With the Draft behind us, the Vikings’ roster for the offseason is mostly fulfilled. They still have a few spots open, and as we’ve seen with the Jauan Jennings signing, they are looking for key contributors.
The idea of a roster prediction in early May isn’t to be 100% correct (although I fully intend to brag if I am), but rather to gauge where things stand before OTAs, minicamp, training camp, and the preseason.
Several Vikings Roster Spots Are Already Getting Tight
And I also think this is a fun exercise, so let’s get to it.
Advertisement
Quarterbacks (3)
In: Kyler Murray, J.J. McCarthy, Carson Wentz;
Out: Max Brosmer
Brad Rempel-Imagn Images
For now, I think this is the easiest one. Murray is likely to start things off as the starter, but McCarthy will have his fair shot if he shows improvement. Carson Wentz gives you an experienced voice in the room, and I don’t think he’d have returned for 2026 if he didn’t think he’d stick around.
Max Brosmer could still develop into a solid backup, but he played poorly in 2025, even for an undrafted rookie. One of my hot takes for 2026 is that Murray and McCarthy won’t both be on the roster, but we’ll see about that.
Advertisement
Wide Receivers (6)
In: Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, Jauan Jennings, Tai Felton, Myles Price, Dillon Bell;
Out: Joaquin Davis, Dontae Fleming, Jeshaun Jones, Shaleak Knotts, Marcus Sanders, Luke Wysong.
I’ll be bold here: I think Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison make the roster. They form one of the best duos in the league and will continue to do so for at least two more seasons. Jauan Jennings is a much-needed, stronger, and taller wide receiver.
Felton is a high pick, only in his second season, and was great on special teams, so there’s no reason to think he won’t stay. Price handled both returning spots, and he’ll probably do it again in 2026. Rookie UDFA Dillon Bell is a fun one.
Advertisement
He was a gadget player and could find himself in a similar role in Kevin O’Connell’s offense, as the team doesn’t have anyone with this skillset.
Halfbacks (5)
In: Aaron Jones, Jordan Mason, Demond Claiborne, Zavier Scott, Max Bredeson;
Out: Kejon Owens.
With the Vikings not spending heavily on the running back position, it’s fair to assume that Jones and Mason will handle the bulk of the carries again. Demond Claiborne can be a demon (bad pun intended) on the field, but his ball security woes can cost him playing time.
Advertisement
If he can figure it out, though, the rookie can be the home-run threat this room lacks. Scott got one of the last spots on the roster, but mostly because I don’t know if Kevin O’Connell will have four running backs.
However, Scott’s ability as a receiver complements this backfield really well, and he had some good plays in 2025. Bredeson comes in as the new fullback on the roster and should be a contributor right away, given his prowess as a run blocker.
Tight Ends (4)
Dan Powers-USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images
In: T.J. Hockenson, Josh Oliver, Gavin Bartholomew, Ben Yurosek;
Out: Bryson Nesbit.
This may be the team’s weakest position on offense. Hockenson doesn’t look the same after his knee injury and has had one of the worst seasons of his career. There’s a chance this had to do with the quarterback play, but it’s still cause for concern.
Advertisement
Josh Oliver is excellent as a blocker and more than capable as a pass catcher, but heavily underused in this aspect. Bartholomew missed his entire rookie season due to a back problem, so this will be the first time we see him in action. Yurosek had over 100 snaps and appeared in 12 games in 2025, giving him a shot at making the roster this season.
Offensive Linemen (9)
In: Christian Darrisaw, Donovan Jackson, Gavin Gerhardt, Will Fries, Brian O’Neill, Blake Brandel, Joe Huber, Ryan Van Demark, Caleb Tiernan;
Out: Michael Jurgens, Delby Lemieux, Henry Bird, Vershon Lee, Tomas Rimac, Caleb Etienne, Tristan Leigh, Walter Rouse.
Four spots on the offensive line are set in stone. Blake Brandel will kick things off as the starting center, but I think this can evolve into a competition with rookie Gavin Gerhardt. Although he’s a seventh-round pick, he has a lot of experience at the position, starting for four years in college.
