Jan 31, 2026; Columbia, Missouri, USA; Missouri Tigers head coach Dennis Gates gestures to players against the Mississippi State Bulldogs during the second half of the game at Mizzou Arena. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images
As Missouri battles to make the NCAA Tournament’s field of 68, perhaps the most important number it needs to pay attention to is 332.
That is where the Tigers currently sit, out of 361 Division I teams, in free-throw shooting percentage as coach Dennis Gates’ team faces South Carolina in Columbia, S.C., on Saturday.
Missouri (15-7, 5-4 Southeastern Conference) has made just 67.4% of its shots from the free-throw line, making the team dead last in the SEC. That includes an atrocious 34.8% (8-for-23) showing in a 90-64 setback at Alabama last month.
The Tigers rebounded in an 84-79 victory over Mississippi State last week, making 75.8% (25 for 33) of their free throws, including 10 of 12 in the final two minutes to hold off the Bulldogs.
It is not the sexiest statistic, but it could end up making the difference as Missouri tries to qualify for the NCAA Tournament.
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“That’s good coaching. I was able to telepathically get into their brain right there on the line and start whispering, ‘Calm down, calm down.’ And you just saw a swish. So, the coaching. I’ll take that today,” Gates said.
Mark Mitchell led Missouri with 19 points and seven rebounds in the triumph over Mississippi State. T.O. Barrett added 16 points, eight rebounds, and four assists.
Trent Pierce, who made 19 starts last season but missed this year’s entire nonconference schedule, started for the first time in nine appearances this year and made two early 3-pointers on the way to 13 points.
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Mitchell leads the team with 17.5 points and 5.5 rebounds. He has scored in double figures in 20 of 22 games. Jayden Stone is averaging 14.6 points and 5.3 rebounds.
The Tigers are just 1-3 on the road in the conference, but in South Carolina, they are facing a spiraling squad poised to miss the NCAA Tournament for the eighth time in nine years. The Gamecocks have lost four straight and eight of 10.
South Carolina has dropped two straight and four of five at home and lost its last outing 84-75 at Texas on Tuesday despite jumping out to an early lead.
“We did a lot of right things that allowed us to be in a position to win the game. … Our first responsibility was to do enough right things that when it got to game-winning time, you were right there to win the game,” Gamecocks head coach Lamont Paris said. “It stings to be in that position and then in the last 2 1/2, 3 minutes, not be in a position to win the game.”
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Meechie Johnson scored a career-best 35 points while shooting 12 of 21 from the field and 10 of 14 from the free-throw line. Elijah Strong added 12 points.
Johnson leads the team with a career-best 16.5 points, 4.3 assists, and 1.3 steals. He is averaging 22.6 points over his last seven games.
“Meechie has had a good year. He’s been getting better at his one-on-one attacking,” Paris said. “So he’s been doing that a lot more, I’d say, in the last few games, especially getting to the rim and finishing strong. That’s been a point of emphasis for him to try to improve.”
NEW YORK — WNBA players’ union president Nneka Ogwumike said significant work remains for the season to start on time but said she remains confident games will be played in 2026.
“I know our players 100 per cent want to play this year,” she said in a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press on Friday. “We want a season.”
Ogwumike said the league and union are not close on key issues like revenue sharing in their effort to strike a new collective bargaining agreement. The clock is ticking. The season is supposed to begin May 8, but an expansion draft, free agency and a rookie draft also need to happen before the league tips off.
Ogwumike said once revenue sharing is solved, the rest hopefully will fall into place quickly.
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“We made the point that once we nail this, we can get everything else done,” Ogwumike said.
The players want around 30 per cent of the gross revenue — money generated before expenses — for the first year in their latest proposal. Under the league’s last proposal, players would receive in excess of 70 per cent of net revenue, though that would be their take of the profits after expenses are paid. Those expenses would include upgraded facilities, charter flights, five-star hotels, medical services, security and arenas.
Ogwumike reiterated several times that the union is still waiting for a response from the league to a proposal that it sent more than six weeks ago.
