Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola was seething after being given a yellow card in the Newcastle win that rules him out for two games
Pep Guardiola has earned a two-match ban after a sixth yellow card of the season – but it will NOT apply for the Carabao Cup final. The Manchester City manager will be free to be in the dugout at Wembley because the suspension only applies to Premier League and FA Cup games.
That means Guardiola will be forced to watch from the stands for the Premier League match at West Ham next Saturday, as well as the FA Cup quarter-final in the first weekend of April. The draw for that will take place on Monday, with Chelsea, Arsenal, and Liverpool having already booked their place in the last eight.
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However, to City’s relief Guardiola will not be banned for the Carabao Cup final with Arsenal despite that taking place before the FA Cup game.
Guardiola joked that he would go on holiday for the games he is not allowed to be in the dugout for after raging again at Newcastle in City’s 3-1 win in the FA Cup. The Blues boss was furious with referee Sam Barrott in the Premier League defeat at St James’ Park in November and this time lost his temper after Jeremy Doku was denied a foul in the second half of the game.
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“When Jeremy Doku dribbles past (Kieran) Trippier and goes alone to the box and is being pulled form behind, I’m not asking for a yellow card but please – it’s a foul,” he said. “I will defend my team. We have all the records in this country -all of them. Despite everything, we have all of them. And we have the record of the manager with the most yellow cards. I have always wanted this record and now I have it. Two game banned now and I will go on holidays.”
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As the next question started, Guardiola continued: “Oh my god. Oh. My. God. There are things that still after 10 years I cannot understand. Review the action, review the action. Of course I’m going to defend Doku, and all my teams. They continue to do it.”
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The University of New Brunswick Reds are headed to the U Sports women’s basketball championship final for the first time in nearly 50 years.
Kylee Speedy scored 16 points and ignited a decisive third-quarter run as UNB defeated the Calgary Dinos 70-66 in Saturday’s first semifinal at the Amphitheatre Desjardins.
The Fredericton-based Reds will play the University of Saskatchewan Huskies in Sunday’s final. The Huskies got past the Laval Rouge et Or 55-43 in the other semifinal.
Katie Butts led the Reds against the Dinos with 20 points and six rebounds, while Katie McAffee had 10 points and three rebounds.
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Kourtney Oss, Christine Geraldo, Amelie Collin and Lilia Skumatova all scored 14 points for the Dinos, who trailed 35-31 at halftime.
Ella Murphy Wiebe led the Huskies with 26 points and 16 rebounds, while Maya Flindall and Tea DeMong each scored nine points.
Brinly Holt led the Rouge et Or with 16 points and nine rebounds, while Sabrine Khelifi had 12 points and five rebounds.
The Dinos will play the Rouge et Or for bronze on Sunday.
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Baselines: The Carleton Ravens edged the Toronto Metropolitan Bold 60-58 in Saturday’s fifth-place game. Kyana-Jade Poulin led the Ravens with 19 points and nine rebounds.
Former Chicago Blackhawks standout Troy Murray, who transitioned to the broadcast booth after his playing career, has died, the team announced Saturday. He was 63.
The Blackhawks said he died earlier in the day.
It’s unclear where Murray spent his final moments. Murray publicly disclosed his cancer diagnosis in August 2021. While he revealed he had been undergoing chemotherapy, details about the type of cancer he was fighting were kept private.
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Murray, affectionately known as “Muzz,” continued to appear on Blackhawks broadcasts during his cancer battle, though his appearances eventually tapered off. He stepped away from the booth entirely ahead of the 2025-26 NHL season.
Troy Murray is honored during Hockey Fights Cancer night during a game between the Chicago Blackhawks and the San Jose Sharks at United Center Nov. 28, 2021, in Chicago.(Chase Agnello-Dean/NHLI via Getty Images)
For more than a decade, Murray starred at center for the Blackhawks. CEO Danny Wirtz said the loss of one of the franchise’s most respected leaders left the team “deeply heartbroken.”
“Troy was the epitome of a Blackhawk so far beyond his incredible playing career, with his presence felt in every corner of our organization over the last 45 years,” Wirtz said.
