  • Carini published a video on Instagram with screenshots of messages she has received on social media — some begging her not to go to the Olympics again, others calling her “a coward”
  • “Have you ever wondered how hard it was for me to face these words?”

NAPLES, Italy: Italian boxer Angela Carini says the online abuse she’s received since her Olympic fight against Imane Khelif last year has “destroyed her career.”

Carini tearfully quit her opening bout with Khelif of Algeria at the Paris Olympics after just 46 seconds, going on to explain afterward that she took the extremely unusual decision because of the pain from her opponent’s opening punches.

On Friday, Carini published a video on Instagram with screenshots of messages she has received on social media — some begging her not to go to the Olympics again, others calling her “a coward” and “the shame of the Italy team” — and a voiceover of the 26-year-old explaining how she felt.

“Have you ever wondered how hard it was for me to face these words? What I had to endure and endure day after day? What I had to face in my silence, while preserving my health from a stupid social network, from people who speak and say words without thinking twice?” Carini said.

“Because for them it’s just a sentence, it’s just a word, it’s just fun, it’s just wanting to follow the crowd.”

Khelif won the Olympic gold amid international scrutiny on her and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting, another gold medal winner.

Both fighters were allowed to compete by the IOC after being disqualified from the 2023 world championships by the Russian-dominated International Boxing Association. The IBA claimed the women failed unspecified eligibility tests.

However, the IOC applied sex eligibility rules used in previous Olympics and said Khelif and Lin passed.

‘An infected wound’

Carini’s actions fueled a discussion far beyond Paris about whether Khelif should have been allowed to compete, with (then former) US President Donald Trump and Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni speaking out.

“For many it is easy to forget the past, but for me it wasn’t,” Carini continued. “That past that marked my life. That past that left wounds inside me that I try to heal day after day, but like an infected wound, it bleeds and hurts.

“That past that changed and destroyed my career, built year after year with sacrifices, dedication, tenacity and a lot of passion … That career that is underestimated and belittled by those who preferred to have a laugh for a few moments, preferred to throw the stone.”

Carini won silver medals at the world and European championships in 2019. She lost her opening fight at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.

After Paris, Carini said she closed herself “in silence” with her family and “tried to rebuild (herself) in small pieces.”

Carini returned to the ring in December, winning her eighth Italian title and gold at the World Boxing Cup in Poland.

“Putting all the disappointment aside, I got back into that ring, reconfirming myself as Italian champion and bringing home medals from important international tournaments,” Carini said. “Getting back into that ring was a tough challenge.

“These words of mine will not change the world, I will not make people become kinder. But at least I invite everyone to reflect … A word, a gesture, a command can hurt and destroy a person.”


Beckenbauer statue unveiled outside Bayern’s Allianz Arena

Beckenbauer statue unveiled outside Bayern’s Allianz Arena
Updated 12 September 2025
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Beckenbauer statue unveiled outside Bayern’s Allianz Arena

Beckenbauer statue unveiled outside Bayern’s Allianz Arena
  • The statue depicts Beckenbauer looking ahead with his right foot on the ball
  • It is a characteristic pose in his typical ‘Libero’ position behind the defense which the Munich-born footballer is widely credited with reinventing during the 1970s.

MUNICH: A bronze statue of Germany football legend Franz Beckenbauer was unveiled outside Bayern Munich’s Allianz Arena on Friday, a day after what would have been his 80th birthday.

Known as the ‘Kaiser’, the German word for emperor, for his elegant and commanding playing style, the statue is the latest in a series of honors for Beckenbauer, who died in January 2024 aged 78.

The statue depicts Beckenbauer looking ahead with his right foot on the ball.

It is a characteristic pose in his typical ‘Libero’ position behind the defense which the Munich-born footballer is widely credited with reinventing during the 1970s.


Beckenbauer won the Bundesliga and the World Cup as both a player and a manager, along with lifting the European Cup, the precursor to today’s Champions League, three times from 1974-1976.
“Standing here today, unveiling the statue and seeing how many people have come along is a moving moment,” Bayern president Herbert Hainer said.
“I had become very good friends with Franz Beckenbauer over the past few years. We all miss him — not just as a footballer, but above all as a person.”
Beckenbauer’s red Bayern no. 5 jersey has also been painted into the Allianz Arena rafters, while the street leading up to the stadium has been renamed Franz Beckenbauer Place.
The German Super Cup, a pre-season match featuring the league and cup winners, was renamed the Franz Beckenbauer Super Cup ahead of this campaign.
Opening in 2005, the Allianz Arena was planned and built under the leadership of Beckenbauer along with long-time Bayern powerbrokers Uli Hoeness and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, both of whom were present on Friday.
The statue is the second to be erected on the esplanade outside the 75,000-seat stadium, after former Bayern and Germany striker Gerd Mueller.
Munich mayor Dieter Reiter said the statue was “the highest honor the city can bestow on someone posthumously.”
Beckenbauer won the Ballon d’Or twice, in 1972 and 1976, making him the only defender in history to win the award on two or more occasions.


Three-time high jump champion Mutaz Barshim withdraws from worlds with foot injury

Three-time high jump champion Mutaz Barshim withdraws from worlds with foot injury
Updated 12 September 2025
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Three-time high jump champion Mutaz Barshim withdraws from worlds with foot injury

Three-time high jump champion Mutaz Barshim withdraws from worlds with foot injury
  • “Unfortunately my foot hasn’t healed in time,” the 34-year-old Qatari said
  • “I’ve given it my all, but we can’t force nature and must stay patient to recover”

TOKYO: Three-time high jump world champion Mutaz Barshim has ruled himself out of the world athletics championships that open Saturday in Japan after failing to recover from a long-term foot injury.

The worlds would have marked his return to Japan where Barshim memorably shared the men’s high jump Olympic gold with Italy’s Gianmarco Tamberi at the Tokyo Games in 2021.


“I was planning to make Tokyo my last world championship but unfortunately my foot hasn’t healed in time,” the 34-year-old Qatari said on Instagram on Friday. “I’ve given it my all, but we can’t force nature and must stay patient to recover.”
Barshim says he has been battling the problem since April.
Barshim took bronze at the Paris Olympics last year after winning the gold at the world championships in 2017, ‘19 and ‘22.
He has a personal best of 2.43 meters, second only to all-time record-holder Javier Sotomayor.
“Don’t feel sorry for me not jumping,” he said. “Feel sorry for high jumping not having me.”