“I think that’s really what the players are considering now, is that the lack of movement from the league side is truly disappointing,” she said.
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According to a person familiar with the negotiations who spoke to the AP last month, the league previously didn’t feel that proposal was much different than an earlier one the union had sent and didn’t warrant a new response. That person spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the negotiations. After a three-hour meeting Monday at the NBA offices, the union left with the understanding that it would have a new proposal soon.
The league’s most recent offer last month would guarantee a maximum base salary of $1 million in 2026 that could reach $1.3 million through revenue sharing. That’s up from the current $249,000 and could grow to nearly $2 million over the life of the agreement.
That was on slides that were presented to players at Monday’s meeting and obtained by the AP.
The slides also outlined 37 areas where the league was willing to make concessions that players wanted. Some of those proposals included adding two developmental player slots to teams, giving pregnant players the right to refuse trades, increasing the guaranteed contracts on a team and codifying charter flights as well as other first-class travel considerations.
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If a new CBA isn’t agreed upon soon, it could delay the start of the 2026 season. It’s already delayed the expansion draft for Toronto and Portland.
The last CBA was announced in the middle of January 2020, a month after it had been agreed to. It could easily take two months from when a new CBA is reached to get to the start of free agency, which was supposed to begin last month. With a massive salary raise expected in a new CBA, 80 per cent of players in the league are free agents this offseason, which makes this the biggest opportunity for player movement in the history of the WNBA.
A delay would hurt both sides as every game that is missed, revenue would be lost, as would be sponsorships, television money and fan support.
Ogwumike, who is in her third term as union president, said that the long wait for a response hasn’t been all bad, as she and union leadership have had a chance to talk with WNBA players. She was in Nashville on Thursday with union leadership at Athletes Unlimited. It was a chance to take the pulse of the players.
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“I actually like the fact that we’ve had these six weeks now, still waiting for a proposal. It’s given us the gift of time,” she said. “And so, you know, in December, after the strike authorization vote, we were able to meet in Miami and talk to players.”
Players voted to give union leadership the right to strike in December. Ogwumike said that, despite that, a strike is not imminent, although the union did post on social media a video about the 1964 NBA All-Star Game strike. The NBA All-Star Game is next weekend in Los Angeles.
“Having the strike on the table is something that we’re very much aware of, but there’s so many more conversations that have to happen,” Ogwumike said. “You know, we’re not just going to say, `Hey, today’s the day (we’ll strike).’ You know, I think that’s what we’re demonstrating right now is negotiating in good faith.”
Wednesday night during Super Bowl week marked a show of local talent.
The Toyota Glow-Up Classic, a glow-in-the-dark flag football game featuring Bay Area high school girls, took place on the same field where the Pro Bowl was played inside San Francisco’s Moscone Center.
San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy is obviously a fan favorite, and he got to be even more so by serving as a coach for the game.
Toyota Glow-Up Classic, a glow-in-the-dark flag football exhibition at the Super Bowl Experience on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026, in San Francisco. Toyota is providing each participating youth player a grant that can be used for their flag football future.(Jeff Lewis/AP Content Services for Toyota Motor North America)
“It was awesome to have the ability to coach up some high school girls and watch them compete, and for Toyota to put on such a cool event, I thought it was just an amazing thing,” Purdy told Fox News Digital after the game. “That’s where the Pro Bowl was played. So for us to be able to go out there and those girls have fun, score touchdowns, jump in like a Tundra. It was a fun night”
Eli Manning, along with Kylie Kelce, served as an official, and despite his best efforts, he was not perfect, according to Purdy.
Toyota Glow-Up Classic, a glow-in-the-dark flag football exhibition at the Super Bowl Experience on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026, in San Francisco. Toyota is providing each participating youth player a grant that can be used for their flag football future. (Jeff Lewis/AP Content Services for Toyota Motor North America)
“They did a great job. I mean, Eli threw a couple flags where I was like, ‘Dude, come on.’ Like we had a big play. Eli threw a flag, called it back. So I wish I had a challenge flag to be able to throw out there, but he did a good job,” Purdy joked.
