Feb 11, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets center Jonas Valanciunas (17) is fouled by Memphis Grizzlies forward Olivier-Maxence Prosper (18) in the second quarter at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images
Nikola Jokic had 26 points, 15 rebounds and 11 assists to counter his nine turnovers, Jamal Murray finished with 23 points, and the host Denver Nuggets held off the Memphis Grizzlies 122-116 on Wednesday night.
It was Jokic’s 20th triple-double this season and 184th of his career.
Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 21 points, Christian Braun had 14 points, Julian Strawther contributed 11 and Bruce Brown had 10 for Denver, which enters the All-Star break third in the Western Conference.
GG Jackson scored a season high with 21 points, Ty Jerome added 19 points, Jaylen Wells scored 17, Olivier-Maxence Prosper had 14 points and Taylor Hendricks 10 for Memphis.
The Grizzlies have lost four in a row.
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Memphis forward Cedric Coward was inactive with a knee injury suffered late in the first half of the loss at Golden State on Monday night. Lawson Lovering, who was signed to a 10-day contract Tuesday, scored three points in his NBA debut for the Grizzlies.
The Nuggets led 30-28 after one quarter and stretched it to 14 late in the second quarter but Memphis finished the half on a 10-2 run to trail 60-54 at intermission.
The Grizzlies tied it at 68 on Jackson’s 3-pointer but Denver responded. Jokic hit one of two free throws and a putback, Murray drained a 3-pointer and Jokic fed Braun for a dunk to make it 78-72.
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The Nuggets went up 83-72 on Hardaway’s bucket moments later, Jokic was fouled on a 3-point attempt and made two free throws and got his 10th assist to complete his triple-double on Hardaway’s 3-pointer that gave Denver a 93-81 lead heading into the fourth quarter.
The Nuggets went up 103-88 with 8:40 remaining but the Grizzlies reeled off 12 straight points, capped by Jerome’s 3-pointer, to make it a 103-100 game midway through the fourth.
Prosper hit a corner 3-pointer and Lovering’s layup — his first NBA points — tied it with 3:50 left. Hardaway’s 3-pointer put Denver back in front, Jokic scored four points to make it 116-111, the Grizzlies got within a point but Jokic’s putback and four free throws by Murray sealed it.
The Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) has punished Wikki Tourists FC after crowd violence during their Matchday 25 game against Katsina United on February 8, 2026.
The league said Wikki Tourists failed to provide proper security at the stadium. Fans invaded restricted areas, threw stones and other objects at players and officials, and caused injuries. Some officials and away players were also held back for hours after the match, and the game was delayed for 18 minutes.
Because of these actions, the NPFL fined Wikki Tourists a total of ₦7.5 million. The club was fined for poor security, injuries to officials, bad behaviour by supporters, throwing dangerous objects, and holding officials and players after the match.
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The league also ordered Wikki Tourists to play their home matches in Jos until further notice. The club must also improve security and crowd control and send a detailed plan to the NPFL within seven working days.
Wikki Tourists have 48 hours to accept the punishment or choose to face a disciplinary panel. The league warned that a weak or failed appeal could lead to more penalties.
The NPFL said the decision shows its strong stand on safety and discipline in Nigerian football.
In this special episode of Confession Cam, WSL presenter Alex Scott and pundits Fara Williams, Ellen White and Steph Houghton make confessions about each other, matchday and reveal who they would sign, bench and sell if they were in a five-a-side team.
Man Utd are not in action this weekend, but Michael Carrick has a simple selection decision to make in the Reds’ next game.
Michael Carrick had not put a foot wrong as Manchester United head coach until he faced West Ham on Tuesday. Carrick showed he was human by getting his team selection wrong.
Despite scoring an injury-time winner against Fulham, Benjamin Sesko missed out on starting against Tottenham, but that was logical with a view to starting Sesko against West Ham.
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It seemed Carrick would put his arm around Sesko before the Spurs game and explain that he would be his man a few days later against West Ham. United were set to play two games in four days, and Sesko deserved a reward for a string of strong performances. Starting him at the London Stadium made sense.
However, Carrick picked an unchanged team for a third game in a row, sticking by the striker-less attack of Amad, Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha. The 44-year-old thought ‘why change something if it’s not broken’, but every game is different and West Ham’s shape was difficult to penetrate.
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Amad, Mbeumo and Cunha were hardly involved in the first half. Amad was the worst performer of the trio, and he was the obvious candidate to hook at the interval to introduce Sesko to the game.
