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Sports

Mike Bailey sets sights on AEW World Championship after ‘Dynamite’ win, gets support from Kevin Knight

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The tag team duo known as Jet Speed had a big night on All Elite Wrestling (AEW)’s “Dynamite” on Wednesday night.

“Speedball” Mike Bailey squashed Westbrook with relative ease to pick up his third win in three shows on AEW. Meanwhile, Kevin Knight successfully defended his TNT Championship against a returning Brian Cage.

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Kevin Knight entering the wrestling ring at National Yoyogi Gymnasium in Tokyo

Kevin Knight enters the ring during New Japan Pro-Wrestling at National Yoyogi Gymnasium in Tokyo on May 17, 2025. (Etsuo Hara/Getty Images)

Afterward, Knight expressed his support in Bailey’s own pursuit of some gold. Bailey made it clear he was going after the AEW World Championship next. Darby Allin, the current title holder, defended it against Konosuke Takeshita as he gears up for a hair vs. title match against Maxwell Jacob Friedman (MJF).

In a recent interview with Fox News Digital, Knight gushed about his tag team partner.

“Man, ‘Speedball’ Mike Bailey is a savant – a wrestling savant. He’s been wrestling for almost longer than I’ve been alive,” Knight said. “He’s been in every single situation that you can think of. He’s wrestled thousands of times. He watches wrestling all the time. He talks about wrestling all the time. He knows how to put everybody in the right place to get the best reaction from the crowd.

Mike Bailey entering the wrestling ring at Ota-City General Gymnasium in Tokyo

Mike Bailey enters the ring during the New Japan Pro-Wrestling Best of the Super Jr. Final at Ota-City General Gymnasium in Tokyo on May 28, 2023. (Etsuo Hara/Getty Images)

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“So, the fact that I got somebody like that on my side … and he kicks extremely hard. So, I think he’s extremely smart and I don’t have to feel those kicks, it’s a great combination for me. So, it’s no complaints from me.”

Knight shared some of the wisdom that Bailey has imparted on him through the years.

“The No. 1 thing is don’t over think it. Don’t over think it and do what you do,” Knight said. “Like, as simple as that sounds, that’s literally the advice that he gives you. And you just take that and go, ‘OK, don’t over think it and just do what you do.’ And you just go out there and do what you do and you come to the back and everybody’s happy and you just get ready for the next one.”

Both men have crushed it since joining AEW.

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Mike Bailey entering the wrestling ring at Ota-City General Gymnasium in Tokyo

Mike Bailey enters the ring during the New Japan Pro-Wrestling Best of the Super Jr. Final at Ota-City General Gymnasium in Tokyo on May 28, 2023. (Etsuo Hara/Getty Images)

The two have been two-thirds of the AEW trios championship twice. They won the belts with “Hangman” Adam Page and then again with legendary Lucha Libre competitor Místico.

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The ceiling is high for both competitors as they each look for more singles gold.

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PGA Tour schedule upheaval claims its first tournament

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The PGA Tour’s time in the motor city is coming to an end.

On Tuesday morning, the Rocket Classic announced that it would be ending its tenure as a PGA Tour stop, ending an eight-year run for the tournament in Detroit.

“After nearly 13 years as a PGA Tour title sponsor, including eight years in Detroit, 2026 will mark the final Rocket Classic,” tournament director Mark Hollis said in a statement reported by the Associated Press’ Doug Ferguson. “We are incredibly proud of what this tournament has meant to the city, from creating unforgettable moments for fans to raising more than $10 million for local organizations.”

The Rocket Classic — nee Rocket Mortgage Classic — will play one final time in late July before drifting off into a sponsor-less sunset, with tournament title sponsor Rocket Mortgage declining its option to host the event in 2027, per the Detroit News’ Tony Paul.

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The decision follows years of weaker fields in the event, which had fallen out of favor with top stars returning from summer travels at the Open Championship and preparing for the final sprint of the PGA Tour season, the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

But perhaps more pressingly, the decision represents the first of what is expected to be a groundswell of changes for longtime PGA Tour events in 2027 and beyond. PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp is expected to speak publicly in the coming weeks about the status of the Tour’s new “two track” schedule — a plan to reorient the Tour around a more coherent, easy to follow season-long competition stratified into two distinct buckets, one with larger purses and elevated events for the better players. It is expected that Rolapp’s next update will provide more clarity around the shape of each of those tracks, which could produce even bigger windfalls for the Tour around its biggest events, but could leave some smaller events, like the Rocket Classic, in limbo.

