
By SuperWest Sports Staff
Sports
Schedule of Known Spring Football Games in the West
Spring Football is coming to a head with intrasquad games and showcases throughout the West.
After another wild offseason of recruiting and transfers, the games represent the first opportunity for fans and media to see the new players and units.
Here is a list of all of the region’s known spring games and showcases, sorted by date and time (All times PT).
The events begin with Montana on April 10th and conclude with San Diego State on May 2nd.
Friday, April 10
Montana, 5:00 pm
Nevada, 6:00 pm
Saturday, April 11
Colorado State, 9:30 am (approx.)
USC (Fan Fest – no game), 9:00 am
Colorado, Noon
Idaho State, 1:00 pm
Stanford, 2:00 pm
Saturday, April 18
UC Davis, 10:15 am
Utah State, 11:00 am
Cal, 1:00 pm
San Jose State, 1:00 pm
Saturday, April 25
UNLV, 11:00 am
Montana State, Noon
New Mexico, Noon
Oregon State, Noon
Boise State, 12:30 pm
Oregon, 1:00 pm
Sacramento State, 3:00 pm
Arizona, 4:30 pm
Fresno State, TBA
WSU, TBA
Wyoming, TBA
Friday, May 1
Eastern Washington, 5:00 pm
Idaho, 6:00 pm
Washington, 6:30 pm
Saturday, May 2
UCLA, Noon
San Diego State, 1:00 pm
No Spring Game/Showcase: Air Force, Arizona State, BYU, New Mexico State, Utah
Sports
MLB roundup: Xander Bogaerts’ 12th-inning slam powers Padres past Rockies
Apr 9, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego Padres shortstop Xander Bogaerts (2) celebrates with teammates after hitting a walk-off grand slam home run against Colorado Rockies relief pitcher Valente Bellozo (not pictured) in the twelfth inning at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images Xander Bogaerts belted a grand slam in the bottom of the 12th inning Thursday night as the San Diego Padres rallied past the visiting Colorado Rockies 7-3.
Fernando Tatis Jr. started the inning with a sacrifice bunt that moved automatic runner Jake Cronenworth to third. After Valente Bellozo (0-1) intentionally walked Jackson Merrill and Manny Machado to fill the bases, Bogaerts lined a 1-0 pitch into the seats in left for his second homer of the year.
David Morgan (1-0) pitched 1 2/3 hitless innings of relief to earn the win. Colorado got the go-ahead run to third in the top of the 12th, but Willi Castro was cut down at the plate on Brenton Doyle’s bouncer to Cronenworth at second.
Each team scored a run in both the 10th and 11th innings.
Twins 3, Tigers 1
Brooks Lee pulled an eighth-inning, two-run single through the right side of the infield, and Minnesota held on for a win over Detroit.
Josh Bell went 3-for-4 and hit a solo home run for the Twins to complete a four-game sweep over the Tigers. Garrett Acton (1-0) earned his first career win after allowing one run in two innings of relief. He followed starter Mick Abel, who pitched six scoreless innings. Eric Orze pitched a scoreless ninth for his first save of the season.
Gleyber Torres drove in the lone run for Detroit, which has dropped five straight games. Will Vest (0-2) gave up two runs on three hits in two-thirds of an inning.
Athletics 1, Yankees 0
Jeffrey Springs allowed one hit in seven outstanding innings to lead the visiting Athletics past New York.
Springs (2-0) took a no-hit bid into the seventh, surrendering just two walks while striking out six. Max Muncy tripled and scored off a Tyler Soderstrom single to help the Athletics record their first series win over the Yankees since April 2016.
Ben Rice broke up Springs’ no-hit bid with a single for New York’s only hit of the day. Ryan Weathers (0-1) was the tough-luck loser despite surrendering just one run on seven hits in a season-high seven innings. The Yankees haven’t scored since taking a two-run lead on Luis Severino in the first inning of Wednesday’s 3-2 loss.
White Sox 2, Royals 0
Anthony Kay struck out six to match a career high over 5 2/3 innings, and Colson Montgomery roped an RBI double as Chicago snapped its 14-game road losing streak to Kansas City.
Luisangel Acuna added a sacrifice fly for Chicago, which won for just the third time in the last 25 games at Kauffman Stadium, where its previous victory came on Sept. 6, 2003. Kay (1-0) was making just his ninth career start but third this season for the White Sox. He yielded three hits on a career-high 100 pitches.
Kansas City’s Seth Lugo (1-1) was charged with both runs while also giving up four hits and four walks over 6 1/3 innings. Maikel Garcia and Bobby Witt Jr. each had two hits, but they struck out for the final two outs, respectively, for the Royals, who stranded 11 runners and went 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position.
Diamondbacks 7, Mets 1
Jorge Barrosa’s RBI triple capped a four-run seventh inning for Arizona, which went on to rout host New York in the decisive game of a three-game series.
The Diamondbacks are 7-3 since being swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers in a season-opening three-game series. Arizona pinch hitter Gabriel Moreno tied the game with a run-scoring double in the seventh before Alek Thomas collected the go-ahead RBI on a fielder’s choice. Diamondbacks starter Eduardo Rodriguez (1-0) allowed one run on five hits over six innings.
Luis Robert Jr. homered in the first inning for the Mets, whose consecutive losses to the Diamondbacks followed a four-game winning streak in which they outscored the opposition 28-8. Mets starter Nolan McLean (1-1) permitted two runs on three hits over 6 1/3 innings.
Marlins 8, Reds 1
Owen Caissie and Javier Sanoja combined for six hits and five RBIs to lead host Miami to a defeat of Cincinnati, earning a split of the four-game set.
In a battle of former first-round picks, Miami’s Max Meyer (1-0) allowed four hits, three walks and one run in five innings, striking out four.
Reds starter Rhett Lowder (1-1) entered the game with the best eight-game ERA (1.30) in Reds history with a minimum of 30 innings. He had never allowed more than three runs in a game. On Thursday, he allowed eight hits and five runs (four earned) in 5 1/3 innings. Caissie (3-for-4, three RBIs) and Sanoja (3-for-4, two RBIs) led Miami’s offense. Agustin Ramirez went 2-for-5 with two RBIs.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Manchester United’s latest deal has been backed by three important people
Man Utd defender Harry Maguire signed a new contract this week to extend his stay at Old Trafford by at least another season.
Earlier this week, Harry Maguire shared an image signing his new contract, along with his two daughters, who wore Manchester United shirts with ‘Daddy’ on the back.
The caption alongside the picture read: “My club.” Maguire has spent more time at United than any other club, but you would have got long odds on his association potentially lasting as many as nine years when he was in the doldrums in 2023.
