Golf instruction is ever-evolving, but the best advice stands the test of time. In GOLF.com’s new series, Timeless Tips, we’re highlighting some of the greatest advice teachers and players have dispensed in the pages of GOLF Magazine. This week, we look back at our June 2018 issue in which Dave Pelz gave a breakdown of the hardest holes at Shinnecock Hills.
This week, the best golfers in the world will head out to the eastern end of Long Island for the toughest test in golf — the U.S. Open.
Any time the USGA is hosting a championship, you can expect a stern test. And no tournament lives up to that more than the U.S. Open.
Among all the historic courses the USGA has taken the national championship, perhaps no host is as feared as Shinnecock Hills. In the four previous U.S. Opens contested at Shinnecock, just three players total have finished the week under par. There may be no course better suited to present a U.S. Open test than Shinnecock.
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So, what is it that makes the William Flynn design so challenging? Ahead of the 2018 U.S. Open, legendary instructor Dave Pelz joined GOLF Magazine to break down some of the toughest holes on property.
The unique challenge of Shinnecock
When I think of Shinnecock Hills, two words come to mind: “national treasure.” As a researcher and golfer who has dedicated nearly four decades of his life to developing swing- and course-management strategies to help players shoot better scores, it remains the ultimate test if you can outthink this place, you can out think anyplace. I paid a visit to the William Flynn masterpiece last fall, walking the fairways with my son, Eddie, and even playing a few shots. It was as vexing as ever. The goal of my visit was to paint a picture of the challenges that await the best players in the world so you can better appreciate the drama sure to unfold before your eyes during the playing of the 118th U.S. Open, whether you’re there in person or catching it on TV.
Even among its major-venue brethren, Shinnecock stands alone in its ability to squeeze every ounce of shotmaking savvy and heart from players’ games — a test hardwired into the course’s layout, the slope and contour of the greens and the ever-present wind. When these elements combine — and you can bet they will — watch out.
It’s not all purgatory. Many of Shinnecock’s greens are downright friendly, with raised edges that funnel shots toward the center of the putting surface. Most, however, are shaped to repel shots away from the flagstick and, in some cases, off the green entirely. Be advised: every green features serious undulation. A few are so sloped that it’s impossible to imagine the ball stopping on its own
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Adding to the difficulty is the fact that Shinnecock’s greens run faster than Flynn originally intended. Shortly after he redesigned the course in 1931 (Shinnecock dates back to 1891), the USGA began measuring how fast and far balls rolled on level putting surfaces, calling the measurement “green speed.” At that time, Shinnecock’s greens measured in the 4- to 5-foot range, and even then they were considered outrageously sloped, severely undulating and very difficult to putt. Come this June 14, these same greens will roll at 12-foot green-speeds, requiring the most deft green reading and putting touches on earth.
Good luck, fellas.
Here is a breakdown of some of the hardest holes on property.
No. 2, Par-3
Shinnecock opens with a wide and fairly benign 399-yard par 4 (it played as the fourth-easiest hole during the 2004 U.S. Open). Then it slaps you in the face. Hard. No. 2 is a 250-yard-plus par 3 with sand on both sides of the green and serious rough in play off the left. The green is the second-largest on the course, with a consistent elevation drop of four feet from back to front (though mild undulations help channel shots toward the center of the green). Depending on the wind direction, don’t be surprised to see some players swing driver here. It’s an absolute beast.
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For fun, | walked to where PGA Tour ShotLink data says is the average miss distance on a shot taken by a Tour player from 260 yards of the target — about the yardage players will face in the Open on No. 2. This miss pattern puts the ball in the deep rough next to the bunker left of the green. This is not where you want to be, especially during a major.
I was able to lash the ball onto the green (and it eventually rolled off the back). That’s right — I pulled an “o-fer.” I left three of the six shots in the rough and dribbled one into the bunker. The remaining ball? I assume it’s still burrowed somewhere deep in the fescue. I never found it. The tall grass at Shinnecock — here and all over the course — can be so severe that I’ve discussed with some players heading into this year’s Open the usually unthinkable option of taking an unplayable-lie penalty and dropping within two club-lengths if and when they find such a nasty patch of grass. As absurd as this idea may sound, my experience proves it a viable, shot-saving strategy.
