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Jon Rahm says: “It’s great to play a links golf event before a links golf event.” Jon Rahm hopes the local accents are all he struggles with this week when the LIV Golf star tees it up at the Genesis Scottish Open.The tournament, co-sanctioned by the PGA Tour and DP World Tour, begins on Thursday at The Renaissance Club in North Berwick. Eligible as a DP World Tour member, Rahm is playing in his first non-major PGA Tour event since the 2023 Tour Championship.The 31-year-old Spaniard has enjoyed a lot of success playing links golf, including two wins in the Irish Open (2017, 2019) and a runner-up finish at The Open Championship at Royal Liverpool in 2023.”A victory on Scottish soil would be fantastic,” Rahm told reporters on Tuesday. “As a European, understanding where it came from, and links golf, (joining) a list of great champions in the Scottish Open would be something that would be really, really exciting.”Rahm has two wins and four runner-up finishes on the LIV Golf tour this season. The two-time major winner also tied for second at the PGA Championship in May.Rahm also missed the cut at last month’s U.S. Open and finished T55 in his last appearance in the Scottish Open in 2022. He’s hoping for a better result as he prepares for The Open Championship next week at Royal Birkdale. ‘GREAT TO PLAY A LINKS GOLF EVENT'”It’s great to play a links golf event before a links golf event, and playing in the weather and the fescue grass and different than what we are playing year around,” he said.Rahm was asked what makes a good links player.”I just think you need to have a great understanding of spin, trajectory, control, and how the ball reacts on the fairway and on the greens, right,” he said. “You can usually, except a few holes here with some trees, where you can start the ball whatever you want, you hit whatever shot shape you feel like hitting or you can be as aggressive or as passive as you want to be.”It all depends on your ability to understand how you can hit the shot, how the elements are going to affect how the ball is going to react once it lands on the fairway, on the green. I know it sounds like a lot but essentially it comes to what I understand as trajectory and spin control, mainly on to the greens.” THINGS OUT OF CONTROLA few things are out of Rahm’s control, including the future of LIV Golf. He said LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil’s search for investors has not included reaching into Rahm’s wallet.”As far as putting my money into it, they have not asked me to do that yet,” he said. “So I don’t know if they will or not. It’s not something that they have asked me but there has been many different avenues to try to make it different, what we’ve had till now.”For now, Rahm is focused on getting a better feel for the course — and the language.”The lad that drove me from the airport, I was a bit too sleepless on the flight, and he was very kind, and I could not understand 90 percent of what he told me on that hour drive,” Rahm said. Related…
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New regulations come into force Monday in Britain banning daytime TV and online adverts for so-called junk foods, in what the government calls a “world-leading action” to tackle childhood obesity. The ban — targeting ads for products high in fat, salt or sugar — is expected to remove up to 7.2 billion calories from children’s diets each year, according to the health ministry.Impacting ads airing before the 9:00pm watershed and anytime online, it will reduce the number of children living with obesity by 20,000 and deliver around £2 billion ($2.7 bln) in health benefits, the ministry added. The implementation of the measure — first announced in December 2024 — follows other recent steps, including an extended sugar tax on pre-packaged items like milkshakes, ready-to-go coffees and sweetened yoghurt drinks. Local authorities have also been given the power to stop fast food shops setting up outside schools.The government argues evidence shows advertising influences what and when children eat, shaping preferences from a young age and increasing the risk of obesity and related illnesses. It notes 22 percent of children starting primary schooling in England — typically aged around five — are overweight or obese, rising to more than a third by the time they progress to secondary schools aged 11.Tooth decay is the leading cause of UK hospital admissions for young children, typically aged five to nine, according to officials. “By restricting adverts for junk food before 9pm and banning paid adverts online, we can remove excessive exposure to unhealthy foods,” health minister Ashley Dalton said in a statement.He added the move was part of a strategy to make the state-funded National Health Service (NHS) focus on preventing as well as treating sickness, “so people can lead healthier lives”. Katharine Jenner, executive director of the Obesity Health Alliance, said it was “a welcome and long-awaited step towards better protecting children from unhealthy food and drink advertising that can harm their health and wellbeing”. The charity Diabetes UK also welcomed the ads ban, with its chief executive, Colette Marshall, noting that type 2 diabetes is on the rise in young people. “Obesity is a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes, and the condition can lead to more severe consequences in young people — leaving them at risk of serious complications like kidney failure and heart disease,” she added. Source link
X-Raid Mini driver Guillaume de Mevius took the Dakar Rally lead after Sunday’s first full stage, while Qatar’s five-time winner Nasser al-Attiyah was in second place for the Dacia Sandriders team, 40 seconds behind the Belgian.Al-Attiyah had mixed feelings saying he “could have lost it all” on the challenging route and lamented that he had been ahead of the day’s winner for most of the stage. “We had a good pace and could have pushed harder, but when we saw (Dacia teammate) Sebastien Loeb with two flat tyres, we decided to be cautious and avoid puncturing ourselves,” said al-Attiyah.For De Mevius co-driver Mathieu Baumel it was “enormous triumph” as just a year after having his leg amputated he won the opening stage with his Belgian driver.Navigator Baumel was back at the race just 11 months after his right lower leg was amputated after being run over while helping someone who had broken down on the road in France.Last January it had looked as if life behind the wheel was in the past for the successful co-driver and navigator. “Just being here is an enormous triumph,” said the 49-year-old, who got into his car Sunday carrying his prosthetic limb.Driving a mini the pair won the perilous 305km first stage at Yanbu, Saudi Arabia. Baumel had previously won the Dakar Rally four times as co-pilot to al-Attiyah, most recently back-to-back