Alex Iwobi found the net as Fulham strengthened their bid for European football with a 2-1 victory over Tottenham Hotspur at the Stadium of Light.
Fulham made a bright start and took the lead in the seventh minute through Harry Wilson. The Welsh winger later turned provider, setting up Iwobi for his side’s second goal just past the half-hour mark.
The Nigerian midfielder has now scored in back-to-back league matches for the Cottagers. The 29-year-old has recorded four goals and three assists in 22 Premier League appearances this season.
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His fellow Nigerians, Calvin Bassey and Samuel Chukwueze, also featured in the encounter. Bassey played the entire match, while Chukwueze came off the bench to replace Wilson with 18 minutes remaining.
Floyd Mayweather is poised to return to the professional scene in September, as he takes on rival Manny Pacquiao for a second time, and super-middleweight legend Andre Ward has issued ‘TBE’ with a warning ahead of that fight.
Mayweather famously boasts a professional record of 50-0, having retired off the back of a victory in his lucrative showdown with Conor McGregor in 2017, fighting solely in exhibition bouts in the years that have followed.
“Floyd Mayweather’s return is bitter sweet to me. I don’t mind Floyd and Manny [fighting each other], but if Floyd starts to campaign, which it seems like he is, as a professional fighter doing real sanctioned fights, I am struggling with that.
“I don’t want to see Floyd take a loss against a guy that we’ve never heard of. I don’t want to see Floyd take a loss against a younger fighter, because the younger fighters, these days, they play for keeps.
“They are not so enamoured with Floyd, where they won’t try to beat him up. They don’t love Floyd so much where they don’t want that ‘0’ on their record. They want to be able to say, ‘I did that to Floyd’, because then their name is forever etched in history.
“There is nothing that they can do, before or after that, that is going to be bigger than them giving Floyd his first loss.”
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Before Mayweather can fully focus on his Filipino foe, he first takes on heavyweight icon Mike Tyson in an exhibition contest, which is reported to take place in the Democratic Republic of Congo, on Saturday, April 25.
Rhian Wilkinson intends to continue rotating her goalkeepers during Wales’ Women’s World Cup qualifying campaign.
Wales kick off their bid to reach the 2027 World Cup in Brazil when they face the Czech Republic at the City Stadium in Uherske Hradiste on Tuesday.
Wilkinson has regularly switched between her two frontline keepers, Olivia Clark and Safia Middleton-Patel, during her time as Wales head coach and says that approach will continue.
“Both of them have performed for Wales but I don’t feel either of them really grabbed the jersey yet and so I try not to make it [so] that it’s a combative environment,” Wilkinson said.
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“They know before they come in which games they’re going to be playing, so I try to tell them that you have just got to perform in your game.
“If they can do that consistently, they’ll grab the number one, but I do not feel one of them has taken that number one role yet.”
Feb 5, 2025; New Orleans, LA, USA; The NFLPA logo at press conference at the Super Bowl LIX media center at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
Three names have emerged as finalists in the NFL Players Association’s search for a permanent executive director, according to reports from ESPN and The Athletic.
The list includes interim executive director David White, former NFLPA president and later chief strategy officer JC Tretter and American Conference commissioner Tim Pernetti, as first reported by ESPN.
The NFLPA’s 32 player representatives could be asked to vote on the position at their annual meeting on March 13-18 in San Diego.
The search followed the resignation of NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell Jr. last July, one month after a series of controversies were revealed, including a reported conflict of interest and a decision to hide key parts of an arbitration ruling from the players.
Howell lasted only two years after the former chief financial officer of technology consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton was selected by a 10-person NFLPA executive committee. The NFLPA was criticized for what was viewed by some as a secretive 16-month process that led to Howell’s hiring.
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He was replaced by former player Tretter, the NFLPA’s chief strategy officer, but he also stepped down in the wake of the Howell controversy after he had presided over the search process. Tretter told ESPN in 2025 that confidentiality in the search process became more important after leaks to the media in previous elections.
Labor executive White has been in charge of the NFLPA on an interim basis since August.
NFLPA president Jalen Reeves-Maybin, a linebacker with the Chicago Bears, in a statement published by ESPN on Friday, said the executive committee is “conducting a comprehensive search that includes a strong pool of highly qualified candidates. Out of respect for the integrity of the process and those involved, we will not comment on or disclose individual names.”