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“During his long and hard battle with cancer, it was often said that Troy didn’t have any ‘give up’ in him,” Wirtz added. “While our front office won’t be the same without him, we will carry that spirit forward every day in his honor. We’ll miss you, Troy.”
Troy Murray, a former player for the Chicago Blackhawks, is honored during the “One More Shift” campaign prior to a game against the Ottawa Senators at the United Center Feb. 21, 2018, in Chicago. (Chase Agnello-Dean/NHLI via Getty Images)
After 12 seasons with the Blackhawks, Murray finished his NHL career with the Colorado Avalanche, winning the 1996 Stanley Cup.
After spending the following season with the International Hockey League Chicago Wolves, Murray stayed in the city to begin his broadcasting career in 1998. Murray was also named the president of the Blackhawks alumni association.
“Troy Murray is remembered for not only his contributions on the ice, but for his professionalism and humility and dedication to the city of Chicago,” the team said in a release. “He leaves behind a lasting legacy within the Blackhawks family and the broader hockey world.”
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Chicago Blackhawks radio announcers John Wiedeman and Troy Murray wear lavender ties in honor of Hockey Fights Cancer night during a game against the Vancouver Canucks Oct. 20, 2010, at the United Center in Chicago. (Bill Smith/NHLI via Getty Images)
From Calgary, Alberta, Murray topped 20 goals five times, but he also became known for his defensive play. In 1986, he became the Blackhawks’ first player to win the NHL’s Frank J. Selke Trophy, the award for the league’s top defensive forward.
Murray finished with 197 goals in 688 games over two stints with the Blackhawks and also played for the Winnipeg Jets, Ottawa Senators and Pittsburgh Penguins. Overall, he had 230 goals in 915 career games.
Rory McIlroy has withdrawn from the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando after suffering spasms in his lower back before he was due to start the third round.
The Northern Ireland player’s exit was announced by the PGA Tour about 30 minutes before his tee time.
In a later statement, the five-time major winner said: “While warming up in the gym this morning, I felt a small twinge in my back.
“As I started hitting balls on the range before the round, it worsened and developed into muscle spasms in my lower back. Unfortunately, I’m not able to continue and have to withdraw.”
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McIlroy held a share of ninth place – nine shots back – after moving to four under on Friday with a round of 68, having shot level par on Thursday.
Having birdied four of the first seven holes on the back nine, McIlroy had said he was “really pleased”, adding he had played a “controlled, patient round of golf”.
The 36-year-old, who was competing in his third PGA Tour event of the season, is due to defend his titles at the Players Championship at Sawgrass next week and the Masters at Augusta from 9-12 April.
Minnesota Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson (87) carries the ball after a reception while defended by Atlanta Falcons safety Billy Bowman Jr. (33) during second-half action on September 14, 2025, at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. Hockenson’s ability to gain yards after the catch remained central to Minnesota’s passing attack as the Vikings worked to establish offensive rhythm. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images.
Since 2022, T.J. Hockenson has been the top tight end in the Twin Cities. Getting him onto the roster involved Kwesi Adofo-Mensah pulling off a bold, unexpected trade deadline swap with an NFC North rival.
These past few years have included highs and lows for Mr. Hockenson. Great performance got interrupted by injury and a prolonged recovery.
He’s going to remain on Minnesota’s roster. ESPN’s Adam Schefter offers the update: “Vikings and T.J. Hockenson have agreed to a restructured contract that saves the team more than $5M in cap space in 2026. Interim GM Rob Brzezinski continues to clear cap space before free agency.”
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Later on, Tom Pelissero offered more details. Check it out: “As part of Vikings TE T.J. Hockenson’s restructured contract, the team agreed to delete the final year of his deal, per sources. So Hockenson takes a $5 million pay cut that provides Minnesota cap relief, and now gets to be a free agent after this season.”***
Vikings Make T.J. Hockenson Decision
Lately, there have been all sorts of moves to get the finances into a decent spot.
Already, WR1 Justin Jefferson, CB1 Byron Murphy Jr., and LT1 Christian Darrisaw have seen their deals restructured (read more here and here). C1 Ryan Kelly is moving into retirement. DT2 Jonathan Allen, DT3 Javon Hargrave, and RB1 Aaron Jones are all going to be cut unless an unexpected trade gets figured out (not likely).
