Manchester United were forced to settle for a point against Bournemouth but a VAR controversy has overshadowed the result
Former Premier League referee Keith Hackett was left “amazed” that Manchester United were not awarded a penalty for a foul on Amad.
The Ivorian was hauled over in the penalty area with United leading 1-0 during Friday’s draw with Bournemouth. However, the referee wasn’t interested in the incident, later awarding the Cherries a spot-kick after Evanilson was brought down by Harry Maguire, resulting in a red card.
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United twice led but were pegged back as they dropped points in the hunt for the Champions League. Saturday’s results meant that their rivals didn’t make up any ground as Liverpool and Chelsea both lost away from home.
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However, the decision not to award a penalty on Amad overshadowed the draw with Ryan Christie and Junior Kroupi hitting back for the Cherries.
Hackett said that it was the right decision to award the penalties in the game but was left stunned that United were denied a spot-kick.
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He told Football Insider: “These are nailed on penalty kicks, and Maguire made no attempt to play the ball and is rightly sent off for DOGSO.
“Amazed that the first one was not awarded. These two incidents are clear holding offences. VAR should have intervened on the first one and awarded Man Utd a penalty kick.”
Fernandes converted from 12 yards after Alex Jimenez dragged down Matheus Cunha. United restored their lead in the second half when the Portuguese’s corner was diverted into his own net by James Hill.
Bournemouth’s first leveller came just moments after Adrien Truffert brought Amad down and the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) ruled that “the contact was not sufficient for a foul.”
United interim manager Michael Carrick pulled no punches after referee Stuart Attwell dismissed the penalty claims. He said: “We should have had another penalty. It’s pretty much identical for me, two-hand grab.
“Either way, [the ref] got one wrong, but to give one and not give the other, I can’t get my head around it. I think it’s crazy. It’s a bit baffling, really.
“Because of that, they score and then it’s chaos after that, really. We should have had another penalty and the game would have been totally different.”
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Sky Sports discounted Premier League and EFL package
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Sky has slashed the price of its Essential TV and Sky Sports bundle for the 2025/26 season, saving £336 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more.
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Sky shows at least 215 live Premier League games each season, an increase of up to 100, plus Formula 1, darts, golf and more.
Minnesota Vikings owner and chairman Zygi Wilf stands near the field before an NFC Wild Card matchup against the Los Angeles Rams at State Farm Stadium. Ahead of the Jan. 13, 2025, postseason showdown in Glendale, Wilf watched Minnesota prepare for another playoff appearance during Kevin O’Connell’s tenure as the franchise pursued a deeper January run. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images.
The Minnesota Vikings’ search for a permanent general manager is firmly underway, and according to SI.com‘s Albert Breer, the interim boss, Rob Brzezinski, is in a good spot, almost no matter what.
Minnesota’s search may end with continuity, a reshuffled power structure, or an outside hire.
Breer provided details on the search this week, insinuating that Brzezinski will either earn the official title or grab a different, powerful role.
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Brzezinski Remains the Central Figure in Minnesota’s Search
Get used to Brzezinski sticking around the Vikings.
Minnesota Vikings executive vice president of football operations Rob Brzezinski participates in an on-site discussion with KFAN’s Paul Allen and analyst Pete Bercich during the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis. On Feb. 25, 2026, Brzezinski discussed roster construction, offseason planning, and Minnesota’s organizational direction ahead of another pivotal spring for the franchise. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.
Breer on the Vikings’ GM Search
In his weekly mailbag, Breer responded to a Vikings fan’s question regarding why the GM search is shrouded in such secrecy.
Breer opined, “I’m not really sure there’s much mystery. They can go one of two ways, in my opinion. One path would be to permanently elevate longtime football-operations chief Rob Brzezinski to GM after he spent the past three months serving as interim GM.”
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“The other would be to keep Brzezinski in a role like the one Mike Disner serves with the Lions or the one Tony Pastoors has (and Kevin Demoff used to fill) with the Rams, as a sort of head-of-everything-but-personnel role alongside a scouting-focused general manager, which could be someone such as Bills assistant GM Terrance Gray.”