Maguire signed a one-year deal, with the option of another 12 months, meaning he could stay in Manchester until 2028. The defender was born in Sheffield, but it’s across the Pennines where he now calls home.
Get MEN Premium now for just £1 HERE – or get involved in our United WhatsApp group by clicking HERE. You can also join our United Facebook page by clicking HERE and don’t miss out on our brilliant selection of newsletters HERE.
Maguire’s time at United looked set to end in the summer of 2023. He suffered a huge loss of form in 2021/22 and made eight league starts in the following campaign under Erik ten Hag, who stripped him of the captaincy.
West Ham were interested in signing him and, in another world, Maguire moved to the London Stadium. He stayed, fought for his place and enjoyed a renaissance instead. Who doesn’t love a comeback story?
Maguire has become a fan favourite and there’s no doubt that the peaks and troughs have helped to endear him to supporters. He was mocked, once being booed by England ‘fans’ on international duty, and he showed extraordinary mental resilience to come through that period.
“Sometimes it did cross my mind at the time just thinking, ‘Why? I don’t know why it has done this. I don’t know where it’s come from’,” he said of dealing with the abuse during a chat with journalists last week.
“My form dipped a little bit, yeah, of course, everyone does that in their career. But I was in a situation where I was just a lad from Sheffield playing for such a huge club. I thought this is what happens – this is the fault of the club not performing well.
“But when you look back it probably did go a little bit too far. At the time, I can remember thinking I just don’t know how this has really happened. I don’t know how it’s changed so quickly.”
Maguire’s mentality is the reason his situation has changed quickly. Not many players would be able to survive at United having reached such a low point, but the England international got his head down and worked hard.
The result is that he remains hugely important at United. The Reds needed to retain Maguire’s experience and quality, so it was a no-brainer to tie him down to a new deal on reduced terms.
There have been ringing endorsements since his contract was announced. “Harry has been here very long. I always say this in a way that is easy to understand. People like fresh meat, when you have the same meat for too long, you want a new one, and football is like that,” Bruno Fernandes told Men in Blazers.
Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package

Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
“You have the same players and people want to change them, but when you change them and it doesn’t work out, you want those players back. People want new names, they want excitement and different people with the shirt, and that’s normal. H has coped very well with that.
“He’s been very important in many moments for us, and he deserves this recognition from the club because he’s very important for the team and the dressing room. Losing someone of his experience and his voice for a season when things will change, you still need some pillars at the club.”
Michael Carrick told Sky Sports: “We’re delighted that Harry’s agreed, and it’s been done, and I think stability and consistency [are] important. He’s been through everything at this club. He knows what it’s all about.
“The way he handles himself, his character and he’s been terrific since I’ve [come] back and credit to him for that, really. I think the experience is important. We got a really good mix within the squad of some really talented and high-end ability-wise, younger players.”
Carrick added: “We have a good number of players in what we kind of class as the peak years. And Harry’s obviously at that stage where he is getting a little bit further down the line in terms of career.
“But it doesn’t diminish the importance of what he can be and the example and the understanding [he has]. And a little bit of just knowing what it feels like to be here and so to have him around for longer is fantastic.”
Jason Wilcox said: “Harry represents the mentality and resilience required to perform for United. He is the ultimate professional who brings invaluable experience and leadership to our young, ambitious squad. Harry is completely determined to help United to achieve regular and sustained success.”
Maguire has the backing of all the important figures at United.
Sports
Duke Blue Devils Basketball transfer portal tracker live updates, news on commits, departures from the program
Duke Blue Devils Basketball transfer portal tracker live updates, news on commits, departures from the program originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
The Duke Blue Devils are coming off an Elite Eight loss to the UConn Huskies and look towards the future. Jon Scheyer’s team entered the NCAA Tournament as the top-seed with the best shot of bringing home a title. Now they’ll reassess the roster for the 2026-27 season and try to make a few moves.
Advertisement
Duke finished the season 35-3 and the UNC loss being the only one in ACC play. But they’ll likely need to replace the production of AP Player of the Year Cameron Boozer, who is projected as a top-three pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. Patrick Ngonbag is also a projected first-rounder this year in the latest mock. Two key pieces to Duke’s overall success.
Here’s where things stand with the Blue Devils in the transfer portal.
According to On3, Duke has very little movement in the first day of the transfer portal.
Duke Blue Devils Basketball transfer portal live updates
Duke transfers
|
Status |
Name |
Pos |
Rating |
Last Team |
New Team |
|
Entered |
Darren Harris |
SF |
96.08 |
Duke |
|
|
Expected |
Nikolas Khamenia |
SF |
97.81 |
Duke |
Duke Transfer news:
April 8, 2026
Advertisement
-
Nikolas Khamenia is expected to enter the transfer portal
April 7, 2026
-
Darren Harris has entered the transfer portal
Duke transfer portal rumors:
April 10: Kansas center Flory Bidunga is “scheduled to see Duke,” according to On3’s Jaime Shaw. The top big man in the portal would make a perfect addition to Scheyer’s rotation.
April 10: Alabama Transfer Aiden Sherrell will meet with Duke coaches, according to multiple sources and first reported by TheDukeNation. The 6-foot-11, 255 pounds forward averaged 11 points and 6 rebounds with the Tide last season.
April 9: Duke transfer guard Darren Harris will visit Indiana (April 11th) and Virginia (April 14th), according to Sam Kayser.
Advertisement
April 9: There hasn’t been much movement from Duke in the transfer portal during the initial first days. This seems very calculated by Jon Scheyer and his staff to get the right talent in Durham. With two NBA first-rounders on the roster, replacing them (when they enter the draft) will be the priority.
More: Why Duke and Jon Scheyer aren’t making early waves in the transfer portal
April 9: Kansas State’s Abdi Bashir Jr. is receiving interest from Duke coaches, according to Sam Kayser.
April 8: Duke was reportedly in a three-team race with Michigan and UNC for Wake Forest’s Juke Harris. However, this was a false report off what On3’s Joe Tipton was reporting. Duke has not been involved with the ACC rival.
Advertisement
April 7: Kansas center Flory Bidunga is one of the top players in the transfer portal. The Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year could find himself at home in Durham. According to On3, “Two early schools to watch are Michigan and Duke. Both teams were involved in his high school recruitment”
April 7: Wisconsin guard John Blackwell is one of the top guards to hit the portal. The All-Big Ten selection averaged just over 19 points per game. Duke was mentioned by On3 as a possible landing spot.
The spring basketball transfer portal window opened on April 7 and will remain open until April 21.