Advertisement
I also like the idea of Brandel working at center and being able to serve as the backup for every position. The Vikings spent a considerable amount of money on Van Demark in the restricted free agency and used a top-100 pick on Caleb Tiernan, so both should be locks.
If Gerhardt wins the starting job, I’m okay with having only Huber as a true backup guard, as Brandel would also be able to fill in.
Out: Elijah Williams, Monkell Goodwine, Eric Johnson II, Taki Taimani.
Advertisement
Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images
Arguably the most promising position on the roster, the Vikings have young defensive tackles with tons of potential. Redmond had a breakout season in 2025, and hopefully that was just the start.
At 27, he could be the leader of this group for the next handful of years. If we’re talking about potential, no one embodies it better than the first-round rookie Caleb Banks. The early signs are that he’ll be able to practice fully at the start of training camp, and, if his foot doesn’t bother him again, could make a nasty duo with Redmond.
The other three round out this duo really well: Ingram-Dawkins comes in on passing downs, Orange possesses the ability to be a great nose tackle, and Rodriguez can contribute on both, although he’s more of a nose tackle as well. How well they perform will hinge on Redmond’s continued development and Banks’ health, but if all goes well, they can wreak havoc in opposing backfields.
Edge Rushers (5)
In: Andrew Van Ginkel, Dallas Turner, Kyle Van Noy, Bo Richter, Tyler Batty;
I wasn’t fond of the idea of trading Jonathan Greenard. The price was mostly fair, considering he’ll turn 29 and has an extensive injury history.
But this trade left the Vikings in an odd position. Van Ginkel will continue to do Van Ginkel things, while I fully believe Dallas Turner is ready to take that additional step. However, the depth behind them is way less than optimal. Both Bo Richter and Tyler Batty are special teams players who have never had more than 6% of the defensive snaps.
In the NFL, you must rotate your front seven as often as possible, so this is not enough. There aren’t any premium edge rushers in the market, as we are in the middle of May. Kyle Van Noy is my pick here, mostly due to his familiarity with Brian Flores, and he has played at least 50% of the snaps in each of the last three seasons. After Jauan Jennings’ signing, I believe that a veteran edge rusher is the next big priority.
Linebackers (4)
In: Blake Cashman, Jake Golday, Eric Wilson, Ivan Pace;
Advertisement
Out: Keli Lawson, Jacob Roberts, Josh Ross, Scooby Williams.
This is another position that I believe is set in stone. Blake Cashman is a very underrated player, but his injury woes are cause for concern. Eric Wilson had a career year in 2025, but banking on it happening again wouldn’t be wise, which is one reason I picked Golday even more.
Speaking of Golday, I think he can impress enough to be the starter alongside Cashman. Wilson should still see the field a lot, but more as a rotational player. Ivan Pace provides solid depth and special-teams play.
Cornerbacks (5)
Matt Krohn-Imagn Images
In: Byron Murphy, Isaiah Rodgers, James Pierre, Charles Demmings, Zemaiah Vaughn;
I think the first four players are safe bets. Murphy is the best cornerback on the team and has slot-boundary versatility. Isaiah Rodgers had his moments in 2025, and James Pierre is an improvement at the CB3 position.
I believe that Flores would’ve pushed harder for a cornerback if he weren’t comfortable with this trio. Most of the other cornerbacks fighting for a roster spot are current or former UDFAs, so the fact that the Vikings used a pick on Demmings is a great sign that he makes the roster. The final spot was between Vaughn and McGlothern, although Marcus Allen is likely to have an opportunity as well.
Safeties (4)
In: Josh Metellus, Jakobe Thomas, Jay Ward, Theo Jackson;
Out: Jacob Thomas, Tavierre Thomas.
Advertisement
The hope here is that Metellus can go back to his 2024 form. He played with a shoulder injury through most of 2025, and it clearly impacted him. A top-100 pick, Jakobe Thomas will have an opportunity to play early if he can quickly understand Flores’ scheme. Jay Ward got some snaps late last season and impressed, and he also has a chance to be an impact player this season. Theo Jackson was kind of underwhelming in 2025, but unless Harrison Smith returns, I can’t see him not making the roster.
Special Teams (3)
In: Will Reichard (K), Brett Thorson (P), Andrew DePaola (LS);
Out: Johnny Hekker (P).