The Vikings’ owners stated last week that the pursuit of candidates would remain private — and then NFL insiders have tweeted their names one by one in the last couple of days. It’s not that secretive at all.
Breer continued, “If they take the latter path, Gray, who cut his scouting teeth with the Vikings before Buffalo GM Brandon Beane poached him in 2017, would be at or near the top of the list.”
“And I do think the Vikings and the search firm they’re working with have a short list they’re plucking from at this point, with perhaps a second list backing that one up.”
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Per Breer, Brzezinski will land on his feet within the Vikings’ power structure no matter what.
Terrance Gray Formally in the Mix
To start the non-Brzezinski party, NFL Network‘s Tom Pelissero tweeted Wednesday, “The Vikings have requested an interview with Bills assistant general manager Terrance Gray for their GM job, per source. Gray spent 11 seasons with Minnesota as a college scout before joining Buffalo in 2017.”
Gray has served as the Bills’ Director of Player Personnel since 2022 and has worked with that organization for seven years. Before that, he was a Vikings scout for 11 years.
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Our Janik Eckardt on Gray: “From the outside, it’s always tough to classify GM candidates. It’s easier to evaluate coaching prospects because their product can be seen directly on Sundays. A defensive coordinator’s scheme is visible, but who knows what the assistant GM is actually doing in Buffalo?”
“Therefore, it’s hard to tell if Gray would be a good or a bad choice. The Bills have been contenders for years, driven by quarterback Josh Allen, of course. The roster around the future Hall of Famer has been up-and-down. There’s also a Rooney Rule angle to remember.”
The Rest of the Big List
In addition to Brzezinski and Gray, the list of possible Vikings general managers ballooned on Thursday. With the expectation that a few extras could be added, here’s the rest of the list:
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Chad Alexander (Assistant GM | Chargers)
RJ Gillen (Assistant GM | 49ers)
John McKay (Assistant GM | Rams)
Nolan Teasley (Assistant GM | Seahawks)
Dave Ziegler (Assistant GM | Titans)
Aside from Brzezinski’s incumbency, there is no odds-on frontrunner. This thing is truly up in the air. Pick your fighter.
Buffalo Bills assistant general manager Terrance Gray watches from the sideline before a matchup against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium. During the Nov. 30, 2025, road contest in Pittsburgh, Gray represented Buffalo’s front office while continuing his growing reputation as one of the NFL’s respected executive evaluators and personnel decision-makers. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images.
NBC Sports‘ Myles Simmons highlighted McKay as a candidate, “McKay, in particular, could be one to watch for the position, as he worked alongside Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell with the Rams. McKay was Los Angeles’ director of pro personnel and O’Connell was the team’s offensive coordinator when the club won Super Bowl LVI to cap the 2021 season.”
Threading the Needle Feels Vikings-Like
While Brzezinski could stay in the director’s chair as the general manager, keeping him in a position of ample power — no matter what — feels like the Vikings’ modus operandi.
After all, during the beginning of the Rick Spielman era twenty years ago, he, the Wilfs, and the head coach at the time, Brad Childress, and later Leslie Frazier, formed a “triangle of authority.” Each party had significant input on the roster and on the future vision.
Minnesota Vikings owner Zygi Wilf stands on the field during Jared Allen’s Ring of Fame induction ceremony at U.S. Bank Stadium. On Oct. 30, 2022, Wilf participated in the pregame celebration honoring one of the franchise’s most dominant pass rushers before Minnesota faced the Arizona Cardinals in Minneapolis. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-USA TODAY Sports.
Promoting Brzezinski to the full-time general manager would mean keeping head coach Kevin O’Connell in a powerful role. O’Connell’s prestige within the organization, in theory, spiked when he kept his job while Kwesi Adofo-Mensah lost his.
There wouldn’t be much surprise if the team opts to give Brzezinski a sweet title and more power, with the new general manager holding a more unconventional role by broader NFL standards.
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The Wilfs should announce their verdict in the next two weeks.
Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
Poland’s Iga Swiatek plays a backhand return to US Caty McNally during their women’s singles match of the WTA Rome Open tennis tournament at the Foro Italico in Rome on May 8, 2026. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Three-time champion Iga Swiatek battled into the third round of the Italian Open on Friday with a 6-1, 6-7 (5/7), 6-3 win over Caty McNally.