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A finalist when Howell was picked for the post in 2023, White has labor experience as national executive director and chief negotiator of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA) from 2009-21.
Tretter, who played offensive line for the Green Bay Packers (2014-16) and Cleveland Browns (2017-21), was player president of the NFLPA from 2020-24. He told CBS Sports upon his resignation that he wasn’t involved in the confidentiality agreement that Howell made with the league to keep from players an arbitrator’s rulings on possible collusion by NFL owners.
Pernetti, the American Conference commissioner since June 2024, is a former president of IMG Academy, an athletic powerhouse boarding school in Bradenton, Fla.
Media reports listed other candidates, who are not finalists, as former players Dominique Foxworth, Matt Schaub and Jeff Saturday. Former NFLPA president Foxworth (2012-14) and Saturday, who are now ESPN commentators, said they were interviewed by the firm running the search but not by the executive committee.
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Schaub, a former player rep and candidate for the post in 2023, did not respond to attempts for comment, per ESPN.
Shane Lowry’s face flushed red. It wasn’t the effects of the Florida sun.
Standing on the tee of the par-4 16th at PGA National on Sunday afternoon, the Irishman looked stunned — suddenly unsure of what he was seeing or feeling — moments after flaring a long iron into the water, a shot so errant it barely crossed dry land before disappearing with a splash.
Only minutes earlier, Lowry had held a three-shot lead at the Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches, in command of the tournament and poised to end a decade-plus stroke-play drought on American soil at an event where he had come agonizingly close before.
Instead, the swing marked the start of a shocking collapse.
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The resulting 6 — salvaged only by a deft up-and-down from a greenside bunker — was the first of two consecutive double bogeys that shrank his lead to one and then erased it altogether, opening the door for Nico Echavarria, playing in the group ahead, to claim his third PGA Tour victory.
“To be honest, I didn’t think it was going to be possible with a three-shot lead that he had,” Echavarria said. “But the Bear Trap played harder today than any of the other three days. It was playing into the wind.”
That’s one way to see it. But Lowry — a major champion and match-play hero — wasn’t mauled by PGA National’s notorious closing stretch. His wounds were self-inflicted.
“I’m obviously extremely disappointed,” Lowry said. “I had the tournament in my hands and I threw it away. What more can I say? That’s twice so far this year. I’m getting good at it.”
The turnabout was startling for a player who had appeared fully in command. Lowry entered the final round fresh off a Saturday 63. Tied for the lead to start the day, he surged in front with a five-under five-hole stretch, highlighted by an eagle on the par-5 10th.
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It seemed finally time for Lowry to break through in his adoptive home of Florida, where his links-born game has adapted nicely. He has four top-11 finishes in his last four starts at PGA National, including three consecutive top-fives. The most agonizing came in 2022, when he reached the 72nd hole needing a birdie to force a playoff but fell short when a sudden squall swept across the course. That was tough to swallow. But Lowry drew a distinction between the disappointment of 2022 and Sunday’s heartache.
“I wouldn’t say that was a stumble,” he said. “I’d say I was beaten that day. But I beat myself today.”
Before his round, Lowry had spent time on the range with mental coach Bob Rotella. The two reportedly talked about keeping things simple and staying relaxed. For most of the afternoon, it seemed to be working.
Then came the tee shot on 16, followed by additional calamity on the par-3 17th, which brought the day into sharp relief. Playing one group ahead of Lowry, Echavarria pushed his tee shot, which flirted perilously with the water but settled beneath the hole, leaving a relatively straightforward birdie putt. Seizing on the good break, Echavarria drained the putt then learned from his caddie walking to the 18th tee that Lowry had found the water again with another wildly errant tee shot.
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Echavarria finished with a tidy 66, completing a bogey-free round on one of the Tour’s sternest tests. It capped a big week on both a professional and personal front. On Friday, he and his wife had closed on a nearby home. They’d also acquired a dog, a Bernedoodle.
Lowry, by contrast, hadn’t closed on anything. And all that he’d acquired was another line item in a list of tortured finishes, including at last year’s Truist Championship outside Philadelphia, where he entered Sunday with the lead only to fade down the stretch and fall to Sepp Straka.
Needing a long-shot eagle on 18 to force a playoff at PGA National, Lowry knocked his second shot into a bunker and walked off with par. His face was still flushed, his body language slumped.
