Schauffele tries to forget Paris heartbreak as PGA playoffs begin

Schauffele tries to forget Paris heartbreak as PGA playoffs begin
Xander Schauffele leaves after completing the course in round 4 of the men’s golf individual stroke play of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at Le Golf National in Guyancourt, south-west of Paris on August 4, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 14 August 2024
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Schauffele tries to forget Paris heartbreak as PGA playoffs begin

Schauffele tries to forget Paris heartbreak as PGA playoffs begin

WASHINGTON: Xander Schauffele will try to set aside Paris Olympics heartbreak as he plays alongside gold medalist Scottie Scheffler in the first two rounds of the PGA Tour playoffs.

World number two Schauffele, the Tokyo Olympics champion, and top-ranked Scheffler, who surged on the final day to win in Paris, will be together Thursday and Friday at the PGA St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee.

Schauffele, who won his first two major titles at this year’s PGA Championship and British Open, shared the lead after the second and third rounds in pursuit of a gold medal repeat in Paris only to fire a 73 in the final round and finish seven strokes behind Scheffler.

“It was bad,” Schauffele said. “I was probably more tired than I thought I was.

“I was pretty bummed out. I went from thinking I could have a good look at gold to maybe silver, then to bronze, and then to, wow, I’m just spectating now.

“That’s sort of what happened the last seven, eight holes of that tournament. So that was a bit of a bummer, especially with how the fans were out there. It must have been such a cool feeling to be in the hunt with important shots coming down that stretch, 15 to 18.”

Schauffele said he has already tried to analyze the reasons for his flop to try and avoid them over the PGA’s three-week post-season run.

“Sort of identified what happened,” he said. “I don’t want to get back into my old habits that I’ve been trying to get out of in these last two or three months. I think some old ones sort of slipped in there. When I tried to put my foot down, it got worse, and I paid the price for it heavily.”

Schauffele had mixed feelings seeing a tearful Scheffler on the medal podium until the Olympic spirit took hold of him.

“It’s weird. I’m not going to lie. It’s the weirdest feeling,” said Schauffele.

“When Scottie was up there and our flag was raised and he started crying up there, I was butt-hurt about my own round, and then I was sitting there like, yeah, this is pretty cool.

“I felt so emotional in that state... It’s hard to explain, the swing of it. Then out here this week playing with him these next two days and we’re all just trying to beat our heads in. It’s a funny feeling.”

Schauffele stands second to Scheffler in the season points race entering the PGA FedEx Cup playoff events. This week’s 70-player field will be cut to 50 for next week’s event in Colorado and again to 30 for the Tour Championship in Atlanta.

“A sharp mental state just for these last three weeks is going to be the biggest thing,” Schauffele said. “Just being able to focus, and you expect your body to make the leaps with the heat and then the altitude and the heat again.

“But to me it’s part of our job. We’re supposed to be preparing for that during the off-season and all year long.”

Some players near the top of the points list skip an early event for more rest, but Schauffele won’t be among them.

“If you’re trying to win this thing, trying to be the best player over the course of this year, you’re going to just have to do better and be better than everyone else,” he said.

“I’m eating the right things, doing the right things to stay in good shape physically and mentally, but when push comes to shove, you’re going to have to be a dog at some point.”


Smith, Carey help Australia to 264 against India in Champions Trophy semifinal in Dubai

Smith, Carey help Australia to 264 against India in Champions Trophy semifinal in Dubai
Updated 10 sec ago
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Smith, Carey help Australia to 264 against India in Champions Trophy semifinal in Dubai

Smith, Carey help Australia to 264 against India in Champions Trophy semifinal in Dubai
  • Smith hit 73 and the left-handed Carey smashed 61 to put on the highest total at the Dubai Cricket Stadium
  • India pace spearhead Mohammed Shami stood out with figures of 3-48 as Australia’s innings lasted 49.3 overs