More college basketball news:
Sports
Honkai Star Rail 4.2 livestream codes expiry time and rewards
HoYoverse has revealed the Honkai Star Rail 4.2 livestream codes during the special preview program for the upcoming update. These codes offer various in-game rewards, including Stellar Jades in Star Rail. You can redeem these for a limited-time, as they will expire on a given date, becoming unusable.
This article will cover the Honkai Star Rail 4.2 livestream codes.
All Honkai Star Rail 4.2 livestream codes
Here is a list of the Honkai Star Rail 4.2 codes that were revealed during the special preview program of the upcoming update:
- HERESTHECODE: 100x Stellar Jades, 50,000 Credits
- SHAREANDSAVEIT: 100x Stellar Jades, 5x Traveler’s Guide
- HAPPY3RDANNIV: 100x Stellar Jades, 4x Refined Aether
Honkai Star Rail 4.2 livestream codes expiration time
The codes from the Honkai Star Rail 4.2 livestream will be available for a limited-time, and they will expire on April 11, 2026, at 11:59 PM (UTC+8). Here is a countdown till the expiry time:
How to redeem the Honkai Star Rail 4.2 livestream codes
Here are the various methods that you can use to claim the codes from the special preview program:

Redeem using the official website
- Use a browser to access the official HSR website.
- Log in to your account.
- Pick a server if the webpage doesn’t detect one already.
- Insert the livestream code in the dialogue box.
- Click the Redeem button to exchange the rewards.
- Repeat the steps for the other codes.
Redeem in-game
- Launch the game on any device and log in to your account.
- Hit Pause once the character appears on the screen. Doing so will open the Pause menu.
- Click on the icon with three dots beside your profile name.
- Choose Redemption Code to open a pop-up window.
- Enter the livestream code in the dialogue box.
- Click the Confirm button.
- Repeat the steps for the remaining codes.
Redeem on the HoYoLAB app
- Launch the HoYoLAB application.
- Select HSR from the list of games.
- Head to the HoYoGuides section.
Also read: Honkai Star Rail 2026 anniversary update leaks: Characters, free rewards, pulls, and more
You can check out more related articles:
Are you stuck on today’s Wordle? Our Wordle Solver will help you find the answer.
Edited by Supratim Sarkar
Sports
Mammoth take down Predators, wrap up playoff berth
Apr 9, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Mammoth left wing Michael Carcone (53) leaps to avoid a shot against Nashville Predators goaltender Juuse Saros (74) and defenseman Adam Wilsby (83) during the first period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images Dylan Guenther and Nick Schmaltz each had a goal and an assist for the Utah Mammoth, who clinched a playoff berth shortly after earning a 4-1 victory over the Nashville Predators on Thursday in Salt Lake City.
The Anaheim Ducks’ subsequent 6-1 win over the San Jose Sharks allowed Utah to seal a postseason bid in its second season.
Clayton Keller had three primary assists for the Mammoth (42-30-6, 90 points), who won their fifth straight game. Kailer Yamamoto and Lawson Crouse also scored goals, and Logan Cooley added two assists.
Karel Vejmelka finished with 29 saves for Utah, which extended its lead over the Predators (37-32-10, 84 points) to six points in the race for the first wild-card spot in the Western Conference. The Los Angeles Kings hold the second wild-card position with 85 points.
Erik Haula scored a goal and Juuse Saros made 23 saves for Nashville, which had a four-game point streak (3-0-1) snapped.
Utah took a 1-0 lead at the 14:26 mark of the first period when Yamamoto, in front of the blue paint, jammed in a Guenther crossing pass through Saros’ pads at the end of an odd-man rush.
The Mammoth increased the lead to 2-0 early in the second period on a power-play goal by Schmaltz, who tucked in a Keller pass inside the left post. It marked the seventh straight game that Utah scored a power-play goal.
Utah broke the game open with two goals in the first 6:05 of the third period to make it 4-0. Crouse got the first goal, snapping a shot in from the middle of the right circle. Guenther followed with his team-leading 39th goal, finishing a 2-on-1 with Keller with a one-timer from the left circle past Saros’ blocker side. Haula put the Predators on the board with a power-play goal with 9:38 remaining, backhanding in a rebound of a Zachary L’Heureux shot.
Nashville captain Roman Josi was a late scratch after taking part in warm-ups with an upper-body injury and is listed as day-to-day.
–Field Level Media
Sports
The Vikings Could Have One Sneaky Draft Swerve in Round 1
Sometimes it’s tempting to look down at an NFL team’s roster, identify a couple of short-term roster holes, and think, “It looks like a Team X needs a player at Position Y.” That’s even the correct line of thought from time to time. But for the Minnesota Vikings in 2026, outside linebacker could be a sneaky roster need, even if it’s not shouted from mountain tops.
Minnesota may have bigger needs elsewhere, but an EDGE pick at No. 18 would not come out of nowhere.
Most fans expect the purple team to draft a defensive back or defensive tackle in Round 1 — it’s a smart theory — but an EDGE defender cannot be ruled out.
Jonathan Greenard’s Future Could Shape the Draft Board
The case for an EDGE in Round 1.
Jonathan Greenard + Andrew Van Ginkel’s Future
The Vikings have one main player in their trade rumor mill right now, and that’s Greenard. He’s lived there for one month. Greenard wants a sizable contract extension, or so goes the working theory, earning $19 million per season at the moment, when his NFC North peers, like Micah Parsons and Aidan Hutchinson, make over $45 million annually. If Minnesota cannot bend to Greenard’s asking price, he may be traded during the draft.
Meanwhile, Van Ginkel has one year left on his contract, and he’ll turn 31 at the start of July. He is not young. Perhaps Minnesota will re-up with Van Ginkel beyond 2026, and his upper-echelon production will continue into his 30s.
But those are two huge maybes: maybe Greenard won’t be traded, and maybe Van Ginkel will be around to produce at a high level after 2026.
The draft, especially in Round 1, should be about preparing for 2028 and 2029. If that’s the case, the Vikings probably need an EDGE defender.
Dallas Turner Is Rising, but …
Meanwhile, Minnesota has Turner marinating, picked in Round 1 two years ago after an expensive trade with the Jacksonville Jaguars.
Turner didn’t play too much as a rookie in 2024, about 30% of the time on defense, but he made a few noteworthy plays, along with showcasing a promising trajectory for the future. That assessment checked out in 2025 when Turner experienced increased playing time due to injuries that affected Greenard and Van Ginkel.
The speedy young EDGE rusher played about two-thirds of defensive snaps last season, tallying 8 sacks for his troubles and hitting his groove late in the season. Turner is also still 23 years old.
