True to form, Cameron Young arrives early and well prepared.
Our production crew is finishing its setup behind the clubhouse at Dutchman’s Pipe, a well-to-do West Palm Beach golf club just a few miles south of Young’s home, when the cover star himself, the third-ranked golfer in the world, pulls up in a cart and offers a wave to our photographer. He looks more casual than we’re accustomed to seeing him at Tour events, wearing an unbuttoned white polo untucked over gray shorts. Several hangers swing from the back of his cart.
“I brought options,” he says sheepishly, gesturing to a handful of logoed golf shirts and checked button-downs. He hops from the cart and shakes hands with each member of the GOLF team. For the next couple hours, he’s engaged and engaging — direct and forthright through a photo shoot, a sit-down chat and a one-sided battle with a bucket of balls.
That Young is here at all is an encouraging sign for those of us intrigued by his game and what makes him tick. His first several years on Tour were marked by a Teddy Roosevelt — like approach to the media and his on-course performance, speaking softly and carrying a big stick while leaving us to guess the rest. We got to know him, in part, from what we saw on TV — the beard, the game-time scowl, the prodigious power, the trademark pause at the top of his backswing — but not much else. Young seemed, from the outside, a reluctant star, notably declining to create even an Instagram account — almost unheard of in this multi-platform, brand-building era.
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So who is Cameron Young? Let’s start here: He was born in New York’s Westchester County and now lives in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. He doesn’t care if you call him Cameron or Cam. He and his wife Kelsey have two boys and a girl. They travel just about everywhere together. He’s quicker to smile in real life than in competition (or photos). His teammates at Wake Forest included Will Zalatoris and Alex Fitzpatrick. He’s sponsored by Major League Baseball but doesn’t watch much Major League Baseball. His first pro tournament win came as an amateur, at Bethpage Black, at the 2017 New York State Open. Last year he became the 1,000th unique winner in PGA Tour history. Before the biggest drive of his life, he gave himself the first pep talk of his life. As he hit the biggest one-foot putt of his life, he couldn’t feel his hands.
Thanks to his series of breakthroughs on the game’s biggest stages — his long-awaited first Tour win at the 2025 Wyndham; a starring role a month later at the Ryder Cup; victory at this year’s Players and a validating follow-up win at the Cadillac Championship; his ascent to World No. 3 — something has changed.
He’s being asked better questions and giving more interesting answers. The door has cracked open a bit wider, offering glimpses of the 29-year-old on the rise, of where he came from and how he now finds himself among the game’s elite.
Young poses for photos at Dutchman’s Pipe in West Palm Beach, Fla.
Michael Schwartz
YOUNG’S ORIGIN STORY will make you nostalgic for a childhood you never even had. You can picture how he would have looked: the little kid at the big golf club, chasing his ball into the fading sun, not a care in the world besides impending dusk, night after night after night.
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“It was a dream place to grow up,” Young says.
That dream place was Sleepy Hollow Country Club, where his father, David, took the head pro job when his son was three or four.
“By that point, I already loved going out there and smacking it around.”
Sleepy, as it’s known, is a landmark club just north of New York City, famous for its Golden Age course design, Vanderbilt-mansion clubhouse and entrancing Hudson River views. It’s rarefied turf, but Young felt welcomed from the start. His father or his mother (Barbara, an accomplished player too) would take him out to play nearly every evening, and he could chase to his heart’s content.
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About a decade into his dad’s tenure, the family moved on property, into a house off the fourth hole of Sleepy’s nine-hole short course. Cam developed a ritual: He’d take the train home from school, change into his golf clothes and head straight out.
“I’d get out on the course as much as I could, especially late in the afternoon — see how many holes we could play,” he says. “It’s one of the most beautiful pieces of [land] you could ever find.”
He continues to get membership emails. That’s how he knows about the occasional watch parties and clubhouse meetups supporting the kid who climbed to the top — even as every rung of the ladder brings a reminder that he’s not that kid anymore.
Cameron and his father, David.