Carrick wanted to give his starting XI more time and waited until the 69th minute to introduce Sesko, though. The Slovenian international sat on the bench without a coat – the only substitute to do so – from the beginning of the second half, but had to wait 24 minutes to get onto the pitch.
It was a surprise that it took so long for Sesko to be introduced. Casemiro played a lofted pass to Bruno Fernandes before the hour mark, the kind of ball only a striker can bring down, and perhaps that was the final straw.
Sesko’s spectacular finish in added time was vindication of the pre-game opinion that he should have started. The goal gets better every time you watch. The technique for the volley was exquisite.
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Carrick heaped praise on Sesko, saying: “It’s an unbelievable finish from the angle to generate that, to get it on target, to finish it. It’s some goal from him. He’s capable of that, Ben.
“He’s done it over time. It’s not that he’s just suddenly burst on the scene. He’s been doing it, he’s proven that he can score goals as well. He’s been doing it in training for us as well.
“It’s not surprising, to be honest. I think that’s what he does, it’s what he’s good at. But certainly to actually do it and to feel it. He did it with the last one [against Tottenham], tonight, a little bit different with the emotion of the game, but certainly important and a big moment for him and us.”
One of the arguments for Sesko to start against West Ham was that he deserved a reward for his goals, as it would have been demoralising if he’d continued to score from the bench, only to be overlooked again.
Sesko cannot be overlooked when United play Everton at the Hill Dickinson Stadium on February 23. He has genuine momentum – five goals in six games – and will be miffed there is no game to play this weekend.
United have a 13-day break between games after crashing out of the FA Cup at the first hurdle against Brighton. That break does not do Sesko, who will be chomping at the bit to start, any favours, but he’s been in such strong form that it might not make a difference.
Which forward moves to the bench to make way for Sesko will be the debate in the build-up to Everton, although it should be a choice between Cunha and Amad, given Mbeumo is the leading goalscorer.
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Amad stayed on the pitch at the London Stadium, while Cunha was replaced by Sesko, but Amad’s overhit pass to the backpost as United chased an equaliser summed up his performance.
You have to nitpick to make a case to move either Cunha or Amad to the bench. Having said that, the latter hasn’t been at his best, failing to record a goal involvement since he returned from AFCON.
In the same games, Cunha recorded an assist against Manchester City and scored against Arsenal and Fulham. The Brazilian’s goal at the Emirates sealed a special victory. The numbers and eye test suggest Amad should lose his place in the team to Sesko, who has made himself impossible to ignore.
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Eighteen months ago, on a golden Sunday evening at the Presidents Cup in Montreal, Fluff Cowan’s mustache curled.
“Oh, I don’t know,” the legendary caddie said, his New England accent curdling the trepidation he felt behind a tuft of snow-white facial hair.
He paused, turning the idea over in his head once more. He’d been asked some strange questions in 47 years as one of the most prolific caddies in golf history, but none quite like this one.
How could he capture the entirety of his caddying experience … in a single song?
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“Well, I guess the first one that comes to mind is — in the ways that it ebbed and flowed…”
He paused once more, agonizing.
“I guess I’d have to go with “Truckin’,” he said.
The conversation progressed, but Cowan seemed to linger on that title, pleased with his selection. It captured his spirit, his story, and critically, his favorite band: the Grateful Dead. A few beats later, his face spread into a grin.
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“I was just a drivin’ fool.“
Cowan turned 78 on Saturday, two days before the start of the golf tournament that has also come to feel like the beginning of a new year: the annual AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. But the start of this golf high season in Northern California has lost some of its tie-dyed luminescence in 2026. In early-January, the world learned of the passing of one of Cowan’s heroes: Bob Weir, the legendary Grateful Dead frontman.
Weir’s death has cast a strange pall over Deadheads like Cowan, who often wore a Jerry Garcia t-shirt to caddie for Tiger Woods. To those whose lives centered around the rhythms of Grateful Dead concert schedules and retirement tours (plural), the band was more religion than music. And in the church of the Dead, Weir was the heartbeat.
“In my mind, Bobby embodied the whole culture of the Dead, there’s kindness and there’s love,” Gil Hanse, the golf course architect (and lifelong Deadhead) said. “Obviously [original Dead drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann] are still here, but it feels like the leader of the band has left the stage.”
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Interestingly, Weir’s passing has also cast a strange pall over the golf world, where the Dead has quietly infiltrated many of the sport’s highest chambers.
