The Grand Finals of the Free Fire Max Asia Invitational (FFMAI) 2026 Spring is all set to be played on May 17, 2026. The top 12 teams from the Group Stage will be seen fighting in this high-octane clash for the trophy. The tournament features a total prize pool of $50,000, of which $15,000 will be awarded to the winners of this phase.
The Group Stage of the FFMAI 2026 was hosted from May 14 to 16. A total of 18 teams, divided into three groups, competed in 12 matches each. The first-to-12th ranked squads on the overall points table entered the Grand Finals. The 13th-to-18th-placed teams faced elimination from the Asia Invitational 2026.
Qualified teams for FFMAI 2026 Spring Grand Finals
Here are the names of the 12 finalists:
Dewa United Horus (Indonesia)
Team Hind (India)
Expand (Malaysia)
Autobotz Esports (India)
Straw Hats Esports (Bangladesh)
NXT Esports (India)
Team Akkee (Thailand)
Total Gaming Esports (India)
Horaa Esports (Nepal)
GodLike Esports (India)
Revenant XSpark (India)
Extreme Ex (Bangladesh)
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How to watch
Fans can enjoy all matches of the Grand Finals live on the YouTube channel of Free Fire Max Esports India Official from 6:30 pm onwards on May 17, 2026.
Indonesia’s Dewa United displayed its supremacy in the Group Stage of the FFMAI 2026 Spring, scoring more than 250 points in 12 matches. The squad won three Booyahs and clinched 181 eliminations in the previous stage, reflecting their dominance. Dewa United will be one the top teams to follow in the Grand Finals.
India’s Team Hind was the second-best performer in the Group Stage of the FFMAI. The squad recently clinched the FFMIC 2026 Spring after an astonishing run. This team will now try its best to secure another tittle.
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Expand from Malaysia and Autobotz from India also had a decent run in the Group Stage, as they came third and fourth in the overall standings. Both teams have played well in their respective regional events in the past.
Straw Hats from Bangladesh displayed commedable performances in its last six matches of the Group Stage and managed to finish into the top-five. Notably, the team recently came out victorious in the Free Fire Bangladesh Pro Season 2.
Popular Indian organizations Total Gaming and GodLike saw a mediocre run in the Group Stage. Revenant XSpark, who’d played remarkably in the SA Play-Ins, struggled in the Group Stage of the FFMAI. These squads will aim to find their rhythm in the Grand Finals.
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Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) throws a pass during second-quarter preseason action against the Las Vegas Raiders at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Aug. 10, 2024. McCarthy displayed poise and polished mechanics during his early NFL reps while giving Vikings fans an encouraging glimpse of the rookie quarterback’s long-term potential in Kevin O’Connell’s offense. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-USA TODAY Sports.
Later on Sunday, VikingsTerritory will publish “The Case for Kyler Murray” as the Minnesota Vikings’ QB1 in 2026. This is the sister edition, uplifting why J.J. McCarthy makes the most sense.
Minnesota’s original quarterback plan still has life.
The argument may not be as strong as Murray’s claim to the throne, but some still insist that McCarthy can be “that guy.”
Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy watches from the sideline during preseason action against the Houston Texans on Aug. 9, 2025, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota. McCarthy continued adjusting to the pace of the NFL while observing Minnesota’s offense during his first extended preseason as the organization’s young quarterback centerpiece. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-Imagn Images
Too Soon to Mail It In
The Vikings decided McCarthy was the best option for their franchise just over two years ago. In April 2024, he was their golden boy. Per the typical timeline of quarterback development, now is too soon to quit on the guy. Patience is a virtue. Ask the former employers of Sam Darnold or Baker Mayfield if they would’ve done things differently.
It’s one thing to quit on a franchise quarterback at age 25, 26, or 27. But 23? That’s wildly premature. The Vikings would basically be begging and inviting a different quarterback guru to “fix McCarthy” if they kicked him to the curb.
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The Production in December 2025
McCarthy tangibly got better down the stretch of 2025; there’s no denying it. The only caveat is that he faced weaker defenses in December and January.
There are the numbers:
J.J. McCarthy, EPA/Play Ranking in 2025:
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Week 1-13: 35th of 35 Week 14: 18: 5th of 34
In the season’s first 13 weeks, McCarthy was the NFL’s single-worst quarterback. From Week 14 on, he became the fifth-best passer in the world by the numbers. Should his coaching staff really ignore that?