Courtesy Cameron Young
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A YEAR AGO AT THIS TIME, Young’s career was still defined — at least publicly — by what he hadn’t quite accomplished. He’d jacked up expectations with a red-hot rookie year in 2022 but still hadn’t been able to win a PGA Tour event. Sure, he’d almost gotten across the line, dating back to that Rookie of the Year campaign and its extremely near-misses at the PGA Championship and Open Championship as part of a season with seven top-three finishes. But no dice. He also hadn’t made a Ryder Cup team, and even that omission barely registered. When the 2023 U.S. team was announced, the spotlighted snub in Netflix’s Full Swing was Keegan Bradley, who’d finished 11th in qualifying, while Young, 9th in the standings, was passed over with significantly less fanfare.
By those lofty standards, he floundered in the years that followed, sliding from top 15 in the world to outside the top 50. By early 2025, he was off the Ryder Cup radar for Bethpage Black, the course and career goal he’d circled since high school.
But then he made changes — some essential, others sharpened by experience — that added up to something special.
Young changed caddies. After shuffling through a series of more established loopers, he passed his bag to Wake Forest pal Kyle Sterbinsky.
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“Some of it is just grinding through tougher times and finding better ones,” Young said at the time. “[Kyle is] one of my best friends, a college teammate, and he’s great at reading greens.” Whatever the alchemy, the results were immediate: his putting stats soared, as did his iron play — and his scores dropped accordingly.
Young changed ballflights. Rather, he committed to a single ballflight. Instead of adjusting from shot to shot, he decided to lean into the draw he’d grown up with around Sleepy, a return to his swing DNA. “You watched Tiger in his prime and he hit all of them. Every shot,” Young says. “And, in theory, if you want to be as good as you can be, you want to be able to hit every shot. But for most people, it probably just isn’t practical.”
Young tweaked his mindset too, choosing to think bigger picture and stating plainly his intention to make the Ryder Cup team at Bethpage. With that as his North Star, everything else found its place.
Finally, he changed his golf ball, putting a mysterious Titleist Pro V1 prototype into play ahead of the 2025 Wyndham, which immediately helped him flight the ball better and control his distance accordingly. It had the desired effect. In his first week with the new rock, Young won the event by six strokes, putting an emphatic end to the chatter about his conspicuous winless streak on Tour.
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To hear him describe it, it all was a massive relief.
“It was nice to just not have it be the conversation anymore,” Young says.
Young has vaulted to No. 3 in the World Ranking.
Michael Schwartz
THAT FIRST TOUR TRIUMPH proved to be a springboard. Young finished fifth the following week, 11th a week later and T4 at the 2025 Tour Championship, earning a Ryder Cup captain’s pick in the process.
He acquitted himself so well in the first two days at Bethpage that U.S. captain Keegan Bradley sent him out first in Sunday singles in front of his New York faithful. He finished a back-and-forth showdown against Justin Rose with a must-make birdie putt on the 18th green for a 1-up victory and the biggest fist pump of his golfing life, knowing he’d toppled the first domino in a rowdy comeback that the U.S. side nearly pulled off.
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“It was maybe more rewarding, in a sense, to make the putt on Sunday knowing that there was another guy behind me and one behind him and another one behind him,” Young says, remembering the momentum. His 3-1-0 record was Team U.S.A.’s best.
In early 2026, Young picked up where he left off in 2025, finishing T7 at Riviera and T3 at Bay Hill before unleashing late heroics at TPC Sawgrass, where he chased down Sunday’s leaders, birdied the island par-3 17th, stepped to the terrifying 18th tee with a pep talk to himself — I’m going to hit the best shot of my life right here — and pummeled the longest drive in the hole’s recorded history. When he won the Players Championship outright (Matt Fitzpatrick bogeyed No. 18, the sort of help he’d never seemed to get from competitors in the past) the tee shot seemed emblematic of this new, assertive, self-believing Young — a golfer in full.
There were still more positive signs at the Masters. Young’s first point of pride was bouncing back from four bogeys in his first seven holes on Thursday to ultimately finish the event T3 behind winner Rory McIlroy and runner-up Scottie Scheffler. McIlroy-Scheffler-Young, at the biggest tournament on the calendar? Company noted.
Two starts later, Young won again, six shots clear of second-place finisher Scheffler at the Cadillac Championship.
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“I’m just playing better,” he says. “And I think you could argue all day about which piece has influenced that the most.”
“I always thought, If I can just get to top 10 in the world, things will be easier. And they’re not,” Young says.