Swiatek dropped serve in the opening game at the Foro Italico but rattled off the next six to seize control against the 63rd-ranked American.
The Pole seemed on course for a routine victory when she pulled 4-2 in front in the second set, but McNally twice broke Swiatek as the Pole served for the match and then snatched the tie-break.
Swiatek again nudged ahead with a break for a 3-1 lead in the decider. McNally clawed herself level at 3-all before Swiatek took the final three games to book her place in the next round, to her visible relief.
“It was a tough match, Caty really played great,” said Swiatek.
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“I had to be patient. For sure, some mistakes happened. It was not an easy match. I’m really happy I was solid at the end and in the important moments. I kept it together.”
Swiatek will play US 28th seed Emma Navarro or Italy’s Elisabetta Cocciaretto this weekend for a place in the last 16.
The Pole suffered her earliest exit in five appearances in Madrid last month when she retired in third round due to a viral illness. She was knocked out at the same stage in Rome last year as defending champion.
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Swiatek, a six-time Grand Slam champion, has not won a clay tournament since capturing the last of her four French Open titles in 2024.
Alexandra Eala reacts during a match in the 2026 Italian Open vs Wang Xinyu in the Round of 64. –WTA PHOTO
Canadian 10th seed Victoria Mboko withdrew from the event on Friday due to illness. She will be replaced in the draw by Czech lucky loser Nikola Bartunkova.
Novak Djokovic is set for his first appearance on clay this season when he plays 20-year-old Croatian qualifier Dino Prizmic.
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The 38-year-old Djokovic has not played since losing in the last 16 at Indian Wells in March. He pulled out of tournaments in Miami, Monte Carlo and Madrid while recovering from a shoulder injury.
Axar Patel admitted that both the batting and bowling units let Delhi Capitals down after their eight-wicket loss to Kolkata Knight Riders in IPL 2026 on Friday. The defeat left DC’s playoff hopes hanging by a thread, with the captain also hinting that the team had already started thinking about next season.Delhi Capitals managed only 142/8 at home before KKR chased down the target in 14.2 overs. Finn Allen scored an unbeaten 100, while Cameron Green remained not out on 33 as KKR completed an easy chase.DC are currently eighth on the table with eight points from 11 matches. KKR moved to seventh with nine points from 10 matches after registering their fourth straight win.Speaking after the match, Axar said, “For now, we’ll go back and think about the mistakes we made. After that, obviously there’s still a long journey ahead and next year will come too. So we’ll think about what plans we can make for next year and what approach we should take.”“Based on that, we can also look at the players sitting on the bench and decide who can be given opportunities and what changes we can make,” he added.Axar said the total of 142 was not enough and also pointed out mistakes made by the bowlers during the defence.“I think the runs were definitely below par and at the same time the spinners made quite a few mistakes. Looking at the way the pitch behaved, I feel the spinners did make errors.”“At the same time, we lost five wickets in two-three overs, and I think that’s where the momentum slipped away from us. That’s probably something we need to think about because the same thing happened against CSK…we started well, and then suddenly wickets kept falling,” he added.The DC skipper said the team needed to handle pressure better when wickets fall quickly.“See, you can’t solve it in a complicated way. So, I think it’s more about applying the right mindset. Even if you lose one or two wickets, you can still spend time at the crease and play through it. I think that’s what needs to be applied, when wickets are falling in clusters, you need to absorb the pressure for an over or two,” Axar said.
Minnesota Vikings linebacker Jonathan Greenard speaks with reporters after an NFL International Series game at Croke Park in Dublin, Ireland. Following the Sep. 28, 2025, matchup against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Greenard reflected on Minnesota’s overseas appearance while discussing the team’s performance during one of the league’s globally spotlighted regular-season events abroad. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images.
Outside linebacker Jonathan Greenard no longer works for the Minnesota Vikings, traded to the Philadelphia Eagles last month, along with a 7th-Round draft pick, for a 3rd-Rounder in 2026 (safety Jakobe Thomas), and a 2027 3rd-Rounder. On his way out, Greenard was sure to spill the beans: his Vikings teammate, Dallas Turner, will cook as his replacement.