Division rival Puka Nacua was also a coach, but Purdy said the two were able to put aside their differences for at least a couple of hours.
San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy coaches female Bay Area youth flag football players during the Toyota Glow-Up Classic, a glow-in-the-dark flag football exhibition at the Super Bowl Experience on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026, in San Francisco. (Jeff Lewis/AP Content Services for Toyota Motor North America)
“We were chilling. I mean, we both had a good time,” Purdy said. “Puka is a competitor. Love his game and everything, but to be able to go out there and coach up some girls and have fun with it. It was pretty sweet.”
Romanian Twitch streamer and partner Madalina “Bisscute” recently went viral for injuring herself during a katana showcase. She has nearly 38,000 followers on the platform and averages about 300 viewers per stream. She’s been consistently streaming since 2021, and is recognized for her variety broadcasting where she ‘Just Chats,’ and plays a series of games from Teamfight Tactics to Elden Ring.
On February 5, 2026, Bisscute pulled her red katana away from the display on her wall to show the viewers in her chatbox. She walked up to the camera and held the sword by its sheath. This caused the blade to slide out. As soon as the metal came out, the streamer grabbed the sword:
“Do you see? Because of the chair… So I got my katana… I got my katana… Ah!”
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As soon as she grabbed the blade, she yelped and walked off camera, grabbing her hand. The stream cut out soon after.
Based on her Instagram Stories, she mentioned that the katana incident severed tendons in her hand. Typically, treatment for severed tendons involves a 12-week recovery process using splinting.
Streamer Bisscute shares an update after the katana incident
Bisscute shares an update on Instagram (Image via @bisscute__/Instagram)
Sure enough, a day later, Bisscute took to Instagram and shared a photo of herself in a splint and her hand covered up in a cast. The caption to the Story read:
“Back in the office. Long live painkillers and determination.”
On February 7, Madalina returned to Twitch in an emotional stream and talked about her injuries, assuring her chat that she was on the road to recovery.
In other news, streamer Tylil James injured himself live during Kai Cenat’s Mafiathon 3 event following a dry ice-plastic bottle experiment. James then went out of commission for a few days to deal with his wounds.
The Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) on Thursday said Kazakhstan’s largest city Almaty would be the new venue for the event.
The 2029 Asian Winter Games had originally been planned to be held in Neom, a planned city and mega-project on the Red Sea in northwestern Saudi Arabia.
Announcing the decision on the sidelines of the Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina, OCA President Sheikh Joaan bin Hamas Al Thani thanked Kazakhstan for its commitment to and development of winter sports.
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“Almaty is a city with deep connections to winter sports and we have very fond memories of when we last hosted the Asian Winter Games in 2011,” he said at a press conference.
“We have no doubt we will build on this legacy and deliver an unforgettable Games in 2029,” Al Thani added.
Why are the 2029 Asian Winter Games being moved from Saudi Arabia?
The move to Kazakhstan comes after Saudi Arabia and the OCA agreed in January to delay the kingdom’s staging of the Asian Winter Games at Trojena, an under-construction mountain tourism resort and a centerpiece of the Neom mega-project.
The Line was set to cost $500 billion, but some say the true cost is over $8 trillionImage: Balkis Press/ABACAPRESS/IMAGO
The postponement was confirmed after Riyadh appeared to try to push back the delivery of the ski resort.
A source at the Saudi Olympic Committee told the Reuters news agency that the nation was still aiming to hold the Games in future, adding that the delay would allow time to develop a winter-sports culture.
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While the postponement has not been explained, it marks the latest blow for the mega-project, which is part of Saudi Arabia’s ambitious “Vision 2030” strategy championed by Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, the country’s de facto ruler.
The project, which also foresees the construction of two parallel mirror-encased skyscrapers extending over 170 kilometers (105 miles) through desert and mountain terrain, has faced repeated delays and doubts over its feasibility.
Riyadh has been forced to reassess several large-scale development projects amid rising costs and stagnating oil prices.
Ireland XV were outclassed by England ‘A’ at Thomond Park on Friday night, going down on a 14-52 score line.