If Greenard were traded or Van Ginkel left next offseason, there’s a temptation to think, “Just play Dallas Turner,” and that opinion may be spot-on. However, Turner has yet to prove he can handle the grind as a full-time starter. Fans and some pundits think he’s ready for it; he just has to prove it. Leaving the starting OLB spot up to the mercy of Turner’s development could be risky business.
The Round 1 EDGEs
Suppose the Vikings swerve and pick an outside linebacker with the 18th overall pick. These are the realistic options:
- Akheem Mesidor (Miami)
- Keldric Faulk (Auburn)
- T.J. Parker (Clemson)
- Cashius Howell (Texas A&M)
- Zion Young (Missouri)
Mesidor will be a 25-year-old rookie in 2026, so Faulk might be the safest bet for the EDGE plan.
NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein on Faulk: “Faulk has a long, developing frame, good movement skills and the potential for odd or even fronts once he gains more muscle mass. He’s a culture player with high character who earns a grade bump based on his age (turns 21 in September), traits and advanced foundation. A fluid athlete with good movement skills, he works around blocks with finesse but needs more assertive initial strikes to set firmer edges in gap control.”
“His toughness and mentality suggest he’ll play through blocks more consistently in an NFL environment. Faulk’s rush is diverse. However, with average upfield burst, he might require a move inside on passing downs, where his long levers, quickness and agility can overmatch guards. Faulk needs polish but offers a high ceiling that should reveal itself within a couple of years.”
The Meaningful Ones after Round 1
If the Vikings are not in the mood to spend their 1st-Rounder on an EDGE, well, they have eight more picks on the menu. Before the end of Round 4 — everything after Round 5 in the draft is a crapshoot that doesn’t typically amount to much — these are the EDGE names to know:
- Malachi Lawrence (UCF)
- R Mason Thomas (Oklahoma)
- Gabe Jacas (Illinois)
- Derrick Moore (Michigan)
- Dani Dennis-Sutton (Penn State)
- Romello Height (Texas Tech)
- Joshua Josephs (Tennessee)
- Keyron Crawford (Auburn)
- L.T. Overton (Alabama)
- Anthony Lucas (USC)
Stylistically, Jacas from Illinois would fit well within Brian Flores’s system.
Minnesota has drafted just one EDGE rusher in Round 1 in the last 20 years, the aforementioned Turner.
Sports
Reachin’ Out chases 2026 Percy Sykes Stakes Group 2 prize for Tulloch Lodge
The $1 million Percy Sykes Stakes at Randwick features Reachin’ Out as the novice among nine, though she may hold the highest ceiling of improvement.
This Stay Inside filly turned heads with a resounding four-length debut success at Kensington last month, preceded by pair of effective barrier trials.
Adrian Bott and Gai Waterhouse wasted no time elevating her to Group 2 warfare, with early wagering reflecting approval by making the two-year-old the $3.60 elect in Saturday’s Percy Sykes Stakes over 1200m.
“That was her debut performance, and she ran good times on the day, some good figures off the back of it,” Bott said.
“She was excellent, and she looks like she has continued to improve.
“She is one of the fillies on the way up. The timing might be ideal for her for this race.”
Lumbini flies the Tulloch Lodge flag as well, having posted an unremarkable result from Queensland in the Sweet Embrace Stakes (1200m) before a heartening second to Pembrey in the Magic Night Stakes (1200m).
Her owners prioritized this race over a Golden Slipper tilt, even with the disadvantage of stall nine.
“She had a quick turnaround from the Gold Coast so she may have been in need of that first run, and she bounced back last start,” Bott said.
“It was always in the plan to come through to this race and skip the Slipper. We weren’t always trying to push her towards that, we thought she would be better placed here.
“She seems to be in good shape, and the form around her looks good.”
Agrarian Girl, runner-up in the Reisling Stakes and Golden Slipper reserve, was in Percy Sykes calculations for Tulloch Lodge, but Bott elected to spell her after her preparation peaked.
“We didn’t want to go one too many,” he said.
“She had been up for a while and just started to come to the end of it. We will do the right thing by her, and give her a bit of time.”
With Medicinal from Godolphin set for Sydney bow after Victorian double, and unbeaten Satono Glow homecoming from Flemington Group 3 win, the Percy Sykes Stakes looks compelling.
Rachini contributes via recent fourth in Group 1 Sires’ Produce Stakes (1400m), while Screen Icon aims to rebound from Golden Slipper exclusion.
Visit betting sites for the latest racing betting markets on the Percy Sykes Stakes.
Sports
GAA Championship 2026 starting team news: Full panels named for opening weekend
GAA Championship 2026 team news: Full panels named for opening weekend
The 2026 GAA Championship gets underway this weekend with a packed programme of football and hurling action, and official panels have now been confirmed across the major ties.
Supporters will get their first proper look at county selections in the Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster senior football championships, while the Christy Ring Cup, Nickey Rackard Cup and Lory Meagher Cup also begin with several intriguing match-ups.
Below is the full team news from the opening weekend, with each county’s named 26-man panel listed in match-by-match format.