Minnesota needs Turner’s Year 3 leap to become real after trading Greenard.
Greenard spoke with Chris Long this week and didn’t hold back when speaking glowingly of Turner.
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Greenard’s Comments Add Fuel to Turner’s Breakout Case
The 2026 campaign could indeed be Turner’s almighty breakout.
Minnesota Vikings linebacker Dallas Turner watches drills during minicamp at the Minnesota Vikings Training Facility. During the June 10, 2025, offseason session in Minneapolis, Turner continued preparing for an expanded defensive role after flashing pass-rushing upside late in his rookie campaign under defensive coordinator Brian Flores. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images.
Greenard on Turner
Greenard knows a little something about EDGE rushers, so when he pounded the table for Turner, folks listened.
He told Long, “The next person up now is Dallas. I’m gonna say it now, Dallas Turner. When he’s on and he’s dialed in on the game plan, the kid is a bottle of explosion. The guy is literally a 4.4 guy (in the 40), and he’s only just breaking the surface of how he’s gonna be in this league.”
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“That’s who I’m taking care of next. I’m watching him real close, I’m still gonna be talking to him the same way, like ‘Listen, XYZ has to happen’ or this is not gonna happen. Just the little small things you gotta have when you’re dealing with a young guy like that, because they don’t know.”
The Greenard trade to Philadelphia completely and utterly paved the way for Turner to emerge as the Vikings’ keynote pass rusher in 2026.
Greenard added, “As much as they are mature when you talk to them, they talk a good game, they still don’t know what they don’t know yet. He’s gonna take this big, big step. You saw him kind of do it a little bit towards the (end of) last season.”
“And now this point, shoot, I said ‘It’s time now. This is your time, this is your team, you need to go ahead and make that happen.’ So I’ll be looking real close for him and I know it’s gonna get done because that boy a dog, too.”
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Turner’s Career to Date
As a rookie in 2024, Turner saw limited playing time, participating in only 28% of Minnesota’s defensive snaps. Despite the small workload, he offered glimpses of his 1st-Round potential, recording 3 sacks, 5 quarterback hits, 3 tackles for loss, and an interception.
His second year, however, marked a dramatic change. Turner’s playing time surged to 66% of defensive snaps, benefiting particularly from Greenard’s injury absence, and his production exploded. He became one of Minnesota’s most disruptive players, especially late in the season, recording 8 sacks, 15 quarterback hits, 11 tackles for loss, and 4 forced fumbles.
Minnesota Vikings linebacker Dallas Turner works in coverage space against the Tennessee Titans during first-half action at Nissan Stadium. On Nov. 17, 2024, Turner continued showcasing his speed and pursuit ability while helping Minnesota counter Tennessee’s physical offensive approach during a tightly contested road matchup in Nashville. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-Imagn Images.
By the final months of the season (November through January), Turner appeared completely comfortable within Brian Flores’ defense, consistently delivering big plays that silenced early criticism.
He concluded his second season with a 65.5 Pro Football Focus grade, including a 70.2 as a pass rusher.
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Always Stashed at OLB3
Ironically, the Greenard trade was “good” news for Turner. It gets him playing time. Until Greenard vamoosed, fans wondered when Turner might become a full-timer, as his aforementioned performance late in 2025 merited an extended trial.
Had Greenard stayed put — a contract extension as many Vikings faithful wanted and expected — Turner would be in the same spot, waiting until Greenard or Andrew Van Ginkel got injured to showcase his skills.
On the whole, it was a nice problem to have — too many productive outside linebackers. Now, the Vikings arguably need an OLB3 with Greenard subtracted from the depth chart, perhaps a player like Jadeveon Clowney or Leonard Floyd.
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The Expensive Trade to Get Him
The Vikings have ample time with Turner, who has three years remaining on his rookie deal. At just 23, he is currently the fourth-youngest non-rookie on Minnesota’s roster.
While this affords them some flexibility, it doesn’t diminish the significant investment made to acquire him. To secure Turner in the 2024 NFL Draft, the Vikings executed a substantial trade, surrendering two 2nd-Rounders, a 3rd-Rounder, a 4th-Rounder, a 5th-Rounder, and a 6th-Rounder.