Four tries and three conversions for the visiting side were followed by a further four successfully converted five-pointers in the second 40 minutes. The hosts only managed two converted tries in the opening period and failed to trouble the score board in the second half.
First score of the game
The visitors went into an early lead through an Ethan Roots try. The England ‘A’ captain’s effort was converted by Leicester Tigers’ Billy Searle.
Searle soon crossed himself for a try pushing the English into a 12-0 advantage – as he missed the conversion.
Ireland got on the scoresheet through Munster’s Brian Gleeson. The number eight’s score was added to by Ciarán Frawley as he successfully converted to reduce the deficit to 5-12.
Brian Gleeson gets @IrishRugby XV’s first points of the game ☘️
The visitors dominated the scoring for most of the following twenty minutes – in the process scoring two converted tries.
Two more tries for the visitors
Ollie Hassell-Collins joined his Leicester Tigers’ teammate Searle on the scoring charts as he touched down for his side’s third five-pointer of the night. Searle missed his second conversion effort of the night – this one from a more difficult angle than the previously one he had missed.
Harry Randall claimed the fourth England ‘A’ try of the fixture, before Searle converted to move the visiting side into a 24-7 lead.
Kenny try before half-time
Shortly before half-time Ireland XV struck back. The fast-reacting Joshua Kenny picked up the ball and raced to touch down – much to the delight, and relief of the home fans.
With an easy tap-over for Ciarán Frawley, the UCD man kept Cullie Tucker’s side in the game, as they headed for the tunnel at half-time 14-24 behind England ‘A’.
Half-time score: Ireland XV 14 England ‘A’ 24
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Within minutes of the restart Fineen Wycherley was sin-binned. With a one-man advantage, England ‘A’ pressured the home side’s line, before Geaorge Kloska crashed over for a try.
Searle’s conversion effort was again successful, as he moved his side to a 31-14 lead.
Ollie Hassell-Collins claimed his second try of the evening, while Wycherley was still in the sin bin. Searle again added the extras as England ‘A’ moved 38-14 ahead.
The England ‘A’ side dominated from then onwards, with winger Cadan Murley of Harlequins getting in on the try-scoring action. Roots scored his second try and with Searle converting the former’s try and Charlie Atkinson the latter, England ‘A’ ran out 14-52 victors.
Six games highlight Friday’s NBA slate, which begins at 7:30 p.m. ET, and has the last tip at 10 p.m. ET. There are a number of high quality options in the NBA DFS player pool to build your daily Fantasy basketball lineups around. Stars like Cade Cunningham, Ryan Rollins, Derrick White, Jalen Brunson, Trey Murphy III, Anthony Edwards, Jaylen Brown, Pascal Siakam, Julius Randle and Zion Williamson are scheduled to be in action, so you certainly have plenty of directions to go with NBA DFS picks.
McClure is a DFS professional with more than $2 million in career winnings. He’s also a predictive data engineer at SportsLine who uses a powerful prediction model that simulates every minute of every game 10,000 times, taking factors like matchups, statistical trends and injuries into account. This allows him to find the best NBA DFS values on sites like DraftKings and FanDuel and create optimal lineups that he shares only over at SportsLine. They’re a must-see for any NBA DFS player.
For Friday, one of McClure’s top NBA DFS picks is Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham at $10,200 on DraftKings and $10,600 on FanDuel. The Pistons are on the second half of a back-to-back after a surprising loss to the Wizards on Thursday. Cunningham played well despite the loss, scoring 30 points and recording eight assists and eight rebounds. With Jalen Duren (knee) questionable against the Knicks on Friday, McClure is expecting another heavy workload for Cunningham in the top game of the evening. See McClure’s other NBA DFS picks right here.
He’s also building his NBA DFS strategy around Pacers guard T.J. McConnell, who is $4,400 on FanDuel and $4,100 on DraftKings. The Pacers traded Bennedict Mathurin and Isaiah Jackson for Ivica Zubac on Friday, and Zuban is not in the lineup, so the Pacers will need some additional scoring options. McConnell has been dealing with a knee injury, but has been cleared for this one, and McClure is projecting above average production at a value price against the Bucks, a team ranked 24th in defensive efficiency this season. See McClure’s other NBA DFS picks right here.