No. 7, Par-3
The 7th hole at Shinnecock Hills.
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I must warn you: The seventh hole features one of the most wicked green complexes you’ll ever find. It’ll play anywhere from 175 to 205 yards, and to the largest green on the course. It’s a classic Redan— the putting surface slopes away from the tee box, from a high point in the front-right section of the green to seven feet lower in the back-left. Bunkers left and right of the green are there to punish inaccuracy. Heaven help the player who finds the sand on the right he’ll face a huge change in elevation to a green running straight downhill from his line of flight.
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The flag hovering above the crest of the hill? My son all 6’5″ of him is holding it as high as he can so I can see it. It’s a ridiculously difficult shot. As I said, Shinnecock is beauty and beast.
No. 10, Par-4
Can you believe that a relatively short, downhill 415-yard par-4 — with no water, out-of-bounds or obviously penal hazards — can play as the most-over-par hole in U.S. Open history? It looks so innocuous. You simply lay up 220 yards off the tee to the crest of the hill or roll a 5-wood or hybrid all the way down to the bottom, and then either play a 190-yard 7-iron or 75-yard wedge shot to a nicely sized green. Two-putt for par. It looks — and seems — so simple.
And it can be — under normal circumstances. It’s not too difficult if the course is playing soft and slow, despite the fact that the green is seriously sloped, elevated in relation to its surroundings and crowned at two-thirds of the way from the front. Its reputation as a monster stems from the fact that, in 2004, the winds completely dried out the green and made it play extremely firm and fast.
If you decide to push your shot up near the green, most approach shots are taken from 20 feet below the putting surface. That means that a normal-trajectory wedge that reaches a peak altitude of 35 feet comes into this green more like a 15-foot shot, or what you’d get from a slightly thinned wedge. When the green is firm and fast, these effectively lower-trajectory wedge shots bounce hard, run over the green and then down the eight-foot slope behind the green.
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It gets worse.
From behind the green, the odds of stopping a return pitch close to the hole are long. In fact, many attempts roll down the front side of the crown, off the green, down the fairway and all the way to the bottom of the hill, 75 yards short of the green — right where the player started from. Madness! More than any other hole, No. 10 rolls all of Shinnecock’s mysteries into one: elevation, slope, contour, wind and firm and fast greens.
No. 13, Par-4
This hole looks easy but plays downright nasty if the wind is up. From the fairway, the green appears tame, What’s difficult to pick up is the severe, extended false front, the substantial runoffs to the right and left (into bunkers, no less); a steep fall-off ear the back, and a gentle crown in the middle. Add it all up and players are left with a minuscule effective landing area to stop shots near the flagstick In 2004, No.13 — the shortest par on the course — surrendered only 54 birdies in442 attempts.
Missing the green left or right will demand hitting a flop shot for your third — other short-game shots just won’t hold the green. And hitting in a gusting wind is no picnic. You can sail long or come up short without notice.
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No 16, Par-5
The 16th green is the third-smallest at Shinnecock and falls nearly five feet as it slopes continuously from back to front. Its gentle contouring will yield birdies, and you can expect many of the bigger hitters to go for the green in two.
The danger is hitting your approach past the hole. Make this mistake and you’ll face one of the most challenging putts you can imagine.
From the back-left to a front-right pin, it’s a roller-coaster ride. Even with my TrueRoller device, it took me six tries to aim this putt correctly and roll it with reasonable speed. (| missed 12 feet left on my first attempt and ran it 15 feet too long.) Can you imagine getting down in two putts from here? It was difficult for my finely tuned TrueRoller. Expect a lot of three-putts.
No. 18, Par-4
The 18th green at Shinnecock Hills.
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Standing on the 18th tee at Shinnecock — with the fairway disappearing beautifully into the distance and the stately clubhouse on the horizon — is one of the singular thrills in golf. As I gazed upon this grand finale, I though of the players who will be taking in the same view come June 17, a possible United States Open Championship within their grasp. What a moment.
