It’s not easy saying no to the president, but Tom Fazio did.
When President Trump asked the acclaimed course designer late last year if he’d be game to renovate East Potomac Golf Links — a nearly century-old D.C. municipal course just south of the National Mall — Fazio didn’t need long to mull the offer.
“A quick ‘no,’” he said the other day, recalling his conversation with the president. “Because I don’t deal with aggravation.”
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By aggravation, Fazio, who is 81, meant the extensive permitting, approvals and other red tape that often accompany municipal projects. Trump’s vision also would mean unwinding plans already underway by D.C. nonprofit National Links Trust. In 2020, the Department of the Interior had granted NLT a 50-year lease to manage and restore East Potomac and D.C.’s other two munis, Langston and Rock Creek. For the East Potomac redo, NLT had tapped another marquee designer in Tom Doak. Stepping over that work was certain to draw opposition from the local golf community.
But then, by sheer coincidence, Fazio’s wife Sue intervened. Sue had a D.C. trip scheduled to visit a friend and urged Tom to join her. Tom, who was busy with work, at first resisted but then relented and used the getaway as an opportunity to tour East Potomac, which sits on a manmade peninsula with the Washington Channel to the east, the Potomac River to the west and Washington Monument views to the north.
“I thought, ‘Holy mackerel, this is awesome,’” Fazio said.
He called the president.
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“I told you no,” Fazio told Trump, “but you were right.”
The site was too good to turn down.
East Potomac sits on a manmade peninsula.
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FAZIO HAS KNOWN TRUMP for decades. He has designed four courses in Trump’s portfolio, including the first course at Trump Bedminster, the president’s New Jersey hangout. (Fazio’s course-designer nephew, Tommy Fazio, and Tommy’s course-designer father, Jim, also have their names on Trump courses.) In November, Fazio visited the White House, where he and the president talked golf. They do that occasionally, but mostly by phone and only on weekends. “He’s got other things to do,” Fazio said with a laugh. “He’s running the world.”
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The world, and other things. One of the first signs that East Potomac was on Trump’s radar came in October when dump trucks full of dirt from the president’s East Wing renovation project began showing up at the facility and depositing tons of debris in an area near the 4th and 9th holes on the nine-hole executive course. (The property also has a 18-hole regulation course and nine-hole par-3 course.)
A more obvious indicator of Trump’s interest came at the end of December, when the Interior Department broke the NLT’s lease, alleging the organization had failed to pay rent and was underdelivering on maintaining and improving the courses; NLT roundly disputed the claims.
The Interior Department’s decision left the three munis’ futures in an awkward, unsettling limbo that extended through the first four months of 2026. Then, on May 9, the administration provided some clarity, announcing it had reached a deal with several private and public entities, including Fazio Design, to begin “immediate renovations” of East Potomac, while returning oversight of the Langston and Rock Creek renovations to the NLT.
None of this activity has come without resistance. In February, two D.C.-area golfers, in tandem with the D.C. Preservation League, sued the administration for threatening to undermine East Potomac’s role as a public park. Earlier this month, in response to a different filing, a federal judge ruled the administration could proceed with maintenance work on the course but was prohibited from overhauling it without prior notice and proper approvals. Save East Po, an advocacy group that has been protesting Trump’s plan, describes itself as “people who love East Potomac and want to make sure the character of this special place continues for the next generation of DMV residents.”
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Trump’s East Potomac plans have not come without resistance.
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Some of the public’s pushback has made its way into Fazio’s inbox. “I’ve gotten some emails and requests from people telling me, ‘Don’t work on that project,’” he said. “Some of them were very insulting; some of them are what I’d call ridiculous. But that’s beside the point. I guess you get used to that when you deal with a lot of different opinions and personalities.”
Whatever criticism Fazio weathers or whatever obstacles he’ll need to overcome to see this rebuild through, he believes the payoff will be worth it. The site, in his mind, is that special.
“It’s Pebble Beach quality land in terms of environment, in terms of setting,” he said. “The president’s idea is to upgrade it to be literally a national monument — and there’s no reason it can’t be a national monument.”
