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Joaquin Niemann, Talor Gooch Tied For Lead After Round 3 Of LIV Golf Korea

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Joaquin Niemann and Talor Gooch have combined to win 11 LIV Golf individual titles. They enter Sunday’s final round of LIV Golf Korea in the best position to chase another trophy.

Niemann, the Torque GC captain, and Gooch, in his first season as the OKGC captain, share the 54-hole lead at 9 under at the challenging Asiad Country Club. One stroke back is HyFlyers GC’s Scott Vincent, with Ripper GC Captain Cameron Smith and Crushers GC’s Charles Howell III tied for fourth at 7 under.

Crushers Captain Bryson DeChambeau, winner of last year’s LIV Golf Korea when it was held outside Seoul, suffered two late bogeys to drop into a share of sixth with 4Aces GC Captain Dustin Johnson and RangeGoats GC’s Ben Campbell. Johnson produced the lowest round of the day, a 6-under 64.

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On the team leaderboard, the Crushers – winners last season in Korea– are at 16 under, one shot ahead of OKGC, which is playing just its second tournament since rebranding from their previous Smash GC name. Ripper GC is solo third at 12 under.

The individual leaderboard is stacked with winners, as eight of the top 10 have won at least one LIV Golf title. Niemann is the league’s all-time individual wins leader with seven, including five last season. He’s yet to win this season, though, but that might change if his putter remains as hot as it was on the back nine Saturday when he rolled in three long birdie putts, including a big breaker from 34 feet at the 14th hole, to shoot a 4-under 66.

“Putter did behave a lot better today than the first two days, so pretty happy about that,” said the 27-year-old Niemann, the league’s youngest captain. “It did love me a lot. I did love it a lot, too.”

Gooch has four career LIV Golf wins, including two at LIV Golf Andalucia, the next tournament on the 2026 schedule set for next week in Spain when he will defend his title from last year. He entered Saturday as the solo leader after a second-round 63 in which he produced eight birdies, but he started his third round with 14 consecutive pars before posting his lone birdie at the par-5 15th for a bogey-free 69.

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“You’ve got to stay patient and just wait for your time and hope that it comes, and it unfortunately didn’t come much today,” Gooch said. “But that’s why we stay patient. Maybe tomorrow it’ll come.”

Although both Niemann and Gooch have extensive history playing in the final group in a LIV Golf final round – this will be Gooch’s 16th time and Niemann’s 14th – Sunday will be the first time they’ve been in the same final group in nearly four years, since LIV Golf Boston in the inaugural season in 2022.

Vincent is the third member of the final group, and he continues to thrive since joining HyFlyers GC as a reserve filling in for captain Phil Mickelson. The Zimbabwean shot a 3-under 67 and is now in position to chase his first individual title.

“Winning out here is not easy,” said Vincent, who has finished top 10 in each of his first two starts with the HyFlyers after starting the season as a Wild Card player. “I think just big picture-wise, just putting myself in this position is just great for me, try and get better and develop as a player.”

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Howell was the runner-up to DeChambeau last year, and he’s given himself another chance in Korea, thriving on this shot-maker’s course. He was a bogey-free 4 under through his first 13 holes before suffering a double-bogey in which he four-putted from 35 feet.

“Man, this place is tricky,” Howell said. “If you miss the fairway, it is really hard around here. Hole locations are quite difficult here on these corners. It’s tough to make birdies.”

Johnson had six of them in his bogey-free round. LIV Golf’s first season-long Individual Champion in 2022 posted at least one win in each of the league’s first three seasons before going winless last year. He’s anxious to get back into the winner’s circle.

So is Niemann, despite all the success he had last season.

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“Last year was an exceptional year. Winning five times, it was pretty cool,” he said. “… It’s obviously a nice feeling to win, and we’re out here for that. But I’m just more focused on what I’m doing now and the way I’m hitting the ball, just trying to keep chasing that trajectory that I’m seeing in my head, so that’s what I need to do.”