Will Reichard is an All-Pro caliber player. Andrew DePaola is an All-Pro caliber player. Even if the Vikings had brought someone to “compete” with them, the other player would certainly lose. This means that the only true debate is Johnny Hekker and Brett Thorson.
Advertisement
Hekker will absolutely go to the Hall of Fame when he decides to hang up the cleats, but he’s coming off arguably his worst season in the NFL. Thorson, an UDFA, won the Ray Guy award for the best punter in college last season. The punter position came down to who’s the better holder in the last few seasons, and it’s likely to happen again in 2026. When it comes to punting, though, Thorson has all the momentum.
Lionel Messi more than doubled his salary to $25 million (approx. Rs 257 crore) in his new contract with Inter Miami and earns more more than twice as much as the second-highest-paid player in Major League Soccer, Los Angeles FC’s Son Heung-min. Messi’s new contract includes $25 million in base salary and $28,333,333 (approx. Rs 267 crore) in guaranteed compensation, the MLS Players Association said Tuesday in its first release of 2026 salaries. Miami’s $54.6 million payroll is more than $20 million higher than LAFC, which is second at $32.7 million, and nearly five times as much as Philadelphia’s league-low $11.7 million. Miami’s payroll is up from $46.8 million at the start of last season.
Toronto cut payroll to $21.4 million from $34.1 million at the start of 2025, and LAFC boosted its spending to $32.7 million from $22.4 million.
Total league compensation was $631 million and the average guaranteed compensation of $688,816 on April 16 was up 8.9% from $632,809 as of last Oct. 1.
Advertisement
Messi’s initial MLS contract, agreed to in July 2023, included a $12 million base salary and annualized guaranteed compensation of $20,446,667. Messi agreed last October to a three-year contract through the 2028 season, then led the team to its first MLS title.
An attacker who turns 39 next month, Messi is captain of defending World Cup champion Argentina and is expected to play in his sixth World Cup. Messi has 59 goals in 64 regular-season games with Miami, including nine in 11 matches this season. He led MLS with 29 regular-season goals last season and won his second straight MVP award.
His salary figures are for his MLS contract and include any marketing bonus and agent’s fees but do not account for any additional agreements with the team or its affiliates, or for any performance bonuses.
Son is second at $10,368,750 in base salary and $11,152,852 in total compensation, the same as his figures last season. The 33-year-old winger joined LA last August.
Advertisement
Midfielder Rodrigo de Paul, who signed with Miami last summer, is third at $7,569,000 in salary and $9,688,320 in total compensation, followed by Atlanta winger Miguel Almirón ($6,056,000, $7,871,000), San Diego winger Hirving Lozano ($6 million, $9,333,333), New York Red Bulls winger Emil Forsberg ($5,405,000, $6,035,625), Nashville forward Sam Surridge ($5.27 million, $5,933,000), LA Galaxy midfielder Riqui Puig ($5,125,000, $5,792,188), Vancouver attacker Thomas Müller ($5,000,004, $5,152,504) and Chicago winger Jonathan Bamba ($5 million, $5,581,806).
Cincinnati defender Miles Robinson topped MLS players in contention for spots on the U.S. World Cup roster at $3.5 million in base salary and $3.95 million in total compensation, followed by New England goalkeeper Matt Turner ($1,776,136, $1,942,886), Seattle midfielder Cristian Roldan ($1,645,000, $1,766,000), Charlotte midfielder Tim Ream ($1 million, $1,127,750), Columbus goalkeeper Patrick Schulte ($900,000, $1,032,083), Columbus left back/winger Max Arfsten ($800,000, $895,000), New York City goalkeeper Matt Freese ($675,000, $795,833), Cincinnati goalkeeper Roman Celentano ($525,000, $574,000), Salt Lake midfielder Diego Luna ($450,000, $500,833), Vancouver midfielder Sebastian Berhalter ($480,000) and Chicago goalkeeper Chris Brady ($250,000, $348,333).
