DAYDREAMING IN THE TRADE PRADE, LONG ISLAND, N.Y. — Boo, Wyndham Clark.
Booooo.
Boooooooo.
Clark is your now two-time U.S. Open winner, and the scene at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, on the eastern end of Long Island, N.Y., felt as if he traded in his golf polo for a Boston Red Sox jersey and ate the last cookie at Tate’s, a local favorite here. Some unpleasant actions — a locker smash, a club throw, a run-in with the rules, some comments — likely led to the unpleasantries, and he also wasn’t helped that his Sunday playing partner, Scottie Scheffler, was playing for the career grand slam … on his 30th birthday … on Father’s Day.
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“Man, they definitely didn’t want me to win,” Clark said afterward.
“It’s pretty rare in an Open Championship or a major to have fans kind of boo against your shots or cheer for bad shots.”
He’s right, right?
Maybe a crowd un-favorite isn’t cheered. But vitriol? In individual golf tournaments, there aren’t away teams, nor are there really home teams, so I’m genuinely wondering then:
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Why would you come to a golf event to hate?
How’d we get here?
This also seems like it’s only going to worsen, isn’t it? The golf balls are out of the sleeve, so to say.
I’m not completely naive, of course, and I think I know the answers — among them being the lust to be loud and the desire to go viral — but, if you’re so inclined, you can reach out to me at nick.piastowski@golf.com to share your thoughts. Or better yet, offer a solution. I’ve said in this space before that banning phones would help — this is done at the Masters, and the patrons mostly behave.
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You can also just boo me in a message, too. I’ve heard worse.
As we look back at the U.S. Open week that was at Shinnecock, let’s make that observation No. 1 then. We’ll try for 49 more, and, to help the mood, we’ll mix in some Billy Joel, one of Long Island’s favorite sons.
2. I’m also being fueled by a bagel and coffee from Goldberg’s.
3. Notably, Clark said he understood why fans weren’t on his side. He also joked about the distaste with his caddie, Dave Pelekoudas.
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“If we heard someone cheer for me,” Clark said, “I’d go, ‘Oh, there’s one person that likes me. So we would kind of make jokes and make it maybe a little light-hearted.”
4. What does it say about Clark’s game that he still won?
5. Scheffler was impressed.
“The crowd was tough today,” he said. “I mean, New Yorkers, they are tough people. There was a good turnout from the fans. You like seeing the fans cheer for you. I think sometimes it can get a little too much when, you know, balls are kind of going off greens and you start hearing cheers. That felt a bit much to me.
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“But at the end of the day, I can’t control fan behavior. Being in the arena is not for everybody. You know, there’s been crowds that have been for me in my career; there’s been crowds that have been significantly against me in my career. …
“Being in the arena is not for everybody, and I think it shows a lot about Wyndham, how he handled not only this golf course but I think the crowd today as well and is a well-deserving champion.”
6. I liked this story here from the Fried Egg’s Kevin Van Valkenburg. He writes that we expect a lot from athletes.
7. What’s the over-under on total majors Clark will win? He’s 32. I’ll set the line at 2.5.
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8. How many pros are calling Julie Elion this week? She’s Clark’s sports psychologist.
9. Before he started Saturday’s third round, she told Clark this on the range:
“It’s not what happens to us. It’s how we respond to what happens to us.”
10. I won’t forget seeing Sam Burns playing with his son, Bear, as Clark was finishing his final round.
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11. Burns has now come thisclose in back-to-back U.S. Opens. What’s his total majors over-under? He’s 29. I’ll set the line at 1.5.
12. Here’s a bit of a look at the sports writing process. Early Sunday, in anticipation of a Clark runaway, I’d started on a story saying that while he won, no one else really lost, but I paused it to follow Burns.
Let’s continue that winners piece now.
13. There were the rebounders, like Burns, who a year ago, led after 54 holes, only to shoot an eight-over 78 on Sunday. Also among this bounceback group was Keith Mitchell, who played his first nine holes of the tournament at six-over par, then played six-under golf after that.
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“I might have not won,” he said Sunday, “but I felt like I achieved a lot more than potentially I thought I was going to after about two hours into the round.
“You can always look at winning a tournament, but I think I won the week after the start.”
14. Another rebounder was Harry Higgs, who tied for 43rd after going six for six in missed cuts this season on the PGA Tour. His press conference after Friday’s second round was one of the best I’ve heard, and you can watch it here.