Youth
McCarthy is 23. Fans should’ve expected roadbumps for the young signal-caller — and roadbumps they got it.
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But let’s face it: Kevin O’Connell once said that organizations fail young quarterbacks before young quarterbacks fail organizations. Leaving a third-year player for dead at age 23 would fall victim to the very warning O’Connell issued.
Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy discusses his adjustment to the NFL during a media appearance following his arrival in Minnesota after the 2024 NFL Draft. McCarthy talked about Justin Jefferson, pregame meditation, music preferences, and life with the Vikings as the franchise prepared him to succeed Kirk Cousins as starting quarterback. Mandatory Credit: YouTube
McCarthy has more than enough time to improve his mechanics and become a franchise quarterback. He. Is. 23.
The Locker Room Part Is Down
Vikings right tackle Brian O’Neill recently said about McCarthy, “Even through some of the low points, I mean, we were 4-8 at one point last year. We rattled off five straight. Like, guys believe in him, and guys wanted us to figure it out and be better as an offense. You hear the term ‘lose the locker room.’ He had the locker room more than anybody I’d seen ever.”
“You want to root for him. You want to do well, and you want him to keep taking those next steps. If I was judged after my first 10 games in the NFL, I’m not playing right now. There’s a part of it where he’s still so fresh, and he’s only going to continue to get better,” continued O’Neill. “The whole attitude from us was, ‘How do we go there as an offense together?’”
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O’Neill would not make that up. This suggests that McCarthy has the “leader of Men” aspect down.
The 4th Quarter Gene
Some of McCarthy’s brightest moments in 2025 occurred when the game was on the line. Indeed, he would struggle at times until the 4th quarter, which was not ideal, but during contests when nothing would go right, the youngster would find another level and lead his team when it mattered the most.
If he wholly stunk, the clutch moments probably wouldn’t show up.
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It’s a sweet starting point to employ the guy who does the hard part first. That is — if the Vikings can figure out how to extract consistency from McCarthy in quarters 1, 2, and 3, he already has the spine for the 4th quarter.
Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy speaks with a referee before a divisional matchup against the Green Bay Packers on Jan. 4, 2026, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota. McCarthy entered the regular-season finale leading Minnesota in a critical NFC North contest as the Vikings continued battling for playoff positioning late in the year. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images
The best evidence for this was Week 1 at the Chicago Bears. McCarthy looked like a raw rookie until the 4th quarter and later turned on the gas. Minnesota won the contest, and McCarthy won NFC Offensive Player of the Week for his troubles.
Sticking to the Plan
Sometimes, teams end up looking silly for quitting on a quarterback too early. The New York Jets look like clowns for drafting the aforementioned Darnold and not empowering him to succeed, especially after Darnold won a Super Bowl seven years later.
The Cleveland Browns are in quarterback hell because they gave up on Mayfield.
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It may be a little fear-based, but there’s a case for sticking with McCarthy so the Vikings don’t miss out on an eventually good thing. If the quarterback-whispering head coach can’t whisper to his hand-picked guy, is he really a quarterback whisperer?
Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
Sep 6, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Boston Red Sox pitcher Lucas Giolito (54) pitches during the fifth inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Arianna Grainey-Imagn Images
Lucas Gioloto sat at home all winter, waiting for the phone to ring.
Nearly a month into the season, the call finally came — from the San Diego Padres.
The veteran right-hander is scheduled to make his season debut on Sunday in Seattle as the Padres will go for a season sweep of the Mariners in their Vedder Cup.
“I’ve been doing this for a long time. Pitching in the big leagues, being in a rotation, that’s normal for me,” Giolito said before San Diego’s 7-4 victory Saturday. “What I was going through the last few months was more abnormal. I’m glad to be through that and back where I feel I belong.”
With pitchers Nick Pivetta, Joe Musgrove, German Marquez and Matt Waldron all out with injuries, the Padres could use another arm.
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Giolito went 10-4 with a 3.41 ERA for Boston last season. He’s 2-1 with a 4.35 ERA in four career starts against Seattle.