Then it hits you: “Wow, what a tough hole!”
At 484 yards, it demands an accurate drive in the fairway and another 200-yard-plus shot uphill to an elevated green. Corey Pavin needed 4-wood to get home in two on No. 18 during the final round in 1995 en route to victory. Today’s players are a lot longer than Corey, but so is the hole, and there’s only so much you can bite off with your tee shot. The approach remains a bonafide killer.
Even if a player hits two good shots, there’s still the matter of sticking your approach in the right spot. Players better hope they’re not past or above the hole, or that the ball hasn’t rolled into the back fringe or over the green, because it’s darn near impossible to stop any pitch shot or putt in the opposite direction.
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I attempted this shot during my fall visit to Shinnecock. I softly slipped a wide-open 64-degree wedge under the ball, landing the shot just three feet in front of my lie. I played this shot as well as I could’ve played it. Then, for the next 25 seconds, I watched the ball slowly amble away from me, down the green and past the hole. It eventually rolled off the front of the green, stopping only after it had traveled 10 yards back down the fairway. Unfair? Maybe. Difficult? Absolutely! But this is the U.S. Open.
On tonight’s episode of WWE RAW, Chad Gable faced off against Rusev in a highly anticipated singles match. After the bout, a Hall of Famer rushed down to the ring to save Gable from the post-match attack.
Rusev did not come to the ring alone, as he was accompanied by Ethan Page. The latter made his presence felt early and got involved in the bout multiple times to give the Bulgarian Brute an advantage.
Thanks for the submission!
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As the match began, Rusev used his massive size and strength advantage to completely overpower Gable. The 40-year-old star executed quick single-leg takedowns to keep Rusev grounded.
Despite Page’s distractions, Gable shifted the momentum by hitting a rolling neckbreaker. He stopped Rusev from stomping him and delivered an Angle Slam. Chad Gable then made Rusev tap out to his Ankle Lock and won the match.
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The bell rang, but the celebration was short-lived for the Olympian on WWE RAW. Right after the match ended, Ethan Page stormed the ring. He ambushed Chad Gable from behind and brutally beat down the exhausted superstar. Rusev quickly joined him, making it a severe two-on-one assault. The duo stomped Gable into the mat, and it looked like things were going to get much worse.
However, suddenly, the arena erupted, and WWE Hall of Famer Rey Mysterio rushed to make the save. Ethan Page tried to go toe-to-toe with Mysterio in the middle of the ring, but the veteran was too quick. Mysterio hit a flurry of strikes and sent Page packing to the outside.
The chaos did not stop there as Dragon Lee rushed out to back up his mentor. Gable stood tall in the ring alongside Mysterio and Lee. Rusev and Page retreated up the ramp, realizing they were completely outnumbered.
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Last week on the red brand, Chad Gable rushed the ring to save the WWE Hall of Famer from Rusev and Ethan Page’s attack, and this week Mysterio returned the favor.
It remains to be seen if a tag team match between the two teams takes place in the future.
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Saudi Arabia continued their impressive record against South American teams at the World Cup after earning a 1-1 draw against Uruguay in their opening Group H match.
The Green Falcons shocked the football world at the 2022 World Cup when they defeated Argentina, who later went on to win the tournament. This time, Saudi Arabia were close to another famous victory before Uruguay fought back late in the game.
Saudi Arabia took the lead four minutes before half-time through Abdulelah Al Amri. The defender reacted quickest after Hassan Al Tambakti’s powerful header from a corner was pushed away by Uruguay goalkeeper Fernando Muslera.
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The goal gave Saudi Arabia a deserved advantage and raised hopes of another memorable World Cup upset.
Uruguay struggled to create clear chances in the first half, and coach Marcelo Bielsa responded by making two substitutions at the break, including replacing former Liverpool striker Darwin Nunez.
The changes improved Uruguay’s performance as they increased the pressure on the Saudi defence. Goalkeeper Mohammed Al Owais produced several important saves, including a fine stop to push Manuel Ugarte’s low effort onto the post.