TOP OF THE LEADERBOARDS

Individual Top 10

T1 (-9) – Joaquin Niemann, Torque (66-69-66); Talor Gooch, OKGC (69-63-69)

3 (-8) – Scott Vincent, HyFlyers (65-70-67)

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T4 (-7) – Charles Howell III, Crushers (65-70-68); Cameron Smith, Ripper (67-68-68)

T6 (-6) – Ben Campbell, RangeGoats (69-69-66); Dustin Johnson, 4Aces (70-70-64); Bryson DeChambeau, Crushers (65-68-71)

T9 (-5) – Harold Varner III, OKGC (68-69-68); Marc Leishman, Ripper (69-68-68)

Team Top 3

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1 (-16) – Crushers GC (DeChambeau 65-68-71, Howell III 65-70-68, Lahiri 68-73-70, Smyth 72-66-68; Rd. 3 total: -3)

2 (-15) – OKGC (Gooch 69-63-69, Kokrak 68-70-69, McDowell 68-71-73, Varner III 68-69-68; Rd. 3 total: -1)

3 (-12) – Ripper GC (Smith 67-68-68, Leishman 69-68-68, Herbert 71-66-69; Smylie 71-69-74; Rd. 3 total: -1)

ROUND 3 NOTES

TOP-HEAVY WINNERS’ LEADERBOARD: Of the top 10 players after 54 holes at Asiad Country Club, eight have won a cumulative 25 LIV Golf individual tournament titles – Joaquin Niemann (T1) with seven; Bryson DeChambeau (T6) with five; Talor Gooch (T1) with four; Cameron Smith (T4) and Dustin Johnson (T6) with three each; and Charles Howell III (T4), Harold Varner III (T9) and Marc Leishman (T9) with one win each.

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The only two players inside the top 10 without a LIV Golf win are Scott Vincent (solo 3rd) and Ben Campbell (T6).

Although Asiad Country Club has not been an easy course to score on, it may take an aggressive mindset Sunday to win the title. “You’ve got to keep making birdies,” Howell said. “You’ve got to keep pushing forward. There are too many good players up there.”

Gooch has always leaned on the “rule of 67” when it comes to golf success – shoot 67 each round and good things happen. But will 67 be enough on Sunday? “When you see a leaderboard with guys like this,” Gooch said, “you feel like you’ve got to do more than 67.”

NIEMANN’S BIG BREAKER: Joaquin Niemann rolled in a birdie putt at the 14th hole from 34 feet that had at least 10 feet of right-to-left break. Even he knew it was a special putt.

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“14 was a beautiful putt,” he said. “As soon as I hit it, I kind of knew. Every time you’ve got that feeling of hitting a great stroke, you can hear the sound, and immediately you know it’s going to be a big chance to go in, and it was one of those that I was so into it, and I hit a good putt. It was right on my line, and I saw it perfectly, I was just walking it in. There was nowhere else to go.”

GOOCH TO WATCH THUNDER: Talor Gooch’s hometown NBA team, the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder, are set for an epic Game 7 in the Western Conference finals against San Antonio, with the winner moving on to the NBA Finals.

Thanks to the time zone differences, Gooch will be able to watch the game in its entirety on TV, since it begins at 9 a.m. Sunday in Korea. The final round of LIV Golf Korea does not begin until 1:05 p.m. locally.

“I definitely get more nervous for Thunder games, important Thunder games, than about anything else,” Gooch said. “Ironically tomorrow might be a good thing to watch the Thunder and kind of get some of my nerves out of my system before we tee it off. But I will be watching all of it.”

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RAHM’S STREAK ENDS: Legion XIII Captain Jon Rahm, the reigning two-time Individual Champion and current points leader, saw his streak of consecutive rounds under par end at 40 after shooting a 1-over 71 on Saturday.

Rahm suffered a bogey on his final hole, the par-5 fourth, to break the streak. He enters the final round tied for 25th at 1 under; he has never finished lower than 11th in any LIV Golf tournament that he’s completed.