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“The hardest thing about today is I’ve never won in front of my four-year-old, and she was waiting for me,” Lowry said. “I only wanted it for her today. I didn’t want it for — I don’t care about anything else. I wanted it so bad. Just to see her little ginger hair running down the 18th green would have been the most special thing in the world. I thought I had it. I thought I was going to win.”
After the Truist last year, Lowry had declined to meet with the press. This time he faced up to every question— even the one he couldn’t answer.
What in the heck happened?
Lowry shrugged. “Golf does strange things to you at times, and it certainly did it to me today.”
Giga Kick gears up for his initial Sydney outing in almost 18 months by tackling the Challenge Stakes at Randwick, paving the way to The Championships.
Since placing second to Bella Nipotina in the 2024 The Everest (1200m), the premier sprinter hasn’t raced in Sydney, with the 1000m Saturday sprint at Randwick serving as his first benchmark if conditions permit.
The trainer Douglas arrived with Giga Kick in Sydney on Saturday, intending to gauge the gelding’s readiness during Tuesday morning’s exercise before deciding on entry.
Attentive to weather patterns, Douglas is enthusiastic about entering the gelding to sharpen up for the Group 1 T J Smith Stakes (1200m) at Randwick on April 4.
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“Nash Rawiller will ride him. He will probably have a sit on him on Tuesday morning,” Douglas said.
“Everything seems to be on target.
“Hopefully we will get a bit of give in the ground. That’s going to be the main thing for him.
“It will be another run towards the T J and then hopefully we’re ready to go.”
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Douglas mirrors the 2023 blueprint that saw Giga Kick third to Passive Aggressive in the Challenge Stakes (1000m), then second to I Wish I Win in the T J Smith Stakes.
Top Reward from the same barn has qualified for Sydney travel after a strong fifth behind Australian Guineas champion Observer in the Autumn Stakes (1400m) at Caulfield on resumption.
Pakistan’s captain Salman Agha (L), Usman Khan and coach Mike Hesson in Colombo. (PTI Photo)
When Pakistan look back at the 2026 T20 World Cup, they will remember it as one that got away. They had a lot running in their favour — staying put in Sri Lanka, playing matches on surfaces of their choice, winning important tosses — but they couldn’t deliver what was expected of them: consistency. As a result, Salman Ali Agha’s team is out of the competition before the semifinals, ensuring that the Sri Lanka leg of this World Cup ended on Saturday.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!It’s true that, the India defeat apart, they weren’t exactly shambolic. The New Zealand wash-out and a Harry Brook classic played significant roles in them not making the semifinals, but then World Cups are decided by fine margins.
T20 World Cup: Salman Ali Agha press conference after PAK vs SL
There were already talks about Agha’s resignation from captaincy, and the right-hander said at the post-match press conference on Saturday that “such decisions shouldn’t be emotional”. “We will go back and take some time and then make the required decision,” Agha said.But he can’t deny that there were some serious decision-making errors that hurt Pakistan in this World Cup. While, in the India game, their decision to win the toss and field at the Premadasa was suicidal, not bowling a second finger-spinner right after dismissing Abhishek Sharma in the first over was equally poor. But those decisions only cost Pakistan pride, because they managed to get into the Super 8s.But there were enough hints in the first four games that Babar Azam was looking a misfit at No 4. Still, the Pakistan team management decided to persist with him, and it was his slow batting in the England game that was one of the reasons behind the defeat. In that match, Babar managed a 24-ball 25 and couldn’t accelerate. Pakistan’s 164-9 was taken down by Brook’s century.Agha, though, tried to defend the senior batter, who was finally dropped in the Sri Lanka game. “Babar had a different role in this World Cup. He was a No. 4 and we needed a batter who could come in the middle-order and give us stability and save us from collapse,” the captain argued.It took the decision-makers — coach Mike Hesson and captain Agha — the entire tournament to figure out that Fakhar Zaman is best suited as an opener. The attacking left-hander was finally given a go against Sri Lanka at the top of the order, where he smashed a 42-ball 84 that gave the team some hope.“We make the playing XI based on conditions and situations. The captain and the coach make the 11 together. We had to win this game in 13 overs or win by 65 runs and play according to that. As for Fakhar, he didn’t come to the tournament with good form, but yes, right now, you can say that he should have played the first four matches,” Agha said.According to the captain, it’s the team’s inability to take correct decisions in crunch moments that have hurt them in ICC tournaments. “Whenever there is pressure, our decision-making is not as good as it should be. When you come to the World Cup or ICC events, there is always pressure,” Agha said, bluntly.It may well have been a dig at the way Shaheen Afridi, the premier pace bowler, often let his team down at crucial junctures, bowling the wrong length. It almost cost them Saturday’s game as well, when he conceded 22 trying to defend 28 off the last over.Amidst the doom and gloom, the performances of Farhan with the bat and mystery spinner Usman Tariq should come as a breath of fresh air.