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FAZIO KNOWS AND APPRECIATES what the existing version of East Potomac means to D.C. residents. He has friends in the area whose children grew up playing the course; they have expressed to him their concerns about what might become of their beloved muni, the same concerns you’ll hear from many East Potomac regulars. What will happen to green fees, which now are capped at $48? Will the new design, which can play to nearly 7,700 yards — and which Trump has said he’d like to see host majors and a Ryder Cup — box out beginners and shorter-hitters? Will the facility assume an upscale or exclusive atmosphere that could alienate some golfers? Will it lose its ties to its rich history and to the original reversible Walter Travis design that the heralded Golden Age architect laid down in 1921?
“It’s controversial,” Fazio allows, adding of the president, “Anything he’s involved with becomes controversial.” But, Fazio said, it’s also too early to jump to conclusions. “Facts have been not put out yet,” he said. Indeed, the administration has offered few specifics about its plans for the property. Last week, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum shared Fazio’s preliminary design for the site but accompanied only by a brief message that read in part, “Like iconic public courses of Bethpage Black & Torrey Pines, East Potomac will offer locals — of the National Capital Region — championship-quality golf at affordable, highly discounted rates.”
Fazio has no insight into what those rates might be but suspects that the fees will be subsidized for locals, as they have been at other high-profile muni rebuilds in recent years, including The Park in West Palm Beach, Fla.; Memorial Park in Houston; and The Patch in Augusta, Ga., where Fazio led the re-design along with Beau Welling.
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Fazio has little experience working with municipalities or, as he puts it, “the processes that go along with getting lots of different opinions.” But his job, as he sees it, is to build the best possible golf course and facility he can within the parameters that are provided to him by the Interior Department. Ideally, he said, he’ll work quickly, which aligns with Trump’s wishes. “The president happens to be a guy of action,” Fazio said. “He wants to get this thing done so people can enjoy it play it, and not one of these ‘10 years down the road and drag it out forever’ things. He wants to get it done now.”
That has been Trump’s m.o. with projects all over town, ranging from the White House ballroom addition to his remodeling (and renaming) of the Trump Kennedy Center to his plans for a statue park along the Potomac River. He seems determined to leave his physical legacy on the city.
At East Potomac, though, Fazio can’t just snap his fingers. He needs engineering, environmental and legal clearance before he can break ground. In terms of an estimated start date, he said, “We’ll probably know in a month or so from now based on the steps that have to be taken through the permit approval process and the regulations that have to be done.”
Best case, Fazio said, he’d start construction later this summer, grass the course next summer and have it ready for play in the spring of 2028. “That’s, like, the most optimistic schedule that anybody can have, right?” he said.
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Barring a third term, Trump’s last day in office will be Jan. 20, 2029.
Excited to unveil the design for the East Potomac Golf Links renovation from Fazio Design.
Like iconic public courses of Bethpage Black & Torrey Pines, East Potomac will offer locals—of the National Capital Region—championship-quality golf at affordable, highly discounted… pic.twitter.com/foLZAAcsj3
— Secretary Doug Burgum (@SecretaryBurgum) May 14, 2026
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WHEN FAZIO DOES GET MOVING in earnest, one of his top priorities will be improving drainage and building up the property’s low-lying areas so they don’t take on as much water as they do now — not only from rain but also from tidal surges. “I don’t know what we’re going to do yet,” he said. “We’re evaluating what do we do to keep it from flooding? How do we grow grass on the turf? We’re doing all those studies as we speak.”
Fazio said the president already has asked him what the renovation will cost. Fazio doesn’t know. “I don’t have an idea yet until we evaluate all the conditions and deal with the constraints of the site,” he said. “Certainly, we know more rules and more regulations mean more cost. Just simple facts. That’s what we’re looking at now and evaluating how much dirt are we going to move to elevate the areas that flood.” He said he’ll expect to have a better handle on budget in several weeks.
Some savings will come by way of the more than 30,000 cubic yards of dirt from Trump’s White House renovation project, which, according to National Park Service data, contains low levels of lead, chromium and other toxic metals. Some savings, Fazio said, but not much savings. “It’s nothing,” he said of the volume of soil relative to what the whole project will require, adding the president “was shocked when I told him that.” Fazio said he intends to use the debris to build a couple of greens and a couple of bunkers, but “it won’t raise the land and keep it from flooding.”