Connacht Senior Football Championship
London v Mayo
London
- Andrew Walsh
- Daire Rooney
- Matt Moynahan
- Sean O’Donoghue
- Ciaran McKeon
- Conal Gallagher
- Conor O’Donohue
- Liam Gallagher
- Daniel Clarke
- Josh Obahor
- James Davis
- Kristian Healy
- Micheal O’Reilly
- Shay Rafter
- Joe McGill
- Cormac McConnell
- Conor Redican
- Ciaran Gaughan
- Nathan Feeney
- Shaun Wogan
- Liam Crowley
- Conor Goggin
- Marc Friel
- Stephen Henry
- Liam Murphy
- Finbarr Crowley
Mayo
- Rob Hennelly
- Jack Coyne
- Rory Brickenden
- Fenton Kelly
- Sam Callinan
- Michael Plunkett
- Paddy Durcan
- Bob Tuohy
- David McBrien
- Jack Carney
- Ryan O Donoghue
- Hugh O Loughlin
- Cian McHale
- Aidan O Shea
- Paul Towey
- Jack Livinstone
- John McMonagle
- Donnacaha McHugh
- Stephen Coen
- Sean Morahan
- Jordan Flynn
- Conal Dawson
- Fergal Boland
- Diarmuid O Connor
- Tommy Conroy
- Cillian O Connor
Sligo v Leitrim
Sligo
- Aidan Devaney
- Tommy Ross
- Conor Sheridan
- Luke Casserly
- Canice Mulligan
- Jack Lavin
- Paul Kilcoyne
- Darragh Cummins
- Luke Towey
- Lee Deignan
- Alan McLoughlin
- Cian Lally
- Joshua Flynn
- Niall Murphy
- Shane Deignan
- Keelan Harte
- Paul McNamara
- Michael Lavin
- Rossa Sloyan
- Daire O’Boyle
- Gavin Gorman
- Conor Johnston
- Kyle Cawley
- David Quinn
- James Donlon
- Pat Spillane
Leitrim
- Killian Gaffey
- Cillian McGloin
- Conor Reynolds
- Seán Harkin
- Eoin McLoughlin
- Mark Diffley
- Keith Keegan
- Conor Quinn
- Barry McNulty
- Fergal McLoughlin
- Riordan O’Rourke
- Tom Prior
- Ryan O’Rourke
- Gavin Reynolds
- Ben Guckian
- Daire O’Shea
- Eanna McNamara
- Kieran Clancy
- James Rooney
- Peter Prior
- Michael Mc Kiernan
- Oisín McLoughlin
- Paul Honeyman
- Jack Kelly
- Tom Plunkett
- Ruairi O’Rourke
New York v Roscommon
New York
- Joey Grace
- Tadhg O’Riordan
- Sean Wilson
- Cian O’Dea
- Jack Foley
- Matthew Queenan
- Rob Wharton
- Eoghan McElliott
- Conall Kennedy
- Donal Hunt
- Frank O’Reilly
- Tiarnan Mathers
- Conor Keenan
- Jack McKenna
- Killian Butler
- Ryan Corrigan
- Shane Brosnan
- Adam Loughlin Stones
- Oisin Mathers
- David Naughten
- Jack Healy
- Jack Kennedy
- Mick Argue
- Noel Hatton
- James Walsh
- Jack Savage
Roscommon
- Conor Carroll
- Patrick Gavin
- Caelim Keogh
- Eoin McCormack
- Eoin Ward
- Ronan Daly
- Senan Lambe
- Keith Doyle
- Conor Ryan
- Dylan Ruane
- Enda Smith
- Darragh Heneghan
- Diarmuid Murtagh
- Daire Cregg
- Robert Heneghan
- Aaron Brady
- Niall Higgins
- Colm Neary
- Robbie Dolan
- Shane Cunnane
- Jack Duggan
- Paul Carey
- Ben O’Carroll
- Conor Hand
- Eoin Colleran
- Ciaran Lennon
Leinster Senior Football Championship
Offaly v Laois
Offaly
- Conor Melia
- Shane O’Toole Greene
- David Dempsey
- Lee Pearson
- Cormac Egan
- Diarmuid Egan
- Daire McDaid
- Jack McEvoy
- Jordan Hayes
- Marcas Dalton
- Keith O’Neill
- Rory Egan
- Dylan Hyland
- Shane Tierney
- Darragh Flynn
- Sean O’Toole
- Aidan Bracken
- Conor Dunican
- Nathan Poland
- Kyle Higgins
- Jack Bryant
- Eoin Sawyer
- Harry Plunkett
- Sean Conway
- Eoin Dunne
- Cathal Ryan
Laois
- Killian Roche
- Jack Lacey
- Trevor Collins
- Alex Mohan
- Pa Kirwan
- Aaron McEvoy
- Simon Fingleton
- Ciaran Burke
- Conor Heffernan
- Kevin Swayne
- Ronan Coffey
- Patrick O’Sullivan
- Brian Byrne
- Daragh Galvin
- Evan O’Carroll
- Matthew Byron
- Darren Brennan
- Killian Byrne
- Niall Corbet
- Jake Darcy
- Ben Dempsey
- Mikie Dempsey
- Paul Kingston
- Rioghan Murphy
- Cian Nolan
- Robert Tyrrell
Carlow v Wicklow
Carlow
- Ben McCarron
- Colin Byrne
- Niall Roche
- Paddy McDonnell
- John Phiri
- Dara Curran
- Padraig Bolger
- Mark Furey
- Conor Doyle
- Lee Walker
- Colm Hulton
- Mikey Bambrick
- Liam Gavin
- Christopher Blake
- Sean Murphy
- Johnny Furey
- Lee Moore
- John Murphy
- Tadgh Roche
- Ross Dunphy
- Adam Burgess
- Kyle Nolan
- Jamie Clarke
- Kevin Murphy
- Eoghan Ruth
- Aaron Amond
Wicklow
- Mark Jackson
- Tom Moran
- Conall Ó Gallchobhair
- Gavin Fogarty
- Cian Deering
- Matt Nolan
- Jonathan Carlin
- Dean Healy
- Jack Hardy
- Joe Prendergast
- Padraig O Toole
- Christopher O Brien
- Oisin Mc Graynor
- Kevin Quinn
- Eoin Darcy
- Cathal Fitzgerald
- Brian Bohan
- Jack Kirwan
- Cathal Baker
- Mark Kenny
- Conor Fee
- Jacques Mc Call
- Liam O Neill
- Eoin Murtagh
- Sean Murphy
- John Paul Nolan
Longford v Westmeath
Longford
- Eoin McGuinness
- Patrick Fox
- Ryan Moffett
- Bryan Masterson
- Peter Lynn
- Ronan Sweeney
- Dessie Reynolds
- Liam Glennon
- Oisin O’Toole
- James Moran
- Matthew Carey
- Daniel Reynolds
- Dylan Farrell
- Joseph Hagan
- Oran Kenny
- Mícheál Hughes
- Cian Brady
- Aaron Farrell
- Niall Farrelly
- Iarla O’Sullivan
- Matthew Flynn
- Paddy Moran
- Conor Smith
- Aidan McGuire
- Caolán Lynch
- Gavin Farrelly
Westmeath
- Jason Daly
- Daniel Scahill
- Charlie Drumm
- Tadhg Baker
- Ronan Wallace
- Shane Allen
- Matthew Whittaker
- Brían Cooney
- Ray Connellan
- Kevin O’Sullivan
- Sam McCartan
- Conor Dillon
- Tom Molloy
- Luke Loughlin
- Brandon Kelly
- Jack Connaughton
- Adam Treanor
- Shane Corcoran
- Robbie Forde
- Senan Baker
- Devin Hill
- Shane Ormsby
- Danny McCartan
- Eoghan McCabe
- Jack Duncan
- TJ Cox
Munster Senior Football Championship
Cork v Limerick
Cork
- Micheál Aodh Martin
- Maurice Shanley
- Daniel O’Mahony
- Seán Meehan
- Brian O’Driscoll
- Tommy Walsh
- Luke Fahy
- Colm O’Callaghan
- Ian Maguire
- Paul Walsh
- Mark Cronin
- Seán McDonnell
- Chris Óg Jones
- Dara Sheedy
- Steven Sherlock
- Patrick Doyle
- Tomas O’Mahony
- Rory Maguire
- Darragh Cashman
- Seán Walsh
- Conor Cahalane
- David Buckley