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Uruguay finally found an equaliser with 10 minutes remaining. Maxi Araujo was in the right place to score after Al Owais had saved Federico Vinas’ header.
Al Owais continued to shine and finished the match with nine saves. One of his best moments came in stoppage time when he tipped a powerful strike from Federico Valverde around the post to secure a valuable point for his team.
Uruguay ended the game with 28 shots but could not find a winner thanks to Saudi Arabia’s determined defending and excellent goalkeeping.
Following Cape Verde’s surprise draw against Spain, Group H remains wide open. Saudi Arabia will now hope to build on this result as they chase a place in the knockout stage for the first time since the 1994 World Cup in the United States.
Sep 27, 2025; Dublin, Ireland; Minnesota Vikings fans tour the city. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
The Minnesota Vikings just finished off mandatory minicamp (read some coverage on VT in Exhibit A, Exhibit B, Exhibit C, and Exhibit D). Next up is training camp, something that gets rolling in 47 days, at least as it relates to fans being welcome.
The word arrives courtesy of the team itself. The critical date to know is Saturday, August 1st. Check out the blurb: “Training Camp kicks off Saturday, August 1 with Back Together Weekend: Saturday Edition In addition to practice, the day will feature MVC and SKOL Line performances, player autographs, and, new this year, the integration of Legends Weekend. The Omni Hospitality Tent will feature a Legends Q&A available as part of an upgraded experience.”
The Minnesota Vikings Set August 1st as Key Date for Fans
Lifting the information from the team website means relaying certain key dates.
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On August 1st, the Vikings will welcome fans for the beginning of training camp. Safe to say that all eyes will be on the QB battle even as there are a variety of broader stories that are worth fan interest. The team’s first padded practice takes place on August 3rd. The practice on August 4th will involve a girls flag football clinic.
Reasonably humdrum training camp practices will take place on August 5th and then from August 7th-9th, all of which are open to fans.
Circle Saturday, August 9th as a key date since it’s the night practice that will take place at TCO Stadium. There are then a cluster of three practices ranging from August 11th to 13th. A practice on August 17th is the next one that’s open to fans.
But then there are two that everyone is circling: August 19th and August 20th. The Baltimore Ravens are in town, meaning there will be 180 players battling on the same field(s). Pure chaos that’s a ton of fun to watch.
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Getting a ticket costs $10 for adults. The youngsters (17 and under, per the team) get in at just $5. All things considered, that’s a decent deal in this topsy-turvy world of ours.
Nov 9, 2025; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson (8) and Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) after the game at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-Imagn Images
Keep in mind that the Minnesota Vikings have a trio of preseason games. The schedule:
Saturday, August 15th, 2026: at New York Giants (12 p.m.)
Saturday, August 22nd, 2026: Baltimore Ravens (12 p.m.)
Friday, August 28th, 2026: at Denver Broncos (8 p.m.)
Currently, the football news is pretty skimpy. Sitting in the middle of June means operating from within one of the unique parts of the calendar where the Vikings aren’t offering at least some form of real football news. What’s notable about today’s update, though, is that the countdown is officially on.
The players and coaches will get to work ahead of that August 1st date. Welcoming fans does have a firm timeline that means people can start making plans to visit Eagan.
Manchester United have been linked with a move for Mateus Fernandes throughout the summer and it appears they have some demands for his club West Ham United
The main sticking point, however, appears to be the fee West Ham are demanding for Fernandes. The Hammers have placed a valuation of around £80m on the midfielder and are keen to spark a bidding war, with Paris Saint-Germain and Real Madrid also circling, reports the Mirror.
West Ham believe Fernandes is the finest young talent in the Premier League, with the potential to command a fee in excess of £100m in the not-too-distant future.
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United, however, are unwilling to meet that asking price. Senior figures at the club have weighed up the benefits of bringing Fernandes into Michael Carrick’s squad.
The feeling at Old Trafford is that, while Fernandes possesses enormous potential, he has yet to fully prove himself at the highest level.