Minnesota Vikings linebackers Andrew Van Ginkel, Jonathan Greenard, and Dallas Turner speak during minicamp at the Minnesota Vikings Training Facility. During the June 10, 2025, offseason workout in Minneapolis, Minnesota’s edge-rushing trio continued building chemistry within Brian Flores’ defense ahead of another season carrying major expectations for the Vikings pass rush. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images.
Such an investment naturally sets a high bar. While Turner isn’t expected to be an immediate superstar, the expectations are undeniably real and entirely justifiable. So, when fans anticipate significant contributions from him, their expectation is well-founded.
Thankfully for his sake, it’s go-time for Turner. In fact, this may have been the Vikings’ plan along when drafting Turner — keep Greenard until he demanded more money and roll with Turner when he left.
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Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
Though the Maple Leafs saw the lottery gods rule in their favour earlier this week, the work has only just begun for this new front office.
Although there’s still time to get going on roster construction for next year, a big question still needs to be answered before the team can move on to the next steps: Is Craig Berube the right man to steer the ship?
According to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, Toronto’s new general manager John Chayka is set to meet with the incumbent head coach in the coming days — either this weekend or next week — for what could be a long conversation about the future on the team’s bench.
“It’s coming soon, there’s no question about that, and it might not be just a one-day thing or a one-hour thing; it sounds like there’s a lot to talk about,” Friedman said on the latest episode of 32 Thoughts: The Podcast, released Friday.
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A priority of this new regime under Chayka and Mats Sundin has been making sure they don’t give anything away preemptively about the status of Berube for next season, out of respect for the tenured head coach.
“There was no way Chayka or Sundin … were going to start this off by disrespecting Berube in any way until they really had a chance to have a meeting with him,” Friedman said.
“Now, I’ve had some conversations with some of the people who had interviews, and they said that the Leafs were very respectful to Berube, but they didn’t really take a position on should he be back. So, Sundin and Chayka clearly have an opportunity here to decide what they want to do. It was clear that (MLSE president and CEO Keith) Pelley liked Berube, but he didn’t say ‘You have to keep him.’”
Instead, the front office wants to get a proper lay of the land before making any key decisions.
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The Maple Leafs finished with the fifth-worst points total in the NHL this past season — a stark contrast to Berube’s first year on the job in 2024-25, when they won the Atlantic for the first time since the 1999-2000 season — and want to give the coach a chance to discuss why he thinks that might’ve been the case and how he can get the team back to contention.
Following their meeting with Berube, the front office is expected to reach out to captain Auston Matthews — whose future has come into question after vague answers at his end-of-season press conference — even if he may want to take a more wait-and-see approach.
“At some point after they meet with Berube, I expect them to start discussing or reaching out to Auston Matthews about, ‘Let’s have some more serious conversations about what you’re thinking,’” Friedman said. “I had heard kind of over the last week or two that Matthews might decide to wait until around July to see what the Leafs do at the draft or free agency before making a decision, but if you’re the Maple Leafs and the new regime, it makes no sense to wait that long to get an idea of what he’s thinking. You might as well start as quickly as possible.”
The 28-year-old, amid injury struggles, had his least productive season with the Leafs by point total, finishing with 27 goals and 26 assists for 53 points in 60 games.
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His campaign ended in mid-March after an ugly knee-on-knee hit from Anaheim Ducks defenceman Radko Gudas, as Matthews suffered a Grade 3 MCL tear and quad contusion.
However, with a longer off-season and extra recovery time without playoff hockey, Matthews will hope to get back to his goal-scoring ways. Now, the Maple Leafs will just have to sell him on their vision and figure out where he aligns.
“Look, they had a big lottery win this week, they’re probably gonna want to hear what (he thinks),” Friedman said. “Even though he’s probably not seen much of the players, they kinda know the generalities — what position they play, what skillset they are, what the team needs — and I’m sure they’ll give him an idea of what that all means and what he might prefer.”
The Raptors wing underwent surgery to address his ongoing right heel pain by removing a heel spur, the team announced Friday.
Ingram is expected to fully recover and be ready for training camp in September, the team added.
The operation was conducted by Dr. Martin O’Malley in New York.