DUBAI: Skipper Steve Smith and Alex Carey hit half-centuries as Australia made 264 all out against India in the first semifinal of the Champions Trophy in Dubai on Tuesday.
After choosing to bat, Smith hit 73 and the left-handed Carey smashed 61 to put on the highest total at Dubai International Cricket Stadium in the ongoing 50-over tournament.
India pace spearhead Mohammed Shami stood out with figures of 3-48 as Australia’s innings lasted 49.3 overs. Spinners Varun Chakravarthy and Ravindra Jadeja took two wickets each.
India’s new-ball bowlers tested the Australian openers with a disciplined line and consistently beat the bat before Cooper Connolly finally edged one to wicketkeeper KL Rahul off Shami.
The decision was denied by the on-field umpire but successfully reviewed by India and the left-handed Connolly, a replacement for injured Matthew Short, trudged back to the pavilion for a nine-ball duck.
The left-handed Travis Head hit back with a flurry of fours and two sixes to raise memories of his onslaught against India in the 2023 World Cup final won by Australia.
But wrist spinner Chakravarthy struck on his second ball to get Head caught out at long-off for 39 off 33 balls as India celebrated a big wicket, leaving Australia 54-2.
Smith and Marnus Labuschagne got to the grind and chipped away against the spinners. Labuschagne finally got a boundary after 50 balls.
He brought up 100 for Australia with a six off Axar Patel, prompting India skipper Rohit Sharma to change him next over with Shami.
Shami nearly got a quick breakthrough but failed to hang on to a return catch by Smith on 36.
Jadeja trapped Labuschagne lbw for 29 with his left-arm spin to end the 56-run stand.
Smith reached his 35th ODI half-century but Jadeja got another wicket when Josh Inglis gave away a catch to covers.
Smith stood firm and put on another solid stand of 54 with wicketkeeper Carey as the two found gaps and hit regular boundaries.
Shami finally had Smith bowled on a full toss and soon after Patel rattled the stumps of Glenn Maxwell after being hit for six as Australia lost their way.
Carey reached his fifty and with fellow left-hander Ben Dwarshuis, who hit 19, kept up the charge until Chakravarthy sent back Dwarshuis.
Carey was finally run out after a direct throw from Shreyas Iyer but the total went past the previous best at the venue at this tournament — when India made 249 in beating New Zealand in the last group match.
India have won all three of their games and are playing in Dubai after they refused to tour Champions Trophy hosts Pakistan for political reasons.
The match is the first ODI between India and Australia since the World Cup final.
The winner faces South Africa or New Zealand in Sunday’s final of the eight-nation 50-over tournament.


Gilgeous-Alexander strikes again for rumbling Thunder

Gilgeous-Alexander strikes again for rumbling Thunder
Updated 04 March 2025
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Gilgeous-Alexander strikes again for rumbling Thunder

Gilgeous-Alexander strikes again for rumbling Thunder
  • A contender for the league’s Most Valuable Player award this year, Gilgeous-Alexander shot 18 of 30 from the field including 5-of-9 on three-point attempts
  • Stephen Curry returned to his hometown Charlotte and led the Golden State Warriors to a 119-101 win over the Hornets

 MIAMI: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander put up his fourth 50-point game of the season as Western Conference leaders the Oklahoma City Thunder marched on with a 137-128 win over the Houston Rockets on Monday.

NBA leading scorer Gilgeous-Alexander had 51 points with seven assists, making all 10 of his free throws as the Thunder moved to 50-11 on the season.

He made a dominant start to the game, making 20 of the Thunder’s 30 first-quarter points.

A contender for the league’s Most Valuable Player award this year, Gilgeous-Alexander shot 18 of 30 from the field including 5-of-9 on three-point attempts.

The Thunder didn’t have it all their own way however with Houston leading by nine in the second quarter before Oklahoma City went in a point up at the break.

The Thunder took control in the third quarter, breaking out to a 102-89 lead before the final quarter, when Houston battled back again to get within six.

But consecutive three-pointers from Luguentz Dort late in the fourth made sure of the 27th home win (against four losses) for the Thunder.

“It’s about us just being who we are and we didn’t have enough of it tonight, up to our standard, but we did enough to get the ‘W’,” said Gilgeous-Alexander.

“I’m just trying to be aggressive, trying to get my team energy, trying to make the right play. Whatever the ball and the game tells me to do, I do,” the Canadian added.

Cam Whitmore top-scored for Houston with 27 points and 11 rebounds while Reed Sheppard put up 25 points for the 37-24 Rockets.

The Memphis Grizzlies, now fourth in the West, continued their recent struggles, losing their sixth game in eight with a 132-130 defeat at home to the Atlanta Hawks.