Michael Schwartz
THERE ARE PERKS that come with joining this club, with winning, with making the Ryder Cup, with being the world’s third best player. Youngarrived on Tour as something of a loner. Now he talks about playing at home with Sunshine State neighbors Justin Thomas, Xander Schauffele, Patrick Cantlay, Keegan Bradley and more.
Still, winning isn’t the game changer he imagined it to be.
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“I always thought, If I can just get to top 10 in the world, things will be easier. And they’re not,” Young says. “You still start over every day, every week. I have a better handle on what I’m doing and how to approach things than I did probably a year or two ago. But, like, is it easier? Less stressful? No. I mean, golf is still really hard. You still have to hit all the shots. So,yeah, my self-belief is higher. I have more tools to deal with things that come my way. But at the same time, it doesn’t feel as different as I would have thought.”
Nevertheless, full-circle moments keep materializing. His three- and four-year-old sons have begun taking an interest in golf at about the age their father was when he first toddled along the fairways at Sleepy. Recently, on a whim, Young’s wife asked the boys if they wanted to go to the golf course.
“I thought it would be five minutes, and they’d get bored and go do something else,” Young says. “But they sat there and hit balls forever. We went and had lunch, then they both said, ‘Can we go back out and hit more?’ ”
Young and family celebrate a Players Championship title.
Getty Images
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The Youngs travel everywhere as a unit, an achievement in patience and logistics Cam credits to his wife, Kelsey. Their presence makes weeks on the road more meaningful — even if it has the effect of ratcheting down post-win celebrations.
“My wife does a family photo album each year,” Young says. “And in this year’s, we have a picture from the Players, late that night, while I was still [at TPC Sawgrass]. Right next to it is a picture of our kids on swings at the park. The two pictures are taken, like, 11 hours apart. We drove home in the rain [from Sawgrass to South Florida], fought the kids to bed, then got up and they were ready for the park. And we’re like, ‘Okay, let’s go.’ ”
With family his first priority, Young has had to double down on fundamentals, on discipline, on managing time and energy. “It’s not glamorous and fun, but simple is the most effective [approach], I think,” he says, adding with a chuckle: “In our household, we joke about ‘being committed to your process,’ whatever it is. Making eggs, whatever.”
Outside the house, Young’s process is focused on making birdies. Does he still love the game? He does. But to get the most out of himself, he’s learned to treat it like a job.
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“To be good at golf, I probably do a lot more things now that I don’t love,” he says. “I love the process of trying to get better, but it doesn’t mean I love endlessly hitting putts on a chalk line with a mirror.”
Does he ever chase daylight for old time’s sake?
“This past December, for probably the first time in three years, I played one round of casual golf with my friends,” he says. His Wake Forest teammates were in town for a wedding.
And that was that. But he’s at peace with the trade-off.
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“I talk to my wife about this on a relatively regular basis, just making sure that we stop and appreciate where we are,” Young says. “It’s much easier to do when things are going well, but [it’s important] even if I was playing poorly. It’s been my dream to compete on the PGA Tour, really, for a very long time. And the opportunity to do that is something to be grateful for.”
Young knows he’s raised expectations. That winning is now the standard, that the question When will he win? has been ramped up to When will he win a major? That’s okay. He’s comfy there: under pressure late on a Sunday, the best players around him, the world watching.
It’s a chance to remind himself of the thing he learned as a kid: It’s good to be on a golf course, late in the afternoon, with something to chase.
Tom Wachman continued the good form of Irish riders at Spruce Meadows with success in the McNerney Cup aboard Hawaii.
The McNerney Cup 1.45m in the International Ring at Spruce Meadows was contested by twenty-five combinations as they took on the challenge of a technical course designed by FEI course designer Santiago Varela.
Nine of the competitors made it through to the second round after producing clears in the first round.
Both Tom Wachman and Daniel Coyle were among the nine to go against the clock in the second round.
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Wachman and Hawaii delivered the fastest fault-free round of the jump-off, stopping the clock in 38.87 seconds to claim victory.
Saudi Arabian rider Abdulrahman, aboard Heartbeat W, took the runner-up spot, with Juan Manuel Luzardo (IRI) and Guizmo du Riou completing the podium.
Detroit Lions cornerback Terrion Arnold (6) practices during mini camp at Meijer Performance Center in Allen Park on Tuesday, June 16, 2026.