15. Another rebounder was Tom Kim, who’d been as high as 11 in the world golf ranking but entered last week at 141st. At the Open, he was one of just three players to finish under par for the week.
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“You know, for the first time, I was able to really taste a major championship right in front of my fingertips,” Kim said. “I can go back this whole week and just see how close I actually am, and I think I finished three back, so a lot of little soft, small stuff that if I had done better, I definitely would have had a chance.
“But I’m not going to look at the week of what could have been. I’m going to look at the week where, you know, I haven’t had — this is my best finish in a major since the British Open in 2023, so a lot of positives.
“I think this is going to give me a big boost for the rest of the season.”
Five-under 65 on Friday. Two-over 72 on Saturday. Four-under 66 on Sunday. That’s seven-under golf.
After an eight-over 78 on Thursday, which included a two-stroke penalty for a club toss, turning a nine on the 6th hole into an 11. Sunday, he was reflective about the incident. After being asked if he thought he was being made an example of, Niemann said he thought he was.
“I was not trying to offend anyone,” Niemann said. “I think it was something more — it was more something kind of like against me. I was frustrated. I had my expectations, which are always super high. I was playing good golf. I knew it was going to be a tough week, a long week, a challenging week.
“After seeing that and knowing that the best score I could do was an eight, it kind of frustrated me a lot. I’m not happy doing that. I’m not proud about throwing a golf club. I get I deserve it in a way; I don’t know. But there’s nothing I can do. I feel like I learned from it.
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“To be honest, it was a good throw. [Here, he laughed.]
“I never try to offend anybody, not even the volunteers that were there. I know they do their job … and they do the best they can. They don’t pay them to be there; they do that because they like it. I was frustrated. …
“It was just frustration, but it’s more because of the passion that I have to get better and better.”
18. Also winning this week were a trio of players fighting ailments. Collin Morikawa has fought a back injury; after Friday’s second round, he said he still feels uncomfortable, and that he couldn’t comfortably hit cuts with irons into right-to-left wind and “the high bomb. But the two-time major winner tied for 17th.
19. A year ago, Sahith Theegala fought an oblique and a neck injury, missed events and finished 147th in the PGA Tour’s regular-season standings. At the Open, Theegala tied for 11th.
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20. Following a brain procedure in 2023, Gary Woodland has been managing PTSD, and his revelation of it, to Golf Channel’s Rex Hogaard during the Players Championship, will remain as one of the moments of the year. The 2019 U.S. Open winner tied for seventh.
21. There were also good stories. James Nicholas, a native New Yorker who hit the tournament’s first ball, shot a one-under 69 on Sundauy, and he tied for 65th.
22. We learned more about Miles Russell, the 17-year-old prodigy who touchingly brought his dad out from the crowd on Sunday — Father’s Day — to carry his bag up the 18th hole.
23. We learned more about Jackson Koivun, the college megastar who will play as a pro going forward. On Saturday and Sunday, Russell and Koivun played together.
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24. We learned more about Arni Sveinsson, who, though he missed the weekend cut, became the first golfer from Iceland to play in a U.S. Open. I wrote about him here.
25. There were also continuations. Aaron Rai, J.T. Poston and Alex Fitzpatrick showed stickiness. In the first major since his PGA Championship win, Rai tied for 11th.
26.J.T. Poston, the Memorial winner, tied for fourth.
27.Alex Fitzpatrick, who earned PGA Tour membership in April after a win with his brother, Matt, at the Zurich Classic, tied for 23rd.
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28. And we found out more about Sam Stevens, who tied for seventh — and on Saturday had this exchange with a reporter (the reporter’s questions are in italics):
Sam, you’ve been around for a while, obviously, but I think a lot of people are going to turn on their televisions tomorrow and say …
“Who the heck is Sam Stevens?” Stevens said.
Yeah, so who the heck is Sam Stevens?
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“I don’t know. I’m an average PGA Tour player, I guess,” Stevens said. “Yeah, I don’t know. That’s a good question. I’m just a golfer.
“Yeah, I’m excited for tomorrow, and hopefully I can play well enough to help a few more people get acquainted with who I am.”
29. Adam Scott is another winner. He’s now played in 100 straight majors, a streak that started with the 2001 Open Championship. At that time, Clark was 7.
31. A Scheffler thought. He wasn’t at his best — and tied for fourth. That is maybe the best sign of who he is — a less than fully charged Scheffler was bested by only three players. Tiger did that type of thing.
32. Scheffler completes the grand slam next year.
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33. What’s his total majors over-under? He turned 30 on Sunday. I’ll set the line at 7.5.