The game went down to the wire with Caris LeVert making a last-second layup to secure the victory for the 28-33 Hawks. LeVert was crucial to the win with 16 points in the last quarter.

Zaccharie Risacher top-scored for Atlanta with 27 points while LeVert had 25 off the bench.

Desmond Bane had his first triple-double for the Grizzlies with 35 points, 10 assists and 10 rebounds.

Grizzlies head coach Taylor Jenkins said he had no doubt that his team would end their run of poor form and bounce back from the loss.

“We’ve done it every season that I’ve been here. I told the team afterwards that resilience is the best thing we have,” he said.

“There are injuries, there are obviously deficiencies on the defensive side. We just have to rally, stay together, our group is going to respond and we have to play at the level that we are capable of.”

Stephen Curry returned to his hometown Charlotte and led the Golden State Warriors to a 119-101 win over the Hornets. He had 21 points and 10 assists.

Miles Bridges led Charlotte with 35 points and nine rebounds but the Hornets fell to their seventh straight loss.

“We had some lows for sure,” said Curry of the Warriors’ performance, “We were convincing enough for stretches where we could get some stops but we can play better, for sure,” he added.

The Dallas Mavericks lost star guard Kyrie Irving to a left knee sprain in the first quarter as they fell to a 122-98 loss to the Sacramento Kings.

The Mavericks, still reeling from the trade which saw them lose Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers, have lost four of their last five games while the Kings have won four straight.

Irving suffered the injury driving to the basket and was carried off court --- he is the fourth Mavs starter now sidelined by injury. Jaden Hardy then turned his ankle in the third quarter and had to leave the game.

“It just seems every time we get close to get someone back, someone else goes down, we are running out of bodies here,” said Mavs head coach Jason Kidd.

Zach LaVine scored 22 points and DeMar DeRozan scored 20 for the Kings (32-28).

The Detroit Pistons continued their playoff push in the East with a 134-106 win over the Utah Jazz, with Cade Cunningham leading with 29 points and nine assists.


Paris return ‘too soon’ for Liverpool fans traumatized by 2022 Champions League final

Paris return ‘too soon’ for Liverpool fans traumatized by 2022 Champions League final
Updated 04 March 2025
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Paris return ‘too soon’ for Liverpool fans traumatized by 2022 Champions League final

Paris return ‘too soon’ for Liverpool fans traumatized by 2022 Champions League final
  • Liverpool’s return to Paris for the first time since the 2022 Champions League final comes too soon for many supporters still scarred by the traumatic events that marred European football’s showpiece

LIVERPOOL: Liverpool’s return to Paris for the first time since the 2022 Champions League final comes too soon for many supporters still scarred by the traumatic events that marred European football’s showpiece event.
The Premier League leaders take on Paris Saint-Germain in the first leg of what should be a mouthwatering last 16 tie on Wednesday.
However, only 2,000 Liverpool fans are expected at the Parc des Princes, with many deciding against a return to the French capital after the treatment they suffered at the hands of the Parisian authorities just under three years ago.
“It’s too soon for a lot of people,” John Gibbons of Liverpool fan website The Anfield Wrap told AFP.
Real Madrid’s 1-0 victory at the Stade de France was overshadowed by a 37-minute delay to kick-off as fans struggled to access the stadium after being funnelled into overcrowded bottlenecks as they approached the stadium.
Police fired tear gas toward thousands of supporters locked behind metal fences on the perimeter of the stadium.
As if events on the night of May 28 were not painful enough, Liverpool fans had to suffer a series of false claims in the aftermath of the chaos.
European football’s governing body UEFA initially tried to pin the blame on supporters arriving late despite thousands having been held for hours outside the stadium before kick-off.
The French authorities then claimed an “industrial-scale fraud” of fake tickets was the problem.
A French Senate enquiry later concluded that poorly-executed security arrangements were the cause of the mayhem.
An independent report found UEFA bore “primary responsibility” for the failures which almost led to the match becoming a “mass fatality catastrophe.”
The report added it was “remarkable” that no one was killed on the night of the final.
But for many Liverpool fans the scenes brought back memories of a crush at Hillsborough Stadium in 1989 that resulted in the deaths of 97 supporters.
As a result, Gibbons said many fans were reluctant to return to the French capital.
“There is the psychological thing of not wanting to go back to somewhere where you have a bad experience but also the lack of accountability makes people think there is nothing to stop it happening again,” he said.
“It wasn’t left on the day. Lots happened afterwards. Most notably the government not taking much responsibility for what happened.”