How to set your NBA DFS lineups for Friday, Feb. 6
McClure is also targeting a player who could go off for massive numbers on Friday because of an optimal matchup. This pick could be the difference between winning your tournaments and cash games or going home with nothing. You can only see who it is here.
Watch the moment a referee is forced to stop play in the match between Union Berlin and Eintracht Frankfurt in the Bundesliga, after the home fans set off flares in the stands in celebration of their 60th birthday.
Should the Players Championship become golf’s fifth major?
That’s the question the PGA Tour not-so-subtly wants you asking.
The Tour released a provocative new Players promo video on Thursday afternoon during late-window coverage of the WM Phoenix Open that felt like an exercise in subliminal messaging.
Seems like the PGA Tour wants the “5th major” debate back on.
The Players Championship just dropped this new ad. Should get you fired up for TPC Sawgrass — but it’s the half-second at the end that’s going to raise eyebrows:
The opening shot — an upside-down reflection of J.J. Spaun — serves as a callback to last year’s dramatic, splashy Players finish, where Spaun made an inspired charge before his hopes ended in arguably golf’s most famous lake.
Next there’s Sepp Straka gazing at TPC Sawgrass’ iconic island-green 17th. (Why Straka? I’m not exactly sure, but my best guess is his was the steeliest stare the Tour had on file.)
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Then recent big-name Players champs tick past, Scottie Scheffler (who won in 2023 and 2024) and then Rory McIlroy (2019 and 2025) and then Justin Thomas (2021), the three most recent in-good-standing tournament winners who are also three of golf’s most popular stars (you won’t be shocked to hear that 2022 champ Cameron Smith, now of LIV Golf, does not make an appearance).
The shots are desaturated, overcast, moody, dramatic. A voice drifts over the scenes.
I can’t get you out of my head
Suddenly you’re underwater, then halfway out, then rising into the sky. The island green appears before you, and the stadium around it. There are a lot of people there.
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There’s Corey Conners. There’s a ball in the water. There’s Tony Finau. Another splash. There’s a player in anguish, and then another. There’s Collin Morikawa, so agonized he’s taken off his hat. Another splash. A hole-in-one from Shane Lowry. (Remember that?) A grin from Brooks Koepka. (Remember him?) A leap from Ryan Moore. (His days as one of the faces of the Tour may be numbered.) Then, boom. Uppercut fist-pump from Tiger Woods, punctuating the iconic “Better-than-most” moment.
And then comes the tagline.
MARCH IS GOING TO BE MAJOR
It’s barely on screen; blink and you could just about miss it. But the message seems pretty clear.
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The Players being described as “major” is, at the very least, a strong suggestion. Greenlighting this particular tagline does not happen by accident — especially not for a PGA Tour under new CEO Brian Rolapp, who has started his first full season on offense. In recent weeks, the Tour has recruited multiple players back from LIV and pushed forward plans to reimagine the schedule under the guidance of visionaries like Tiger Woods and Theo Epstein. The latest development is only a piece of marketing material, but it suggests something bigger: Rolapp is ratcheting up the size of the Tour’s visionboard, and in the process, testing the limits of his newfound momentum.
The Players-as-fifth-major discussion is not new. It certainly predates my arrival in the world of golf media. Based on conversations with smart people, the Tour has vacillated on the seriousness of the “major” moniker many times over the years.
Still, it’s easy to see why the Tour would want the Players to become a major. By most objective measures, the PGA Tour is the strongest and wealthiest Tour in the world — but if we’re judging by ownership of golf’s most important events (the majors), it comes up empty. The PGA Tour does not own the Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open, the Open Championship or even the Ryder Cup. I doubt Rolapp is particularly pleased about that structure. I doubt the Tour’s private-equity partners are, either. They would like to own all four majors. At the very least, they’d like to own one.