Released last week by the Detroit Lions after he was arrested on eight felony charges last month, cornerback Terrion Arnold cleared waivers, multiple outlets reported on Monday.
Arnold was arrested on June 24 and is facing charges of armed robbery and kidnapping related to an incident in February near Tampa, Fla.
Arnold is expected to meet with NFL teams that have expressed interest in signing him.
“Although Mr. Arnold has been released by the Detroit Lions organization, he already has been contacted by three other NFL clubs regarding his services,” defense attorney Harvey Steinberg wrote last week.
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Arnold is accused of being the ringleader of a plot to avenge a theft in February by detaining and pistol-whipping the men he believed were responsible. But authorities said none of the victims Arnold and co-conspirators allegedly kidnapped and attacked were involved with stealing items from Arnold.
The 23-year-old who played at Alabama and was drafted by the Lions was the primary conspirator, according to prosecutors. All three victims are in their teens, according to court documents.
Arnold reported the theft of more than $250,000 in property from an Airbnb in Largo, Fla., near Tampa, three days before the alleged kidnapping and assault occurred.
Mexico City, Guadalajara and Monterrey are the three Mexican host cities for this mega World Cup, hosted jointly with the United States and Canada. Images from these cities have quickly spread across social media, showing fans of many nations celebrating with Mexican fans.
Along the narrow streets of Monterrey’s nightlife district, older women dance salsa, arm-in-arm with sandal-wearing Dutch fans while loud reggae music blasts from the speakers of bars and restaurants. Other locals jump in circles with World Cup tourists, taking turns waving Moroccan and Mexican flags. Mexican fans are cheering on supporters of other teams, even tossing them into the air before catching them as a group. There is one particularly strong image that depicts fans consoling South Korean supporters after a 1–0 loss before treating them to tequila shots.
“I was a bit afraid I’d fall to the ground and get hurt, but they caught me,” Leonardo Jun from South Korea told DW. “Everyone took photos with me as if I were a pop star. It’s pretty cool to be welcomed like that.”
“You can really feel the World Cup here,” said Sebastian from Colombia, who managed to snag tickets for a match at the legendary Azteca Stadium.
His compatriot Xavier reported: “This is my first World Cup, and the Mexicans have already become like brothers to us.”
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Colombian fans have felt very much at home in MexicoImage: Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/picture alliance
While headlines in the United States initially focused on issues entering the country, high public transport costs, and the unique tipping culture, Mexico offers an authentic openness and warmth that has many international visitors raving. Brenda, a Mexican herself, believes that “all three hosts are doing a great job, but Mexico has that special something.”
A record three-time host
Ahmed from Egypt also traveled to Mexico City.
“I had high expectations, and I haven’t been disappointed. Mexico has a wonderful culture of hospitality and, after all, knows a thing or two about major football events.”
Following the tournaments in 1970 and 1986, Mexico has become the only country to host the World Cup for a third time.
Ahmed from Egypt (left) enjoyed the atmosphere in Mexico CityImage: Josue Perez/ZUMA/picture alliance
In this regard, Mexico has an edge over Canada and the USA, where other sports like ice hockey, baseball, basketball, and American football take center stage. In New York, for instance, there was little World Cup buzz during the opening days; soccer was overshadowed by the New York Knicks‘ first NBA title win in over half a century.
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Deeply rooted football culture
In Mexico, by contrast, football is deeply embedded in the national psyche and is omnipresent these days. National team players smile from numerous roadside billboards, and the typically red Coca-Cola cans are being sold in green – the color of the national jersey.
From taxi drivers and flight attendants to pizza delivery workers, everyone is wearing the green jersey featuring the golden eagle on the chest – the national symbol that also adorns the center of the Mexican flag.
Mexican fans, young and old, live and die with the fortunes of “El Tri”Image: Lisi Niesner/REUTERS
“The only problem with this World Cup is that it isn’t taking place in Mexico the whole time,” said Tom, who traveled from Yorkshire, England.
“I think Mexico performed better than the United States and Canada. For me, they are the winners among the hosts,” said Jenny.
Mexico and Canada were both allocated 13 matches – a small fraction of the total of 104 games. The opening match took place in Mexico City, but the Round of 16 clash between “El Tri” and England will be the last match in the country. From the quarterfinals on, all of the games will be in the United States.