- Ruairi Deane
- Eoghan McSweeney
- Conor Corbett
- Brian Hurley
Limerick
- Jeffrey Alfred
- Sean Kilbridge
- Cormac Woulfe
- Diarmuid Buckley
- Barry Coleman
- Killian Ryan
- Tony McCarthy
- Eliah Riordan
- Jack McCarthy
- Rory O Brien
- Cillian Fahy
- Paul Maher
- Robbie Childs
- James Naughton
- Danny Neville
- Ronan McElligott
- Darren O Doherty
- Oran Collins
- Oisín Moss
- Lee Woulfe
- Mark McCarthy
- Colm McSweeney
- Josh Dineen
- Zach McCarthy
- Shane Cross
- Peter Nash
Waterford v Tipperary
Waterford
- Simon Burns
- Tommy Martin
- Billy Hynes
- Conor Ó Cuirrín
- Glen Power
- Adam Crawford
- Conor Murray
- Michael O’Brien
- Michael Curry
- Donal Fitzgerald
- Aaron Ryan
- Liam Mulligan
- Dermot Ryan
- Stephen Curry
- Alan Dunwoody
- Paudie Hunt
- Darach Ó Cathasaigh
- Adam Murray
- Darragh Walsh
- Caoimhín Walsh
- Cian Kiely
- Kyle Flynn
- Conor Keating
- Colin Foley
- Conor Fennell
- David Butler
Tipperary
- Shane Garland
- Jack O’Neill
- Eoin O’Connell
- Manus McFadden
- Kieran Costello
- James Morris
- Charlie King
- Joe Higgins
- Paudie Feehan
- Eoin Craddock
- Michéal Freaney
- Killian Butler
- Cian Smith
- Sean O’Connor
- Daithi Hogan
- Robbie McGrath
- Darragh Brennan
- Mark Corcoran
- Paddy Creedon
- Michael Lowry
- JP Mboka Tansia
- Emmet Moloney
- Darragh O’Connor
- Paddy O’Keeffe
- Mark Russell
- Mark Stokes
Ulster Senior Football Championship
Armagh v Tyrone
Armagh
- Blaine Hughes
- Peter McGrane
- Aaron McKay
- Paddy Burns
- Ross McQuillan
- Gareth Murphy
- Jarly Og Burns
- Tiernan Kelly
- Ben Crealey
- Greg McCabe
- Darragh McMullan
- Tomas McCormack
- Cian McConville
- Jason Duffy
- Oisin Conaty
- Ethan Rafferty
- Barry McCambridge
- Joe McElroy
- Ryan Duffy
- Callum O’Neill
- Daniel Magee
- Conor Turbitt
- Oisin O’Neill
- Fergal O’Brien
- Rory Grugan
- Andrew Murnin
Tyrone
- Niall Morgan
- Cormac Quinn
- Peter Teague
- Niall Devlin
- Frank Burns
- Joey Clarke
- Michael McKernan
- Brian Kennedy
- Conn Kilpatrick
- Seanie O’Donnell
- Ronan Cassidy
- Ben McDonnell
- Darren McCurry
- Mattie Donnelly
- Daragh Canavan
- Oisin O’Kane
- Michael Rafferty
- Aidan Clarke
- Ben Cullen
- Kieran McGeary
- Dalaigh Jones
- Aodhan Donaghy
- Ciaran Daly
- Lorcan McGarrity
- Eoin McElholm
- Ethan Jordan
Christy Ring Cup
Meath v Kerry
Meath
- Gavin King
- Jarlath Ennis
- Seán Geraghty
- Lorcan O’Connor
- Eoin Donegan
- Daire Shine
- Noah Conroy
- Simon Ennis
- Joey Cole
- Lorcan Byrne
- Padraig O’Hanrahan
- Tom Shine
- Mikey Cole
- Darren O’Higgins
- Mark Leavy
- Philip O’Brien
- Anthony Healy
- Cathal Barron
- Darragh Heffernan
- Fergal Flynn
- Jack Walsh
- Kevin Mulligan
- Kyle Donnelly
- Kyle Ennis
- Seán Coloe
- Seán Doyle
Kerry
- Conor Bohane
- Eric Leen
- Sean McGrath
- Kyle O’Connor
- James O’Connor
- Jason Diggins
- Michael Leane
- Kevin Goulding
- Evan Murphy
- Jordan Brick
- Ronan Walsh
- Tom Doyle
- Liam Óg O’Connor
- Padraig Boyle
- Hugh Lenihan
- Diarmuid Quirke
- Michael Slattery
- Dara Kearney
- Adam Segal
- Darragh Slattery
- Seamie Foran
- Luke Rochford
- Keith Carmody
- Cillian Litchfield
- Niall O’Mahony
- Gavin Dooley
Donegal v Wicklow
Donegal
- Luke White
- Oisin Kelly
- Ciaran Bradley
- Steven McBride
- Conor O Grady
- Kevin Kealy
- Gavin Browne
- Danny Cullen
- Brian Mcintyre
- Liam Mc Kinney
- Ronan McDermott
- Peter Kelly
- Declan Coulter
- Richie Ryan
- Josh Cronolly McGee
- Dylan Lafferty
- John Kealy
- Dan Donnelly
- Ryan Hilferty
- Ruairi Campbell
- Conor Diver
- Caolan O’Neill
- Gerard Gilmore
- Kieran Brady
- Sean Halvey
- Sean Ward
Wicklow
- Conor Mc Nally
- Ben Kearney
- Byran Kearney
- Ian Clancy
- Padraig Doran
- John Henderson
- James Boland
- Tommy Collins
- Sam O’Dowd
- Andrew Kavanagh
- Jack Phelan
- Luke Evans
- Fionn Darcy
- Padraig Doyle
- Seanie Germaine
- Meithéal Cleary
- Emmet Blanchfield
- Conall Byrne
- Kenneth Cullen
- Dylan Byrne
- Andrew Lynch
- Brandon Ryan
- Jack Doyle
- Willie Cash
- Luke Byrne
- Adam O Leary
Derry v Roscommon
Derry
- Sean Kelly
- Jamie Lee McGlade
- Patrick Turner
- Cathair McGilligan
- Conor Coyle
- Meehaul McGrath
- Eamon Cassidy
- Eamon Conway
- Thomas Brady
- Darragh McGilligan
- Fintan Bradley
- Joseph Mulholland
- Cormac O’Doherty
- Shea Cassidy
- Deaghlan Foley
- Eoin Mullholland
- Eunan Boylan
- Sean Quinn
- Conor McGurk
- Connor Melaugh
- Michael Lynch
- Tiernan Melaugh
- Andy McBride
- Ryan McGarvey
- Ruairi Biggs
- Eoin Scullion
Roscommon
- Enda Lawless
- Micheál Hussey
- James Dillon
- Jack Dowling
- Keelan Ryan
- Adam Donnelly
- Darragh Finn
- Tommy Morris
- Ethan Connaughton
- Brian Mannion
- Cian Murray
- Ronan Finn
- Sean Canning
- Jack Donnelly
- Paddy Fallon
- Tim Gilmore
- Conor Mulry
- Conor Morris
- Niall Fleming
- Eamon Mulry
- Jason Martin
- Liam Óg Coyle
- Cian Bowes
- Tommy Fleming
- Karl Feehily
- Brian Lawlor
Nickey Rackard Cup
Armagh v Mayo
Armagh
- Ciarán Duffy
- Stephen O’Keeffe
- Paudie Lappin
- Odhrán Curry
- Tam Lennon
- Barry Shortt
- Caionn Hughes
- Jack Scallon
- Peter McKearney
- Jack Loughran
- Aaron Fox
- Aaron Cullinane
- Dáire Harvey
- Charlie McArdle
- Conor Carabine
- Declan Harris
- Eoin McGuinness
- Dylan McKenna
- Morgan Thomas
- Miceal Rice
- Joe O’Connor
- Marty Moan
- Conor Gormley
- Darren McMullan
- Brian McCann
- Danny Magee
Mayo
- Bobby Douglas
- Alex Evans
- Oisin Greally
- Connor Murray
- Corey Scahill
- David Kenny
- Oisin Ivers
- John Heraty
- Daniel Huane
- Ryan Duffy
The post GAA Championship 2026 starting team news: Full panels named for opening weekend appeared first on SportsNewsIreland.