And so here we are, with the Tour using its marketing material to test the waters of the major championship discussion again. Is this a trial balloon — or the beginning of an organized campaign? It appears we’re about to find out.
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Update: I emailed the Tour asking for comment on the new ad. Just as we were publishing this story, they sent over the following statement. The second sentence seems…suggestive:
“Fans and players have long discussed THE PLAYERS Championship’s status as a major. We understand that is not for us to decide. Ultimately it is up to our sport and its fans to recognize what the professionals who play the game already know.”
In the meantime, it’s worth running through five questions on what a theoretical Players-as-fifth-major would mean.
1. Who decides the majors, anyway?
Oh boy, good question. The short version: Some golfers and some writers. It was murky for a while, but it’s been a mostly settled discussion for decades.
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There was a time, pre-Masters, in which the U.S. and British Amateurs were considered majors. In 1930, just four years before Augusta National’s first invitational tournament, Bobby Jones won those two plus the U.S. Open and Open Championship and was considered a grand-slam winner.
The modern Grand Slam, per our in-house expert Michael Bamberger, had its roots in the 1930s but didn’t become a “thing” until 1960, when Arnold Palmer and his preferred sportswriter, Bob Drum, decided on the four events during a flight to St. Andrews … or so the story goes. There were other top players involved in choosing the majors, and other top sportswriters, too (I type, wistfully, imagining this power), but the power to make such pronouncements was derived primarily from the rise of golf on TV, which elevated stars like Palmer and Jack Nicklaus into authority figures. Of course, that leaves a deep irony in the formation of the modern slam: The majors are each 90-plus years old, but the Grand Slam may not yet be 70.
There was still some murkiness around the Grand Slam the ’60s and ’70s, when it was unclear whether Nicklaus should count his 1959 and 1961 U.S. Amateur titles as majors. But eventually a common vernacular emerged around the four big events: the Masters, the PGA, the U.S. Open, and the Open Championship. Horse racing has its Triple Crown, and golf has its Grand Slam, an epic foursome of tournaments stretching from the beginning of spring through the end of summer.
The majors are “official” in certain ways; they’re referenced in handbooks, Hall-of-Fame criteria, media guides, Wikipedia pages and the like. But there’s also no organization or individual in charge of amending their definition. It’s a funny thing to think about. They’re the majors because we all agree that they are.
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If the Players isn’t a major, what is it?
The Players isn’t a major and hasn’t been a major — but it is the next best thing: the second line in the counting stats of PGA Tour players. Justin Thomas has two majors plus a Players. Rory McIlroy has five majors plus two Players. Yes, this is a bit bulky. Rolapp’s quest is for “simplicity,” and this could be simplified. But it’s also the way things are; the Players is the PGA Tour’s biggest event … but it’s not a major.
It is worth emphasizing just how good the Players has become. It’s not just No. 17; TPC Sawgrass is a terrific tournament venue. I’ve written that it’s the Florida Masters; we return every year to a familiar, iconic venue with famous hazards, big-time champions, and highlight-reel moments. Sub out Rae’s Creek for the island green, and sub out Augusta’s historic manor clubhouse for the towering Ponte Vedra palace, you get the idea. The crowds are terrific, it’s the event in town, the broadcast feels big and it seems to get bigger every year.
What’s the case for the Players as a major?
I guess I sort of just made that case. Iconic venue, memorable moments, 50-plus years of history, big-time winners, a massive purse, elevated TV coverage, enormous crowds. It’s objectively one of the best tournaments on the golf calendar.
About the biggest thing working against the Players as a major is its field. The majors have gained strength in the 2020s because they’ve served as the only mutual meeting ground for stars from the PGA Tour and LIV. In some ways, it could be argued that what makes a major in 2026 is that all the best players are in attendance. Currently, the Tour only welcomes Tour players to compete in the Players.
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But there’s an intriguing potential subplot here. This is pure speculation, but if the Players wanted to achieve major status, could it create an eligibility category for top LIV players and serve as a crossover event transcending tour rivalry? I dunno. But it does seem like you’d need to open up the field in some way to seriously enter the conversation.