“The Dead has probably been the soundtrack of 70 percent of the holes I’ve shaped and worked on in my career,” Hanse said. “So yeah, there’s a nice legacy there.”
Perhaps no place speaks to both Deadheads and golf lovers quite like the Bay Area. Pebble Beach is just an hour down the road from Dana Morgan’s Music Shop in Palo Alto, where Garcia and Weir met for the first time as teenagers, and just two hours from Golden Gate Park, where Weir played his last three shows in the summer of 2025 (coincidentally just feet from one of America’s most celebrated muni revival projects). Consciously or subconsciously, golf’s visit to the region this week has presented the sport’s legion of Deadheads with an opportunity to mourn.
“I’ve been feeling pretty upset about it,” Hanse said. “I wasn’t expecting that. It’s been a lot harder than I thought.”
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Of course, there is a deep irony in Weir’s legacy extending over the Monterey Peninsula’s most tidily manicured cliffs. Golf is a sport of well-coiffed stiffs and fetishized cloisteredness, the kind of place where even the appearance of countercultural impulses can cost you a seat at some of the sport’s most reputable tables; Dead concerts feature the kind of individuals who call into open question the timing of their last shower. (It should also be noted that if you were to scientifically engineer the diametric opposite of Shakedown Street — the popular Dead pre-concert tailgate where sun-beaten roadies trade tie-dye T-shirts and psychedelic drugs with startling nonchalance — you might wind up with a place that looks a lot like 17 Mile Drive.)
And yet, like a particularly stubborn case of lice, golf can’t rid itself of the Dead. A flourishing underbelly of rejects and hippies floods the caddie yards and maintenance crews (and, in many cases, membership rolls) of the greatest clubs in America with Dead iconography; while golf’s own (gentle) countercultural moment of the 2020s has helped some clubs bring Touch of Grey greenside.
“Love ’em, need ’em, can’t live without ’em,” Cowan said, capturing the spirit of devotion that promulgates caddie yards across the country with impressive brevity.
From a distance, the correlation might sound trivial, but spend time near golf’s true Deadhead contingent and you’ll realize the sport and the band share a heartbeat. For all of golf’s occasional stuffiness, the sport’s best traits might be lifted verbatim from the central themes of a Dead concert: empathy, tranquility, creativity, artistry. And, hell, is there a better place to discover the wonders of nature than on a particularly psychedelic golf course?
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“Everybody in our band, the Cavemen, we all have a role to play — and there’s sort of a foundation — but then off of that foundation, we can take it in any different direction we want to,” says Hanse. “I think that’s sort of the ethos of the Dead. Every night was different in the way the music was performed and presented. We want creativity to manifest itself in improvisation.”
The core audience helps too. Many of the original Deadheads have now aged into boomerdom, where golf is a national pastime, while many of the diehards responsible for keeping the sport afloat — those deranged enough to pursue a career in golf — have done so precisely for the opportunity to break the shackles of a desk job and a nine-to-five. To this group, the Dead is a siren song.
“I’ve often said what we provide for people is music with a little adventure in it,” Weir said in 2016. “The people who like our music, come to our music, are drawn to our music — they’re people who require a little adventure in their lives.”
Ultimately, the same spirit of adventure carried Weir through to the end. He played his final shows with the Dead at Golden Gate Park in August — part of a 60th anniversary celebration for the band that drew more than 150,000 people to San Francisco. Hanse was among the crowds for all three nights, having hopped “back on the bus” with his wife, Tracey, in the last few years of Weir’s life. Nobody knew it then, but Weir was waving goodbye.
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“The first show was pretty rough, Bobby was obviously not well,” Hanse said, briefly slipping into Deadhead vernacular. “But then Saturday and Sunday night was just … the magic.”
If an anti-establishment bent brought the Dead into golf, memories like these are what have kept them. Beneath the logos and the hippies and the music is a spirit of something much bigger: kindness.
“From the outside, people kind of can draw whatever conclusions they want about golf, but real golfers find the same peace and tranquility when they’re out on the golf course,” Hanse said. “I mean, you had three nights where you had 50,000 people – and there were no crimes, no violence, no nothing. Maybe some people were … chemically altered in the way that they were feeling, but they were there to celebrate something that was pure. And I think we celebrate the game of golf and in the landscapes we play it in for the very similar reasons.”
For many Deadheads, this idea was the hardest part of Weir’s death. If the leader of the band was no more, what would keep the spirit of the Dead from passing with him?