Ingram missed the final two games of the Raptors’ seven-game series loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the NBA Playoffs because of the recurring heel pain.
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He exited early in Game 5 after reaggravating the injury — which had been nagging him near the end of the regular season, causing him to miss three games — and was spotted in a walking boot after Game 6.
In the four full games Ingram played for the Raptors in the first round, the 28-year-old averaged 14.8 points, 3.8 rebounds and 2.3 assists while shooting 33.9 per cent from the field and 38.5 per cent from three-point range.
A mid-season acquisition for the Raptors in the 2024-25 season who didn’t debut until this year, Ingram averaged 21.5 points, 5.6 rebounds and 3.7 assists while shooting 47.7 per cent from the field and 38.2 per cent from deep in his first campaign in Toronto and earned the second all-star nod of his career. He played 77 games — the most he’s suited up for since his rookie year in 2016-17.
Group of cyclists in action during the 2026 Tour of Luzon. –CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
CANDON, Ilocos Sur—Ronnilen Quita entered the conversation as a potential threat to overall leader Nikita Shulchenko after his fourth place finish in Stage 9 of the MPTC Tour of Luzon that ended here.
The 7-Eleven Roadbike Philippines rider and national champion climbed from sixth to fourth in the general classification, but still four minutes and 19 seconds back of Shulchenko, who will keep the symbolic yellow jersey for a seventh straight lap.
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Shulchenko has an accumulated time of 26 hours, one minute and 59 seconds, keeping a gap of 1:38 over LCW UAE Cycle teammate Ibrahiem Alrefai and 4:15 over Quita’s fellow 7-Eleven pedalist Mervin Corpuz.
It was the only significant change after nine laps of the summer cycling spectacle with those in the top 10 each falling one position while maintaining similar gaps over the Russian pedalist.
Excellent Noodles’ British rider Tyler Hannay is fifth (+4:34), followed by MPT DriveHub’s Nash Lim (+4:42), 7-Eleven’s French cyclist Antoine Huby (+4:50), MPT’s Rustom Lim (+5:32), Seoul Cycling Team’s Jung Woo Ho (+5:36) and Malaysian national team’s Muhammad Maulidan (+5:43).
Quita was part of a seven-man breakaway in the ninth lap that started in Laoag, Ilocos Norte, even going on a solo breakaway during the middle part of the race.
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He eventually joined the same group of riders before making a wrong turn with less than a kilometer to go, resulting in CCN Factory Racing’s Daniel Guld beating two riders of Team Pangasinan to the finish.
Meanwhile, Go for Gold Philippines is still on top of the team classification with a total time of 103:15:35, ahead of Standard Insurance Philippines by 1:40.
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After a long period of uncertainty, the fight finally looks to have been salvaged, after Mike Coppinger reported it will be a fully sanctioned contest with a new date and venue.
“Breaking: Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao have agreed to terms on an amended deal for a professional fight on Netflix being planned for Sept. 25 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Manny Pacquiao Promotions CEO Jas Mathur tells @ringmagazine.
“This means another Friday fight on Netflix once finalized. Netflix has gone on Friday a few times now. The bout was originally announced for Sept. 19 at The Sphere.
“Mathur: ‘We never wanted this at The Sphere. It didn’t make economic sense for this event to be at The Sphere. Ultimately the parties putting the fight together were insistent. Floyd was able to get it out of The Sphere. Bottom line, we’re making more money.’”
It means that two of the biggest names in boxing history do now look set to meet for the second time, with Pacquiao looking to gain revenge after his defeat back in May 2015.
ROME — Novak Djokovic was beaten by a Croatian qualifier 18 years younger than him at the Italian Open on Friday in his first match after two months out due to a right shoulder injury.
The 20-year-old Dino Prizmic defeated the record 24-time Grand Slam champion 2-6, 6-2, 6-4 with an ace on his first match point.
The 38-year-old Djokovic hadn’t played since losing to Jack Draper in the fourth round in Indian Wells, California, in March.
Djokovic had taping on his right shoulder that was revealed when he changed shirts between sets.
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A six-time Rome champion, Djokovic is preparing for the French Open, which starts on May 24.