“He’s been there, done that,” Padres manager Craig Stammen said. “He knows what it’s like going through a full season. Pitching well in the big leagues, that’s the biggest attribute he brings. He knows how to get outs, get outs in the big leagues.”
Giolito signed a one-year deal worth $3 million with the Padres on April 22. He made four minor-league starts in preparation for Sunday.
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“I’m just excited to be back out there and help a really good team win baseball games,” he said. “It was kind of a surreal offseason, leaking into spring training and the season. But I’m really appreciative of the Padres giving me the opportunity.”
Walker Buehler pitched five innings for the victory Saturday. He was backed by homers from Nick Castellanos, Gavin Sheets and rookie Rodolfo Duran, whose two-run shot in the seventh inning was his first major-league hit after going 0-for-10.
“If you play baseball, if you want to be a major leaguer, you always think of that, you have dreams about it,” said Duran, a catcher who spent 11 years in the minors before being called up earlier this month. “Now that I was able to do it, it’s amazing.”
The Mariners have lost three of their past four games since getting within a game of the .500 mark. They’ve been above .500 for one day all season, when they were 3-2 on March 30.
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“I think we know we’re not playing all the way to our capabilities, but it’s a long year,” said Logan Gilbert, who allowed a season-high seven runs Saturday. “Every single year I’ve been here, we’ve had that. The biggest thing is not to panic. Second thing is, how quickly can you turn it? Because things like this are going to happen to every team, every single year, it’s just how much can you shorten that window and get back to playing your best baseball.”
The Mariners are set to send right-hander George Kirby (5-2, 2.84 ERA) to the mound Sunday. He defeated host Houston 3-1 Monday when he allowed one run on seven hits over five innings, with two walks and seven strikeouts. Kirby is 0-2 with a 10.38 ERA in two previous starts against the Padres.
The Mariners hope to have third baseman Brendan Donovan and catcher Mitch Garver back after both were late scratches Saturday. Donovan needed a rest as he recovers from a groin strain and Garver had back tightness.
The SPFL has confirmed Celtic’s title-clinching victory over Hearts on Saturday was not brought to a premature conclusion, while condemning the pitch invasion that followed the last action of a thrilling and chaotic afternoon.
Fans streamed out of the stands at Celtic Park after Callum Osmand ran clear to make it 3-1 on 98 minutes.
Play did not resume, with eight minutes of stoppage time having been announced at the end of the regulation 90.
Hearts began the day one point in front and took the lead through a Lawrence Shankland header.
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Celtic levelled with an Arne Engels penalty on the stroke of half-time, while Daizen Maeda fired the defending champions in front on 87 minutes.
Hearts, who had been chasing a first title since 1960, made the decision to make a hasty exit from the stadium, citing a “menacing and threatening atmosphere”.
Chelsea hired Xabi Alonso as manager on Sunday on a four-year deal starting next season, with the Spaniard returning to coaching after a short, rocky spell at Real Madrid and tasked with bringing stability to a club that has become dysfunctional under its American ownership.
Alonso will formally take charge on July 1 as the replacement for Liam Rosenior, who was fired last month, and will become the fifth permanent coach appointed by Chelsea owners Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital since they bought the Premier League team in 2022.
Alonso lasted eight months at Madrid before leaving the Spanish giants by mutual consent in January after poor results and widespread media reports that he lost control of a locker room wracked by infighting and disharmony this season.
Before that, the former Spain midfielder had built a strong reputation at Bayer Leverkusen, which he led to the German title and an unbeaten domestic campaign in the 2023-24 season, and Chelsea described Alonso as “one of the most respected figures in the modern game.”
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“From my conversations with the ownership group and sporting leadership, it is clear we share the same ambition,” Alonso said in a Chelsea statement. “We want to build a team capable of competing consistently at the highest level and fighting for trophies.”
Without a domestic trophy for eight years, Chelsea was European champion as recently as 2021 and won the Club World Cup against most pundits’ expectations last summer.
However, Chelsea looks highly unlikely to be in next season’s Champions League and might miss out on European competition entirely after a huge dip in form in the second half of the campaign. The club was guaranteed a trophyless season by losing to Manchester City in the FA Cup final on Saturday.
“There is great talent in the squad and huge potential at this football club and it will be my great honour to lead it,” Alonso said. “Now the focus is on hard work, building the right culture and winning trophies.”