34. Does Bryson DeChambeau make the weekend at the Open Championship — and avoid missing the cut at every major this year?
35. I thought Jon Rahm would contend. He’s had success on poa annua greens. But he also missed the cut, playing his last 13 holes at eight-over par.
36. I’m about a 14-handicap. Had I played from the tips at Shinnecock and the wind was at its worst, I think I would have shot — hell, I’d still be out there.
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37. I didn’t hear one complaint about the course or the setup, which was impressive considering seemingly everyone complained in 2018, the last time Shinny hosted a U.S. Open.
38. The lack of fans on Saturday was odd. I think there were about a dozen spectators following the penultimate group.
39. I did learn all about the “Trade Parade” traffic of the area. Our lodging for the week was 12 miles from Shinnecock — and on Thursday, it took an hour and a half to get to the course. Saturday and Sunday? Twenty minutes.
43. Here are a few of my favorite reads this week from the on-site GOLF.com staff. From my batch, I hope you’ll like my story here on Sveinsson, the first Icelander to play in a U.S. Open.
44. From Michael Bamberger, his story here that looked at Clark was great.
45. From Alan Bastable, his story here on John Shippen was great.
46. From Josh Berhow, his story here that wrapped up the tournament was great.
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47. From James Colgan, his story here on the Turnesa family was great.
48. From Sean Zak his story here on Niemann[‘s penalty was great.
49. From videographers Darren Riehl and Emma Devine, the video below wrapping up Sunday play was great.
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50. Wednesday, I’m off to another U.S. Open course — Pinehurst. The trip is a boys trip for my nephew and I after he just graduated high school. Let me know at nick.piastowski@golf.com if you have must-dos when you’re out there.
Bonus! Time for a Long Island story. It’ll tell you a little about me, and it’ll tell you a little about the folks out here.
After college, I interned for a summer at Newsday newspaper. The experience was great. Played Bethpage. Ate at Friendly’s
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Went to a certain type of club.
Training for the internship was in Philly, and, after driving out, another out-of-town intern and I looked for a spot for a drink. We’d done zero research, and this was a few years before everyone had a cellphone, but we found what looked like a heavily trafficked road and saw a sign for “a restaurant and bar.” Hey, Applebee’s is a restaurant and bar. We pulled up. It had a valent. Hmm, maybe it was something more upscale. We walked in. There was a $50 dollar cover charge. Odd, but New York is expensive.
I made a bee line to the bar and ordered a Long Island iced tea. Felt like I needed to. Whatever. To my right, a woman was dancing. Hmm.
To my left, my intern friend was frozen. She motioned to look behind us.
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More dancers.
But no clothes.
On the way out, another no-clothed worker must have made sense of what happened, and she told us about another bar right down the street.
One analyst has a bone to pick with a specific region of golf fans following the U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills this past week.
Golf Channel’s Eamon Lynch believes a golf major shouldn’t ever come across Long Island, New York again after seeing what unfolded at one of the country’s storied courses in Shinnecock Hills during the U.S. Open.
“Long Island golf fans re a stain on the game of golf,” Lynch said during a segment on Monday following Wyndham Clark’s second U.S. Open victory for his career.
Golf Channel commentator Eamon Lynch looks on during the second round of the 125th U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa., on June 13, 2025.(Andrew Redington/Getty Images)
Lynch continued to unload on Long Islanders who attended the event, saying they “do not deserve” to see another major at any of its storied courses, including Bethpage Black, which hosted this past year’s Ryder Cup.
Clark was at the center of Lynch’s argument, as authorities had to kick patrons at Shinnecock Hills on Sunday out after heckling the U.S. Open’s leader. Fans were heard screaming, “Don’t choke Wyndham,” as well as, “Get in the bunker” during his final round.
“This isn’t a New York problem,” Lynch added. “It doesn’t happen at Winged Foot, doesn’t happen at Baltusrol on the other side of the Hudson River. It happens on Long Island every single time.”
As of now, the PGA of America has the PGA Championship set up for Bethpage Black in 2033.
At that very course, Rory McIlroy and other members of Team Europe were the subject of taunts and heckling that got in the way of the Ryder Cup this past summer. McIlroy was even seen stepping back from the ball to quip back at one of the hecklers, while others, including his friend Shane Lowry, were also quick to respond.
Then, during Team Europe’s victory run on American soil, McIlroy’s wife, Erica Stoll, had a beer thrown at her while walking on the course.