Minnesota Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson (87) reacts after scoring a touchdown against the Washington Commanders at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Dec. 7, 2025. Hockenson celebrated in the second half after finishing the drive with a scoring catch as Minnesota’s passing attack found success at home. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-Imagn Images.
Kevin Seifert chimed in with some added insight on why the decision was made. Consider his brief word to offer context: “Prior to the restructure, T.J. Hockenson was going to have a cap number of $21.3 million this season, highest in the NFL for tight ends.”
Consider a rough, simple summary of the cap savings that are known:
Justin Jefferson: $18M
Christian Darrisaw: $9M
Byron Murphy: $11M
Ryan Kelly: $8M
T.J. Hockenson: $5M
And then with the upcoming cuts — Allen, Hargrave, and Jones — the Vikings will add another $25 million into the mix. Adding it all together means obliterating the $46 million in cap debt that was showing up on Over the Cap.
Rob Brzezinski, a numbers nerd who had been wrestling with Minnesota’s salary cap for decades, has injected $76 million into the mix. Debt is gone; cap space is available.
Nov 24, 2022; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson (87) celebrates his touchdown against the New England Patriots during the second quarter at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports.
So, the Vikings will be able to add talent if there’s a desire to do so. Can’t get too frisky in free agency but can join in the fun.
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T.J. Hockenson, 28, is coming off a season where he turned 51 catches into 438 yards and 3 touchdowns. The 8.6 yards-per-reception average is modest. So is the scoring. He’ll look to improve in both areas, something that appears plausible since he’s further away from his serious knee injury. More importantly, Minnesota’s quarterback play should (note: should) take a large step forward next year.
Worth remembering, as well, that keeping Hockenson means sitting on a deep tight end position. Josh Oliver remains. So, too, is there Gavin Bartholomew, Ben Yurosek, and others in the mix. What happens with Ben Sims, someone whom the Vikings like quite a bit?
The Vikings won’t need to worry about adding at tight end unless there’s a great opportunity.
On October 24, 2024, in Inglewood, California, Minnesota Vikings tight end Josh Oliver celebrated a first-half touchdown with offensive tackle Christian Darrisaw during the team’s matchup against the Los Angeles Rams at SoFi Stadium. The score highlighted Minnesota’s physical red-zone execution and Oliver’s growing role as a reliable target in Kevin O’Connell’s offense, blending power and precision on the road. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images.
Mr. Hockenson comes in at 6’5″ and 248 pounds. A gifted athlete who was chosen at No. 8 in the 2019 NFL Draft, Hockenson has been getting better as a blocker. Returning to his old explosiveness would make a huge difference.
Look for him to work toward a bounce back in 2026 as the team more broadly endeavours to do likewise.
Mar 3, 2026; College Station, Texas, USA; Texas A&M Aggies forward Rashaun Agee (12) reacts during the second half against the Kentucky Wildcats at Reed Arena. Mandatory Credit: Maria Lysaker-Imagn Images
Rashaun Agee had 26 points and 11 rebounds and converted a go-ahead three-point play with 24 seconds left in the third overtime as Texas A&M outlasted LSU 94-91 on Saturday in Baton Rouge, La.
Rylan Griffen scored 24 points, Pop Isaacs had 18 and Ali Dibba added 12 for the Aggies (21-10, 11-7 Southeastern Conference).
Max Mackinnon scored 20 points, Jalen Reece had 17, Michael Nwoko had 16 points and 13 rebounds, and Marquel Sutton and Robert Miller III scored 12 each for the Tigers (15-16, 3-15).
Both teams made two free throws to start the scoring in the third overtime before Ruben Dominguez made a 3-pointer for his only points, giving the Aggies a 90-87 lead.
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Miller’s layup and Reece’s jumper gave LSU a one-point edge before Agee’s three-point play pushed the Aggies ahead 93-91. Dibba made one of two free throws with 7 seconds left, leaving LSU with a chance to tie with a 3-pointer but Mackinnon missed.
Isaacs made a layup to start the scoring in the second overtime, then Mackinnon made two free throws for LSU’s first points with 1:33 left, tying the score. Mackinnon followed with a layup, giving the Tigers an 83-81 lead with 1:04 left.