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Storm clouds are hovering over Chelsea
After an unseemly end to Rosenior’s turbulent tenure, Chelsea’s ownership said it would be undertaking “a process of self-reflection” ahead of its next coaching appointment, amid growing tension among supporters about the direction of the club and its massive financial concerns following years of heavy spending.
In the four years under Boehly and Clearlake, around $2.5 billion has been spent on new, mostly young and unproven players on long contracts while the club has taken on a debt approaching $2 billion, according to figures compiled by The Athletic.
Chelsea’s most recent financial results revealed the club made pre-tax losses of $350 million, a record in the Premier League era.
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It’s with this backdrop that Alonso — who has long been linked with a potential move to Liverpool, another of his former teams — heads to Chelsea, which he described as “one of the biggest clubs in world football.”
“His appointment,” Chelsea said, “reflects the club’s belief in his broad set of experiences, coaching quality and game model, leadership attributes, character and integrity, which were key to the decision to ask him to help lead the next phase of Chelsea’s journey.
“He is regarded not only as an outstanding football coach, but also as a proven leader and partner across a number of areas essential to the demands of driving the team.”
McFarlane remains in temporary charge
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Chelsea has two games left this season — against Tottenham and Sunderland in the Premier League — for which interim coach Calum McFarlane will stay in charge.
The Netherlands once again enter the FIFA World Cup carrying the weight of history and expectation as they continue their pursuit of a first-ever world title. Despite producing some of football’s greatest legends, including Johan Cruyff, Marco van Basten, and Dennis Bergkamp, the Oranje have repeatedly fallen agonisingly short on the biggest stage.
Now under Ronald Koeman, the Dutch arrive at the 2026 World Cup with another talented squad determined to finally break the country’s long-standing curse. While the current generation may lack the iconic attacking superstars of previous eras, the Netherlands still possess quality across the pitch and remain one of Europe’s strongest contenders heading into the tournament.
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The Oranje enjoyed an unbeaten qualification campaign, recording six wins and two draws while scoring 27 goals and conceding just four. Memphis Depay finished as the team’s leading scorer with eight goals, while both Depay and Cody Gakpo shared the assist lead with four each.
The Netherlands begin their World Cup campaign against Japan, immediately facing a difficult test in their quest to finally make history.
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Netherlands’ Group F in FIFA World Cup 2026
Netherlands
Japan
Sweden
Tunisia
Netherlands looking to get past the semis this year
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Memphis Depay heads into the 2026 FIFA World Cup as one of the Netherlands’ most experienced and influential players. The veteran forward became the Oranje’s all-time leading scorer during qualification after netting eight goals, once again proving his importance at international level. Although his club performances in recent seasons have not always matched his earlier standards, the 32-year-old continues to deliver consistently whenever he represents the national team and remains a major attacking threat for Ronald Koeman’s side.
Meanwhile, Micky van de Ven is emerging as one of the breakout stars of this Dutch squad. After playing only a limited role at Euro 2024, the defender is now expected to start regularly at the World Cup. Known for his explosive pace and powerful forward runs from the back, Van de Ven could become one of the tournament’s standout defenders.
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Netherlands schedule for FIFA World Cup 2026
FIFA World Cup 2026 Netherlands schedule
Fixture
Date
Venue
Netherlands vs. Japan
Sunday, June 14
AT&T Stadium
Netherlands vs. Sweden
Saturday, June 20
NRG Stadium
Tunisia vs. Netherlands
Thursday, June 25
Arrowhead Stadium
Netherlands Strengths
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The Netherlands are expected to operate in a hybrid 4-2-3-1 system under Ronald Koeman, combining possession-based football with a more direct attacking approach when required. Staying true to the nation’s “Total Football” philosophy, the Oranje aim to control games through fluid passing sequences and intelligent movement, particularly against weaker opposition.
One of their biggest strengths lies in midfield, where technically gifted players like Frenkie de Jong, Ryan Gravenberch, and Tijjani Reijnders provide creativity, composure, and control. Defensively, the Dutch also possess strong and dynamic centre-backs capable of handling high-pressure situations while contributing comfortably in possession.
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Netherlands Weaknesses
Despite their quality in midfield and defence, the Netherlands still have concerns in attack heading into the tournament. The lack of reliable depth at centre-forward remains a major issue, with the team lacking a truly elite goalscoring presence capable of consistently deciding matches at the highest level.