Newcomers to the league include Toronto forward Josh Sargent ($3.21 million, $5,265,667), San Jose forward Timo Werner ($3,738,872, $4,268,039), Salt Lake winger Morgan Guilavogui ($2.2 million, $2,225,500), Houston forward Guilherme ($1,528,572, $1,925,230), LAFC midfielder Stephen Eustáquio ($1.8 million), D.C. forward Louis Munteanu ($1.19 million, $1,634,100) and Minnesota midfielder James Rodríguez ($684,000).
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
Advertisement
Featured Video Of The Day
IPL 2026 News | RCB Outplay CSK For 2nd Win On Trot, Ruturaj Gaikwad & Co Suffer 3rd Loss
Nigeria international goalkeeper Chiamaka Nnadozie has expressed her joy after helping Brighton & Hove Albion Women F.C. reach the Women’s FA Cup final following a dramatic 3-2 comeback victory over Liverpool Women F.C.
Brighton produced a stunning fightback in the thrilling semi-final clash after recovering from a two-goal deficit to secure a historic place at Wembley.
Liverpool started brightly and went ahead in the 11th minute through O’Sullivan before Beata Olsson doubled the lead in the 22nd minute to make it 2-0 for the hosts.
Advertisement
Brighton responded quickly as Manuela Vanegas scored in the 23rd minute to reduce the deficit and revive her side’s hopes before halftime.
After the break, Brighton continued to push forward and found the equaliser in the 54th minute through Madison Haley, setting up a tense finish to the encounter.
With the match heading towards extra time, Nadine Noordam scored a dramatic late winner to complete the remarkable comeback and send Brighton into the Women’s FA Cup final for the first time in the club’s history.
Advertisement
Reacting after the memorable victory, Nnadozie celebrated the achievement on her official X account.
“We are going to Wembley. Straight into the FA Cup finals. Super proud of this team. I give God the glory,” she wrote.
The achievement adds another major highlight to Nnadozie’s impressive debut season in England following her move from Paris FC Féminines in 2025.
The Super Falcons goalkeeper has quickly become one of Brighton’s key players, earning praise for her brilliant saves, calmness under pressure and commanding presence in defence.
Advertisement
Nnadozie has also recorded several clean sheets this season and was recently nominated for the Barclays Women’s Super League Save of the Season award after an outstanding save against Liverpool earlier in the campaign.
DHARAMSHALA: Madhav Tiwari still remembers how tiring bowling used to feel. As a 13-year-old kid in Indore, newly introduced to leather-ball cricket after changing schools, batting was the only thing that truly excited him. Bowling, in comparison, felt like labour. “I really liked batting. I wanted to become a batsman. Bowling was very tiring. You have to use your body a lot. I find it easy to bat. You can bat for as long as you want,” Tiwari told TOI after scripting Delhi Capitals’ thrilling three-wicket win over Punjab Kings in Dharamshala on Monday.
Watch
Punjab Kings coach Sairaj Bahutule explains what went wrong against Delhi Capitals
At the HPCA Stadium, though, it was his bowling — sharp, heavy and fearless — that first changed the game. Then came the finishing touches with the bat. In just his second IPL appearance, the 22-year-old allrounder produced the kind of performance that instantly forces people to sit up and take note. Who is this boy? Where has he come from? And how has Delhi Capitals unearthed this exciting Indian talent? On a surface that offered generous seam movement, Tiwari bowled with the confidence of someone far more experienced. Clocking speeds in the 137-140 kph range, he attacked the hard lengths relentlessly and struck at crucial moments. His biggest breakthrough came when he got the wicket of the dangerous Priyansh Arya, who had threatened to bat DC out of the contest. Tiwari later returned to dismiss Cooper Connolly with a cleverly disguised slower bouncer, ending with figures of 2/40. “I think the wicket was helping the hard, length ball,” Tiwari said. “So I was kind of sticking to that early on and then tried to mix it with wide yorkers and short balls when I came back towards the end.” Yet the night was only half complete. Delhi still needed composure during a tense chase of 211, and Tiwari provided exactly that. Walking in when the match was on a knife’s edge, he smashed an unbeaten 18 off just eight deliveries, including two boundaries and a six, to help Delhi pull off what became the highest successful T20 chase in Dharamshala. Alongside him was Ashutosh Sharma, someone Tiwari already shared familiarity with