Marcus Hill converted a three-point play for his only points of the game, giving Texas A&M a one-point lead with 50 seconds left. Griffen sank one free throw, but Mackinnon answered with two with 12 seconds left, forcing a third overtime.
The score was tied once and the lead changed hands for a fourth time in the first overtime when Agee’s 3-pointer gave the Aggies a two-point lead with 1:05 left. Reece’s jumper tied the score at 79 with 6 seconds remaining and Griffen missed a jumper, forcing a second extra period.
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LSU led by nine points early in the second half before Texas A&M took its first lead of second half, 61-60. Mackinnon’s layup tied the score at 70 with 38 seconds remaining in regulation. Both teams missed a 3-pointer in the final seconds.
During the 2024 season, Minnesota Vikings defensive tackle Levi Drake Rodriguez shared a celebration with teammate Bo Richter after delivering a key play. The moment captured the energy and enthusiasm of Minnesota’s defensive front as the young players made their presence felt. Rodriguez’s ability to disrupt and Richter’s support highlighted the team’s depth and emerging contributors on defense. Mandatory Credit: Alli Rusco, Vikings.com.
Over recent days, media outlets have leaked details of upcoming moves, suggesting a youth movement on the Vikings’ defensive line in Minnesota. It’s out with the old and potentially in with the new in Minnesota this spring.
Minnesota’s Interior Defensive Front Is Entering a Transition Phase
There have been three significant moves made at the interior defensive line position. Both Jonathan Allen and Javon Harhrave are going to be released just a year on from signing for Minnesota in big-money deals. Hargrave’s release was leaked first, along with veteran RB Aaron Jones, and both were moves I expected. The news regarding Allen came a few days later and was more of a surprise.
Minnesota Vikings defensive tackles Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave against the Chicago Bears in Week 1 of 2025. The two signed in 2025 free agent with Minnesota, multi-year deals for both. Mandatory Credit: YouTube
It was a big move when the Vikings signed Allen and Hargrave on the same day last March. Both were coming off injury problems, but had been very good players in the league. Surely one of them would recapture their old form? Both were ok but neither got close to being worth the two-year, $30 million (Hargrave) or three-year, $60 million (Allen) contracts they got from Minnesota.
Unless someone comes in with a trade offer, which would be a surprise at this point, their pair will be released, giving the Vikings a combined savings of $17.4 million against this year’s salary cap. Releasing Allen two years early will leave a huge dead cap hit of $17.3 million unless it is designated as a post-Jun 1, where a further saving of $4.7 million can be made, but it still leaves a hefty dead cap hit.
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The Emergence of Jalen Redmond
One reason the Vikings can feel comfortable making these moves is the emergence of Jalen Redmond. Undrafted in 2023, Redmond was signed and then discarded by the Carolina Panthers before eventually landing in the XFL. Redmond got a second chance in Minnesota and has never looked back, playing in 30 games, including 17 starts, over the last two seasons.
Dec 14, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott (4) is tackled by Minnesota Vikings defensive tackle Jalen Redmond (61) during the first half at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images
Redmond comfortably outplayed both Allen and Hargrave, which has led the Vikings to place the exclusive rights tender on him. After a six-sack season in which he showcased his all-around ability, a long contract will soon be on its way.
Soon to be 27, Redmond is suddenly the senior man on the Vikings’ defensive line, alongside Levi Drake-Rodriguez (25), Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins (22), and Elijah Williams (23), making up the rest of the depth chart. All of those are well thought of in Minnesota, but there certainly needs to be someone else added to the mix.
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Adding via Free Agency or the Draft?
The question now is, do the Vikings add to the position via free agency or the draft? They probably do both, but my preference would be to add a cheap veteran via free agency – a Jonathan Bullard type – and then go early in the draft. No Jalen Carter or Aaron Donald is screaming to be picked near the top of this year’s draft – the Vikings wouldn’t be in position to get them if they were – but there are some good players.
The big names this year are Caleb Banks, Peter Woods, Kayden McDonald, and Lee Hunter, and they are the big names to look out for early in the draft.
I’m a big fan of Banks and have been banging the support for him as the Vikings pick at 18 – even more so since his impressive display at the NFL Combine. He is the only one of the four I’d take in the first round. If Minnesota goes with a different position on Day 1, then the other three are good options if available on Day 2.