In Djokovic’s only other tournament this year, he reached the Australian Open final and lost to Carlos Alcaraz.
The 79th-ranked Prizmic beat No. 6 Ben Shelton to reach the third round at the Madrid Open last month.
“He’s my idol,” Prizmic said of Djokovic. “I just played unbelievably today.”
Former South Carolina quarterback Stephen Garcia is currently battling for his life after being diagnosed with stage 4 colorectal cancer.
The diagnosis came after noticing certain abnormalities, but the hard-nosed former athlete thought he could figure out the issues on his own without a visit to the doctors. His wife wasn’t comfortable with that plan from the quarterback, who used to take snaps for a Steve Spurrier-led offense led offense in Columbia.
Reluctantly, Garcia went in for a colonoscopy where doctors discovered the cancer, and that it had been growing for a number of years.
Unfortunately, Stephen wasn’t fully grasping the news when first given, due to him still being somewhat groggy from sedation.
Stephen Garcia of the South Carolina Gamecocks looks to pass against the Georgia Bulldogs at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga., on Sept. 10, 2011.(Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)
But, when it was finally explained to him how serious this situation was, reality set in pretty quickly.
Obviously, there’s nothing simple about hearing the word ‘cancer,’ no matter which stage or form you are dealing with. It will humble you quickly, with the grim outlook overtaking the mind.
And while this process to fight the disease will be tough, filled with many obstacles, Garcia was most worried about his family.
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While his older son understands the magnitude, he has yet to fully inform his youngest daughter, which led to the former Gamecock shedding a few tears while discussing the situation with OutKick on Friday morning.
Former Gamecock has changed his tune amid battle with cancer
In the past, Stephen Garcia was not one to jump aboard the mental health awareness train, looking at it as someone who was not strong enough to handle the circumstances surrounding whatever battle they were facing.
But, that’s the football side of Garcia, and he was the first to admit that his mindset had changed because of the stigma surrounding people, most importantly men, not feeling comfortable enough to discuss their struggles.
This problem has led to many downfalls, or problems that arise by not talking to others about what they are going through in the moments of trials and tribulations.
For Stephen, that has all changed.
“In years past, I thought mental health was an absolute joke, just to be completely frank with you,” Garcia told OutKick. “I was like, if you gotta have some mental toughness, I played for Coach Spurrier so I had to have some mental toughness to deal with him. But, I was also extremely hard headed. It is huge. There’s gonna be days when you’re not gonna walk to talk with anybody, days you wanna give up, you gotta stay mentally tough. This whole process has opened my eyes to a whole different deal.
“People can change. I was against the whole mental health thing, I thought it was stupid. But, it’s changed my opinion, my outlook on life in general, and I encourage everyone to speak it up. I’ve had so many people reach out to say if you need to talk, reach out to me. Everyone said the same thing that you have to be mentally in it. If you are positive mentally, you’re going to get through it. If you’re feeling down in the dumps, figure out a way to get positive. It’s no joke, you are where your minds at.”
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South Carolina quarterback Stephen Garcia throws a pass against Kentucky in the third quarter at Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, S.C., on Oct. 3, 2009. South Carolina defeated Kentucky 28-26.(Dale Zanine/USA TODAY Sports)
Outreach has been overwhelming, with a long battle ahead
After going through his first round of chemotherapy this week, Garcia is coming to terms with the battle he faces, though he’s keeping a positive outlook for the sake of himself and his family. He will continue training athletes, when his body allows, and using his platform to encourage others to take their health seriously.
If it weren’t for his wife pushing him into getting examined, who knows how long this could’ve gone before his cancer was noticed. In the meantime, the support system has been overwhelming, as Garcia described while choking back tears.
Stephen Garcia of the South Carolina Gamecocks drops back to pass against the East Carolina Pirates at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C., on Sept. 3, 2011.(Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)
Whether it’s the Clemson football team, or Dabo Swinney himself, and the thousands of people who have reached out over the past few days, it’s not lost on the former quarterback how much the support has meant for his own sanity during uncertain times.
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For now, Stephen Garcia is taking his battle with cancer one day at a time. But, he’s also got college football fans rooting for him to beat this terrible disease.
Trey Wallace is the Sr. College Sports Reporter for OutKick.
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