United are expected to table an opening bid later this week – but it will fall well short of £80m. Whether the two clubs can find common ground on the fee remains to be seen.
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However, with Fernandes having set his heart on a move to Old Trafford, United are refusing to be rushed and are willing to play the long game in the hope of securing a deal on their own terms.
A medical has already been set for £39m midfield signing Ederson from Atalanta. He is expected to be the first of three potential midfield arrivals this summer.
Meanwhile, United have played down reports claiming a £60m agreement has been struck with Newcastle to sign Lewis Hall. Although United continue to hold the England international in high regard, bringing in a left back is not at the top of their transfer agenda right now.
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Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package
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Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
Sorsby made the decision just one week after a Texas judge shocked the sporting landscape by granting Sorsby a temporary injunction that blocked the NCAA from enforcing its career suspension of Sorsby, who had admitted to placing more than 40 bets on Indiana when he was a freshman quarterback with the Hoosiers in 2022.
That decision by a retired judge from Tarrant County, Texas, caused an eruption in college football.
Big 12 opponents seethed. Big Ten and SEC foes ordered their programs to strip Texas Tech from the schedule. In recent days the outrage snowballed. Big 12 presidents and athletic directors actively met with one clear consensus from the rest of the league: Sorsby shouldn’t be allowed to play. It went so far that state attorney generals from Oklahoma, Kansas and Utah voiced their support for the Big 12 in the face of Texas attorney general Ken Paxton threatening the conference with legal action if it attempted to interfere with the judge’s order.
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College football is basically religion in Texas, and the strife surrounding the Sorsby situation felt, in a way, biblical.
Sorsby, who entered a gambling rehabilitation program and stood to be suspended the first two games of Texas Tech’s season, was never a martyr, and the national blowback from his high-profile lawsuit against the NCAA cannot have been worth it. He was easily going to be the most unpopular figure in college football this season, and that harassment would have been a terrible, season-long drain on his mental health. We’ll see if a possible NFL suspension looms and what even happens in the supplemental draft, but there will be more peace afforded to Sorsby if only because this Texas Tech saga is over.
Now to talk about Texas Tech. Its most vociferous Sorsby defenders of the last week have Sorsby himself to thank for saving the Red Raiders from themselves.
The Red Raiders, in just a few short months, had gone from one of the great underdog success stories of the NIL era of college athletics into a villain. Their power triumvirate of booster, coach and AD had been unflinching about playing Sorsby this fall despite the fact their prized transfer QB had crossed one of the last few lines in sports: He had bet on games involving his team.
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Preventing that is foundational to the integrity of the sport. Any crack in the competitive, unpredictable nature of college football could endanger the enterprise’s existence. It’s the rare rule everyone in college football can agree on.
Yet Texas Tech dug its spurs into the West Texas dirt in protest.
Not only would it support Sorsby through his gambling addiction — the right thing to do — but Tech showed up to this fight fully loaded. It supported Sorsby’s lawsuit, appealed the NCAA’s career-long suspension and then doubled down when critics blasted the judge’s outlandish decision to reduce Sorsby’s punishment to just two games.
Texas Tech paid Sorsby more than $5 million this offseason to transfer from Cincinnati. He was the building block for a championship push. The Red Raiders, led by the bombastic booster Cody Campbell, had made their big investment and were totally willing to push through the vitriol to win as many games as possible this fall, perhaps even all of them (Texas Tech is loaded).
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Texas Tech’s administration explained publicly that they didn’t want to abandon Sorsby in a time of need. He needed support from the school and his team to work through his addiction. Fair and frankly noble of Texas Tech.
But the one thing the Red Raiders never managed to explain is why they couldn’t help Sorsby and also keep him on the bench.
He didn’t have to play. Texas Tech could have helped Sorsby through a difficult time and also justly punished him for the the type of violation that will forever keep baseball’s hit king out of the Hall of Fame.
Instead, whether it was via a 20-minute video, Campbell’s tweets or head coach Joey McGuire’s stump speeches at booster events, the Red Raiders kept fighting against the obvious correct answer.