A depth chart that reads Redmond, Banks, Drake-Rodriguez, Ingram-Dawkins, and Williams would signal a significant shift toward a Vikings defensive line youth movement. Depending on the group’s development, it could be an exciting prospect for a group that has been together for a significant amount of time.
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Proud UK Viking. Family Man. Enjoy writing about my team. Away from football an advocate for autism acceptance.
Minnesota Vikings center Ryan Kelly signs his contract after joining the team during 2025 NFL free agency. March 17, 2025. Kelly suffered a couple of concussions in 2025, limiting his availability. Mandatory Credit: YouTube
When the Minnesota Vikings turned their focus to the offseason, two separate necessities were top of mind. They needed to find a quarterback who could push J.J. McCarthy down the depth chart. They also needed to clear nearly $50 million in salary cap space.
They have yet to do the former, but it sounds like Kyler Murray is their desired answer. We’ll have more clarity on that next week when free agency actually opens. Minnesota has done plenty of restructuring and made cuts to get below the salary cap, and one additional move was decided for them.
Minnesota Suddenly Has a Real Question at Center
On Friday afternoon, Ryan Kelly decided that his career was ready to be over. After suffering multiple concussions this season, and even more over the course of his career, it was time to call it an end.
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Of course, Kelly’s departure leaves the Vikings without a starting center. Pro Football Focus ranked him as one of the best in the league last year. That’s why Minnesota signed him to a two-year deal last offseason. Kelly only played eight games last season, though, and Kevin O’Connell was consistently forced to test out his depth.
J.J. McCarthy and Ryan Kelly move through warmups at U.S. Bank Stadium as Minnesota prepares for Houston, with the session unfolding on Aug. 9, 2025 during early preseason work in Minneapolis. The quarterback-center pairing rotates through stretching and snapping routines while coaches monitor timing and communication, offering a clear look at developing chemistry ahead of the team’s first exhibition game of the summer. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images.
Michael Jurgens was initially slated to be the backup center, but instead lost the spot to Blake Brandel. He regained it and played there too, but now the Vikings have a pair of uncertain talents they’ll need to decide whether to trust.
The reality is that Kelly is irreplaceable by the talent on this roster. A four-time Pro Bowl selection, Kelly was arguably the best part of the Vikings’ offensive line last season. When he suffered the first concussion, though, it needed to be over. Having a long history of brain injuries, it was tough to think he should get back out there.
Jan 13, 2025; Glendale, AZ, USA; Minnesota Vikings guard Michael Jurgens (65) against the Los Angeles Rams during an NFC wild card game at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images.
Unfortunately, he did. Then Kelly suffered another concussion. That all but cemented his future, and the Vikings put him on injured reserve to finish the year. Of course, Kelly needed to talk with family and those among his inner circle, but with a wife and kids, this was always the right move.
Kelly is just 32 years old and should be prioritizing his quality of life. He has spent more than a decade in the NFL, and not subjecting himself to further issues is as straightforward as it gets.
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The Minnesota Vikings now need to add another center to the rotation. Either Jurgens or Brandel could start, but neither is truly a desirable outcome. Kelly’s retirement saves a decent amount of money under the salary cap, and the team could certainly use some of that to find his replacement.
Ted Schwerzler is a Minneapolis based blogger that covers the Minnesota Twins and Vikings. Sharing thoughts constantly on Twitter, … More about Ted Schwerzler
Daniel Berger’s nickname is so old it feels like it’s from another life.
And well, maybe that’s because it was.
Once upon a time, “DB Strait Vibin‘” was an Instagram handle as much as it was a way of life — a reflection of both the rising star who slayed some of the best golfers in the world and the way he generally preferred to spend his time (shirtless on his 41-foot Bahama GT boat, with a fishing pole dangling off the back). Now, as Berger finds himself sleeping on a three-shot lead on Saturday night at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, a redemption arc victory within his grasp?
“Oh, who knows?” Berger said Friday. “That’s just a stupid thing from back in the day.”