Sports
Vikings Doing Homework on Day 2 Linebacker
The Minnesota Vikings will have a Round 2 draft pick for the first time in four years on April 24th, and they might just spend it on a new linebacker: Jake Golday from Cincinnati.
Minnesota’s pre-draft homework keeps pointing toward linebacker help in the middle rounds.
The Vikings will meet with Golday this week via Top 30 visit. Needing youth at the ILB spot, Golday is a name to remember with the draft two weeks away.
Golday Fits the Vikings’ Need for Speed and Depth
Linebacker could be a target in Rounds 2 and 3.
MIN to Meet with Golday
The top off-ball linebackers in this year’s draft, Arvell Reese and Sonny Styles, will be long gone by the time Minnesota is called to the podium, but the Vikings are doing their diligence on inside linebacker nevertheless.
VikingzFanPage, an account with nearly 30,000 followers on Twitter (X), tweeted Wednesday, “Cincinnati LB Jake Golday will have a pre draft visit with the #Vikings later this week, per KSTP’s Darren Wolfson.”
Minnesota holds the 49th pick in the draft, also known as prime real estate to draft Golday, who is ranked No. 50 on the current Consensus Big Board.
The Golday Scouting Report
Golday is 6’4″ and 239 pounds, a 22-year-old Tennessean who will turn 23 a week after the draft. He’s known for his 4.62 speed at his size, high motor, and coverage skills. Downside? He played just one full season as an off-ball linebacker, and he fits better in a 4-3 defense, whereas the Vikings run a 3-4.
The Athletic‘s Dane Brugler on Golday: “A two-year starter at Cincinnati (and three-year starter overall), Golday played Sam linebacker in defensive coordinator Tyson Veidt’s 3-3-5 base scheme, playing to the field side. After three years in the FCS (two as a defensive end, one as a Mike linebacker), he moved up to the FBS in 2024 and joined the Bearcats.”
“He changed positions again and showed growing pains, but he continued ascending in 2025 and almost doubled his tackle production while cutting down on the mistakes. Golday was asked to operate in a ton of space in college (almost like a nickel defender), which helped showcase his gazelle-like speed to chase down the ball anywhere on the field.”
The Vikings onboarded a different off-ball linebacker from the same school three years ago: Ivan Pace Jr.
Brugler added, “His mental processing took a clear jump in 2025, which was the hope during his second season as a full-time overhang linebacker. Though he had the explosive athleticism to get away with false steps in the Big 12, it won’t be that easy in the NFL. He is trending in the right direction against the pass, but his coverage recognition isn’t yet a strength.”
“Golday is still unrefined in several areas, but his size, speed and ascending skill set are reasons to be encouraged. He projects as an immediate special teamer who can compete for defensive snaps during his rookie year.”
Vikings Current ILB Situation
Speaking of Pace Jr., the Vikings’ ILB setup is a little goofy right now because they dropped rookies Kobe King and Austin Keys midseason last year, two players who had no problems finding work right away. In short, Minnesota needs more inside linebackers, especially young ones, so it’s a safe bet to assume one joins the team from the draft or undrafted free agency.
Nonetheless, this is the current ILB group:
- Blake Cashman
- Eric Wilson
- Ivan Pace Jr.
- Jacob Roberts
- Josh Ross
Cashman and Pace Jr. are scheduled to hit free agency in 2027.
Other Linebackers in Round 2 & 3
Golday won’t be the only off-ball linebacker available to Minnesota on Day Two of the draft. The rest of the field will look like this:
- C.J. Allen (Georgia)
- Jacob Rodriguez (Texas Tech)
- Anthony Hill Jr. (Texas)
- Josiah Trotter (Missouri)
- Kyle Louis (Pittsburgh)
- Jaishawn Barham (Michigan)
Hill Jr. from Texas could be a sweet fit in defensive coordinator Brian Flores’s system. Our Josh Frey noted on his skill set last month, “Hill’s greatest strength is his prowess in the running game combined with great tackling technique. He is alarmingly quick off the snap as a downhill blitzer, and as a result, he racked up tackles for loss during his collegiate career with 31.5 in 40 career games including 17 sacks.”
It’s actually a wonderful draft for a team to need a linebacker after Round 1 while still expecting the rookie to turn into something.
NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein compared Golday to Steelers linebacker Malik Harrison, who’s been in the league since 2020.
Sports
2026 Masters tee times: Round 2 pairings and groups for field on Friday

AUGUSTA, Ga. — The first round of the 2026 Masters produced a stellar leaderboard, headlined by defending champion Rory McIlroy tied at the top alongside Sam Burns at 5 under. McIlroy will look to back up that performance with another strong effort in the second round, and he will wait until late in the afternoon to do so as he goes off in the penultimate group at 1:44 p.m. ET on Friday. Burns, meanwhile, will aim to prove he can maintain his position on the leaderboard when he tees off at 12:27 p.m.