from the Madhya Pradesh circuit. “It was clear to us what was required,” Tiwari said. “The way the game was going, both of us needed to hit. We were comfortable with that. We have played together and we know each other. We come from the same place. The atmosphere in the middle was very chill. We also practised together before the IPL.” The 22-year-old hails from Indore, while his family roots trace back to Rewa. His father runs a transportation business and, by Tiwari’s own admission, ensured he never lacked support or facilities while growing up. The biggest influence, however, was former India cricketer Amay Khurasiya. Training at the Amay Khurasiya Cricket Academy, Tiwari was constantly pushed towards becoming a genuine allrounder, even when he himself leaned heavily towards batting. “Amay sir made sure that I picked up on both things,” Tiwari said. “He has played a lot of cricket, so he knew the benefits of being a proper allrounder – especially a pace-bowling allrounder in India. When it dawned on me and I understood how important the combination of both is, I started working equally hard on both.” Years later, the youngster now proudly describes himself as “100 percent bowler and 100 percent batsman.” Interestingly, despite not playing senior domestic cricket for Madhya Pradesh even till date, Tiwari attracted IPL attention through standout performances in the Madhya Pradesh Premier League with Bhopal Leopards. Delhi Capitals spotted the raw ingredients — sharp pace, natural seam movement and clean ball-striking ability — and picked him up for Rs 40 lakh ahead of IPL-2025. The outing against Punjab Kings was, in many ways, a stamp of validation. “This is my second year in the IPL. I feel I have gotten used to the environment,” Tiwari said. “The management and all the seniors are super supportive. You can go to them anytime to ask anything. Now that I am used to it, I just have to control my nerves. It’s a game of bat and ball, and I was just focusing on my basics.” And like every young Indian cricketer beginning to find his feet, the dream is to play for the country one day. “That’s the ambition,” Tiwari said about playing for India. “My ambition is to become the best. I have a lot of work to do. I have to get more sharpness in my game. I hope to learn more from here and do well in the future.”
Lionel Messi remains the highest-paid player in Major League Soccer with an annual base salary of $25m (£18.5m) – more than double that of the North American league’s next-highest earner.
The Argentina forward’s base salary has doubled, while overall the deal is worth $28.3m (£20.9m) in guaranteed compensation.
LAFC’s Son Heung-min is the second-highest earner on a base of $10.4m (£7.7m), with $11.2m (£8.3m) guaranteed.
Advertisement
The former Tottenham forward, 33, earns slightly more than Inter Miami’s Rodrigo de Paul and San Diego FC’s Hirving Lozano.
The salaries do not include income from endorsement deals, or Messi’s option to acquire a stake in Inter Miami – co-owned by David Beckham.
Messi joined the Florida franchise in 2023 and has scored 59 goals in 64 regular-season MLS games, helping Miami win the MLS Cup in 2025.
He led the league with 29 goals last season and has been Most Valuable Player in each of the two full MLS seasons he has played so far – 2004 and 2005.
The EA FC 26 LaLiga TOTS roster has been leaked on social media by X/FUTPoliceLeaks, and it could potentially be one of the most overpowered squads released so far in Ultimate Team. With the Spanish top flight being home to some of the most popular names in the sport, these rumored special items could prove to be extremely expensive in the transfer market.
FC Barcelona recently secured the league title with their win against Real Madrid in El Clasico, and the leaked EA FC 26 LaLiga TOTS squad features plenty of players from both these teams. However, the lineup also features other top performers from clubs like Atletico Madrid, Villareal and others.
Note: This article is speculative and is based on a leak by X/FUTPoliceLeaks. This account has provided accurate and reliable information in the past.
Advertisement
The EA FC 26 LaLiga TOTS squad has been leaked on social media
The previously released Team of the Season rosters from leagues like Premier League, Serie A, Bundesliga and Ligue 1 have all featured high-rated items with overpowered stats and meta PlayStyles. While the headlining player always receives four PlayStyles+, the others receive three such traits. With Lamine Yamal spearheading the leaked EA FC 26 LaLiga TOTS squad, he could potentially becoe one of the best attackers in the game.