The infamous dirt pile at East Potomac has grown to more than 30,000 cubic yards.
craig kalkut
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The current plan has the opening two holes — parallel par-4s — detached from the rest of the layout in the northwest corner of the property, with a sprawling practice range flanking the 2nd hole and, beyond that, a nine-hole par-3 course. The remaining 16 holes will sit on the footprint of the existing course with about half the holes, Fazio said, occupying the existing corridors.
The current holes all run north and south; Fazio plans to change that. “We like to bend and twist and create some variety in different sun angles and those kinds of things,” he said. Given he has limited land with which to work, he called the design process an exercise in “space allocation.” Fazio added that he would have liked to extend the layout all the way to the end of the peninsula but said “that’s not the criteria that I was given to work with.”
From the back tees, the course will play a beefy 7,660 yards. That figure, paired with the president’s desire for the course to test the world’s best players, has some locals worrying about playability. Fazio is keen to allay those concerns. “I’ve never done a golf course that’s not playable for [a high-handicapper],” he said. “I wouldn’t do it any other way.” The course, he said, will, at a minimum, have two sets of forward tees, two sets of middle tees and two sets of championship tees. “If we only put the third tee from the front,” he said, “guys who are serious players would say, ‘Oh my gosh, that’s a short golf course and I’m not interested in that.’”
But, yes, Fazio is intending for the course, when all stretched out, to challenge elite players. “There’s not one golf course I’ve ever done that [the developer] hasn’t thought that we’d be able to hold a major championship on. We’re going to build the best golf course — the equivalent to the Aronominks and the Quail Hollows and the Shinnecocks. It’s gonna be that quality, whether you have an event or not.”
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Trump wants an event, a big one, and Fazio said his planning has accounted for how galleries might flow through the property, and that some of the contouring he’s envisioning could serve as natural vantage points for fans. How tens of thousands of spectators, vendors and tournament support staff might get in and out of the peninsula is another matter, likely one best suited for logistics experts to solve. Still, Fazio said there is a need for more tournament-ready courses in the D.C. area.
“There are many golf courses in the region that can host a PGA-quality event,” Fazio said, noting such sites as Congressional, TPC Avenel and Caves Valley, which is north of Baltimore. “But most of them don’t want to, because that means you have to give up your golf course.”
The president’s idea is to upgrade it to be literally a national monument .
Tom Fazio on Trump’s vision for the East Potomac site
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PRESERVING OR PAYING HOMAGE to Travis’s original design was not top of mind for Fazio, he said, partly because maps and references from Travis’s work are scant but more so because the existing design isn’t suited for the modern game. “There won’t be any holes that are exactly the way they are now because they’re not acceptable in today’s golf standards,” he said. “People talk about designing or preserving the old golf courses. If Donald Ross or [A.W.] Tillinghast, the famous great old designers, if they would have had the budgets and equipment we had today, they would’ve done a whole lot of things differently than they did.”
The current clubhouse, with pillars that resemble a D.C. monument, will stay and be refurbished, Fazio said. The addition of a second clubhouse down the line is also a possibility. “Our job and my job always is to look at options and possibilities and what can be done over time,” Fazio said.
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The new range, which will replace the dilapidated double-decker range that now sits on the northwest corner of the facility, will run south to north. That is intentional so late in the day golfers won’t be hitting into the setting sun, as they do now. “When you hit a golf ball, especially on a practice tee,” Fazio said, “you kind of like to see it land.” Fazio said the range will extend to 400 yards from the back tee with players hitting balls toward the Washington Monument. “The president loves practice ranges,” Fazio said, so Fazio and his team are aiming to take full advantage of East Potomac’s dramatic setting.
“Where’s the greatest practice range you’ve ever seen?” he continued. “Well, if you stood on the practice tee at the East Potomac and hit balls, that could be as good as any place in the world. Of course, as an American, I’d say that, because I’m looking at the Washington Monument. But it’s a big deal.”