REASONS FOR PAKISTAN’S EARLY OUSTER
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A batting line-up overreliant on Sahibzada Farhan and stuck in the past.
Former captain Babar Azam struggled with a strike rate of just 112.34
The middle order repeatedly collapsed in high-pressure games.
Made tactical blunders against big teams like India where they elected to field on a spin-friendly pitch and introduced Usman Tariq late.
The death bowling was poor too Against England, Pakistan failed to defend 165, allowing Harry Brook to smash a century. Even in the final win against Sri Lanka, Shaheen Afridi conceded 4, 6, 6, 6 in the final over, nearly losing a game they dominated.
Check in every week for the unfiltered opinions of our writers and editors as they break down the hottest topics in the sport, and join the conversation by tweeting us at @golf_com. This week, we discuss Shane Lowry’s epic collapse at the PGA National, the future of off-week events like the Cognizant and more.
Shane Lowry led the Cognizant Classic by three with three to play on Sunday at PGA National, but he found the water off the tee on both 16 and 17, doubled both and handed Nico Echavarria the title. What in the world happened to Lowry? And when’s the last time we’ve seen a Sunday collapse this rough?
Alan Bastable, executive editor (@alan_bastable): Doubt is what happened. Lowry said his fanned iron into the water on 16 “completely threw me,” and, from that moment on, he never was able to pop his wheels back on. It was shocking because it was Lowry — a guy we’re used to seeing deliver in the nerviest of spots — but it also was wholly relatable, because this is what golf, perhaps more cruelly than any sport, does to players of all abilities: one negative thought begets more negative thoughts, and before you know it, you can barely draw back the club let alone find a tucked pin from 200 yards out. Lowry said it all when he said, “I just felt like it was weird out there.” The last Sunday like this one? Gosh, there have been many. Fleetwood’s oil-leaking finish at the Travelers last year comes to mind. Jack Hirsh, associate equipment editor (@JR_HIRSHey): Are we used to seeing Shane Lowry deliver in the nerviest of spots? The Open Championship was seven years ago now! Since then, the only event he’s won was a team event with Rory McIlroy and the only other time he came up clutch was last fall at the Ryder Cup. Aside from that, he’s been the best player at PGA National over the past five years, a tournament that doesn’t draw the star power it once did, and has no wins to show for it. There was also his three-wack in Philly last season. All of this is to say that something clearly changed in Shane Lowry since the Open, where he can’t seem to get over the hump unless he’s part of a team. Seems that came back to bite him here. As for recent comparisons, non-Fleetwood division, double-double is tough, and frankly something I’d rather see at In-N-Out, but Joel Dahmen bogeyed the last three to lose in Puntacanna last year and Collin Morikawa bogeyed three in a row to lose a 7-shot lead to Jon Rahm in 2023 at the Sentry.
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Josh Sens, senior writer, (@joshsens): The list of late meltdowns is long and painful. I’d agree that Fleetwood stands out as the most recent of a similar scale. Speaking of that, I was glad to see Lowry take a page from the Fleetwood playbook and not shy away from post-round questions, as he did after his disappointing finish at the Truist last year. What exactly happened? Lowry himself said that golf happened. He’s on a tough run of brutal finishes. But I wonder if by addressing the questions head-on, he, like Fleetwood, will have a breakthrough soon. You can’t beat back the darkness by ignoring it.
Three of the top betting favorites for the Cognizant Classic withdrew early in the week, leaving just eight of the top 50 players in the world in the field. The Cognizant, the first stop of the Florida Swing, follows two straight Signature Events on the West Coast and is followed by two more Signature Events (including the Players). With all the discussion surrounding new schedules, is the Cognizant a good example of why the PGA Tour schedule is too unbalanced and needs a change? Or an example why these tournaments are necessary so a mostly young, unproven group can pave their way?