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Thankfully, there have already been signs to the contrary. One arrived on the morning of January 10, the same day news of Weir’s passing reached Hanse at a golf course in New Zealand.
As Hanse found himself confronting an unexpected swell of grief, he received a surprise visitor: His five-year-old granddaughter, Peyton.
Peyton heard that her grandpa was upset, and she’d taken matters into her own hands. She approached Hanse bearing a gift.
“She went outside and picked me some flowers from the little meadow in the backyard,” Hanse said. “And she said, ‘I know you’re sad, so I just want to give you some flowers for your friend.’”
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Hanse cried at the gift. He cried again sharing the story.
They were happy tears. The kind that come after an unusual act of kindness. His old friend Bobby would’ve liked that. He would’ve liked it a lot.
But he would’ve liked most what came after, when Gil Hanse fired up his tractor, and kept on truckin’.
Team India head coach Gautam Gambhir spoke about returning to his hometown, New Delhi, for the upcoming T20 World Cup 2026 group stage match against Namibia. The iconic Arun Jaitley Stadium will play host to the contest on Thursday, February 12.
Gautam Gambhir has a special connection with Delhi, having represented them over the course of his domestic career, featuring for the Delhi Daredevils (now renamed as Delhi Capitals) in the Indian Premier League (IPL), and also recording his highest Test score there.
The head coach had recently hosted the squad members and the coaching staff for dinner at his residence, as he looks to make the most of his time back on his turf, before leaving with the contingent for Sri Lanka. India’s next group stage clash against Pakistan is scheduled to be held in Colombo, on Sunday, February 15.
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Gambhir spoke about the challenges that the constant travel and the result-oriented nature of the profession bring with them.
“Home is love, home is where your family is, and obviously, home is where you get peace as well. For me, home has always been really special. Obviously, it’s tough because you go through a lot of lonely nights as well, you go through a lot of nights where things don’t go your way. It is sometimes a very challenging profession as well, so when you have got your trusted support staff, they become as close as your family, because you can share a lot of emotions with them,” Gautam Gambhir said in a video released by the BCCI.
“In fact, when you are in this profession, you share a lot more emotion with them as compared to what you share with your family. They know the ups and downs of this profession, they know how it feels when things don’t go your way,” he added.
Gambhir had handpicked most of the support staff after taking over as head coach from Rahul Dravid in 2024. He has worked extensively with both the assistant coach, Ryan ten Doeschate, and bowling coach, Morne Morkel, during his time in the IPL.
“There has to be funny moments somewhere” – Gautam Gambhir on the importance of a relaxed team atmosphere amid a high-pressure T20 World Cup 2026
Gautam Gambhir also elaborated on the need to incorporate light-hearted moments in the team environment, especially off the field, as they embark on a high-pressure challenge, which is to retain a World Cup on home soil.
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“There have to be moments where the guys can be themselves, there has to be funny moments somewhere in the practice sessions or in the dressing room. Everyone has a funny side, so we make sure that we try to get the fun side out of everyone, and that is something that will keep the atmosphere light as well,” Gambhir said.
Team India have the opportunity to reclaim the top spot in Group A with a win over Namibia ahead of their crucial match against arch-rivals.
Norwegian biathlete Sturla Holm Laegreid apologized and admitted he regrets confessing to cheating on his ex-girlfriend after winning a bronze medal at the Milan Cortina Olympics.
“I deeply regret sharing this personal story on what was a day of celebration for Norwegian biathlon,” Laegreid said in a statement issued by the Norwegian team Wednesday.
Sturla Holm Laegreid of Norway reacts after he won bronze, and teammate Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold comforts him after the men’s 20-kilometer individual biathlon race at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Anterselva, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
“I am not quite myself these days and not thinking clearly. My apologies go to Johan-Olav (Botn), who deserved all the attention after winning gold. They also go to my ex-girlfriend, who unwillingly ended up in the media spotlight. I hope she is doing well. I cannot undo this, but I will now put it behind me and focus on the Olympics. I will not answer any further questions about this.”
Laegreid initially became one of the most viral stories of the Milan Cortina Olympics this week when he admitted to his affair after the men’s biathlon Tuesday. He fought back tears as he shared “the biggest mistake” of his life.
“There’s someone I wanted to share it with who might not be watching today. Six months ago, I met the love of my life — the most beautiful and kindest person in the world. Three months ago, I made my biggest mistake and cheated on her,” Laegreid told NRK in Norway.