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The protests that took place in Mexico before the start of the tournament, as well as the debates regarding match security, now seem a distant memory. For most fans, none of that matters anymore. Crowd control remains a more pressing concern following the death of three fans who were caught in a crowd crush during celebrations.
Apr 27, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder guard Aaron Wiggins (21) against the Phoenix Suns during game four of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
The Atlanta Hawks acquired guard Aaron Wiggins from the Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday in exchange for second-round draft picks in 2030 and 2032.
Wiggins, 27, was a second-round draft pick by the Thunder in 2021 and made 35 starts the following season as a rookie when he averaged 8.3 points with 3.6 rebounds and 1.4 assists in 50 total games.
During the Thunder’s championship season of 2024-25, Wiggins made 26 regular-season starts then played in 22 of 23 playoff games as Oklahoma City defeated the Indiana Pacers in a seven-game NBA Finals.
Wiggins has averaged 8.7 points with 3.2 rebounds and 1.4 assists in 339 regular-season games (100 starts) over the past five seasons. He has averaged 4.7 points, 2.9 rebounds and 0.8 assists in 45 playoff games over nine separate series.
Blue Jays manager John Schneider told reporters on Monday that Scherzer’s rehab assignment will continue on Wednesday, when the three-time Cy Young winner starts for the triple-A Bisons.
Buffalo is at home this week for a six-game set with the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders — an affiliate of the New York Yankees.
Scherzer last pitched on Friday with the high-A Vancouver Canadians, throwing 49 pitches (33 strikes) across three innings. He allowed three hits and two earned runs, striking out three batters and walking a pair.
The 41-year-old last pitched for Toronto on June 10 against the Philadelphia Phillies before hitting the injured list later that week with back spasms.
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Various ailments have limited Scherzer to just six starts and 22 innings with the Blue Jays this season, in which he owns a 10.23 ERA, 14 strikeouts and 11 walks.
He was also sidelined from April 24 to June 10 due to right forearm tendinitis and left ankle inflammation.
Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Jordan Addison (3) battles Chicago Bears cornerback Nahshon Wright during a contested catch at U.S. Bank Stadium on Nov 16, 2025. The Week 11 highlight clip captured Addison elevating near the sideline as Wright challenged the throw, creating a dramatic moment from Minnesota’s divisional matchup against Chicago. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
The world isn’t necessarily high on the Minnesota Vikings in 2026, mainly because new quarterback Kyler Murray’s reputation is at a career low point. But one website really took the cake last week, bashing the Vikings and calling them a non-threat this season.
DaWindyCity.com took it upon itself to declare the Vikings a laughable squad, which is strange because Minnesota beat Chicago once last year and was one tackle away from a sweep.
Bears-Themed Media Thinks the Vikings Are a Joke
Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy dropped back to pass during first-half action against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field as Minnesota opened a road divisional matchup. On September 8, 2025, in Chicago, McCarthy worked from the pocket while the Vikings’ offense tried to establish rhythm against a familiar NFC North opponent. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images.
Nick Halden: Just Go Ahead and Write Off the Vikings
Halden did the honors, assessing an article about a J.J. McCarthy taunting penalty — of all things — last year. He wrote, “The Bears can already write Vikings off list of 2026 NFC North threats. No question, the Bears have zero reason to fear the Vikings and should be able to pencil in two wins in each of the team’s divisional matchups.”
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“Having such a poor decision-maker at quarterback simply cannot be overcome. No question, the Bears have zero reason to fear the Vikings and should be able to pencil in two wins in each of the team’s divisional matchups. Having such a poor decision-maker at quarterback simply cannot be overcome.”
For good measure, he added, “The Bears still need to approach the Vikings with their best attack due to the familiarity, but barring injuries or a complete coaching failure, Minnesota simply isn’t a threat. This is evidenced by a series of quarterback decisions that doomed a once-productive rival offense.”
The Very QB He’s Making Fun Of … Helped Beat the Bears Last Season
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Last year, before the Bears morphed into a playoff-bound squad, they hosted the Vikings in Week 1, McCarthy’s first career start. The youngster looked shaky throughout the contest — that happens to first-time starters — but McCarthy turned on the jets when it mattered the most.
McCarthy personally abused the Bears, leading his team to a come-from-behind triumph, and at the time, sending his personal momentum through the roof. Vikings fans thought, “We got our man” for the long haul at quarterback — before various struggles and injuries for the 22-year-old.