The status of golf’s calendar represents Rolapp’s biggest swing since being announced as PGA Tour CEO a year ago. The PGA Tour schedule has existed under its current general shape and dimensions for the better part of three decades, and to no small degree of financial success. At one point in the early LIV days, its predictably and repeatability were mentioned as strengths by players for both tours.

But critics have suggested that the Tour’s model, while profitable, comes at the expense of a greater (and even more profitable) sense of coherence and drama. Tour events take place twelve months out of the year, and many of the biggest moments on the Tour schedule come in the earliest months of the season, costing the Tour the kind of season-long narrative arc with a dramatic conclusion that fills the calendars (and bank accounts) most other professional sports leagues.

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Under the first track of Rolapp’s “two track” vision, the Tour would coalesce the lion’s share of financial support around a smaller, more prominent series of tournaments. Supporters of this vision suggest it amounts to a relatively small shift in the overall pro golf calendar — the underlining of an already existing, if unspoken stratification between certain “big” PGA Tour events and other “local” ones.

Still, there is fair reason to be skeptical: The FedEx Cup Playoffs were initially intended to serve as a bridge to the same outcome of a unified, season-long Tour; they proved to be a ramp to tens of millions in sponsor-dollars and not much more. Rolapp’s vision not only aims to pursue these same ends — it also threatens to undercut the “local” events that have served as the bedrock of the tour for decades.

The Rocket Classic is the first of those events to be shown the door. But with change still lingering in the air at PGA Tour HQ as the heart of the golf season comes into focus, it may very well not be the last.

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She has scored a lot of runs there

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Cricketer-turned-commentator Aakash Chopra has opined that India’s chances of winning the Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 could depend on how they fare in the Powerplay overs. He highlighted that Smriti Mandhana and Shafali Verma could control the game with the bat, pointing out that the Indian vice-captain has an excellent record in England.

The Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 will be played in England from Friday, June 12, onwards. India will begin their campaign with a clash against Pakistan on Sunday, June 14.

In a video shared on his YouTube channel, ‘Aakash Chopra,’ the former India batter reckoned that the opening combination of Mandhana, especially considering she likes batting in English conditions, and Shafali could be among the keys to India’s prospects in the global T20 event.

“The Indian girls have won the 50-over World Cup. Can they win the 20-over World Cup? That’s the big question. It’s a good team. Where do you win T20 games? One is if you control the Powerplay with the bat and with the ball. With the bat, Shafali Varma’s consistent avatar is very, very good,” Chopra said.

“Smriti Mandhana will be there with her. Smriti Mandhana in England is another beast altogether. She has scored a lot of runs there. So, Smriti Mandhana and Shafali Verma, as your Powerplay players, can actually control the game. One of them should bat deep into the innings, which they can,” he added.

Chopra noted that the onus will be on Richa Ghosh and Harmanpreet Kaur to make the most of the death overs with the bat.

“Then followed by Yastika Bhatia, Jemimah Rodrigues, Harmanpreet Kaur, and Richa Ghosh. The last five overs’ responsibility will be on Richa Ghosh and Harmanpreet Kaur. You will expect Deepti Sharma to continue playing as attackingly as she has started doing in the WPL. It seems like we are actually quite set in batting. We are as good as any other World Cup team in batting,” he observed.

Smriti Mandhana has amassed 4,333 runs at an average of 29.88 in 160 T20I innings. She has a much better record in England, having scored 650 runs at an average of 38.23 in 19 innings.


“Since it’s England and it would swing, Renuka Singh Thakur’s value increases” – Aakash Chopra on India’s bowling heading into Women’s T20 World Cup 2026

In the same video, Aakash Chopra noted that the focus will be on Renuka Singh Thakur, especially considering the seamer-friendly English conditions, Arundhati Reddy, and Kranti Gaud with the ball in the Powerplay overs.

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“In bowling, again, the Powerplay overs, whether it’s Renuka Singh Thakur, Arundhati Reddy, or Kranti Gaud, the focus will be on them. Even if Nandani Sharma plays, she will have a bigger role in the death overs. Since it’s England and it would swing, Renuka Singh Thakur’s value increases,” he said.

The analyst added that India’s middle-over and death-over performances with the ball could define how far they reach in the Women’s T20 World Cup 2026.

“Death overs, that will be the big challenge, because we get our spinners to bowl the death overs many times. How we bowl in the death overs might actually define. We might end the Powerplay on equal terms, but can we grab them with spin in the middle overs, and whether we can bowl well in the death overs, I think that will be the defining part,” Chopra observed.

Aakash Chopra opined that India have the team to beat South Africa and Australia in the Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 group phase, and then go on to win the tournament. He added that winning the 50-over and 20-over World Cups together will be a different kind of domination.