Bastable: Well, we know change is coming. Question is, how much that change will affect the Tour’s underclass? It’s not hard to grasp why congregating the stars as much as possible is a good business model. But the Tour’s decision-makers seem less energized about creating pathways — at least in the form of a robust schedule of “tier 2” events — for the dreamers. Sounds like the endgame is marquee names clashing in marquee markets. This week, though, was a reminder of why it also can be highly entertaining when less established players lock horns with the stars. Sometimes the underdogs win.
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Hirsh: I agree, Basty. Call me a traditionalist, but there’s always going to be tournaments that have and tournaments that are have-nots. I thought the Signature Event model with Siggies and Full-fields was a nice compromise to what is being proposed by having an elite tour and then something in between the PGA Tour and the Korn Ferry. Where the issue lies is the balance. Wasn’t the idea to have two full-field events followed by two siggies or a major? We started the season with a run of four full-fields and now you have four Signature Events in five weeks (counting the Players) with the poor old Cognizant getting squished in there. Perhaps there are a few too many Siggies, but we need to shake up the calendar a little and balance this out so these tournaments don’t get left out to dry.
Sens: You absolutely need to have a few of these lower-wattage events in the mix. It keeps a pipeline open and the dream alive. And as we saw today, it can also lead to pretty compelling entertainment. I don’t know the right balance. 80-20? The top Tour brass is getting paid a lot of money. Let them figure it out. Meantime, though, I think a lot will sort itself out naturally in the years to come, depending on what sponsors decide they want to do.
Much was made pre-tournament about the overseeded rye grass at PGA National, where a course that was once one of the most difficult on Tour has seen lower scores over the last few years (and 17 under win this year). Are you bothered by the conditioning changes and lower scores? Is this something, or nothing?
Bastable: I have a hard time getting too worked up about overseeding, or, for that matter, whether a winning score is 7 under or 17 under. But I do think it’s important for tournaments to establish an identity, and PGA National had that for many years in the form of a teeth-kicking test that felt different from the homogeneity of most other non-major weeks. Shane Lowry reflected on the defanging of PGA National earlier in the week, saying he hoped “the scoring is a little bit more difficult this year and it plays like it used to.” On Sunday, he got his wish.
Hirsh: Spot on. I don’t care too much about winning scores, but PGA National is supposed to be a challenge for these guys. There’s also a bit of an issue since they made the 10th hole a par-5, as this course was previously a par-70 (now 71). Echvarria’s winning aggregate of 267 is the same as Camillo Villegas’ in 2010, although he won by five that year. I say make em suffer not because I wanna see lower scores in general, but seeing Tour players struggle in a non-major is enjoyable once in a while.
Sens: Tougher is always more interesting. Overseeding also uses a lot of water. In short, I’d like to see it play firmer and faster. Though the turf itself had nothing to do with Lowry’s struggles. His tee shots on 16 and 17 didn’t threaten dry land.
Scottie Scheffler didn’t play this week, but last week at Riviera, he ended his streak of 18 straight top-10 finishes, the longest of any player in the modern era. Meanwhile, Xander Schauffele also had a streak of his own end earlier this season, when he made the cut in 72 straight events (the longest since Tiger’s 142) in a streak that lasted nearly four years. Which was more impressive?
Bastable: Oh, it’s Scheffler’s run, which, lest we forget, also included seven wins. It’s hard to compute that level of consistency but consider this for perspective: Tiger’s best run in this category was “only” a mere 11 straight top-10s.
Hirsh: It’s Schauffele’s for simply how long he kept it going without having a bad week. That is, until Scheffler passes him later this summer…
Sens: Come on, Jack. That matchup goes to Scheffler, and it’s not especially close.
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Hirsh: What fun is agreeing all the time?
Sens: I’d rather save the disagreements for truly arguable topics.
Speaking of Scheffler, he’s been great as usual so far this year — that is, except for his first-round slump he’s been in his last three starts. After winning his first start of the season, Scheffler has carded opening rounds of 73, 72 and 74 in his last three starts, which has been just enough to keep him out of the winner’s circle. Back at the Arnold Palmer Invitational this week, what does Scheffler shoot come Thursday?