The par-3 course, which flanks the east side of the property, next to the Blue course, will be nixed and replaced by another nine-hole short course on the northeast corner of the parcel. Fazio said he expects the hole yardages to be line in with the current course, where the shortest hole from the back tees is 64 yards and the longest is 208 yards. East Potomac’s recently restored miniature golf course, which is the country’s oldest continuously operating miniature golf course and listed in the National Register of Historic Places, will remain, Fazio said.
Changes are afoot, and local golfers can expect them to come sooner than later, with a seal of approval from the highest office in the land.
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“As the president says, as a guy who’s a golfer, he’s just not happy with a golf course with very little grass on it, with bad drainage, with bad putting surfaces, with not quality experiences,” Fazio said. “He’s going to fix it.”
Switzerland take on World Cup dark horses Colombia in Vancouver in the round of 16, stripped of injured 20-year-old breakout star Johan Manzambi. The winners will go on to face title holders Argentina, who survived an almighty scare against Egypt earlier today. Follow our liveblog for minute-by-minute match commentary.
Jannik Sinner believes the work he and his team put in after the French Open has already paid off following his straight-sets victory over Jan-Lennard Struff at Wimbledon.
The world No. 1 defeated Struff 7-5, 7-6(5), 6- 3 to reach the Wimbledon semi-finals for the second consecutive year.
Playing in hot conditions, Sinner admitted he was pleased to get through the match in three sets.
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When asked whether the heat made the victory even more satisfying, the Italian laughed before saying:
“Yeah, thanks for reminding me.”
He then explained how the French Open disappointment led to the important changes behind the scenes.
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“We worked a lot, especially after Paris, trying to understand what went wrong there. We prepared ourselves in the best possible way.”
Sinner said he was especially encouraged by how he felt physically throughout the match.
“It was a huge test today. I felt really, really comfortable on the physical side today. A good step forward.”
Although he hopes not to experience another setback like the one in Paris, Sinner believes his team is now better prepared.
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“If it would happen again like in Paris, I hope not, but if it happens again, we know we need to change some things again.”
The defending Wimbledon champion also praised Struff, describing the German as one of the toughest opponents on tour.
“Very, very tough player to play against. He deserves everything he’s done and achieved in his career.”
Sinner will now head into the Wimbledon semi-finals looking to continue his title defence after another composed performance on grass.
And the photo from that goal was just unreal. It was snapped by Elsa of Getty Images — she’s shot so many incredible sports moments — and just look at it: It’s from inside the net as the ball goes in, with Messi watching from afar and getting ready to celebrate. The rest of the players are watching it, with some realizing what just happened.
It’s so good:
ATLANTA, GEORGIA – JULY 07: (EDITOR’S NOTE: Image was captured using a remote camera inside of the goal.) Lionel Messi #10 of Argentina scores his team’s second goal past Mostafa Shoubir #23 of Egypt during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 match between Argentina and Egypt at Atlanta Stadium on July 07, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
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A tearful Messi perfectly celebrated Argentina comeback vs. Egypt
Argentina’s forward #10 Lionel Messi celebrates after winning the 2026 World Cup round of 16 football match between Argentina and Egypt at Atlanta Stadium in Atlanta on July 7, 2026. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP via Getty Images)
(ODD ANDERSEN, AFP via Getty Images)
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A tearful Messi perfectly celebrated Argentina comeback vs. Egypt
Argentina’s forward #10 Lionel Messi celebrates after winning the 2026 World Cup round of 16 football match between Argentina and Egypt at Atlanta Stadium in Atlanta on July 7, 2026. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP via Getty Images)
(ODD ANDERSEN, AFP via Getty Images)
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A tearful Messi perfectly celebrated Argentina comeback vs. Egypt
Argentina’s forward #10 Lionel Messi is lifted by teammates as they celebrate after winning the 2026 World Cup round of 16 football match between Argentina and Egypt at Atlanta Stadium in Atlanta on July 7, 2026. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP via Getty Images)
(ODD ANDERSEN, AFP via Getty Images)
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A tearful Messi perfectly celebrated Argentina comeback vs. Egypt
July 7, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.; Argentina’s Lionel Messi is thrown in the air in celebration by teammates after the match as Argentina qualify for the quarter finals of the World Cup. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images
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(Brett Davis, IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters)
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A tearful Messi perfectly celebrated Argentina comeback vs. Egypt
July 7, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.; Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates after the match as Argentina qualify for the quarter finals of the World Cup. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images
(Brett Davis, IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters)
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A tearful Messi perfectly celebrated Argentina comeback vs. Egypt
July 7, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.; Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates after the match as Argentina qualify for the quarter finals of the World Cup. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images
(Brett Davis, IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters)
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A tearful Messi perfectly celebrated Argentina comeback vs. Egypt
July 7, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.; Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates after the match as Argentina qualify for the quarter finals of the World Cup. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images
LONDON, ENGLAND – JULY 07: Karolina Muchova of Czechia serves against Naomi Osaka of Japan during their Ladies’ Singles quarterfinal match on day nine of The Championships Wimbledon 2026 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club on July 07, 2026 in London, England. (Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images)
Karolina Muchova reached her first Wimbledon semifinal after defeating Naomi Osaka 7-6, 6-4.