The chase pack is headlined by world No. 1 and two-time Masters champion Scottie Scheffler, who had to endure the tougher afternoon conditions on Thursday but managed to shoot a 2-under 70. He’ll flip tee times with McIlroy and go off with his group at 10:19 a.m., hoping the course follows a similar pattern to Thursday by playing a touch softer in the morning. Also firmly in contention is 2025 runner-up Justin Rose, whose steady presence at Augusta National led our Round 1 Masters takeaways.
Also in the mix is 2018 champion Patrick Reed, who briefly held the lead at 5 under midway through his round before slipping back to 3 under with a Thursday 69. He will be back out with Akshay Bhatia and Tommy Fleetwood — also in red figures after a first-round 71 — at 1:08 p.m.
The two biggest shocks of Thursday were the poor performances by Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau, who enter the second round with work to do just to make the cut. Rahm will look to shake off his opening 78 at 9:43 a.m. with Chris Gotterup and Ludvig Åberg, who also struggled to a 74 after entering as one of the favorites. DeChambeau started his 10th Masters with a disappointing 76, and will face the tough afternoon conditions in his 1:20 p.m. tee time alongside Matt Fitzpatrick and Xander Schauffele.
Check out the full list of second-round tee times and pairings for the 90th Masters below, and don’t forget to dive into the 2026 Masters TV schedule and coverage guide so you know exactly when and how to watch throughout the week.
Watch the 2026 Masters with expanded coverage from CBS Sports. It continues Friday with Masters Live as we follow the best in the world on Featured Groups, Amen Corner and holes 15 & 16. Watch those streams live across Paramount+, CBSSports.com and the CBS Sports App with extended broadcast coverage Saturday and Sunday from 12-2 p.m. on Paramount+ and 2-7 p.m. on CBS.
All times Eastern
2026 Masters tee times, Friday groupings
- 7:40 a.m. — Sam Stevens, Sungjae Im
- 7:50 a.m. — Andrew Novak, Tom McKibbin, Brian Campbell
- 8:02 a.m. — Mike Weir, Wyndham Clark, Mateo Pulcini
- 8:14 a.m. — Zach Johnson, Michael Kim, Nicolai Højgaard
- 8:26 a.m. — Danny Willett, Davis Riley, Ethan Fang
- 8:38 a.m. — Adam Scott, Daniel Berger, Brian Harman
- 8:50 a.m. — Fred Couples, Min Woo Lee, Fifa Laopakdee
- 9:02 a.m. — Sergio Garcia, Aaron Rai, Jacob Bridgeman
- 9:19 a.m. — Harry Hall, Corey Conners, Michael Brennan
- 9:31 a.m. — J.J. Spaun, Maverick McNealy, Tyrrell Hatton
- 9:43 a.m. — Jon Rahm, Chris Gotterup, Ludvig Åberg
- 9:55 a.m. — Jordan Spieth, Justin Rose, Brooks Koepka
- 10:07 a.m. — Sepp Straka, Ben Griffin, Justin Thomas
- 10:19 a.m. — Scottie Scheffler, Robert MacIntyre, Gary Woodland
- 10:31 a.m. — Harris English, Marco Penge, Si Woo Kim
- 10:51 a.m. — John Keefer, Haotong Li
- 11:03 a.m. — Naoyuki Kataoka, Max Homa, Carlos Ortiz
- 11:15 a.m. — Jose Maria Olazabal, Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Aldrich Potgieter
- 11:27 a.m. — Angel Cabrera, Sami Valimaki, Jackson Herrington
- 11:39 a.m. — Charl Schwartzel, Max Greyserman, Ryan Fox
- 11:51 a.m. — Vijay Singh, Matt McCarty, Rasmus Højgaard
- 12:03 a.m. — Kurt Kitayama, Kristoffer Reitan, Casey Jarvis
- 12:15 p.m. — Bubba Watson, Nicolas Echavarria, Brandon Holtz
- 12:27 p.m. — Cameron Smith, Sam Burns, Jake Knapp
- 12:44 p.m. — Keegan Bradley, Ryan Gerard, Nick Taylor
- 12:56 p.m. — Dustin Johnson, Shane Lowry, Jason Day
- 1:08 p.m. — Patrick Reed, Tommy Fleetwood, Akshay Bhatia
- 1:20 p.m. — Bryson DeChambeau, Matt Fitzpatrick, Xander Schauffele
- 1:32 p.m. — Hideki Matsuyama, Collin Morikawa, Russell Henley
- 1:44 p.m. — Rory McIlroy, Cameron Young, Mason Howell
- 1:56 p.m. — Viktor Hovland, Patrick Cantlay, Alex Noren
-
Fashion7 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Spanx – Corporette.com
-
Business5 days agoThree Gulf funds agree to back Paramount’s $81 billion takeover of Warner, WSJ reports
-
Sports6 days agoIndia men’s 4x400m and mixed 4x100m relay teams register big progress | Other Sports News
-
Business6 days agoExpert Picks for Every Need
-
Tech3 days agoHow Long Can You Drive With Expired Registration? What Florida Law Says
-
Business5 days agoNo Jackpot Winner, Prize to Climb to $231 Million
-
Fashion4 days agoMassimo Dutti Offers Inspiration for Your Summer Mood Board
-
Fashion3 days agoLet’s Discuss: DEI in 2026
-
Crypto World2 days agoBitcoin recovers as US and Iran Agree a Ceasefire Deal
-
Business6 days agoAkebia Therapeutics, Inc. (AKBA) Discusses Pipeline Progress and Strategic Focus on Kidney Disease Treatments at R&D Day – Slideshow
-
Crypto World1 day agoCanary Capital Files SEC Registration for PEPE ETF
-
Politics6 days agoThe UK should not pay a penny in slavery reparations
-
Tech4 days agoSamsung just gave up on its own Messages app
-
Tech4 days agoHaier is betting big that your next TV purchase will be one of these
-
Fashion7 days agoWeekly News Update, 4.3.26 – Corporette.com
-
Sports7 days ago
A Kevin O’Connell Theory Can Now Be Retired
-
NewsBeat7 days agoKemi Badenoch talks ‘spring cleaning’ Reform defections
-
Tech4 days agoGamer Restores the Original PlayStation Portal From Two Decades Ago
-
Tech7 days agoFlat tire? Dead battery? Speedy’s serves stranded Seattle riders as a quicker e-bike picker-upper
-
Tech4 days agoThe Xiaomi 17 Ultra has some impressive add-ons that make snapping photos really fun


You must be logged in to post a comment Login