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It’s possible Tech’s stance has softened in recent days. Many around the sport speculated it eventually would: Could they really have stood up against the waves for 75 more days? The Big 12 hoped to come down hard on Texas Tech, and public vitriol against Tech outside of Lubbock blazed. The Red Raiders were likely going to have to back down eventually, and perhaps they pushed Sorsby toward the NFL path with the supplemental draft deadline looming.
Either way, Sorsby leaving for the NFL is best for all parties. Sorsby gets to move on with his career. The NCAA and college football stave off a doomsday scenario.
Texas Tech, for its part, avoids losing a part of its soul.
Saudi Arabia hold firm against relentless pressure to earn a 1-1 draw against two-time world champions Uruguay in their Group H opener at the Miami Stadium.
Live Telecast: USA – Tennis Channel | UK – Sky Sports | Canada – TSN
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Andrey Rublev vs Hubert Hurkacz preview
Hurkacz at the Libema Open (Image Source: Getty)
On Tuesday, June 16, Andrey Rublev and Hubert Hurkacz will butt heads at the 2026 Terra Wortmann Open. The duo are scheduled to be the second match on the Schauinsland-Reisen Court, with their battle taking place after the completion of Karen Khachanov and Ethan Quinn’s 11:30 AM encounter.For Rublev, his upcoming appearance at Halle will make his debut on grass for the 2026 season. Prior to this, the Russian was last seen on court at the French Open. While in Paris, he defeated the likes of Ignacio Buse, Camilo Ugo Carabelli and Nuno Borges. He eventually went down against Jakub Mensik in his fourth round encounter.
Meanwhile, Hurkacz kicked off his grass season earlier this month at the Libema Open, where he was shown the door in his opening round encounter by Marton Fucsovics. Overall, the Pole has had a lukewarm 2026 season, with a win-loss record of 9-12. His best performance of the year was a runners-up finish at the Sardegna Open, a Challenger event, but he has failed to make deep runs in other tournaments.
Andrey Rublev vs Hubert Hurkacz head-to-head record
Hurkacz and Rublev at the 2023 Shanghai Rolex Masters (Image Source: Getty)
Rublev and Hurkacz have played each other a total of six times over the years, and the Pole holds the edge in their head-to-head record. Their first meeting took place all the way back at the 2020 Internazionali BNL d’Italia. Hurkacz won that encounter in three sets before going on to beat the Russian in straight sets at the Miami Open a year later.
In 2022, Rublev managed to draw even against Hurkacz in their head-to-head record, clinching two back-to-back wins over the Pole. However, Hurkacz has since gone on to win their two most recent encounters, including their battle in Rotterdam in 2025
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Andrey Rublev vs Hubert Hurkacz odds
Player Name
Moneyline
Handicap Bets
Total Games
Andrey Rublev
Hubert Hurkacz
(To be updated)
Andrey Rublev vs Hubert Hurkacz prediction
Rublev at the 2026 French Open (Image Source: Getty)
Rublev and Hurkacz’s battle should make for some interesting viewing. On paper, the Pole is the favorite for the win, holding an edge over his opponent in their head-to-head record and excelling on grass courts. However, given Hurkacz’s recent dip in form, it wouldn’t be surprising to see Rublev claim his first win over the former World No.4 in more than three years.
The £13 million Weldon Wellbeing Pavilion has opened in Kent
Charitable trust Freedom Leisure will operate it on behalf of Ebbsfleet Garden City Trust
The site features a state-of-the-art 3G pitch, a gym, courts, and a community hall
Freedom Leisure and Ebbsfleet Garden City Trust have opened the £13 million Weldon Wellbeing Pavilion – a new community wellbeing and sports facility.
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Weldon Wellbeing Pavilion offers a gym and group exercise studio, netball and tennis courts and a 3G pitch, alongside a versatile community hall, that will enhance opportunities for grassroots sport, physical activity and wellbeing initiatives within the growing Ebbsfleet Garden City community.