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Back in the day, Berger was a big deal. As the golf world transitioned into the pandemic years, Berger was one of the pros at the forefront: collecting wins at two of the PGA Tour’s best venues — Colonial and Pebble Beach — in the span of a calendar year, and topping off 18 months of weekly leaderboard presence with a Ryder Cup invite at Whistling Straits.
But then he arrived in the Bahamas for the 2021 Hero World Challenge, and Berger’s life as he knew it changed.
The first problem was a doozy: a bulging disc in his lower back that took more than a year to be correctly diagnosed. Berger played on in agony, trusting the doctors who reviewed his imaging and swore everything looked normal. “It was the worst six months of my life,” he said later.
Finally, in late 2022, Berger found the source of the issue, and underwent surgery to fix it. He spent all of 2023 in rehab, returning in 2024 only to find his form had disappeared. He grinded through the better part of two full seasons in pursuit of his long-lost A-Game, and finally seemed to be finding it in August 2025, when he arrived at Caves Valley for the playing of the BMW Championship.
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On the 14th hole of his opening round on Thursday, Berger felt his ring finger jam as he swung a 7-iron. He thought little of it and played through the pain, only to make it back to the clubhouse to learn he’d shattered his finger directly on the knuckle. What was supposed to be a several-week absence turned into a three-month recovery as the knuckle healed. The familiar feelings of doubt crept back.
This week, Berger arrived at the Arnold Palmer Invitational carrying the weight of a half-decade of injury baggage. He hasn’t forgotten the time he spent watching his name fade from a bona fide top-20 player in the world to outside the top 600 in the Official World Golf Ranking (he is now safely back in the top 75). He hasn’t forgotten the doctors, tests, and ever-changing prognoses. He certainly hasn’t forgotten the hours spent regaining the form that had been robbed from him. But could he remember how to win again?
Berger answered those questions emphatically on Thursday afternoon, when he went out in his opening round at Bay Hill — annually one of the toughest setups anywhere in golf — and shot an opening-round 63, a full three shots clear of the field. He followed it up on Friday, when he shot a second-round 68 (the third-best score in the field) to move five shots clear of the field. And he answered the questions again on Saturday, when he leaned on an artisanal brand of shotmaking skill to fend off a rain delay and charges from several pros to sleep on a three-shot lead again.
Thanks to the delay, Berger will still have three holes to play in his third round when he wakes on Sunday — and then another 18 if he’d like to emerge from Bay Hill a champion. But the added pressure of 21 holes of Sunday golf with the tournament on the line? That’s a problem Berger would’ve dreamed about facing over his last five years of heartbreak.
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“”You play like as if you’re starting the round at even par and you’re not playing other guys,” Berger said. “You’re playing the golf course and yourself. You’re controlling what you can control. It’s not like I’ve done it a million times, so I can’t really tell you exactly how it’s going to feel, but I know what I have to do.”
Indeed, it’s a simple goal. The same simple goal that Berger sought with a nickname and an Instagram account five years ago. A half-decade of pain and trauma followed those early days of glory — and there were more than a few moments when it seemed a Sunday in contention was destined to become a distant memory.
But now he’s here again, on the brink of a moment that years of foul luck took away. This isn’t the old Daniel Berger. Not close to that.
And maybe that’s a good thing.
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“I think that life is, you know, you can’t control what happens,” Berger said. “You just do your best and things happen. I wouldn’t trade what I’ve gone through over this time for another win or whatever. I think your path is your path, and I’m here today because of what I went through over the last couple years. So I just do my best to be the best golfer that I can be, and whatever happens, happens.
A fuming Pep Guardiola is facing a two-game touchline ban after being booked for the sixth time this season as Manchester City eased past Newcastle into the FA Cup quarter-finals.
The Spaniard confronted fourth official Lewis Smith on the touchline at St James’ Park after Kieran Trippier had felled Jeremy Doku, prompting referee Sam Barrott to act, and will now have to sit out the Premier League fixture with West Ham and the club’s last-eight clash.
That proved the only downside for Guardiola on a night when a team featuring 10 changes from the midweek draw with Nottingham Forest won 3-1 at a canter.
The City boss said: “I will tell you something – we have all the records in this country, all of them, despite everything. We have the record of the manager with the most yellow cards. I want all records and now I have it.