So for Halden to chide McCarthy as a terrible quarterback, well, it just doesn’t make much sense after he saw firsthand how McCarthy could cook and beat Chicago — in his inaugural game.
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Bears Got One Whiff of Success
This must be the price of success. Chicago won a playoff game in 2025 — its first since 2010 — and now that fan base or blogging community can punch down. A similar phenomenon emerged in 2023 (and remains) for the Detroit Lions. For years, the Lions were the laughingstock of the NFC North, the kid brother to the Green Bay Packers, Vikings, and sometimes even the Bears.
Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams met Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson after a divisional matchup at U.S. Bank Stadium, creating a notable postgame moment between two NFC North headliners. On November 16, 2025, in Minneapolis, Williams greeted Jefferson following the game as cameras captured the exchange near midfield after Minnesota’s home contest. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-Imagn Images.
Then, Dan Campbell arrived, and Detroit became a serious team, nearly reaching the Super Bowl in 2023. They fell short and orchestrated the largest collapse in NFC Championship history, but that didn’t stop fans from changing their personality — “same ‘ol Lions” shifted to the big bad wolves of the NFC North.
That appears to be happening with some Bears fans and writers.
Showtime Soon
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Halder’s assertion: “No question, the Bears have zero reason to fear the Vikings,” will be put to the test in less than 10 weeks. The NFL season kicks off September 9th, and any summer prognostication will meet its maker.
The Bears will have a chance to personify Halder’s bold take by claiming the Vikings are a joke no one needs to worry about. Chicago also won oodles of close games in 2025, and when that happens, teams usually regress to the mean.
Chicago Bears tight end Colston Loveland was brought down after a reception as Minnesota Vikings defenders Fabian Moreau and Eric Wilson closed quickly at U.S. Bank Stadium. On November 16, 2025, in Minneapolis, Moreau and Wilson converged during first-quarter action, stopping Loveland in a physical NFC North matchup near the sideline. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images.
Fox Sports‘ Greg Auman wrote about the Vikings last month, “If the Minnesota Vikings had found ways to put up more points last season, they would’ve made the postseason for a second straight year.”
“They had a top-10 defense with coordinator Brian Flores, going 7-2 in games where they scored 20 points or more. That suggests if the offense can get back to 2024 levels, they could be a surprise team in the NFC North.”
Finally, Chicago and Minnesota will do battle at least twice in 2026. If there is nothing to fear about the Vikings, the Bears should seamlessly sweep the purple team, a feat it has not accomplished in seven years.
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Oddsmakers list the Bears’ win-over-under at 9.5, with the Vikings a whisker behind at 8.5. The two clubs first meet on September 20th — Week 2.
Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
Argentina star Leandro Paredes has admitted that they were not surprised by Norway knocking out Brazil in the FIFA World Cup. He said that no side is easy to face at the tournament and they are aware of the threat from Egypt.
Speaking to the media, Paredes said that all sides playing a tthe FIFA World Cup have been competitive this summer. He believes anyone can win in the knockout stages and that there are no favourites in any game.
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“We weren’t surprised that Brazil got eliminated yesterday, because we know that every national team is competetive and in this World Cup anyone can beat anyone. The lesson is that there will not be any easy game, as will happen with Egypt. After our late goal against Cape Verde, what did the coach tell us? Scaloni did not say ‘they don’t play any more’, but to give their best and keep trying, pressing. That we leave everything until the end.”
Paredes was quizzed about his role in the Argentina
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“If I see myself as a starter? I always see myself on the pitch. The coach makes the decisions and decides by eleven. We must give everything and be willing. We want to give our best version, always. You can’t always do it, you suffered and you could win.” (via beIN Sports)
“The fatigue we have is normal, the grass had an influence. We are in good shape footballing and mentally. There is no easy game, like against Cape Verde. Winning was the most important thing and we were able to do it.”
Argentina needed extra time to beat debutants Cape Verde in the Round of 32 last week. They had eased into the knockout stage, beating Algeria, Austria and Jordan in the group matches.
Brazil eliminated from the FIFA World Cup by Norway
Brazil had a tough start with a 1-1 draw against Morocco, but finished top of their group. They defeated Scotland and Haiti in their final group games, and set up a clash with Japan in the Round of 32.