What’s the case against the Players as a major?
There was a quote, some years ago, from John Feinstein on Golf Channel: “When you go to Denny’s and order the Grand Slam, they don’t give you five things, do they?”
You get the idea. A grand slam means four wins in tennis, a grand slam means four runs in baseball, a Grand Slam means four things at Denny’s. In golf, the Grand Slam means four events.
The LPGA added a fifth major last decade. I’d argue that has only served to muddy the waters as to the important tournaments on their schedule. Five majors is one too many.
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Here’s where I’ve landed: I’m fine with the Players being a major in the abstract — but I’m not okay with five majors. Whether via a duel or a hostile takeover, the Players has to demote another major to elevate itself.
What would happen if it became a major?
We’d need to do some serious arithmetic, for one thing. Nicklaus won three Players, so he’d suddenly have 21 majors. Woods won two of ’em, so he’d be up to 17 total majors but even further behind Jack.
Fred Couples would jump from one major to three, as would Steve Elkington, as would Hal Sutton, as would Davis Love III. I’m guessing we’d have their votes.
Perhaps the biggest change would be among those whose current major total is zero. Matt Kuchar would suddenly be a major champ. So would Rickie Fowler. And Si Woo Kim. And K.J. Choi.
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Scottie Scheffler would suddenly have six majors. Rory McIlroy would suddenly have seven. On the other hand, Ben Hogan and Gene Sarazen would see their major totals hold, as neither player overlapped with the Players. Cross-generational scorekeeping is tough. Apples and featheries.
I imagine we’ll hear more from the Tour in the coming weeks. I imagine we’ll hear from Rolapp himself at the Players itself. I’m curious what he’ll have to say — and whether the M-word is part of it.
Protests take to the streets to show their displeasure at the presence of ICE in MilanImage: Alkis Konstantinidis/REUTERS
Before the show tonight, there were protests on the streets of Milan as hundreds of people, mostly students according to reports, voiced their unhappiness at the presence of American ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agents in Italy.
Our correspondent Elisabetta Galla was at the protests today and passed on the following information:
Many were protesting about the social issues in Milan, such as rising rent costs and how spending money on an Olympic Games was not the right choice right now. Others were upset about the environmental impact of all the new construction that has gone on, particularly in Cortina. There were also protesters about Isreal being at the Games and not being banned like Russia. Around 10,000 protesters from all across Italy are expected in Milan tomorrow, but tonight, in front of the stadium, Galla reports a totally different atmosphere with many happy people from Milan who are proud of hosting the Olympics.
The US ambassador to Italy, Tilman J. Fertitta, recently said that the ICE officers would be deployed “only in an advisory and intelligence capacity, without patrolling or enforcement measures.”
This is likely in reference to the Homeland Security Investigations unit, which is a unit within ICE that focuses on cross-border crimes. It frequently sends officers to events like the Olympics to help with security, and they are completely seperate from those currently at the forefront of the immigration crackdown in the US. However, as the protests show, any ICE presence in the country has increased the tension.
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US vice president JD Vance and secretary of state, Marco Rubio, will be at the opening ceremony tonight, and Vance met with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni earlier on Friday. Meloni said sport and religion were “values that keep together Italy and the US, Europe and the US, Western civilisation.”
The former Leicester assistant coach confirmed the news to TNT Sports before his side’s Prem Rugby Cup clash against the Tigers at Welford Road.
“I am not there next season, but I wish the club well with whoever comes in and I sincerely mean that,” he said.
“I want to be professional. There is a job to finish here.
“It was an honour to be asked to be the interim head coach of Newcastle Red Bulls. I have enjoyed the people, I have enjoyed the place and I wish them well in the future.
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“In terms of the players, I want the best for those who are staying and moving on. I want them to find jobs in the country or wherever so they can continue their professional careers.”
He would not, however, be drawn on rumours of his successor.
“That is news to me [about Gregor Townsend]. I am sure he covered that off in his press conference this week,” said Dickens.
“The job he has is a consultant to Red Bull, and that is what he does.”