These are all the leaked EA FC 26 LaLiga TOTS players along with their rumored overall ratings:
Lamine Yamal: 97
Kylian Mbappe: 96
Raphinha: 96
Pedri: 96
Federico Valverde: 95
Mikel Oyarazabla: 95
Fermin: 95
Marcos Llorente: 95
Aurelien Tchouameni: 94
Pau Cubarsi: 94
Eric Garcia: 94
Joan Garcia: 94
Vedat Muriqi: 94
Arda Guler: 94
Pablo Barrios: 94
Pubil: 94
Thibaut Courtois: 93
Moleiro: 93
Carlos Romero: 92
Mourino: 92
Pablo Fornals: 92
Luis Mila: 92
While Yamal is rumored to be the highest-rated inclusion, Kylian Mbappe could potentially be the most expensive and sought-after player in this lineup due to how overpowered he usually is on the virtual pitch. His Team of the Year version is already one of the most expensive attackers in the game, and this TOTS item could possibly be even better.
There are also other top-tier names like Raphinha, Federico Valverde, Arda Guler, Aurelien Tchouameni, Marcos Llorente and Pedri, who already possess overpowered special items in Ultimate Team and are fan-favorites as well. Even the lower-rated players include massive superstars like Thibaut Courtois, making this an extremely intriguing lineup.
Advertisement
Why did you not like this content?
Advertisement
Was this article helpful?
Thank You for feedback
Are you stuck on today’s Wordle? Our Wordle Solver will help you find the answer.
Australia captain Sophie Molineux has been passed fit and named in Australia’s squad for the T20 World Cup.
The 28-year-old all-rounder will lead a 15-strong squad for the tournament in England, with assistance from vice-captains Ash Gardner and Tahlia McGrath.
Fast bowler Lucy Hamilton has been selected for her first international tournament as the six-time champions look to regain the World Cup title after losing in the semi-finals in 2024.
All-rounders Annabel Sutherland and Grace Harris return to the squad having been rested and dropped respectively for the tour of the West Indies in March.
Advertisement
Molineux was appointed to the Australia captaincy in January, replacing the retired Alyssa Healy, and was considered a surprise pick following a career blighted by injury.
She injured her back prior to the tour of the Caribbean, her first away series as captain, where she played exclusively as a batter.
Australia national selector Shawn Flegler had previously confirmed, external that Molineux would not have been considered for a non-bowling role at the World Cup.
“Sophie has already made her mark as captain and built a strong connection with the group over the last couple of tours, so we’re looking forward to seeing what this side can achieve under her leadership,” Flegler said upon the squad’s announcement.
Advertisement
“Darcie Brown was unlucky to miss out but the decision was based on the conditions we’re expecting and the make-up of the side.
“With at least six right-arm pace options in the mix and raw pace expected to be less effective, we opted to go with Lucy Hamilton who offers something different as a left-arm quick.”
Molineux’s side will play warm-up fixtures against South Africa, England and the West Indies before opening their tournament against South Africa on 13 June at Old Trafford.
Barker was in the right place at the right time and snuck in a buzzer-beater to lift the Fire to a 98-96 win over the New York Liberty on Tuesday night.
Advertisement
With the game tied up, Bridget Carleton tried to hit a 3-pointer over Liberty star Breanna Stewart, though Stewart tipped the ball just barely. But Barke found herself wide open in the lane, easly grabbed the rebound and put it back up before the horn sounded.
Advertisement
That sent the Moda Center into a frenzy and sparked a huge celebration under the rim.
The win marked the first for the Fire since they returned to the WNBA this season along with the Toronto Tempo. The Fire played three seasons from 2000-2002, but ended up folding altogether.
The Fire fell to the Chicago Sky 98-83 in their season-opener, and dropped both of their preseason games.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Barker finished with five points and went just 2-of-5 from the field off the bench in the win. She was selected with the No. 9 overall pick in last year’s draft by the Los Angeles Sparks, and she averaged just more than three points off the bench during her rookie campaign.
This post will be updated with more information shortly.
This is PGA Championship week, after all, but this story is about a junior event he’d played in when he was 12. It was a qualifying event, he explained, and you could either take your result and enter that week’s main tournament, or use it in the future. But Scheffler’s dad, Scott, didn’t make it an either/or proposition. His son could play only in the qualifier. No tournament that week. The family had to be somewhere.