Bastable: Considering in his five API starts all he’s done is win twice and never finish outside the top 15, I like his chances of shaking this curious monkey from his back. There’s zero chance this is nothing more than a weird statistical anomaly. His previous five first-round scores at Bay Hill, in reverse chronological order: 71-70-68-70-67. This year he’ll open with another 70, and we can all move from sweating Scottie’s mysterious case of the Thursdays.
Hirsh: I was about to say wait, 70 is just even par, but then I remembered Bay Hill is another course I wish would go back to par-70! But I digress, Scheffler shoots a four-under 68 and is one off the lead before he cruises to his second win of the season. What’s that? You just wanted his first round score? Deal with it.
Sens: If it were almost any other player, I’d say those rough opening rounds were signs of some kind of mental struggle. But given that it’s Scheffler, I’m going to chalk them up to a statistical anomaly. If he shoots 75 this Thursday, I’ll consider changing my mind. But I won’t have to, since he’s going to shoot 69.
Our Josh Berhow recently wrote about Town & Country Club in Minnesota, a private course that boasts an unconventional 3-5-5-5-3 finish. What’s the most unusual or quirky feature of a couple you have played?
Bastable: Haven’t played it but recently learned that Desert Highlands in Scottsdale closes with a pair of par-3s followed by a pair of par-5s. And Crail (Balcomie) in Scotland has the reverse early in the back nine: two par-5s followed by two par-3s. For back-to-back majestic par-3s, tough to beat Cypress Point’s 15th and 16th.
Hirsh: I love courses that have more par-3s and par-5s than par-4s, but I actually belong to a club in Scotland, Fortrose and Rosemarkie, that has a par-3 9th, followed by eight straight par-4s before another par-3 to finish. On paper, that might sound a little boring, but the way the back nine goes up and back a peninsula while playing along Ness Road, I actually didn’t even realize the eight consecutive two-shotters until the third time I played it. Also, depending on the wind you get, some of those two-shotters are one-shotters and others are three!
Sens: Pacific Grove Golf Links in the Monterey area, widely referred to as the “poor man’s Pebble,” opens with consecutive par 3s. I don’t think I’ve seen that anywhere else, other than on, well, a par-3 course.
Khabib Nurmagomedov’s longtime manager, Ali Abdelaziz, released a public message calling for peace as tensions in the Middle East escalated into open conflict.
Abdelaziz’s statement came days after the United States and Israel launched ‘Operation Epic Fury’ on February 28, targeting Iran’s nuclear facilities and military infrastructure. The strikes reportedly killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s defense minister, and the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Abdelaziz, a prominent MMA manager, took to X and wrote:
“Human life is precious. Every life has value, dignity, and purpose. May Allah protect you and your family, grant you health, peace, and barakah in your home. And may God bless America with justice, unity, safety, and compassion for all people. Peace and mercy be upon you and your loved ones.”
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Check out Ali Abdelaziz’s X post below:
Iran reportedly has responded with ‘Operation Truthful Promise 4’, firing ballistic missiles and drones toward Israeli cities including Tel Aviv, West Jerusalem, and Haifa, while also striking US-linked assets in Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Qatar. Three US service members were reported dead.
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More than 200 people have been reported killed in Iran, including over 150 in a strike on a school in Minab. Civil unrest has spread to parts of Pakistan and Iraq, where protesters attempted to storm the US Consulate in Karachi.
When Khabib Nurmagomedov detailed strict coaching approach and father’s system
Khabib Nurmagomedov has transitioned into one of the sport’s most disciplined coaches after his retirement. Speaking at the World Sports Summit earlier this year, Nurmagomedov explained that his gym operates under firm rules, with no room for debate once training begins.
He expects full commitment, accountability, and focus from every athlete under his guidance. After the death of his father Abdulmanap Nurmagomedov, Khabib assumed leadership of the team and embraced the responsibility of continuing the system that produced multiple champions. Weighing in on his mentality at the World Sports Summit, he said:
“When we come to the gym, when we begin our training, all of them know about this, there is no freedom of speech. There is no freedom of speech. Everybody do what I say if I’m coach. In or out, there is no 50-50, and I try to push them very well, and if you look at the result we have in almost every organization, we have champions, and we have some of the best fighters right now. We are the best team, and I’m very happy. It means I’m doing a good job.”