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Rory McIlroy talks with Golfweek journalist Eamon Lynch during the pro-am before the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Arnold Palmer Bay Hill Golf Course in Orlando, Fla., on March 1, 2023.(Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
“I don’t think we should ever accept that in golf,” McIlroy said at the time. “I think golf should be held to a higher standard than what was seen out there this week.”
While nothing of the sort was seen during the four rounds at the U.S. Open this past week, Lynch still believes Long Island golf fans have been too “repetitive” and “predictable” to allow high-stakes tournaments to be played there in the future.
“It’s the drunk crypto bros who buy a ticket with Daddy’s credit card,” Lynch said, even adding that some of the fans have been privileged in their lives to the point they’ve been “without ever being stopped for something they’ve said.”
“Maybe golf in its entirety needs to take the August National model,” he said. “No phones, no tolerance, no second chance.”
Shinnecock Hills saw Clark become somewhat of a villain among the crowd despite leading the pack throughout the tournament. He’s had a history of throwing clubs, and he notoriously was banned from Oakmont during the 2025 U.S. Open after damaging two lockers inside the clubhouse out of frustration. He’s no longer allowed on the property.
Wyndham Clark celebrates with his girlfriend Emily Tanner after winning the final round of the 126th U.S. Open Championship at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y., on June 21, 2026.(Tracy Wilcox/PGA Tour)
Kylian Mbappé celebrates one of his two goals in France’s 3-1 victory over Senegal at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
France overcame a lengthy weather delay to defeat Iraq 3-0 and strengthen their position at the 2026 FIFA World Cup on Monday night.
The Group stage match was suspended for more than two hours due to lightning activity near the stadium. Play was stopped at the end of the first half at 5:49pm local time and eventually resumed at 8:00pm.
Despite the interruption, France remained in control and secured a comfortable victory through a brace from captain Kylian Mbappe and a goal from Ousmane Dembele.
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Mbappe opened the scoring before the weather stoppage and added his second goal after play resumed. Dembele then wrapped up the win with his first-ever World Cup goal.
The result moved France onto six points from two matches and underlined their status as one of the favourites for the tournament.
Mbappe’s double was also a personal milestone. The 27-year-old now has 16 World Cup goals, leaving him just two short of the all-time record of 18 goals set earlier on Monday by Lionel Messi.
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France dominated throughout the contest, registering 16 shots compared to Iraq’s two, while the Asian side failed to record a shot on target.
Mbappe came close to completing his hat-trick late in the game but fired over the bar after breaking clear of the Iraq defence.
The victory extends France’s impressive start to the tournament as Didier Deschamps’ side continue their quest for another World Cup title, while Iraq face a difficult challenge to keep their hopes of reaching the knockout stage alive.
With Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, announcing his resignation this morning and Andy Burnham as a possible successor, the fitness, health and wellness sector is evaluating its position.
Burnham understands the importance of physical activity and has been a strong advocate, so is this what the sector is waiting for?
In an interview with HCM’s sister publication, Sports Management, before the pandemic Burnham – as Mayor of Manchester – spoke about physical activity being a passion for him and his goal to get 75 per cent of people in Manchester physically activity by 2025.
He used his devolved power in Manchester to pivot GPs from a medical model to a social model, expanding their role to treat isolation and physical inactivity as aggressively as clinical symptoms.
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Under the Active Practices Charter, GP surgeries across Greater Manchester partnered with local leisure trusts to encourage GPs to connect patients with walking groups and local fitness sessions.
He also championed Parkrun and the Daily Mile in schools.
According to Sport England Active Lives data, 76.4 per cent of adults in Manchester exercise for at least 30 minutes a week, with 66.3 per cent meeting the WHO guidelines of 150 minutes. The smoking rate is also relatively low at 17 per cent.
“I’ve always had a simple belief that activity is good for people and also good for society,” said Burnham.
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“If physical activity was placed at the heart of primary care, we’d be in a different league in terms of health.
“Can we get to a point where exercise referral – linked to a full package of nutritional advice and counselling – is the default option as a starting point rather than us turning immediately to medication?”
Burnham has also argued that preventative healthcare cannot be mandated from Westerminster, but must be built from bottom-up leadership in local neighbourhoods.