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The wide areas have also been inconsistent throughout recent campaigns. The absence of Xavi Simons due to a serious ACL injury has further weakened the Dutch attack, removing one of their most creative and unpredictable offensive players ahead of the World Cup.
Netherlands squad for FIFA World Cup 2026: Preliminary squad:
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Goalkeepers: Bart Verbruggen, Justin Bijlow, Mark Flekken, Robin Roefs
Defenders: Lutsharel Geertruida, Jeremie Frimpong, Denzel Dumfries, Jurrien Timber, Jan Paul van Hecke, Virgil van Dijk, Nathan Aké, Stefan de Vrij, Micky van de Ven, Jorrel Hato
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Midfielders: Ryan Gravenberch, Tijjani Reijnders, Jerdy Schouten, Teun Koopmeiners, Kees Smit, Quinten Timber, Frenkie de Jong, Luciano Valente
Only one round remains at the the 2026 PGA Championship, and by the looks of the leaderboard at the 54-hole mark, we’re in for quite a finish.
Let’s break it all down. Here are five things to know for Sunday at Aronimink.
The leader
Multiple players shared the lead for the first two rounds, but there is just one player at the top of the leaderboard heading into Round 4: Alex Smalley. At six under par, Smalley has a two-shot lead on the field. The 29-year-old has never won on the PGA Tour but has been on quite a run for the last few weeks, finishing no worse than T21 in his last five tournaments, including a runner-up finish alongside Hayden Springer at the Zurich Classic.
The contenders
Chasing Smalley is an incredible collection of contenders, with 22 total players who are within five shots of Smalley’s lead. That group includes major winners Jon Rahm (-4), Patrick Reed (-3), Rory McIlroy (-3), Xander Schauffele (-3), Hideki Matsuyama (-2), Cameron Smith (-2), Martin Kaymer (-2), Justin Rose (-2), Scottie Scheffler (-1) and Brooks Koepka (-1).
The defending champ got off to a promising start in Round 1, sharing the lead at three under par. But two straight rounds of 71 on Friday and Saturday have left him with an uphill battle on Sunday: five shots back, with a giant group of talented players to muscle through. Not impossible, but admittedly not likely.
Rory chasing more history
No matter what happens on Sunday, the fact that Rory McIlroy has a chance to win this major is pretty stunning. His opening round was grim indeed — a four-over 74, good enough for T105 on the leaderboard after Round 1. But McIlroy bounced back on Friday with a 67 to get himself to within five shots of the lead with two rounds remaining. And he kept the pedal down on Saturday with a third-round 66. Now, McIlroy is three under overall, three shots back, with a chance to win a seventh career major and keep dreams of a calendar-year slam alive.
Action-packed timeline
Given the sheer number of big names in he mix for the final round, CBS cameras will have their work cut out for them. Scheffler’s twosome tees off at 12:05 p.m. ET followed by 13 more pairings until you get to the last tee time of the day, Smalley and Matti Schmid at 2:35 p.m. ET. That’s a two-and-a-half-hour time block of legitimate contenders!
We’ve arrived at the final round of 2026 PGA Championship. On Sunday night, one player will hoist the Wanamaker trophy at Aronimink as PGA champion. If you’re searching for what channel the PGA Championship is on Sunday, we have all the details you need. Keep scrolling for a full 2026 PGA Championship Sunday TV schedule and streaming information.
What channel is PGA Round 4 on?
CBS and ESPN will again air TV coverage for Round 4 of the 2026 PGA Championship on Sunday, as they did for Saturday’s third round.
ESPN will start the Sunday TV coverage from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. ET, followed by CBS’s lengthy final-round broadcast.
CBS’s PGA Championship Sunday telecast will start at 1 p.m. ET and run for six hours, finishing up at 7 p.m. ET with the trophy presentation to follow.
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PGA Sunday streaming coverage can be found on ESPN+. ESPN+’s Sunday stream includes exclusive early coverage starting at 8 a.m. ET, featured groups and featured hole coverage. Paramount+ will provide a simulcast of CBS’s Sunday TV broadcast.
Below you will find more detailed information on how to watch the final round of the 2026 PGA Championship.