The shocking scenes at the time sparked concerns over Paris’ suitability to host the 2023 Rugby World Cup and last year’s Olympics.
Those events passed off peacefully, but there remains resentment at the double standards often faced by football fans.
Liverpool fan and journalist Daniel Austin said: “Thankfully, the Olympics went off largely without incident, and that’s great. But I think it was quite clear that people were treated differently for that, because it was the biggest event in the world.”
Austin is one of those who is making the voyage to Paris, adding it would be admitting “defeat” to the lies spread in the aftermath of the 2022 final not to go.
He understands why there are others who will not put themselves at the mercy of the French police again.
“It wasn’t just the fact that they went through something that was really physically and mentally difficult, it was the fact that they were then lied about in what was quite a concerted campaign by the authorities for weeks and months,” he added.
“I’ve heard of people who are saying that because of all of that they’re not going to go.
“They don’t want to come across those same authorities again. They don’t trust the people who were responsible for that, a lot of whom remain in exactly the same positions, to look after them as visitors this time.”


Upbeat New Zealand feel ‘lucky’ in Lahore for South Africa semifinal

Upbeat New Zealand feel ‘lucky’ in Lahore for South Africa semifinal
Updated 04 March 2025
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Upbeat New Zealand feel ‘lucky’ in Lahore for South Africa semifinal

Upbeat New Zealand feel ‘lucky’ in Lahore for South Africa semifinal
  • Kiwis face South Africa in Lahore on Wednesday in second Champions Trophy semifinal 
  • New Zealand won tri-series tournament involving Pakistan, South Africa in Lahore weeks ago

New Zealand bring “positive emotions” on their return to Lahore for the Champions Trophy semifinal against South Africa after good results during the Pakistan tri-series, coach Gary Stead said on Tuesday.

New Zealand beat a vastly different South Africa team by six wickets in Lahore three weeks ago, two days after beating Pakistan at the same venue in warmups for the ODI tournament.

“We are lucky. We’ve had some experience playing here in the tri-series before the tournament actually kicked off,” Stead told reporters on a video call.

“We’ve got some on-ground experience and I guess some positive emotions to fall back on the way we played here as well.”

Though losing to India on a spin-friendly wicket in Dubai, New Zealand were happy how their three-pronged pace attack of Matt Henry, Kyle Jamieson and Will O’Rourke performed to restrict the South Asians to 249-9.

Stead, also a selector, said it was likely New Zealand would stick with the same trio and complement them with spin from their contingent of all-rounders as they did against India and in the previous win against Bangladesh in Rawalpindi.

New Zealand produced 300-plus totals in both their recent wins in Lahore, and Stead said taking wickets in the early and middle overs would be key to prevent South Africa from batting big.

“We haven’t been down to the ground yet to see if we’re on a used wicket or not, but generally these wickets are pretty good batting surfaces,” he added.

“They don’t bounce too much.”

South Africa will have a very different team than the lineup that played in the tri-series.

Tabraiz Shamsi has not appeared at the Champions Trophy but Stead suggested the left-arm wrist spinner might be called up in place of paceman Lungi Ngidi.

“They’re a very, very good side and we’re going to have to play right near our best to beat them,” he added.


In-form Atletico Madrid look to end their Champions League slump against city rivals Real Madrid

In-form Atletico Madrid look to end their Champions League slump against city rivals Real Madrid
Updated 04 March 2025
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In-form Atletico Madrid look to end their Champions League slump against city rivals Real Madrid

In-form Atletico Madrid look to end their Champions League slump against city rivals Real Madrid
  • The round of 16 will begin this week to cap the inaugural season of a new Champions League format that featured a league phase and a playoff round
  • The other last-16 matchups will include the local rivalry of German clubs Bayern Munich and Bayer Leverkusen, and powerhouses Paris Saint-Germain and Liverpool going against each other

MADRID: The Madrid derby takes center stage in the round of 16 of the Champions League, with Atletico Madrid in a commanding position to try to finally get the best of rival Real Madrid in the European competition.

Madrid, the record 15-time European champion, have been a thorn for Atletico in the Champions League over the years, beating the city rival in two finals and eliminating it from the competition the other two times they faced off in the knockout rounds.