“Two-game ban now and I will go on holidays the next two games. There are things after 10 years I cannot understand.
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“Review the action. Of course I’m going to defend Doku and all my teams.”
If that decision left Guardiola perplexed, it was one of few events which did as his side completed a fourth successive victory in five games against Newcastle this season, with his big guns rested ahead of the first leg of their Champions League showdown with Real Madrid on Wednesday night.
It was a 19th win in 21 FA Cup ties in the last year – the only two defeats have come in finals against Manchester United and Crystal Palace – a record of which he is justifiably proud.
He said: “It’s the best game we have played against Newcastle here in our period together in 10 years, in the FA Cup and a difficult one, so I’m really, really pleased how we behaved, how we played defensively, offensively and the concentration on top.
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“Eight times in a row in the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, that means how good this organisation is.”
The hosts took an 18th-minute lead as they started impressively, Harvey Barnes running on to Sandro Tonali’s picture-book pass, but once City flexed their muscles it proved a chastening evening for Eddie Howe’s men.
Savinho levelled before the break and Marmoush put the game to bed after it with a double to take his tally against the Magpies to seven in five appearances, half his entire total for City.
Newcastle boss Eddie Howe now faces the task of raising his players for Tuesday night’s visit of Barcelona to St James’ Park, which is unlikely to be any less challenging.
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Asked about chief executive David Hopkinson’s aim of being part of the debate over the top club in the world by 2030, he said: “My focus is really short-term and it’s trying to win the game that’s in front of me, and that’s Barcelona in the Champions League.
“As much as it is easy to be very negative in this moment – and I understand, we’ve gone out of the FA Cup – but we have the biggest game in the club’s history coming up in no time at all. We’ve got to get the players ready for that, we’ve got no time to dwell on this.”
Mar 7, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Philadelphia 76ers guard Quentin Grimes (5) drives to the basket against Atlanta Hawks guard CJ McCollum (3) during the first half at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images
Jalen Johnson had 35 points, 10 rebounds, and seven assists as the Atlanta Hawks completed a four-game season series sweep with a 125-116 victory over the visiting Philadelphia 76ers on Saturday.
Nickeil Alexander-Walker had four second-half 3-pointers and finished with 24 points and six assists for Atlanta, which won its season-high sixth straight game. The Hawks have won five straight at home.
Johnson and Alexander-Walker made back-to-back 3-pointers as part of a 12-2 fourth-quarter run that took a tie game to a 10-point, 114-104 Hawks advantage.
Tyrese Maxey led Philadelphia, which lost for the third time in four games, with 31 points. Quentin Grimes scored 15 of his 26 points in the second half, while Kelly Oubre Jr. returned to the lineup after missing one game and had 24 points and five rebounds.
Joel Embiid missed his fourth straight contest with a strained right oblique, while rookie VJ Edgecombe missed his second straight game with a back contusion.
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Maxey had 15 first-quarter points as Philadelphia took a double-digit lead in the first quarter and stayed in front for the rest of the half, despite Johnson’s 13 second-quarter points.
Both teams were hot throughout the first half. The Sixers shot 65.2% (30 for 46) from the field, including 61.5% (8 for 13) from beyond the arc.
Atlanta responded by shooting 63.9% from the field (23 of 36) and 50% (5 for 10) from 3-point land. The Hawks were able to stay close at the break thanks to shooting 88% (15 for 17) from the foul line in the half.
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Alexander-Walker had three 3-pointers in the third quarter as Atlanta took its first lead since the game’s early minutes. Despite Grimes’ 10 points in the quarter, Philadelphia was outscored, 31-21.
CJ McCollum added 17 points and seven assists for Atlanta, which is two games over .500 for the first time since mid-December. Dyson Daniels contributed 15 points and nine rebounds, and Onyeka Okongwu chipped in with 10 points, six rebounds, and five assists.
The 76ers will no doubt be pleased to know they don’t have to face Johnson anymore this year, at least in the regular season. He scored 35 or more points three times against Philadelphia this season. He posted four double-doubles and one triple-double.
Trendon Watford had 10 points for the Sixers, followed by Jabari Walker with nine points and five rebounds, Andre Drummond with seven rebounds, and Cam Payne with six assists.