UK Active CEO, Cameron Saunders, said on LinkedIn that he’s cautiously optimistic about what a Burnham government might be able to deliver:
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“Physical activity in primary care – Burnham has always believed exercise referral should be the default NHS offer, not an afterthought. As Mayor he pushed hard to embed it in Greater Manchester’s devolved health system. As PM, he’d have the levers to reform the GP contract – specifically the Quality Outcomes Framework – to incentivise activity referrals nationally; that’s a potential structural shift our sector has been waiting decades for.
“The Manchester Model, on a national scale. Burnham’s blueprint – Daily Mile in schools, social prescribing, active travel infrastructure, community-based provision – is proven. He’ll hopefully want to roll it out everywhere. For leisure operators, that means new commissioning frameworks, stronger referral pipelines and genuine integration with public health.
“Gyms as NHS delivery partners. He said it explicitly: gyms need to become the standardised, recognised exercise referral option that GPs can confidently prescribe to. That’s not a nice-to-have – it’s a policy architecture waiting to be built, delivered across public and private. Will he recognise it’a time to stop taxing prevention in order to fund cure?
“Prevention over prescription. Burnham has always been frustrated that the NHS reaches for medication before lifestyle intervention. Let’s hope a Burnham government would push hard on this – moving physical activity from the margins of health policy to the centre.
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“After “Two Year Kier” I’m cautiously optimistic about what a Burnham government might be able to deliver, you’ve got to live in hope, right?”
Oct 6, 2024; London, United Kingdom; New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers (8) the ball against the Minnesota Vikings in the first half at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
The Steelers are sorting through a mess of their own making with Mike McCarthy at HC and Aaron Rodgers at QB. These two are going to collect headlines whether there’s success (unlikely) or failure (more likely).
Pretty quietly, the team has been collecting ex-Vikings players, too.
Pittsburgh’s official social media passed along word of adding WR Joaquin Davis. He’s a tall and super fast depth receiver who got shown the door after GM Nolan Teasley took over (signing some Seattle talent was deemed more desirable). Davis will be looking to prove helpful to McCarthy & Rodgers as he tries to secure long-term employment in The Steel City.
Doing so meant reuniting with Rodgers, both of whom played in Green Bay. Where Tonyan differentiates himself from Rodgers is that the TE wanted to play in the Twin Cities, leading to an opportunity to do so. Meanwhile, Rodgers desired to do so but the Vikings (mercifully) opted against the option. Given how things unfolded in 2025, signing Rodgers for a single season may have been the better move had the only criteria been on-field competence.
The wild part in the broader conversation is that Davis and Tonyan are far from alone when it comes to former Vikings getting a chance over in Pittsburgh.
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Aug 16, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Broncos wide receiver Joaquin Davis (80) pulls in the ball in the second half against the Arizona Cardinals bat Empower Field at Mile High. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images
Consider some of the former Vikings putting in work for the Steelers:
DL Esezi Otomewo
DL Dean Lowry
LB Jamin Davis
TE Robert Tonyan
WR Joaquin Davis
OL Doug Nester
As it relates to Davis specifically, a spot on the 53-man roster always appeared difficult. Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, and Jauan Jennings aren’t going anywhere. Securing a spot as the WR4 or WR5 was going to be supremely difficult.
Standing at 6’4″ and running a forty in the 4.3 range is always going to attract attention in the NFL. Davis, predictably, has been getting chances. Rodgers isn’t the deep-ball assassin that he once was but he’s still above average. Maybe Davis can prove helpful.
Jan 12, 2026; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Houston Texans wide receiver Christian Kirk (13) runs against Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback James Pierre (42) during the second half of an AFC Wild Card Round game at Acrisure Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.
Considering the situation from the other direction — ex-Steelers putting in work as Vikings — means considering a more modest list. Most notable, perhaps, is corner James Pierre. He’s joined by d-lineman Isaiahh Loudermilk.
Prior to becoming the DC in Minnesota, Brian Flores was the world’s most overqualified linebacker coach with Mike Tomlin’s Steelers.
Since the Vikings and the Steelers play in opposite conferences, a Super Bowl battle is a possibility. Seeing that incredibly unlikely matchup take place would mean seeing some ex-Vikings trying to get revenge on football’s biggest stage.
LoLdle answers for June 23, 2026 are finally revealed for fans who got stuck today. Puzzle iteration 1447 can be quite a hassle if players are not familiar with all of the characters and their aspects. That said, those actively grinding LoL should be able to decipher the clues by following the hints correctly.
Nevertheless, here is the Quote puzzle in the 1447th entry of LoLdle:
“Peace, no matter the cost.”