SMITH’S DRIVING ACCURACY: Cameron Smith hit 12 of 14 fairways on Saturday, tying with Ian Poulter for the best percentage in the field at 85.71%. It’s the first time the Ripper GC captain has ever ranked first in driving accuracy after any LIV Golf round and is another sign that his game is headed in the right direction after his recent switch to Claude Harmon III as his swing coach.

CONVERTING LEADS: Co-leader Joaquin Niemann will take the lead into the final round of a LIV Golf tournament for the sixth time; he has converted four of the previous five into wins. His fellow co-leader Talor Gooch enters the final round with the lead for the seventh time; he’s converted three of the previous six into wins.

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DECHAMBEAU LEVELS OFF: Bryson DeChambeau opened the tournament on Thursday by playing the first 10 holes in 6 under. He has since played the last 44 holes at even par. He has found just 50% of fairways and 61% of greens in regulation through the first three rounds.

STATS LEADERS

Round 3

Driving Distance: Jon Rahm, 339.4-yard avg.

Longest Drive: Jon Rahm, 379.1 yards (11th hole). Official measured drives taken only on holes 11 and 12.

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Driving Accuracy: Cameron Smith, Ian Poulter, 85.71% (12 of 14)

Greens in Regulation: Cameron Smith, Laurie Canter, Bubba Watson, 88.89% (16 of 18)

Scrambling: Nine players tied at 100%, led by Ian Poulter (8 of 8)

Fewest Putts: Danny Lee, 23

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Bogey-free rounds: Dustin Johnson (64), Ben Campbell (66), Abraham Ancer (66), Bubba Watson (67), Cameron Smith (68), Talor Gooch (69)

Cumulative

Driving Distance: David Puig, 311.8-yard avg.

Driving Accuracy: Ben Campbell, 80.95% (34 of 42)

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Greens in Regulation: Joaquin Niemann, Laurie Canter, 79.63% (43 of 54)

Scrambling: Charl Schwartzel (15 of 18), 83.33%

Fewest Putts: Bryson DeChambeau, Thomas Pieters, Ian Poulter, Yosuke Asaji, Danny Lee, 80

Lowest Rounds: Rd. 1 – Bryson DeChambeau, Charles Howell III, Scott Vincent (65); Rd 2 – Talor Gooch (63); Rd. 3 – Dustin Johnson (64)

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This piece is courtesy of Mike McAllister in partnership with LIV Golf.

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World Cup hero can join Man United or Liverpool for only £60m after vital contributions

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The midfielder has been in fine form for Germany at the World Cup and could head to the Premier League this summer

Felix Nmecha is available for just £52m as he continues to turn heads at the World Cup. The Germany international has contributed to three goals so far, including the assist for the winning strike against the Ivory Coast on Saturday.

Nmecha is reportedly open to leaving Borussia Dortmund this summer and eager to return to England, with Manchester United among the clubs tracking him. The 25-year-old left the Manchester City academy setup in 2021 for a fresh start at Wolfsburg, before earning a £26m switch to BVB two years on.

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Since making that move, the midfielder has racked up 21 goal contributions in 112 outings for the Bundesliga outfit and secured a place in Germany’s World Cup squad. He scored and assisted in the nation’s emphatic 7-1 thrashing of Curacao before adding another assist to help seal progression to the knockout rounds.

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The 25-year-old’s reputation has never been higher. Reports indicate that although Nmecha penned a fresh Dortmund contract in March, his long-term future at the club remains uncertain.

It is understood that a deal could be struck for around £52m, a figure that has attracted considerable interest in the midfielder. However, United could face stiff competition from Liverpool, Barcelona and Real Madrid.

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Nmecha’s brother Lukas also came through the ranks at City before linking up with Felix at Wolfsburg. The striker is now back on English soil with Leeds United, and his younger sibling could well follow suit this summer.

TeamTalk reports that the midfielder’s camp believes there is a genuine chance for the player to secure a transfer during the window, with interest in his abilities likely to remain strong throughout the major tournament.

Numerous Premier League supporters have taken to social media to express their enthusiasm over Nmecha’s display against the Ivory Coast, urging their respective clubs to make their move. One Chelsea supporter wrote: “Felix Nmecha, what a player. I need him beside Caicedo.”