The Czech star extended her winning streak to nine consecutive matches, producing another impressive performance to book her place in the last four.
After the match, Muchova laughed when told she looked calm throughout the contest.
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“Oh my God, I was nervous.”
She praised Osaka’s ability to punish even the smallest mistakes.
“She’s an unbelievable athlete. You can’t lose that focus. You have to keep playing every point. If you give her a little chance, she takes it.”
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Muchova also admitted she had never enjoyed playing on Centre Court before the breakthrough.
“I don’t know if you guys know, but I played three times on this court and it was 0-3, so I wasn’t in a very good relationship with this court.”
That finally changed with her biggest Wimbledon win yet.
“I’m super happy we finally made it today and I got that win in front of you all.”
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The victory sends Muchova into her first Wimbledon semifinal and her first Grand Slam semifinal in two years.
She will now face Coco Gauff for a place in the Wimbledon final. Although Gauff leads their head-to-head 6-1, Muchova won their most recent meeting in Stuttgart earlier this year. The semifinal will also be the first time they have faced each other on grass.
Vaibhav Sooryavanshi takes a brilliant catch to remove Jacob Bethell and England lose Tom Banton in the next delivery as Harshit Rana strikes twice for India during the third T20 at Trent Bridge.
Jon Rahm says no, he hasn’t been asked to put his own money back into LIV Golf.
But what if the league made the request?
“Something I’ve learned in life, never say never,” he said Tuesday.
“I’m not going to say absolutely no to anything that can happen in the future.”
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Speaking Tuesday ahead of this week’s Genesis Scottish Open, Rahm had been asked whether he’d help finance the prize fund for the league in which he plays, an idea that a reporter said could be an option while LIV seeks new investors as it’s been told it will no longer be backed by the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund. In December of 2023, Rahm left the PGA Tour and signed what has been reported as a nine-figure deal with LIV.
But Rahm said he hasn’t been asked to invest into the tour playing its fifth season. Since the PIF announcement, LIV CEO Scott O’Neil has said he’s exploring options, though Rahm said early last month that he wouldn’t be involved in an investor search.
“I know Scott is doing a lot of work trying to find developers,” Rahm said Tuesday. “And there’s many ways around that. As far as putting my money into it, they have not asked me to do that yet.
“So I don’t know if they will or not. It’s not something that they have asked me, but there has been many different avenues to try to make it different, what we’ve had till now. They haven’t asked me to put my money in yet.”
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Several questions during his media session centered around LIV, which was to be expected given the league’s uncertainty — and the fact that Rahm is playing a tournament co-sanctioned by the DP World Tour and the PGA Tour. The latter does not allow players to play on LIV, but the formerly named European Tour, through an agreement, is letting LIV pros into its tournaments, all of which seemingly would lead to at least a different feeling this week, but Rahm said he hasn’t experienced that.