All League of Legends LoLdle answers 1447th edition (June 23, 2026)
New temporary game mode: Worlds Mayhem 🏆 Build your dream roster. Simulate a Worlds run. Can your team become Worlds Champions? Play it now on Inspired by the awesome 82-0 game.
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The League of Legends LoLdle answers for June 23 are shown below:
Classic: Lillia
Quote: Karma
Ability: Bel’Veth; Bonus: W (Above and Below)
Emoji: Naafiri
SplashArt: Cho’Gath;Bonus: Shan Hai Scrolls Cho’Gath
The Classic answer for June 23’s LoLdle is Lillia. Next, the Quote puzzle points to Karma, who is also one of the better and more feasible choices in the support role in the current League of Legends meta.
Next, the Ability clue refers to Bel’Veth’s W ability named “AboveandBelow.” The Emoji puzzle, on the other hand, indicates Naafiri and her characteristics. Lastly, the Splash Art puzzle wraps up by including Cho’Gath’s Shan Hai Scrolls skin.
Former Super Eagles captain William Troost-Ekong has declared that Lionel Messi is the greatest footballer of all time following the Argentine’s latest World Cup record.
Messi made history after scoring twice in Argentina’s 2-0 win over Austria, becoming the highest goalscorer in World Cup history with 18 goals.
Reacting to the achievement while working as a pundit on SuperSport, Troost-Ekong had no doubts about where Messi stands among football’s all-time greats.
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“Messi is the GREATEST,” Troost-Ekong said.
“Lionel Messi is just something special. He does things other players cannot do.”
The Nigerian defender also praised Cristiano Ronaldo for his remarkable achievements in football but believes Messi’s success at the World Cup gives him the edge in the long-running debate.
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According to Troost-Ekong, Messi’s triumph with Argentina at the 2022 FIFA World Cup and his outstanding performances at the 2026 tournament have strengthened his claim as the greatest player in history.
The former Super Eagles captain pointed to Messi’s current form in the United States, where the Argentine has already scored five goals in just two matches.
Troost-Ekong believes those achievements, combined with Messi’s ability to produce moments of magic on the biggest stage, settle the argument over who is football’s greatest player.
William Troost-Ekong on World Cup punditry duty with Supersports
“Messi is the GREATEST,” he repeated.
The 39-year-old Argentina captain is currently the leading scorer at the 2026 FIFA World Cup and has helped the defending champions secure a place in the knockout stage.
One of the summer’s biggest potential transfers has made his intentions known.
Speaking after Argentina’s 2-0 win over Austria on Monday, Atletico Madrid striker Julian Alvarez told assembled media he wants a transfer from the La Liga side, saying, according to an ESPN translation, “I think the best thing for everyone is a transfer. I want to fulfill my dream.”
Though Alvarez didn’t elaborate on what — or what team — constitutes his dream, he has already been at the centre of the perpetual tug-of-war between Real Madrid and Barcelona atop Spanish soccer’s hierarchy this summer.
Barca, which will require a new No. 9 to replace the departed Robert Lewandowski, has been linked with the Argentinian striker since before the domestic season ended. The reigning La Liga champions are Alvarez’s preferred landing spot, according to ESPN.
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Now that Alvarez has made public his desire to move on from Atleti, the El Clásico foes will likely renew their historic rivalry in the transfer market. Though Madrid was the first to submit a bid for the attacker, Barca presumably has an edge if only through a greater appetite on Atleti’s side to do business with it as opposed to its local rival.
Since arriving at Atletico Madrid from Manchester City in 2024, Alvarez has scored 49 times across 106 appearances in all competitions.
Kansas City Chiefs superfan and NFL analyst Nick Wright voiced strong support for the organization’s decision to bet on its young wide receiver trio rather than make a big move at the position, as reported by ESPN. The team has been linked to re-signing free agent Tyreek throughout the offseason.
Speaking on “First Things First” on Monday, Wright endorsed the front office’s draft-focused philosophy as the smart path to sustaining Patrick Mahomes’ dominance in the long term. He outlined the Chiefs’ ideology around trusting Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy and Tyquan Thornton.
Thanks for the submission!
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“They were never going to, in my opinion, overspend at wide receiver because they feel like they have spent at wide receiver, and they have to have those guys pan out,” Wright said. “It is a lot of ifs they are relying on, but that is the philosophy.
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“And that is why I think they don’t make what I consider some of the panic moves some of the other AFC contenders I have seen them make, to try to, ‘Oh, this didn’t work out, we will trade a couple picks to try to fill in there.’ That is not how they are going to do business.”