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Another commented: “If Xabi Alonso will need a midfielder who can carry the ball, win duels, cover ground, dominate transitions, and impact games at Chelsea. I have 2 names Felix Nmecha and Angelo Stiller.”

An Arsenal supporter added: “Felix Nmecha is a midfield general. He does literally everything with the ball, a 6’4 midfielder that turns fluidity like a ballerina, as defensively solid as a bull, passes the ball like a proper maestro. He should definitely be on Arsenal’s shortlist.”

One United supporter weighed in, stating: “INEOS Felix Nmecha isn’t a gamble, he’s a proven midfielder. We should be going all in for him if Matheus Fernandes won’t work.”

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Eighth World Cup red card ties Qatar and Russia editions for combined send-offs

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Some are calling it the World Cup of the red card.

When Belgium’s Nathan Ngoy was sent off with a straight red in the 66th minute vs. Iran on Sunday, red-card history was made.

Ngoy’s was the eighth red card issued at this edition of the World Cup, which ties the last two World Cups combined, The Athletic shared on X. There were exactly four red cards issued in Qatar and Russia, respectively.

Two matches at this tournament have featured two send-offs — the opening match between South Africa and Mexico, and Canada’s match on Thursday vs. Qatar.

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Ngoy’s illegal challenge was made to prevent an Iranian breakaway, which is by rule worthy of a straight send-off. Iran was unable to capitalize despite being up a man, and the match finished 0-0.

The 2006 World Cup in Germany featured 28 red cards, which is the most all-time at one tournament.

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Noskova breaks into Top 10 with Berlin Title Win

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Linda Noskova captured the biggest title of her career after defeating Jessica Pegula 6-4, 4-6, 6-3 in the Berlin Open final.

The victory secured Noskova’s second WTA title and will see the Czech star break into the Top 10 of the world rankings for the first time.

Facing one of the toughest opponents on tour, Noskova produced another impressive performance to improve her head-to-head record against Pegula to 3-1.

  • Romans 8:18: Tiafoe gives Glory to God after Halle TitleRomans 8:18: Tiafoe gives Glory to God after Halle Title

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The title caps a remarkable week for the 20-year-old, who continued the powerful form that has made her one of the most dangerous players on the WTA Tour heading into Wimbledon.

It was also Noskova’s 13th career win over a Top 10 opponent and her 22nd victory of the 2026 season.

After lifting the trophy, Noskova took time to thank the people who helped her reach the biggest moment of her career.

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“I wanna give a big thanks to my team… To my coach supporting me the whole week, to the rest of the team supporting me back home, my whole journey,” she said.

The Czech star also thanked a friend who travelled to Berlin to support her during the tournament.

“I really appreciate every one of you guys. Thank you.

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Alex, after semifinal exit in Berlin, sets sights on Homburg for chance at another giant-killing spree

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Alex Eala headsto Homburg as the
27th seed. —WTA PHOTOAlex Eala headsto Homburg as the
27th seed. —WTA PHOTO

Alex Eala headsto Homburg as the27th seed. —WTA PHOTO

Alex Eala’s most memorable 2026 WTA run ended on Sunday morning in Manila when the Czech Linda Noskova needed just 69 minutes to bundle out the hard-fighting pride of the Philippines in the semifinals of the Berlin Open.

And that leaves the 21-year-old setting her sights on another WTA 500 event starting Monday when she battles Elise Mertens in the round-of-32 of the Bad Homburg Open at the Spielbank Bad Homburg Centre Court.

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There will be no shortage of giants to chop down in Homburg in Germany, with former world No. 1 Iga Swiatek of Poland and newly crowned French Open champion Meera Andreeva ranked 1-2 in the event and where Eala will get a chance of facing Noskova again after taking a 6-2, 6-4 defeat in Berlin.

With Filipino blood

A second player with Filipino roots in Leyla Fernandez of Canada is also entered and they could find their paths crossing in the quarterfinals with Fernandez opening up against wild card Katie Boulter.