The Asian side took the lead in the first half, the Selecao looked set for an early exit. However, Casemiro got them level before the hour mark, and Gabriel Martinelli scored the winner in injury time to seal a 2-1 win.
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However, things did not go their way in the Round of 16 ans Erling Haaland scored two late goals, before Neymar pulled one back deep into injury time.
The footballing world has reacted furiously to FIFA’s decision to suspend the red card shown to USA striker Folarin Balogun, making him available to face Belgium
Jordan Spieth would say that’s part of the bargain.
By now, you’ve likely come across what went down with Kohles at the PGA Tour’s John Deere Classic, though it’s quite possible you quickly covered your eyes. Kohles is a 36-year-old pro. He’s won five times on the Korn Ferry Tour, including once early last month, and he’s never won on the PGA Tour, though two years ago, he came as close as you can get. On the 72nd hole at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson event, he led by a stroke, only to fall short by that margin after he bogeyed and Taylor Pendrith birdied. Then came late Sunday afternoon. This time, Kohles co-led at TPC Deere Run in Silvis, Ill.
And he tied for third, the result of a swing from the center of the fairway that hooked left, took a couple of bounces and cannonballed into the water left of the green. Kohles said he’d been between clubs. A 9-iron would have been too little; an 8 too much. He said he hit a three-quarter punch shot with his 8, tugged it and double-bogeyed, and Chris Gotterup won and Kohles didn’t.
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For Gotterup, there was elation and emotion. He’d won again — Sunday was his third victory of the year and fifth on the PGA Tour overall. But he also seemingly recalled where he’d been just four years ago, when he’d been handed a sponsor exemption to the John Deere after writing a letter, and in a post-tournament interview during CBS’ broadcast, he cried. Meanwhile, Kohles admirably answered some questions, then was off to do it all over again, this week at the ISCO Championship in Kentucky.
It was if they were enacting what Spieth had talked about just five days earlier.
Ahead of the John Deere, he’d been asked for a peek into the idea of having results in professional golf tied directly to the player, and Spieth laid out what that’s like in pretty raw terms.
“Well, golf — I mean, if you choose to do what I do for a living, you’re choosing to have the ball in your hands for the last shot from the get-go,” he said. “That obviously can bring you — that risk can defeat you, and it can also bring you to the highest of highs in sport.
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“We chose to be there. We choose to do this. If you want to do it at the highest level, you choose to have failure, heartbreak, and on the other side, you get so much more reward from the good, and that risk is worth it to me.”
To Kohles, too.
Still.
Should you be wondering where his thoughts were, on Monday morning, he logged onto Instagram. He posted a few photos, including one of the fateful moment where his 8-iron’s clubface closed ever so slightly. He also wrote a few words.
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Give him the damn ball, he said.
“It was a disappointing finish, there’s no sugarcoating that,” he wrote. “But if this game has taught me anything, it’s that you don’t get to choose how the story unfolds, you only get to choose how you respond.
“I’m extremely proud of how we played all week. And, while this one stings, it’s not going to define who we are. We’re going to learn from it, get better because of it, and keep putting ourselves in positions to succeed.
“I want to thank everyone who has reached out. The support from my family, friends and those who have been along for this crazy journey means the world.
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“Although it wasn’t quite my time, I know that day is going to come, and everything we’ve been through is going to make it that much sweeter.
“Looking forward to getting after it again this week in Kentucky!”
Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell watches from the sideline during the first half against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field on Nov 23, 2025. O’Connell monitored Minnesota’s offense and game management in Green Bay as the Vikings battled their NFC North rival during a pivotal late-season divisional road matchup. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images.
The Minnesota Vikings will host a quarterback competition at training camp in three weeks, and for the most part, fans are excited. But don’t tell that to CBS Sports‘ Carter Bahns, who claimed last week that the Vikings’ locker room could get “ugly” as a result.
To date, Minnesota has shown no signs of quarterback strife, but it’s on the way, per Bahns.
Kevin O’Connell Evidently Has a Problem to Solve?