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Nick Wright’s comments come amid ongoing chatter about a potential Tyreek Hill reunion. The speedy veteran receiver, who’s now a free agent, was once a cornerstone in the Chiefs’ offense. However, the franchise isn’t taking a chance on him despite a diminished value post-injury.
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Nick Wright describes the Chiefs’ internal feeling on the offense’s struggle in 2025
The Chiefs struggled to produce on offense last season, costing them playoff football in the process. On “First Things First,” Nick Wright noted that the Chiefs aren’t considering it a disaster, as he described the internal feelings around the offense’s struggles in 2025.
“They believe internally that last year’s lack of production was a combination of injuries and, on it, being unavailable: the suspension, plus Xavier Worthy getting hurt immediately and not being 100%,” Wright said.
“Coaching, which is that they replaced wide receiver coach and offensive coordinator, and a total lack of any running game threat that allowed teams to only play the pass. That’s, you know, that is one bucket of this. They think all of those things (played a role in the lack of production).”
Nick Wright and many other Chiefs fans are expecting something different from the offense next season. The team will be looking to have their wide receivers available throughout the upcoming season, as they’ve made significant additions to improve the run game with names like veteran Kenneth Walker.
A Minnesota Vikings fan looked on intently on Sept. 14, 2025, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, during the second half of the matchup against the Atlanta Falcons at U.S. Bank Stadium. The afternoon crowd reflected a mix of anticipation and frustration as the game’s momentum shifted late, leaving fans hanging on every possession in another tense home-field showdown. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images.
Best guess on this end of the internet is that Vikings defender Ivan Pace Jr. is facing a tough battle to get onto the final roster. Minnesota would likely be keen to participate in a trade. That’s far from gospel truth, though.
Mr. Pace is a 25-year-old linebacker who offers a pile of aggression and physicality. Coaches, as Mike Zimmer used to say, would “rather say whoa than go.” Basically, coaches would rather need to restrain a player operating with too much compete than motivate somebody who doesn’t appear particularly motivated.
Add it all up and there is a lot to like in Pace. He’s a homegrown talent who is young and who has the potential to improve. Better yet, his mentality appears perfectly-suited for life working under the tutelage of Brian Flores.
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With all of that being said, what of the subtraction chatter?
Demoted Vikings Defender Ivan Pace Jr. in Danger of Subtraction
All along, Pace has been doubted, largely due to being a smaller player.
Looking back, there’s simply no way he should have fallen out of the 2023 NFL Draft. Seeing a redo take place would involve the blitzing specialist going reasonably high. Not a 1st and possibly not somebody for the 2nd or 3rd, but the 4th or 5th would represent good value. Bringing him to town as an undrafted player was an instance of highway robbery from former GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah.
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Minnesota Vikings linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. kneels quietly in the end zone during pregame moments, with Dec 25, 2025 set at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis as players prepare for a Christmas Day matchup against the Detroit Lions, capturing a focused and reflective scene before kickoff in a divisional showdown. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images
Since being promoted to a starting position as a rookie, Pace has been slowly declining. Or, at least, his portion of the pie has decreased, leaving him with less and less snaps.
Consider just his overall snap count on defense across his three years:
2023: 706
2024: 414
2025: 323
Obviously, that’s a discouraging trend. Making matters even worse is that Pace was involved in all seventeen games in 2025 versus just eleven in 2024. Not only did he play less snaps, but Pace played less snaps while playing six more games.
Another factor to consider is the broader injury turmoil for the ’25 Flores defense. Guys like Jonathan Greenard, Andrew Van Ginkel, Blake Cashman, and Josh Metellus all missed time. In theory, that should have created more work for Pace.
I recognize that a pair of those players are edge rushers and one a safety, but the Flores defense involves shuffling aplenty. Metellus, for instance, is commonly tasked with playing linebacker. Not having Metellus therefore creates a need for somebody to eat into those linebacker snaps (such as a linebacker).
And then not having Greenard and Van Ginkel for some games meant moving Eric Wilson up to edge rusher. Seeing Wilson vacate his normal off-ball linebacker spot didn’t lead to a major boost in playing time for Pace.
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Oct 20, 2024; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. (0) returns a fumble 36 yards for a touchdown as linebacker Andrew Van Ginkel (43) and cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. (7) look to block against the Detroit Lions during the fourth quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images.
Per Over the Cap, Ivan Pace is demanding a $3.52 million cap hit in 2026. None of that money would get left behind as dead money in either of a cut or a trade.