Sturla Holm Laegreid of Norway competes in the men’s 20-kilometer individual biathlon race at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Anterselva, Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
“I told her about it a week ago. It’s been the worst week of my life.”
He was distraught, crying and hugging friends after the race. During a news conference, he explained why he decided to tell the world about his personal situation on the broadcast.
“It was the choice I made. We make different choices during our life, and that’s how we make life,” he told a room full of reporters. “So, today I made a choice to tell the world what I did, so maybe, maybe there is a chance she will see what she really means to me. Maybe not.
Read More About The 2026 Winter Olympics
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“There are probably many who look at me with different eyes, but I only have eyes for her,” he added. “Sport has taken a slightly different place in my life the last few days. Yes, I wish I could share it with her.”
Laegreid’s ex-girlfriend indicated she was not willing to take him back in an anonymous interview with a Norwegian news outlet.
Bronze medalist Sturla Holm Laegreid of Norway reacts on the podium of the men’s biathlon 20-kilometer individual event during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at the Anterselva Biathlon Arena in Anterselva Feb. 10, 2026.(Odd Andersen/AFP via Getty Images)
“It is hard to forgive. Even after a declaration of love in front of the whole world. I did not choose to end up in this situation, and it hurts to have to be in it. We have been in contact, and he is aware of my views on this,” she told VG.
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“(I am grateful) to my family and friends who have embraced me and supported me during this time. Also to everyone else who has thought of me and sympathized without knowing who I am.”
Fox News Digital’s Ryan Gaydos contributed to this report.
Jackson Thompson is a sports reporter for Fox News Digital covering critical political and cultural issues in sports, with an investigative lens. Jackson’s reporting has been cited in federal government actions related to the enforcement of Title IX, and in legacy media outlets including The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Associated Press and ESPN.com.
Thursday is shaping up to be one of the most exciting days at the Winter Olympics for Canadian fans.
There are numerous medal possibilities, along with a hockey doubleheader.
Here are athletes and teams to watch on Day 6, along with the full schedule (all times Eastern):
Team Rachel Homan (women’s curling, Canada vs. Denmark, 3:05 a.m.)
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Canada didn’t win a women’s curling medal at the past two Olympics. Homan, the two-time reigning world champ, is expected to push Canada to the podium.
Mikael Kingsbury (men’s moguls final, 6:15 a.m.)
The Canadian has been the dominant figure in his sport for the past decade. He’s looking for his fourth career Olympic medal.
Canadian women’s hockey team (vs. Finland, 8:30 a.m.)
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This is a rescheduled game after a postponement last Thursday because of Finnish norovirus cases.
The Ottawa native won silver at this event at the 2022 Olympics.
Canadian men’s hockey team (vs. Czechia, 10:40 a.m.)
Canadian NHLers play their first game at the Olympics since 2014.
Courtney Sarault (women’s short-track speedskating 500 metres final, 3:31 p.m.)
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The Canadian was second in the World Tour standings in this event this season. Her escape from U.S.-Korean collision helped Canada win silver in the mixed relay on Tuesday.
William Dandjinou (men’s short-track speedskating 1,000 metres final, 3:43 p.m.)
This might be Dandjinou’s toughest test in his bid to win five medals at the Olympics. The Montrealer was fifth in the World Tour standings in this event this season.
Men’s curling (scores, schedule, standings) Great Britain vs. Sweden, 8:05 a.m. Norway vs. Germany, 8:05 a.m. U.S. vs. Switzerland, 8:05 a.m.
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Men’s hockey (standings, scores) Switzerland vs. France, 6:10 a.m. Canada vs. Czechia, 10:40 a.m. Germany vs. Denmark, 3:10 p.m. Latvia vs. U.S., 3:10 p.m.
Women’s curling (scores, schedule, standings) Canada vs. Denmark, 3:05 a.m. Italy vs. Switzerland, 3:05 a.m. Japan vs. Sweden, 3:05 a.m. South Korea vs. U.S., 3:05 a.m. China vs. Great Britain, 1:05 p.m. Denmark vs. Japan, 1:05 p.m. Italy vs. South Korea, 1:05 p.m. Sweden vs. U.S., 1:05 p.m.
The mare Treasurethe Moment’s trainer, Matt Laurie, is thinking about a Caulfield excursion to wrap up her preparation leading into her first run back.