titles in 2022 and 2023.De Mevius, sitting top of the heap at the finish line, admitted he was surprised. “It wasn’t particularly the objective to win today, but we said to ourselves with Mathieu (Baumel) that we wanted to at least win one on the Dakar stages,” he said after a stoney and dusty ride.Czech driver Martin Prokop was in third place for the Orlen Jipocar team, with Sweden’s Mattias Ekstrom fourth in a Ford Raptor. French driver Sebastien Loeb came 10th in his Dacia losing three minutes with a puncture after also leading the field.Reigning Dakar champion Yazeed al-Rajhi was the big loser of the day as the Saudi was slapped with a 16-minute penalty due to a missed crossing point and ended up nearly 29 minutes off de Mevius with 12 more stages of the endurance event to come over the next two weeks in Saudi Arabia.In the motorcycle category, Spain’s Edgar Canet, already winner of the prologue, benefited after Botswana’s Ross Branch received a six-minute penalty for speeding in a restricted zone. Canet leads Australia’s Daniel Sanders by just over a minute.Today, the competitors will tackle a first big day of racing, heading towards Al Ula after more than 500km, 400 of which are individually timed. Related Story Source link
Less than a year after watching flames raze his home in the Altadena foothills, Ted Koerner has moved into a brand new house, one of the first to rebuild in this Los Angeles suburb.It has been an uphill battle, and Koerner is visibly moved as he brings his dog, Daisy, back home.”We’ve been through a lot this year,” he told AFP.Altadena was hardest hit by the fires that ravaged parts of the sprawling US metropolis in January 2025.Thousands of homes were destroyed and 19 people died in the town – compared to 12 killed in the upscale Pacific Palisades neighbourhood.To rebuild his home, Koerner, a 67-year-old head of a security company, had to front up several hundred thousand dollars as his mortgage lender refused to release insurance payouts for months.Koerner also had to contend with the uncertainties created by the policies of US President Donald Trump.Tariffs on steel, wood, and cement, all of which are often imported, have increased construction costs, and Latino construction workers fear arrest by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).”If ICE grabs construction crews and Trump does that to us on top of tariffs, we’ll never get this town rebuilt,” Koerner said.Slowly, however, Altadena is coming back to life.Amid the thousands of empty lots, a few frames are beginning to rise from the ground.The hurricane-strength 160kph (100mph) gusts of wind that spread the fire at breakneck speed last January are still fresh in everyone’s minds.However, despite the destruction and the pervasive threat of climate change in California, dogged survivors refuse to move away.”Where are you gonna go?” sighs another Altadena resident, Catherine Ridder, a 67-year-old psychotherapist. “There’s no place around here that’s not vulnerable to catastrophic weather.”Her construction project has begun and she hopes to move in by August – before the $4,000 monthly rent she pays for a furnished apartment exhausts the housing allowance from her insurance.To speed things up, the Californian bureaucracy has streamlined its processes.Los Angeles County is issuing building permits within a few months.Before, it often took more than a year.However, Ridder has been frustrated by delays in inspections to verify compliance with new building codes, such as requiring a fire sprinkler system in the roof.”There’s a lot of chaos and delays. I mean, maybe it’s faster than pre-fire stuff, but this doesn’t feel easy at all,” she told AFP. “I know that I’m way better off than a lot of people who were underinsured.”In this high-risk area, many residents were covered by the state’s insurer of last resort, and their compensation is too meager to rebuild homes that often cost more than a million dollars.So many are counting on the financial outcome of lawsuits filed against Southern California Edison, the company that owns the faulty power line suspected of having triggered the fire that destroyed Altadena.Carol Momsen couldn’t wait.She was compensated only $300,000 for the destruction of her home, so the 76-year-old retiree sold her land. That paid for a new apartment elsewhere.”Even if I had the money, I don’t think I’d want to rebuild in Altadena, because it’s just a sad place right now,” the former saleswoman said.There is palpable anxiety that this diverse town, home to a sizable African American population, will lose its soul because people cannot afford to rebuild.Several empty lots display signs: “Altadena, not for sale!” and “Black homes matter.”Ellaird Bailey, 77, a retired technician at a telecommunications company, settled here with his wife in 1984 so his children could grow up in this “melting pot”.”So many of those people that we’ve known for 20 or 30 years are moving away” to more affordable communities, he said.”It’s hard to visualise what it’s going to be like moving forward.” Related Story Source link
Seven-time major singles champion Venus Williams said Sunday she's still driven to play good tennis – and ‘it gives you great legs’ – as she prepares for an Australian Open tilt at age 45.Williams will become the oldest woman to play in the main draw at the season-opening Grand Slam after accepting a wildcard, five years after she last competed in Melbourne.The American said she was unaware of the record she was poised to break, adding she didn't have the same intense approach to achieving milestones as in her prime.However, her drive to succeed on court remained.’I think one of my goals is to be joyful and just embrace being uncomfortable because that's the things champions can do,’ she said.’I definitely don't wake up and come halfway across the world — or more than halfway — to not be feeling the fire.’And, well, tennis burns a lot of calories. It gives you great legs. I figure if I want to stay fit, I've got to keep playing.’A five-time Wimbledon champion, Williams was an Australian Open singles finalist in 2003 and 2017 and won the doubles title four times alongside sister Serena.Williams' last tournament was the US Open in August, not long after returning from a 16-month break.She will play warmup events in Auckland next week and Hobart ahead of the January 18-February 1 Australian Open and hoped she can shake rust out of her system.’It's interesting because I have so much experience, but I've probably played the least amount as any other player in this draw,’ Williams told reporters in Auckland.’So I have a lot to pull out but I also have to come out of the gates playing quickly.’The good news is that, you know, tennis matches are long and you have a chance to figure things out.’Her first opponent in Auckland on Monday will be Polish fifth seed and world No.54 Magda Linette. Source link