“Not really,” he said. “It’s just another event. Just happy I can — happy that the DP World Tour let me have the opportunity and that I can be here and play what’s not only a great week but a great golf course, great crowd. It’s one of my favorite weeks, so it’s really fun to be here again.”
A reporter also wondered whether Rahm thought that his appearance this week, along with those of other LIV players in the Scottish Open field, would be looked at as “a turning point” in the men’s game.
“Yeah, it could be,” he said. “Yeah, I mean, it’s a fantastic event, and I think a lot of us, if given the opportunity, we are going to continue to play in the events that we like to play. Myself, very thankful and happy that I can be here.”
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Rahm also said he hadn’t seen any of the news announced last week regarding the PGA Tour’s future schedule and format; when told by a reporter that there would be two tours, Rahm said: “That’s not the first time I’ve heard that, so it’s not a surprise that that would happen.” A reporter also wondered how difficult it was for Rahm to put himself in the present, while answering questions about the future.
But Rahm said that wasn’t hard.
“Maybe early on,” he said. “I think at this point, seeing whatever some of the headlines that come my way, I can pretty much predict what I’m being asked. I’m ready for what is coming. It’s not entirely a surprise.”
“I also understand it’s everybody’s job to do,” he said later. “I’m ready for it. I like to say I’m an open book, so I like to be as honest as I can.”
Minecraft has released the third snapshot for the upcoming 26.3 update, alongside a new Beta and Preview for the 26.40 update. These new releases introduce features confirmed for the Fall game drop, releasing later in 2026.
The latest Minecraft snapshot, Beta, and Preview introduce two main features for 2026’s Q3 update: cushions and straw beds. For the first time in years, Minecraft is getting decorative furniture with a sitting option. Players will no longer have to rely on awkward minecart setups while creating seating arrangements in their builds.
The second feature, straw beds, is a type of temporary bed that you can use to skip nights in Minecraft. Using a straw bed does not reset your spawn point, making it the perfect item for explorers who want to skip the night without risking their original spawn location. Let’s look at all the new features in today’s Minecraft snapshot and Preview.
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What’s new in Minecraft 26.3 Snapshot 3 and Bedrock 26.40.30 Preview?
Cushion
Alex on a cushion (Image via Mojang)
Cushions are one of the main new features in the latest Minecraft snapshot and Preview. You can craft them using three wool slabs. They come in 16 different colors, just like other wool items. You can interact with them to sit down. The best thing about cushions is that you can place them on a variety of flat surfaces, such as stairs, trapdoors, and more. The possibilities are endless!
Straw bed
Straw bed in an abandoned camp (Image via Mojang)
You can use three hay bales on a crafting table to make four straw beds in Minecraft. Like a regular bed, you can place them on the ground and sleep to skip the night. However, the straw bed disappears as soon as you wake up.
Using a straw bed does not change your spawn point, meaning you can carry multiple straw beds and use them to skip nights while avoiding hostile mobs. They can also stack up to 16, so carrying several of them does not take up much inventory space.
Other features and changes in Minecraft 26.3 Snapshot 3
Minecraft Snapshot 26.3 🔗 changelog:
Minecraft 26.3 Snapshot 3 adds Gothic language support to Java Edition. On the technical side, the snapshot introduces a new command called posteffect, which lets you add or remove post-processing shader effects for a player. The developers have also added technical changes and bug fixes, which can be found in the official patch notes.
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Changes and fixes in Minecraft Bedrock 26.40.30 Preview
All new features in one image (Image via Mojang)
Unlike 26.3 Snapshot 3, Minecraft Bedrock 26.40.30 Preview mainly focuses on changes related to abandoned camps and dappled forests. In this new version, abandoned camps now generate correctly in the Pale Garden and Flower Forest biomes. You will also find a straw bed inside abandoned camps.
As for the dappled forest, it now features new textures for poplar leaves and uses the same fog settings as other biomes.
Version 26.40.30 also fixes several graphical glitches, including extra pixels on the poplar door icon, incorrect poplar sign textures, a black background on poplar leaves, a miscolored pixel on sulfur spikes, Vibrant Visuals glitches on certain Android GPUs, and more. You can read the official Minecraft 26.40.30 patch notes for the complete list of changes and fixes.