Treasurethe Moment lines up in the Group 1 Futurity Stakes (1400m) at Caulfield a week on Saturday, after trialling at Caulfield Heath on Wednesday in a jump-out.
Damian Lane partnered the mare as she jumped swiftly and commanded the 1000m heat from go to whoa.
Laurie conceded that having to set the pace wasn’t optimal, but Lane reported positively on the effort.
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“I was hoping there would be a horse or two in there that would charge along, but unfortunately those ones were scratched,” Laurie said.
“It seemed likely that she would lead and she was quick away, but that’s the sort of horse she is, she gets there but comes off the bit, just touching the bridle.
She doesn’t work too hard, she relaxes beautifully. She was asked to quicken up a bit in the last two furlongs (400m), and she did that well and Damian was happy.”
Next Tuesday’s Caulfield gallops, hosted by the Melbourne Racing Club, precede the Group 1 card of Blue Diamond Stakes, Futurity Stakes and Oakleigh Plate slated for Saturday week.
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Laurie is contemplating a return visit with Treasurethe Moment for a final gallop, similar to the setup for her dominant fresh win in the Group 1 Memsie Stakes over the Futurity Stakes track and trip.
“Another trip away for her final gallop wouldn’t hurt and then we’re ready to go,” Laurie said. “She’s done a lot of galloping at Mornington, so one more trip away would be great, but if not, we’ve got a great surface down there anyway. But either way, I’m happy with the prep so far and if she can produce what she did last time, she will be right there.” Fans eager for the Futurity Stakes can find extensive racing betting markets available now.
Chris Gotterup is a betting man, though one of golf’s next big things isn’t a cash-on-the-line, checking-the-odds kinda guy. No, no. That’s forbidden, after all.
But he knows a winner when he sees one.
Take last week, when he was grouped with Scottie Scheffler for rounds one and two of the WM Phoenix Open. After 18 holes, Scheffler was playing most un-Scheffler-like, but Gotterup understood where things stood: The world No. 1’s two-over day was only a hiccup — and money couldn’t leave his wallet fast enough for round two, provided he could do such a thing.
“Everyone has seen it out here,” Gotterup said.
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“If I could bet on golf, I would have put a lot of money on him to come out and play good on Friday.”
OK, OK, so you probably thought the same, and Scheffler did finish eight strokes better. How about this, then? If you really want to hear about a wager, and if you really want a peek at what’s underneath Gotterup’s Nike golf hat, he can tell you about the time his dad promised him he’d take him to Pebble Beach, the cathedral that is the host of this week’s PGA Tour stop, but only when he’d break par — then, when he was 13 or 14, Gotterup went out and shot a two-under 69 at Rumson Country Club in New Jersey. (“I have the scorecard somewhere in my house. … My mom’s like got it framed.”)
And there’s this:
Know that his Masters trip in a couple of months will be his first — but that is by his own choosing. Gotterup’s been invited to the tournament before.
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And he said simply, thanks, but no thanks.
He’s a player. And he’d go when he’d play.
“I haven’t been invited to play, in general,” Gotterup said Wednesday. “But I would go down — one of my sponsors would do a dinner down there every Wednesday before and they would ask if I wanted to go over on Thursday and watch.
“I don’t know, I feel like it would ruin my — like one, I don’t really like watching other people play unless I’m not playing that week. It’s just my, I don’t know, I’m kind of weird in that sense. Like I wanted it to be, like it’s the most hyped-up tournament in the sport and I don’t want to go over there and be a spectator; I want to play.
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“I had faith in myself that I was going to be able to do it as a player. Now that I’m going to be able to, it will be much more rewarding stepping on the first tee there rather than being a fan.”
He’ll go as a favorite, too. Last year, he won the Genesis Scottish Open. This year, he’s won the Sony Open and the WM Phoenix Open. He’s blended power throughout the bag with touch from up close. Those play well at Augusta National.
As does confidence in one self.
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“It’s just one of those tournaments where I think — like here is similar in the fact that I could tell you every hole on that course even if I didn’t step foot on it,” Gotterup said.
“So I’m excited to just kind of be out there and enjoy maybe in one of these off weeks, enjoy, like get the, not the nerves, but like the awe factor of it hopefully away and try to get settled in by the time the tournament comes.
“Just talking to like at the Bridgestone, stuff that we’ve done, talking to Freddie [Couples] and Tiger [Woods] and Jason [Day] and all these guys like about it, it’s just the only tournament that everyone talks about all the time. I don’t know, it’s just exciting.”