Eala, who owns a win over Swiatek carved out in magical Miami Open stint last year, had said in Berlin that she was just thankful for the chance of playing some of the biggest names in the world—and beating some of them like world No. 2 Elena Rybakina before taking out Elina Svitolina in the quarterfinals.

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The Filipino made the Berlin draw as a wildcard and sealed a place in the final four after humbling world No. 8 Svitolina, 6-3, 6-4. Eala wasted no time paying tribute to her vanquished opponent.

“Elina is a huge fighter, and I’ve seen it many times,” Eala said in her on-court interview after the match on Friday, Berlin time.

Shot at Adreeva

“I’ve been watching her since I was a kid, so to be able to compete with her today is such an honor, and I really admire her. She’s a mother, and I find her to act with such elegance and strength, and I’m really lucky to have had this match today.”

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Svitolina, like Swiatek, Andreeva and Karolina Muchova all earned first round byes, with Eala, being at the bottom half of the draw as the 27th seed, having a shot at Andreeva in the third round.

But for that to happen, Eala would of course have to beat Martens first to advance into a likely collision with another charismatic player in Japan’s Naomi Osaka, another multiple Grand Slam winner entered as the 25th seed in Homburg.

Noskova, meanwhile, now has a 2-0 record against Eala and will battle Jessica Pegula of the United States after the American scored an impressive 6-4, 7-6, 6-0 dismantling of current No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in the other semifinal.

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Pegula will not be in Homburg. INQ

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Fontein Jewel’s 2026 Flemington win marks key milestone for trainer Brisbourne

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Jockeys in blue and red silks race side by side on fast galloping horses on a grassy track, leaning forward.

Trainer Ben Brisbourne achieved a significant milestone with Fontein Jewel’s victory in the first race at Flemington on Saturday, making the win particularly special.

The Lucky Vega colt’s triumph in the $150,000 TAB We’re On Handicap (1420m) was the young English trainer’s first at the track since establishing on-course stables at Australia’s premier racecourse in early May.

Brisbourne continues to operate his Wangaratta stable, where Fontein Jewel was listed as trained before Saturday’s event, but he considered the win a collective achievement for his team.

“It the third Flemington winner for us, but the first one at Flemington since we’ve been had a base down here,” Brisbourne remarked. “So that’s a big tick and hopefully it gets us noticed a little bit more, especially with these young younger horses. “It just proves that what we’ve put in place so far is working and we look forward to plenty more successful, hopefully.”

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Fontein Jewel, which started as a $7 outsider, displayed a determined effort to win by three-quarters of a length from Insolence ($6.50). Insolence narrowly edged out the closing Spirit Of Macedon ($5) for the runner-up position.

This victory marked the second win from five starts for Fontein Jewel. The colt had previously finished second in the Elvstroem Classic (1300m).

The win occurred just over five years after his dam, Fontein Diamond, won the $250,000 Country Mile Final at Moonee Valley on All-Star Mile Day. Brisbourne expressed his delight at winning significant races with the son of his first major winning mare.

“It’s really nice, because he’s the first foal out of Fontein Diamond, who was my first big winner as a trainer,” Brisbourne stated. “She would have put some toughness into him and then the stallion’s just put a little bit of a class. “It’s absolutely brilliant for Chris (Morey) and Terry (Hurford), who bred him and support me every year with taking shares and horses, to get a big reward here.”

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Uruguay vs. Cape Verde prediction, odds, line, start time: 2026 World Cup picks

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Cape Verde will take the field again at the 2026 World Cup after their stunning draw with Spain when they face Uruguay on Sunday. The Cape Verdeans had a scoreless contest with the Spanish in their Monday opener, while the Uruguayans drew 1-1 with Saudi Arabia in their World Cup Group H opening match on the same day. This is Cape Verde’s first ever appearance at this tournament, while Uruguay is a two-time champion (1930, 1950). Spain (-270) is favored to win Group H, with Uruguay at +340 and Cape Verde at +1800.