He added:
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“There are some fighters, they take it very personal, competition. Like, when they lose competition, and right now in these days, you can see how guys, they lost the ball and they just stand. It’s like, c’mon brother, you cannot do this. If you’re on my team, even when I play, if we’re losing and he’s smiling, he’s going to have big problems. You have to perform. Anybody can lose, but you have to show your best. You cannot come with me on my team just laughing and smiling while we’re losing.”
Shane van Gisbergen fell short of a record-setting win in Sunday’s Duramax Texas Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas. The road course ace admitted that he didn’t ‘quite have enough’ to overcome the day’s most dominant driver, Tyler Reddick.
Van Gisbergen entered the 95-lap event having won the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race a day prior. The result snapped his winless streak at the track, and SVG was vying to replicate the same on Sunday.
Thanks for the submission!
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However, van Gisbergen began on the backfoot with a 13th-place start, while Reddick began on pole for the second consecutive race. SVG parsed through the field to finish second in Stage 1, one spot behind his Trackhouse Racing teammate, Ross Chastain.
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After a 10th-place finish in Stage 2, SVG reached second once again by lap 80. Despite his best efforts, van Gisbergen couldn’t pass a faster Reddick. With five laps to go, the Kiwi driver radioed that he lacked the speed and grip in comparison to Reddick up ahead.
When the No.45 driver reached the finish line, he’d pulled a 3.944-second gap to van Gisbergen. Reflecting upon the same, the Trackhouse driver said(via X/NASCAR on FOX),
“Disappointed with second. But the series is just at a high level. I felt okay, we got our Safety Culture Chevy a lot better than yesterday, but just following Tyler, his driving was immaculate and his car was very good too so, I tried but didn’t quite have enough, but still a great points day for the 97.”
Shane van Gisbergen had a good points day nonetheless, as he jumped 11 spots on the table to finish fifth.
Shane van Gisbergen shares struggles with ‘average’ car in COTA
Shane van Gisbergen showed blistering pace in his O’Reilly Auto Parts Series win at COTA, but his Cup Series qualifying paled in comparison. After Saturday’s race, SVG outlined his struggles with the No.97 Chevy.
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“Not very good. My car was pretty average, really. The race run was okay, but in qualifying, start of the race run, I just couldn’t switch it on, and you need that round here to just light it up, and I couldn’t do it, so I did a rolling lap and then it still wasn’t good, and then I did my time on my third lap, and, yeah, really struggled. But there were some things that I wasn’t doing very well,” he said.
A COTA win would’ve placed Shane van Gisbergen alongside Jeff Burton for most consecutive road course wins. His streak now ends with five wins, all of which came from last year alone.
Till now, the New Zealander has racked up 11 road course wins across the top-2 divisions. Tyle Reddick, meanwhile, made history by becoming the first driver in NASCAR history to win the opening three races.
Turki Alalshikh has promised to explore a potential mega fight for David Benavidez, who must first take care of business against Gilberto Ramirez on May 2.
The pair will collide for Ramirez’s WBO and WBA cruiserweight titles, headlining a Premier Boxing Champions pay-per-view card at the T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas.
For Benavidez, this represents an opportunity to become a three-division world champion, with the 29-year-old having already claimed notable victories at super-middle and light-heavyweight.
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His legacy at 168lbs, however, was slightly diminished by an elusive showdown with Canelo Alvarez, who he chased for the best part of 18 months while holding the WBC ‘interim’ title.
During this time, Canelo had made a sizable impression as the undisputed super-middleweight champion, but was widely accused of ducking his then-mandatory challenger, Benavidez, while defending his titles against lesser opposition.
Should the Mexican emerge victorious, then Benavidez would seemingly still be eager to face him, even after moving all the way up to 200lbs.
In a video recently posted by Pedigree Boxing, the WBC light-heavyweight champion reminded Alalshikh of a previous conversation regarding his desire to face Canelo.
“Remember you told me you were going to give me Canelo?”
In response, the boxing powerbroker admitted that such a fight seems unlikely, but nonetheless promised to speak with the man himself.
“Let me tell you something: there is something we can do and there is something we cannot do. Of course I want to see this fight, but maybe when [Canelo’s] 40 [years old].
“We will talk with him.”
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While the Canelo dream has not quite deserted him, Benavidez must ultimately remain focused on his cruiserweight title challenge against Ramirez.