Deal. Scott dropped off Scottie. Scottie played. Scottie called him when it was over.
“He goes, ‘I don’t like this. This is not something I want to hear,’” the younger Scheffler said Tuesday at Aronimink Golf Club, the PGA’s host. “I said, ‘Well, dad, I won the qualifier.’ So if I win the qualifier, I get into the tournament, and I get to save the exemption. So I’m like, I got to play in the tournament.
Advertisement
“He’s like, ‘Scottie, I told you, you can’t play in the tournament. I’m like, ‘But dad, I won.’”
Of course, he’d remember that story.
His mom probably does too.
Scheffler had been asked in his pre-PGA press conference for advice for young golfers and their parents, and he said his parents never pushed him. They’d drop him off with coach Randy Smith, and he was off.
Advertisement
“I think there were more important things for them than my golf game,” Scheffler said. “I think growing up, especially when you look at youth sports today, I think you see a lot of parents that are overzealous. That’s not from a place where they don’t care. I think they want their kids to have success. I think they want them to do well. I think sometimes pushing them towards something is the best way to do it.
“Maybe it isn’t in some cases, but I think I did my best when my parents would drop me off at the golf course and let me do my thing. One of the first things that Randy taught my dad is when Scottie gets to the golf course, he takes his own bag off the golf cart, he sets up his own area. He doesn’t need you out there, this is his thing. I think they did a good job of guiding me along, helping me when I need help, but not pushing me to be anything other than a good student and a good person. It wasn’t all about golf with them.”
And his mom, Diane, did something that was “interesting,” he said.
She had a rule.
Advertisement
“She never asked me what I shot,” Scheffler said. “She said, ‘If you want me to know what you shot, you’ll tell me.
Good advice, and the benefits are clear. Later in the press conference, Scheffler talked about how he’s internally focused and how he enjoys improving, and you can see where that took root. Naturally, he’d share some scores, though, including the one in the story that started this article. Which makes you curious:
Advertisement
Did Scheffler play in that junior tournament?
And how’d he do?
He remembered that, too.
“So he ends up letting me play in the tournament,” Scheffler said, “and I remember calling him when the tournament ended, because the tournament was a couple of hours away, and he had to leave me there for a period of time. I was like 12 years old. He’s probably not going to be happy me telling this story.
Advertisement
“I called him after the tournament, because the tournament ended, everything’s cleaned up, and he’s not going to be back for another hour or two. So I’m just out practicing after the tournament. I called him, ‘Well, dad’ — I told him what I shot, finished fifth. Now I’m fully exempt. We don’t have to worry about the qualifiers anymore. He’s like, ‘OK, great. I’ll be there in a couple hours.’”
During a Netflix documentary about the Reds’ success in Istanbul, Gerrard acknowledges he was in a “bad place” mentally, with a head like “a box of frogs”.
And he says criticism from then manager Rafael Benitez contributed to his potential departure from his boyhood club.
Advertisement
In May 2005, Gerrard captained Liverpool to perhaps the most famous victory in their storied history as they came from 3-0 down at half-time against AC Milan to win on penalties and clinch the club’s fifth European Cup.
It was a moment fans hoped would convince Gerrard to commit his future to Liverpool amid interest from Spanish giants Real Madrid and Premier League champions Chelsea, who were managed at the time by Jose Mourinho.
Six weeks later, Gerrard announced he was leaving. Then he wasn’t.
“Mourinho was on the phone – the best manager in the world at the time, offering silly contracts, which would naturally turn your head. Chelsea were spending fortunes, he was guaranteed success there,” he says.
Advertisement
“I can’t park my relationship with Liverpool. When they came, I didn’t know which way to go. Mentally, I was in a bad place. My head was like a box of frogs.”
Benitez’s demeanour didn’t help.
“I felt like he didn’t rate me, he didn’t trust me, he didn’t want me,” says Gerrard, 45.
“I’ve always been clear that I want to be a Liverpool player and a Liverpool player only, but with that doubt and with that coldness and being part of a team where you don’t believe that you can compete at the top, that’s when your head gets turned.”
Advertisement
Gerrard’s former team-mate Jamie Carragher feels Gerrard “probably needed an arm round his shoulder”.