Kickoff is 6 p.m. ET from Miami Stadium. The latest Cape Verde vs. Uruguay odds from FanDuel Sportsbook list the Uruguayans as -250 favorites (risk $250 to win $100) on the 90-minute money line, with Cape Verde at +800 and a draw at +330. The over/under for total goals is 2.5. Before locking in any Uruguay vs. Cape Verde picks or World Cup 2026 predictions, check out the Cape Verde vs. Uruguay predictions from SportsLine’s Martin Green.

After working in the sports betting industry for several years, Green became a professional sports writer and handicapper and has covered the game worldwide. Last year, Green was profitable in multiple areas on his soccer betting picks, including the Champions League (+211.25) and Bundesliga (+100). He’s also been red-hot in 2026, posting an 18-8 record over his last 26 UCL picks, returning nearly $1,000 in profit. Anyone wanting to follow his World Cup betting advice at sportsbooks and on betting apps could see big returns.

Now, Green has studied Uruguay vs. Cape Verde and just revealed his 2026 World Cup picks and betting predictions. You can head to SportsLine now to see his picks. Here are several World Cup odds and soccer betting lines for Cape Verde vs. Uruguay:

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Uruguay vs. Cape Verde 90-minute money line

Uruguay -250, Cape Verde +800, Draw +330

Uruguay vs. Cape Verde over/under:    

2.5 goals

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Uruguay vs. Cape Verde spread:

Uruguay -1.5 (+142)

Uruguay vs. Cape Verde picks:    

See picks at SportsLine

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Uruguay vs. Cape Verde streaming:

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Top Cape Verde vs. Uruguay predictions

After examining Uruguay vs. Cape Verde from every angle, Green is leaning Under 2.5 total goals (-170). Uruguay have played three matches in 2026, and all three contests saw under 2.5 total goals. Dating back to 2018, each of their last five World Cup matches have gone under 2.5 goals. Meanwhile, the only scoreless contest across the first 24 matches of this year’s World Cup involved the Cape Verdeans, thanks, in part, to their goalkeeper Vozinha. The 40-year-old became the third-oldest goalkeeper to produce a World Cup clean sheet in keeping Spain off the scoreboard.

“Vozinha was the star of the show in Cape Verde’s 0-0 draw with Spain, as he made eight saves. Cape Verde’s 40-year-old goalkeeper was the player of the match, as he displayed remarkable agility to keep the reigning European champions at bay,” Green told SportsLine. “… We can certainly expect a similar approach from Cape Verde, as the Blue Sharks will be happy to sit back and ‘park the bus’ in a bid to stop Uruguay from scoring.” See Green’s best bets for Uruguay vs. Cape Verde at SportsLine, and you can bet the Under in Cape Verde vs. Uruguay at FanDuel here:

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How to make Uruguay vs. Cape Verde picks

After studying Uruguay vs. Cape Verde from every angle, Green has locked in another pair of best bets, both of which return plus-money. You can head to SportsLine to see what they are

So what are the best bets for Cape Verde vs. Uruguay? Visit SportsLine now to see the best bets for Uruguay vs. Cape Verde, all from expert on an 18-8 roll on UCL picks, and find out.

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Keely Hodgkinson ‘healthy’ after tearful exit from UK Championships

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World record-chasing Keely Hodgkinson insisted she is “healthy” after tearfully withdrawing from the 400 metres final at the UK Athletics Championships with what her coach explained was hamstring tightness.

The Olympic champion has made no secret of her summer ambition to break the one minute, 53.28-second 800m women’s standard set by Czech athlete Jarmila Kratochvilova nearly 43 years ago, identifying next month’s London Diamond League as the ideal time and place.

A visibly emotional Hodgkinson – who was out on track in Birmingham for her pre-race warm-up – sparked concern when she abruptly pulled out but Jenny Meadows, who alongside husband Trevor Painter coaches Hodgkinson, later confirmed a physiotherapist gave the 24-year-old “the all-clear”.