Minnesota Vikings tackle Christian Darrisaw watched practice action during training camp at TCO Performance Center as players worked through another summer session in Eagan. On August 6, 2026, Darrisaw stood near the sideline in uniform while Minnesota continued evaluating its offensive line before preseason football arrived and the regular season drew closer. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
Rookies will report to Minnesota Vikings training camp in 19 days, with veterans arriving a couple of days later, and fans formally invited on August 1st. The time is coming.
And while the club, like every summer, has several fascinating storylines, here’s what we can’t wait to see in Eagan three weeks from now. The items are listed in no particular order.
The Watchlist Has Real Stakes
Miami Hurricanes defensive back Jakobe Thomas lined up against the Indiana Hoosiers during the College Football Playoff National Championship at Hard Rock Stadium. On January 19, 2026, in Miami Gardens, Thomas worked through title-game action as Miami’s secondary faced Indiana in one of the season’s biggest national college football stages. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images.
1. The Pecking Order at Safety
This could be moot or less important if Harrison Smith returns to the Vikings, but as of early July, nobody knows if that will happen. Smith is acting mysteriously.
If Smith is gone-gone, the Vikings will unveil a safety unit without him for the first time since 2011. Josh Metellus will start, but after Metellus, it’s a crapshoot to determine the other main starter, among contenders Jay Ward, Theo Jackson, and rookie Jakobe Thomas.
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Ward is probably the frontrunner to obtain most safety snaps because he took over as the starter in December. That must be confirmed, though, and training camp will be the first major clue. Generally speaking, the Vikings’ safety room is no longer as straightforward as “Smith and Metellus.”
2. The Seriousness of the QB Battle
We fully understand and embrace the fact that Kyler Murray and J.J. McCarthy will battle at training camp; that’s healthy for a football team. We, however, believe that Murray will prevail rather handily — because he is the better, more experienced quarterback.
So, we ask: How interesting will McCarthy make the competition? Will it go down to the wire? Will preseason games be needed to weigh pros and cons of each combatant? Will Kevin O’Connell see a practice or two and say, “Murray’s our guy, folks.”
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It’s not a sham competition, but McCarthy’s legitimacy as a contender is “to be determined.”
3. Brett Thorson’s Leg
In March, Minnesota signed punter Johnny Hekker, who was the best punter on the planet in 2015. In April, Minnesota signed punter Brett Thorson, who was the best college punter in 2025. We wonder why Hekker is even needed.
There shouldn’t be much mystery about Thorson’s transition to the NFL; he’s the real deal. The Vikings may not have known that Thorson would fall into their lap after the draft in undrafted free agency. Perhaps signing him was a perk that rendered the Hekker signing useless.
Thorson should be the punter in 2026 and for the long haul, but he evidently has to prove it against Hekker at training camp.
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The Vikings always have some form of a kicking battle in the summer. Clockwork.
4. The Dillon Bell Glow-Up
The hype train began for Bell in late April, when, like Thorson, the Vikings signed him as an undrafted free agent. Georgia head coach Kirby Smart and former NFLer Steve Smith have pounded the table for Bell, who brings WR versatility and a chip on his shoulder to the Vikings.
Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kyler Murray delivered a pass to wide receiver Dillon Bell during minicamp practice at TCO Performance Center. In June 2026, in Eagan, Murray connected with Bell as Minnesota continued offseason workouts and evaluated new offensive combinations, giving the rookie receiver valuable reps alongside the veteran quarterback before training camp arrived. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
Boots on the ground also suggest that Bell looked the part at OTAs and minicamp. That’s great — but now Bell must earn a roster spot, dueling Tai Felton, Myles Price, and several other anonymous UDFA wide receivers at training camp.
Can Bell take the momentum through the summer and snag a September roster spot? Felton or Price might have to be cut to make room. You’ve been warned.
5. Caleb Banks and His Foot
Teams shied away from Banks in Round 1 of the draft because he injured his foot in the summer of 2025 and then broke the same foot at the NFL Combine. As a rule of thumb, it’s dangerous to draft big men with bad feet in the 1st Round.