Ebbsfleet Development Corporation (EDC) worked alongside Redrow, Ebbsfleet Garden City Trust and Freedom Leisure to support delivery of the facility. Sara Waller, CEO of Ebbsfleet Development Corporation said: “Facilities like this matter because they turn new neighbourhoods into places where people can genuinely live well. That is what long-term placemaking is about, and it is what we are committed to delivering across Ebbsfleet.”
Ivan Horsfall Turner, CEO of charitable trust, Freedom Leisure, which will operate the Pavilion says: “At Freedom Leisure, we are passionate about creating opportunities for people of all ages and abilities to be active, improve their wellbeing and connect with others. This fantastic new facility provides a welcoming space where residents, schools, clubs and community groups can come together and we look forward to supporting the health and wellbeing of the Ebbsfleet community for many years to come.”
FOOTNOTE
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Ebbsfleet is one of a number of healthy new towns being built in the UK. Find out more in HCM’s sister magazine, CLADmag – here on desktop and here on mobile. NB, the UK government has reduced the original list of 12 new towns to seven, however, the principles remain the same. The locations are: Tempsford in Bedfordshire, Crews Hill and Chase Park in Enfield, Leeds South Bank in West Yorkshire, Victoria North in Greater Manchester, Thamesmead in Greenwich, Brabazon and the West Innovation Arc in South Gloucestershire and Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire
Sites originally proposed in Plymouth, Adlington in Cheshire, Heyford Park in Oxfordshire, Marlcombe in East Devon and Worcestershire Parkway, Wychavon will not be developed into new towns, but may continue to get support through existing housing programmes.
Somerset Council has recently awarded an interim two-year contract to Freedom Leisure to operate leisure centres in the East of Somerset – the Mendip area – after the previous operator, Fusion Lifestyle, went into administration. The new contract will run from 1 July 2026 for the following facilities:
Frome Leisure Centre
Strode Swimming & Fitness (Street)
Shepton Mallet Lido
Tor Sports & Leisure Centre (Glastonbury)
Wells Leisure Centre
3. Freedom Leisure has also been investing in solar energy as part of a decarbonisation and energy efficiency programme. It has recently invested in 600 solar PV panels for the LC Leisure Centre in Swansea which will power everything from the showers, to the lighting and heat the swimming pool. SolarSense did the installation and the costs were covered with support from Sport Wales and Swansea Council.
Daylight and wood panelling feature in the indoor cycling studio / Freedom Leisure
Moses Itauma is expected to be a major force in the heavyweight division, but whether he will get the chance to announce himself with a fight agains the likes of Tyson Fury, Oleksandr Usyk or Anthony Joshua remains to be seen.
In his last two fights, Itauma has bettered performances of Fury and ‘AJ’, halting Dillian Whyte in the opening round of their fight three years after he lasted six rounds with Fury, and dispatching of Jermaine Franklin within five rounds, three years after the American went the distance with Joshua.
Those triumphs have thrust Itauma up the rankings, where he is now positioned as the WBO mandatory challenger, poised for a shot at the victor of Daniel Dubois and Fabio Wardley’s anticipated rematch should his team decide on that route.
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However, should the youngster wish to face the old guard and take on Fury, the latter told iFL TV that any offer needs to be a lucrative one.
“Nothing, but obviously money [would tempt me to fight Itauma]. For sure, I am a prizefighter, show me the money and I will do the job, but at the end of the day, if there is no big money involved, what is the point? He doesn’t have a belt, he doesn’t have nothing, what is it for?”
“I don’t need to fight f***ing kids, do you know what I mean? Listen, Moses is a good kid, he is a great boxer and everything, brilliant, but unless its going to big money, why would I want to fight Moses for f**k all?”
Fury then went on to praise the talent of his fellow Queensberry heavyweight, admitting that Itauma ‘is definitely the real deal’ after regularly sparring the Kent-based sensation.
“I have had Moses in four or five camps and he is a good kid. Good puncher, good speed, good boxing IQ, he listens, which is very important, he takes it all on board and he is a good learner, as well.
“He has got speed and athleticism, he is definitely the real deal, if he wasn’t then I would say, but don’t forget that I am the one who has gassed him up for the last four years!”
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