Keely Hodgkinson pulled out of the women’s 400m final after feeling hamstring tightness during her warm-up (David Davies/PA)
Keely Hodgkinson pulled out of the women’s 400m final after feeling hamstring tightness during her warm-up (David Davies/PA) (PA Wire)

Hodgkinson, speaking immediately after dropping out of the final, said: “I wasn’t feeling 100 per cent standing on the start line, so I made the tough decision to step away and not race.

“I didn’t want to risk anything this summer.”

The world indoor 800m record-holder later wrote on Instagram: “Leaving champs healthy! Sometimes the hard decision is saying no. Body wasn’t feeling 100 per cent, exciting summer ahead!”

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Meadows replied to a concerned fan on X, saying “Thankfully it was just a precautionary measure. She’s fine now she’s seen the physio and got the all clear.”

She further explained to another user: “She’s not injured! It was a precaution as her hamstring felt tight. She did her cool down jog, saw the physio and is fine. We don’t take any risks now and neither does Keely.”

Hodgkinson’s training partner Georgia Hunter Bell won the women’s 800m final in a championship-record one minute, 55.93 seconds.

Hodgkinson was laid off for 376 days with injury, much of it hamstring-related, before returning last August to set a world-leading 800m time, then claimed bronze at the 2025 world championships in Tokyo having raced just twice that season before travelling to Japan.

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It was a layoff she later described as a “s***show” so her reluctance to risk anything after announcing her London intentions is understandable, particularly after she was beaten by Swiss rival Audrey Werro – who went third on the all-time list in one minute, 53.98 seconds – earlier this month.

Amber Anning ultimately defended her 400m title on a Father’s Day replete with successes for British dads.

Olympic 400m silver-medallist Matthew Hudson-Smith was given an exemption last year so he could support his wife through the challenging birth of their now-healthy daughter Eden.

The local favourite, a Wolves academy product in his youth, reclaimed his title in 44.45secs to secure his place at August’s European Championships at the same venue.

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Alastair Chalmers enjoyed a perfect first Father’s Day (David Davies/PA)
Alastair Chalmers enjoyed a perfect first Father’s Day (David Davies/PA) (PA Wire)

First-time dad Alastair Chalmers, who welcomed a baby boy on Tuesday, was the 400m hurdles champion and 200m champion Zharnel Hughes revealed his agent had texted him before Saturday’s 100m final to say “do this one for your son”.

Scotland’s Jake Wightman, the 2022 world gold and 2025 world silver 1500m medallist, was among Sunday’s other champions, winning the men’s 800m final in 1:45.40 – with his father Geoff on commentary duty in the stadium.

Success Eduan won the women’s 200m in a personal best 22.43 seconds, beating world 200m silver medallist Amy Hunt, who defended her 100m title on Saturday.

Dina Asher-Smith also qualified for the 200m final, but explained it was always her plan only to participate in Sunday’s heat.

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Canada’s Leylah Fernandez wins in first round at Bad Homburg Open

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Leylah Fernandez is back on the winning track.

The Canadian snapped a three-match singles losing streak with a 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-3 win over Great Britain’s Katie Boulter in the first round of the Bad Homburg Open in Germany on Sunday.

Fernandez exacted some revenge on Boulter, who beat the Canadian in another three-setter earlier this month at Queen’s Club.

Sunday’s match took three hours and 12 minutes as Fernandez fought off 19 of 24 break-point chances for Boulter.

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The Bad Homburg Open is a grass-court tune-up for Wimbledon next week.

Fernandez will next face the winner of a match between No. 8 seed Iva Jovic of the U.S. and Wang Xinyu of China.

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David feels championship thrill while recovering

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Jayson David had a tremendous PBA Philippine Cup stint that naturally, he was expected to be a key contributor for the Gin Kings in the Commissioner’s Cup that recently ended.

That was supposed to be the case, only for a season-ending injury to derail his march into a contributor and total stardom with the crowd-darlings.

From someone expected to lighten the load for the Kings, David turned into a spectator after tearing his left ACL in March in a game against the NLEX Road Warriors.

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That, however, didn’t dampen his joy when Ginebra won its first title in three years after defeating TNT in Game 7 last Wednesday.