“Rafa Benitez was never going to do that,” says the Sky Sports pundit. “He’s very unemotional.”
Throughout the documentary, former players describe how Benitez’s criticism and obsession with granular tactical detail sometimes jarred.
Gerrard, in particular, felt that.
Advertisement
“My game… was about emotion, passion, desire, commitment, for the badge, for the [Liver] bird, for the family,” he says. “It was in me and I felt like he wanted to really remodel me.
“Nothing would ever satisfy him.”
Benitez, 66, defends his approach.
“When I joined Liverpool, there was a culture based on emotion,” he says. “Football requires more than that. If you’re really emotional, you don’t find the way to success.”
Advertisement
Time has been a healer – and Gerrard is now able to appreciate the Spaniard’s methods.
“I look back at Rafa and think he’s the best coach I have worked with,” he says.
TORONTO – Down 5-0 in the seventh inning, the Toronto Blue Jays seemed to be headed for a dispiriting, one-sided loss.
They tied the score with an impressive seventh-inning rally, but the Tampa Bay Rays scored two in the tenth and the Blue Jays still lost for the third time in a row. So while this loss wasn’t as one-sided as it could have been, that doesn’t change the bottom line.
Now 18-24, the Blue Jays are a season-worst six games below .500 and they’ve lost all five of the games they’ve played against the Rays this season. Bit by bit, the losses are piling up for the Blue Jays and the list of concerns is growing longer.
Of course, the loss would have been far more one-sided without a five-run seventh from the Blue Jays. Hits by Ernie Clement, Jesus Sanchez and George Springer got the rally going, but it was a two-run double by Yohendrick Piñango that brought the Blue Jays to within one. One batter later, Junior Caminero made an error and Piñango scored to tie the game.
Advertisement
But while the Rays scored twice in the tenth, the Blue Jays managed just one run in the bottom half of the inning.
To be fair, some teams recover from worse records every year. The problem is, most teams that start like this don’t recover – so if the Blue Jays want to be the exception to prove the rule, they need better results soon.
Those solutions could come from any number of sources. As injured position players like Alejandro Kirk, Nathan Lukes and Addison Barger make their way back this month, the roster will get stronger both on offence and on defence.
But the timeline for others, like Jose Berrios and Max Scherzer, is murkier, meaning the Blue Jays essentially have four and a half starters right now, depending on what they decide to do with Spencer Miles.
Advertisement
As for Corbin, he acquitted himself well enough Tuesday, scattering nine hits over 4.1 innings while allowing three runs. There wasn’t a whole lot of bat missing here – just four swinging strikes and one strikeout – but he continues holding his own as a credible depth starter.
While Vladimir Guerrero Jr. contributed a sacrifice fly in the tenth, he was hitless in four at-bats and continues seeking his first extra-base hit in May.
When the topic of Guerrero Jr. came up before the game, manager John Schneider pointed out the work the 27-year-old puts in behind the scenes and noted that some other prominent sluggers are off to slow starts. Then he returned to the question.
“What am I seeing from Vladimir? I think he’s trying to do a lot. He’s trying to do a little bit too much.”
Advertisement
“He wants to be the guy to carry us and the more he does that the harder it gets,” Schneider continued. “From a swing standpoint, I feel like he’s just a tick off with his timing, with his load, his bat tip. And they’re pitching him tough. It’s like hard sinkers in (and) breaking balls away. He’s got to just have a game or two to kind of get himself going.”
As for the Blue Jays’ defence, Daulton Varsho made a tremendous catch in centre field in the tenth, but there were other moments where balls evaded the likes of Varsho, Ernie Clement and Davis Schneider, continuing a trend of hit-and-miss defence.
As a team, the Blue Jays ranked seventh in MLB in outs above average entering play Tuesday. But while the numbers are respectable, those who know this team understand that there’s another level of defensive performance possible here.
Advertisement
“Totally,” Schneider said. “You want to just make a couple more plays or play a little bit tighter, give yourself a chance to come back. And there’s games that we’ve just straight out gotten beat. But I think the (defensive) expectation for this group is higher than what they’ve shown for sure.”
You must be logged in to post a comment Login