Best guess is that a cut isn’t going to happen. Added cap space is always to be coveted, but Minnesota could have already moved on had there been a desire to add cap room. What appears more likely is a willingness to move on from Pace if somebody offers a Day 3 pick. In that scenario, the Vikings defender would give back cap space while further fortifying the draft ammo.
Otherwise, Pace can be kept around as the LB4 behind Cashman, Wilson, and Jake Golday. He can show improvement (cutting down on missed tackles and not getting eviscerated when in pass coverage) so as to demand a contract in Minnesota. Or he’ll be allowed to walk next offseason, putting a comp pick on the board.
Ivan Pace, 25, hasn’t seen the final chapter of his story written. He is nevertheless needing to overcome the sort of doubt that made him such a fascinating story as an undrafted talent who quickly proved capable of shining in the NFL.
Fourteen years on from the moment Nadiem Amiri joined Hoffenheim’s youth teams and played for a young coach called Julian Nagelsmann, the pair are together in the USA, Canada and Mexico representing Germany at the World Cup.
“If you have a youth coach and you know each other early and for a long time, then it’s always a special relationship,” said Amiri. “There were so many amazing moments together and that shapes us. We have a good connection, and he was always in touch even when he wasn’t my coach. I have a lot of respect for Julian and am grateful to him.”
And after just the second game at this tournament, Nagelsmann can be grateful that Amiri delivered what he wanted from the midfielder exactly when the team needed it. After all, it was the 29-year-old’s perfectly delivered cross that set up Deniz Undav for Germany’s equalizer in Toronto on Saturday.
“I knew my moment would come,” said Amiri, who has met in an exemplary fashion the expectation that Julian Nagelsmann has of him as a substitute who delivers instant results.
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Nagelsmann told ARD at the end of May that Amiri’s emotional energy had played a role in his inclusion in the squad. “Especially in the heat, when a game is petering out after the 70th minute because the teams are tired, [Amiri] can still spark something with his positive tenacity.”
Amiri’s long road back to the top
The turning point in his recent career was a surprise move to Mainz in January 2024.
“The move to Mainz was the best move of my life. At the time, I just wanted to be happy again and play. I never would have thought I’d be sitting here two years later, but in football you never know,” Amiri said, as Germany prepares for a World Cup game against Ecuador. “I always believed in my qualities and I’m very proud.”
After helping the club to stave off relegation, Amiri helped Mainz reach Europe in the following season. In the campaign just finished, Amiri took a jump, scoring more goals and driving Mainz to the Conference League quarterfinals. Notably, the 29-year-old scored all 10 of the penalties he took, including two in one Bundesliga game.
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Amiri returned to Germany’s squad in March 2025 following a five-year absence, admitting that while it hurt being out of contention for so long it didn’t break him. Indeed, Amiri’s openness about his family and what it means to him to be here is a reminder of his strength of will, but also the impact of a supportive inner circle.
“I can’t find that many words to say about him [father] because if I did, I’d have to talk for hours about how grateful I am. I love him more than anything,” said Amiri. “Every moment on the pitch is for them [family]. When I assisted the goal, they were celebrating in the crowd as if they had delivered the cross. It’s an incredible moment,” said Amiri, adding that 20 of his 25 family members were at game in Toronto to watch him live, many for the first time. “With it being my World Cup debut and all that happened, it was a perfect day.”
Nadiem Amiri with his family after the gameImage: Markus Ulmer/Ulmer/Teamfoto/IMAGO
From Afghanistan to America
Amiri’s parents fled war-torn Afghanistan in the 1980s, settling in the West German city of Ludwigshafen. His father had a trucking business and his mother was employed at a care home for 20 years as the pair labored to create safety and opportunity for their children. Amiri was born in 1996 and played on the streets of the city with his older brother. His parents then drove him to practice in Kaiserslautern, some 60 kilometers (37 miles) away, where his football journey began.
“In the tough times, I realized that for me, it’s the family that is always there. A slump like that was good for me at the time,” said Amiri.
Whether it was the path to youth football as a child, the setbacks in Leverkusen or the half-decade long absence from the Germany team, Amiri has overcome the challenges in his life one after another. In September 2025, Amiri came off the bench to score his first goal for Germany and help turn the tide in Cologne against Northern Ireland. In Toronto, at the World Cup, it was his cross that did the same. Deniz Undav might be Germany’s supersub and the man making the headlines right now, but he’s not the only one capable of making a game-changing impact for this team.
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