“I’m just so happy because I saw their dedication,” a beaming David told the Inquirer, alluding to his teammates. “Everyone really worked together while I’m sidelined and observing.

“They went through a lot, but now we won a championship and everyone, even me, can breathe better now.”

David has since had surgery and has begun going through rehab sessions, doing all that while being present every game for his Ginebra brothers.

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And it’s a bittersweet feeling, the one of not being able to play and seeing his brothers win.

While he enjoys the support that Ginebra gives during his time of recovery, the tough-as-nails guard couldn’t help but feel like he could do more for his fellow Ginebra swingmen.

“I have this feeling since the playoffs came, when every time I see us trailing, I always think to myself, ‘sayang, if I was just there, I can help on defense to stop this player,’ but it’s okay,” he said.

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“My teammates stepped up, so I’m happy that they got me a championship even if I’m not on the team this time,” David added.

Already undergoing therapy sessions, David expects to be back as early as February next year.



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“I feel like I can come back in February or March next year. I’m not sure but I’m certain it’s early next year.” INQ

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Sports

Purse, payout breakdown, winner’s share

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SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Wyndham Clark has a commanding lead at the 2026 U.S. Open, but now comes the hard part — closing it out when everyone expects you to do so.

At seven under, Clark leads four players by six strokes heading into the final round at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club on Long Island. That group is led by World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who is a win away from completing the career Grand Slam. And if he did so on Sunday, it would be quite the 30th birthday present.

Scheffler, Sahith Theegala, Tom Kim and Sam Stevens are all tied at one under, while Emiliano Grillo, Keith Mitchell, Sam Burns and Xander Schauffele are even par and seven off the lead.

The winner Sunday will also take home the $4.5 million winner’s check, although the top-four finishers all earn at least one million dollars.

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Clark has been in this position before, although things were a little different when he won the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club. He was tied for the 54-hole lead with Rickie Fowler, and Rory McIlroy was just one behind.

Now? He leads by a half dozen.

“I would say I’m definitely a lot more confident and believe I can do it — in ’23 there was still doubts,” Clark said Saturday. “Not necessarily doubts, but I hadn’t done it, so there was a lot of unknown. Now that I have done it, I know I can do it, and I can do it again. So I’ll definitely lean on that experience and other experiences from when I’ve won that I can break through and do this again.”

The total purse for the U.S. Open is $22.5 million, which is the same total purse (and winner’s share) as the 2026 Masters. Aaron Rai took home $3.69 million for winning the PGA Championship last month, and Cameron Young won $4.5 million at the Players Championship in March.

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Below is the payout breakdown for the U.S. Open. All the professionals who missed the cut receive $10,000 each.

2026 U.S. Open total purse, payout

1st: $4.5 million
2nd: $2,430,000
3rd: $1,532,530
4th: $1,074,363
5th: $894,841
6th: $793,443
7th: $715,320
8th: $640,654
9th: $579,815
10th: $532,572
11th: $486,021
12th: $449,379
13th: $418,729
14th: $386,466
15th: $358,812
16th: $335,767
17th: $317,331
18th: $298,895
19th: $280,459
20th: $262,022
21st: $246,121
22nd: $230,220
23rd: $214,780
24th: $200,492
25th: $188,048
26th: $177,447
27th: $169,381
28th: $162,237
29th: $155,324
30th: $148,410
31st: $141,497
32nd: $134,583
33rd: $127,669
34th: $121,447
35th: $116,377
36th: $111,307
37th: $106,468
38th: $101,859
39th: $97,250
40th: $92,641
41st: $88,032
42nd: $83,423
43rd: $78,814
44th: $74,205
45th: $69,596
46th: $65,448
47th: $61,300
48th: $57,382
49th: $55,077
50th: $52,773
51st: $51,390
52nd: $50,238
53rd: $49,316
54th: $48,855
55th: $48,394
56th: $47,933
57th: $47,472
58th: $47,012
59th: $46,551
60th: $46,090
61th: $45,629
62th: $45,168
63th: $44,707
64th: $44,246
65th: $43,785
66th: $43,324
67th: $42,863

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