But this Atletico arrive for Tuesday’s first leg at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium playing some of their best soccer since coach Diego Simeone took over more than a decade ago, and showing the confidence that they can take on the long-time rivasl head-on.

The round of 16 will begin this week to cap the inaugural season of a new Champions League format that featured a league phase and a playoff round.

The other last-16 matchups will include the local rivalry of German clubs Bayern Munich and Bayer Leverkusen, and powerhouses Paris Saint-Germain and Liverpool going against each other.

Atletico Madrid enter the match against Madrid in good form and enjoying one of its best seasons under Simeone. The team is ahead of its rival in the Spanish league standings, and is only one point behind leader Barcelona.

Atletico hasn’t lost any of its matches this season against either Madrid or Barcelona. In the Spanish league, it beat the Catalan club 2-1 in Barcelona and drew 1-1 in both games it played against Madrid. Atletico hasn’t lost to Madrid in four consecutive matches, having eliminated the city rival in the round of 16 of the Copa del Rey last season.

“It’s a match with a lot of respect, against a great rival, who respects us in the same way.” Simeone said Monday. “For the city of Madrid it is spectacular that the two teams face each other and, for Spain, having a team in the quarterfinals is going to be fantastic.”

Simeone’s team finished fifth in the league phase of the Champions League, while Madrid was only 11th and had to play extra playoff games against Manchester City.

The last time Atletico faced Madrid in the Champions League, it was eliminated in the semifinals in 2017. It also lost to Madrid in the final both in 2014 and 2016, and in the 2015 quarterfinals.

Overall, Atletico has won only three of its 10 meetings against Madrid in UEFA competitions, with five losses and two draws.

“The derby is always a special match,” Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said. “They are always very even and very competitive matches, and it’s going to be like that again tomorrow (Tuesday). Atletico is having a very good season.”

Madrid is coming off a loss at Real Betis in the Spanish league, while Atletico won 1-0 against Athletic Bilbao.

PSG vs. Liverpool

Premier League leader Liverpool finished the league phase in first place but there was little reward as they will have to take on France powerhouse Paris Saint-Germain in the round of 16.

PSG struggled in the league phase, finishing in 15th place, but picked up momentum in the playoffs by routing fellow French club Brest 3-0 in the first leg and 7-0 in the return game at home, when seven different players scored.

Liverpool won seven of their eight Champions League matches this season, with the lone defeat coming at PSV Eindhoven in the final matchday, when it had little to lose.

Benfica vs. Barcelona

An in-form Barcelona, which had the second-best campaign in the league phase, will face a familiar foe in Benfica.

The two teams met in the league phase, with the Barcelona winning a 5-4 thriller in Lisbon. Benfica stunned Barcelona 3-0 at home in the group stage in 2021-22, and held the Spanish powerhouse to a 0-0 away draw in results that helped keep the five-time champion from advancing to the knockout stage at the time.

PSV vs. Arsenal

PSV Eindhoven brought one of the surprises of the league phase with its 3-2 win over Liverpool, and then it got past Juventus with an extra-time victory in the playoffs.

It will now another face another Premier League team in top form: An Arsenal squad that is second in the Premier behind Liverpool and that finished third in the league phase of the Champions League.

Bayern Munich vs. Bayer Leverkusen

The all-German encounter will feature a Leverkusen side that finished sixth in the league phase and a Bayern team that needed a stoppage-time goal by Alphonso Davies to get through the playoffs against Celtic.

Xabi Alonso’s Leverkusen trails Bayern by eight points in the Bundesliga, but did not concede any attempts on target when the two played a 0-0 draw last month.

Other matchups

Last year’s runner-up, Borussia Dortmund will take on a Lille side that thrived in the league phase, finishing seventh after a campaign that included wins over both Madrid and Atletico Madrid.

Aston Villa also were a league-phase surprise, losing only once to finish eighth and set up the round-of-16 matchup against a Club Brugge squad that defeated Villa 1-0 at home in November. Brugge eliminated Atalanta in the playoffs.

Inter Milan conceded only once — in a 1-0 loss at Leverkusen — en route to a fourth-place finish in the league phase. It will face a Feyenoord team that will have Robin van Persie as its third coach in the Champions League this season.