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Get ESPN+
With an ESPN+ subscription, you gain access to PGA Tour Live, where you can stream the best PGA Tour events live from wherever you want.
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How to watch PGA on TV Sunday
ESPN and CBS will split final-round TV coverage of the 2026 PGA Championship. ESPN’s coverage runs from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. ET on Sunday. CBS’s broadcast is scheduled for 1-7 p.m. ET.
How to stream PGA online Sunday
You can watch Sunday’s final round of the 2026 PGA Championship online via ESPN+ and Paramount+. Here’s the full PGA Championship streaming schedule for Sunday:
As senior managing producer for GOLF.com, Cunningham edits, writes and publishes stories on GOLF.com, and manages the brand’s e-newsletters, which reach more than 1.4 million subscribers each month. A former two-time intern, he also helps keep GOLF.com humming outside the news-breaking stories and service content provided by our reporters and writers, and works with the tech team in the development of new products and innovative ways to deliver an engaging site to our audience.
Morgan Gibbs-White is playing wearing a face mask as Nottingham Forest face Manchester United in the Premier League.
Gibbs-White suffered a sickening cut to his forehead during Forest’s impressive 3-1 win at Chelsea on 4 May as he clashed with Blues keeper Robert Sanchez in an aerial duel.
He had only come on in the second half but was forced him off shortly after, and later had multiple stitches on the nasty-looking injury.
He was named in the starting XI for the first time since his injury for this Sunday’s visit to Old Trafford and played wearing a face mask, as he had done since his return to training.
Vitor Pereira told Sky Sports before the game: “He wants to play because he wants to play, he has ambition. He is a very important player.”
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Forest were left sweating on their star midfielder’s availability ahead of trying to book a place in their first European final since 1980, with Pereira’s side taking a 1-0 lead to Villa Park courtesy of Chris Wood’s penalty in the first leg.
Gibbs-White was fit enough for the squad but did not feature as Forest lost 4-0, with the side having specially prepared headwear to protect the cut.
Morgan Gibbs-White sustained a cut to his face (Reuters)
Ready to prep for the summer season with some sweet new gear? Callaway is making it easy with a new promotion.
For a limited time, you can enjoy $50 in savings on all Odyssey Ai-DUAL putters. And to really amp up your short game, there’s also a buy more, save more deal to take advantage of on Callaway Opus SP and SP+ wedges: Buy 1, Save $20. Buy 2, Save $30 each!
Odyssey’s Ai-Dual putters feature an innovative half-ball alignment aid — a visual that can be especially helpful on short-range putts — as well as an insert comprised of two layers of urethane with a softer outer layer and firmer inner layer shaped by artificial intelligence to control ball speeds.
On the wedge front, Callaway’s Opus SP (Spin Pocket) wedges were first introduced last year. Their primary design attribute: A raised center of gravity to help players flight lower wedge shots with more spin.
The Opus SP+ wedges made their debut earlier this year, and were described by gear editor Jack Hirsh as a version of their predecessor “on steroids.” The Opus SP+ features an even higher CG for more control and spin.
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Trusted by Tour players for its clean, confident look at address, Shape 6 offers precise leading edge shaping and refined sole geometry. Shape 6 is the 6th and final iteration in the Opus prototype shaping phase, validated by Tour players and major champions. OPUS SP introduces progressive shaping in gap wedges to seamlessly blend with modern iron sets—creating a more cohesive setup from top to bottom.
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Back by popular demand, the X Grind returns in OPUS SP. Designed for shotmakers who want added bounce for forgiveness, without giving up versatility, the X Grind is ideal for players who like to open the face around the greens or play in firmer turf conditions. It’s the perfect blend of playability and performance in a wide range of shots and conditions.
Introducing the all-new Opus SP+ with Spin Pocket™ Construction + Tungsten, a new extension of our Opus SP family. Tour-preferred shaping with an even higher center of gravity for more spin and precision.
As a four-year member of Columbia’s inaugural class of female varsity golfers, Jessica can out-birdie everyone on the masthead. She can out-hustle them in the office, too, where she’s primarily responsible for producing both print and online features, and overseeing major special projects, such as GOLF’s inaugural Style Issue, which debuted in February 2018. Her original interview series, “A Round With,” debuted in November of 2015, and appeared in both in the magazine and in video form on GOLF.com.
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