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It’s just that the Vikings didn’t care.
Before the second foot injury, Banks held 1st-Round draft stock; it was just a matter of which DT-needy club would pick him. After the NFL Combine, Banks’s draft hopes fell into Round 2, and he lived there until the Vikings went against the grain, selecting him in Round 1.
Now, listen carefully: Minnesota absolutely cannot afford a draft miss, especially one from the 1st Round. The franchise is trying to emerge from the rubble of failed draft picks like Lewis Cine, Andrew Booth, Brian Asamoah, and others.
Watching Banks this summer will be a major clue whether the Vikings got this one right. He really can’t afford to “sit out” his rookie season with a bad foot. If so, a 1st-Round pick was not worth it.
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6. Demond Claiborne’s NFL Translation
The Vikings are starved for young legs at running back. It’s been nine years since they drafted Dalvin Cook. After Cook left — and fell off an NFL production cliff — Minnesota has preferred RB1 options like Alexander Mattison, Aaron Jones, and Jordan Mason. Those veterans are okay, but soon the Vikings must restart the clock with a promising, explosive tailback.
Wake Forest running back Demond Claiborne carried the football during first-quarter action against Virginia Tech at Lane Stadium, adding another road-game snapshot to his college profile. On October 4, 2025, in Blacksburg, Claiborne worked through the Hokies’ defense as the Demon Deacons tried to generate offense in an ACC matchup. Mandatory Credit: Brian Bishop-Imagn Images.
In theory, that could be Claiborne, a 6th-Rounder from Wake Forest with 4.37 speed.
Onlookers will be able to tell if Claiborne has the vision and tackle-breaking acumen to succeed as an eventual RB1 at training camp. He’ll provide hints. The early returns, too, are promising.
But he has to make a dent this summer to project well for the future. The question is this: Can Claiborne become a rare late-round RB success story? Or is he just another Ty Chandler or DeWayne McBride?
Do not forget: the Vikings are fundamentally starved for a young playmaking running back.
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Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
Former world champion Pedersen made it look easy as he surged clear of a small group to take his first win since stage 15 of last year’s Vuelta a Espana, and first Tour win since 2023, with his Lidl-Trek team-mate Quinn Simmons coming second for good measure.
Traeen, diagnosed with testicular cancer in 2022 after a routine anti-doping test, was eighth on the day and moved into yellow with the main peloton finishing some 13 minutes later, Pogacar happy to hand over the responsibilities of race leader a day after his stage win in Les Angles.
Torstein Traeen took the yellow jersey after stage four (Reuters)
Every time the Tour has visited Foix it has ended in a breakaway win and it soon became obvious this day would be no different as 34 riders went clear in sweltering temperatures touching 40 degrees in south-west France.
The break splintered on the final climb but Lidl-Trek managed to get three riders in the front group of 10 – Mathias Vacek joining Pedersen and Simmons – and they were able to control a series of late attacks to set up Pedersen.
“This was I would say a masterpiece of teamwork,” the Dane said. “I was suffering a lot on the last climb but with Quinn and Vacek it was an incredible day, they did incredibly well on the climb to pace it for me and make sure we didn’t lose too much time.
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“They were just machines to the finish. What a team effort, what a team win today.”
Mads Pedersen sprinted to victory as part of the stage four breakaway (Reuters)
But Traeen celebrated taking the race lead (AP)
Uno-X Mobility’s Traeen, who spent four days in red at last season’s Vuelta, started the day five minutes off yellow, and once it became apparent the peloton would not chase, the 30-year-old’s only rival for the race lead was Sean Quinn, also in the front group but a further 28 seconds down.
“I think it’s quite hard for me to understand how big it is,” Traeen said. “You can see the face of my coach, the soigneur, everybody, you see how special it is but for me at the moment I don’t really understand what’s going on. Maybe in a couple of days it will sink in.”
Quinn moved up to second overall with Vacek third, three minutes 50 seconds down, and Pogacar dropping to fourth, almost eight minutes down and still on the same time as his rival Jonas Vingegaard as they save resources for later in this Tour.
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