Minnesota Vikings offensive linemen Ryan Van Demark and Walter Rouse stood alongside quarterback J.J. McCarthy during minicamp practice at TCO Performance Center. On June 11, 2026, in Eagan, Minnesota, the group worked through Day 3 drills as the Vikings continued installing offensive concepts before training camp. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
Bahns: Things Could Get Ugly in MIN
Sizing up possible “fireworks” around the league in the spirit of Independence Day, Bahns landed on the Vikings as one nominee. He explained, “Work in progress: Quarterback competition could get ugly. Kyler Murray and J.J. McCarthy offered two different accounts of the Minnesota Vikings’ quarterback competition when asked this spring about their working relationship.”
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“Murray, who arrived on a minimum contract as the presumptive favorite to win the job, said that he embraced a mentor role and that McCarthy had been ‘overly acceptive’ of that leadership. The incumbent starter, however, made it sound as though they are not on such friendly terms.”
Minnesota signed Murray in March for $1.3 million to compete with McCarthy, a shockingly small contract.
Bahns added, “Neither is owed the No. 1 quarterback role, but whoever loses it will have reason to be discontented. Murray is a seven-year starter who, at his best, produces among the league’s top half of signal-callers. McCarthy is a recent first-round pick who has arguably not received a fair shake due to injuries.”
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How Ugly?
If Bahns is right about locker room disharmony, one must wonder about the magnitude. Will McCarthy just remain disgruntled under the surface, with certain players thinking he should start? Would it be one of those situations? No quarterback likes to be benched, especially not one who is 23 and held the QB1 job a year prior.
Or — would McCarthy rage and demand a ticket out of town? The guy who drafted McCarthy, Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, no longer works for the Vikings, so one could argue that the franchise already has a paved off-ramp if it wanted to cut ties and roll with Murray, Carson Wentz, and Max Brosmer in 2026.
Total locker room chaos would result in a McCarthy trade — if Murray wins the QB1 battle — and there could be a market. The Arizona Cardinals and New York Jets may need a quarterback solution for the long term and, in fact, based on their respective roster constructions, appear to be eyeing the deep 2027 draft for a new passer.
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Roster Competitions Happen All the Time
On the other hand, Bahns’s assessment may be dramatic. Roster competitions happen every summer for every team, at almost every position. The loser of the Vikings’ QB1 battle could accept his fate like a gentleman and assume the QB2 role like a classy athlete. That’s how sports work.
Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy met with head coach Kevin O’Connell during first-half action against the Atlanta Falcons at U.S. Bank Stadium. On September 14, 2025, in Minneapolis, the quarterback and coach talked between plays as Minnesota continued its home matchup against Atlanta. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images.
Also remember — Murray and McCarthy have suspect injury resumes. No matter who reigns triumphant at training camp, they will fight to avoid injuries that have already plagued their careers.
Generally speaking, keeping the locker room together will be up to Kevin O’Connell. He’s actually known for building consensus within a locker room. Minnesota has the right man for the job.
Murray as the Favorite
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Murray is the likely Week 1 starter against the Green Bay Packers. Let’s get that out in the open. That’s the most straightforward assessment of the Vikings’ quarterback situation, despite the summer competition providing a talking point for the coming weeks. While Minnesota may frame it as a battle, and perhaps they should — McCarthy deserves an opportunity to prove himself, and O’Connell benefits nothing from making premature promises — the reality is more nuanced.
Murray’s arrival in Minnesota was not coincidental. He had other options, as players with his pedigree typically do. When the Vikings acquired him, there was likely an implicit understanding regarding the immediate plan: Murray would be the presumptive starter, given the first legitimate shot at QB1, with the potential to extend beyond a one-year deal into 2026.
Minnesota needed a definitive answer at quarterback after a tumultuous offseason, and Murray provided it. He boasts experience in high-stakes games and all the tools required of a QB1, including elite speed not usually found at the quarterback position. For a team focused on immediate contention, that package was an ideal fit, especially for a million or so bucks.
Minnesota Vikings quarterbacks J.J. McCarthy and Kyler Murray worked through minicamp practice as Minnesota continued shaping its revamped quarterback room. On June 11, 2026, at TCO Performance Center in Eagan, the pair took Day 3 practice reps while building timing before training camp under Kevin O’Connell’s staff. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
However, McCarthy could still make the competition compelling. He should not be underestimated. If he excels in training camp and displays improved mechanics, the Vikings will face a genuine dilemma.
The more probable scenario is clear. McCarthy will push hard, Murray will start, and Minnesota will avoid overcomplicating the decision.
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Then everyone will be on “locker room watch,” according to Bahns.
Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
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