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A Rare Rainout Suspends Players Championship With Three Tied for Lead

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A Rare Rainout Suspends Players Championship With Three Tied for Lead

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — This 12 months’s Gamers Championship, a signature occasion of the PGA Tour, will take an additional day to finish after torrential rains on Friday in northern Florida suspended play for a second consecutive day. Golfers endured Friday’s foul climate for just a few soggy hours on the T.P.C. Sawgrass golf course, at some point after the primary spherical was twice interrupted by rain delays and by no means accomplished.

The back-to-back postponements will be sure that the 72-hole, four-round event, scheduled to finish on Sunday afternoon, won’t end earlier than Monday for the primary time since 2005.

Giant puddles had change into widespread on most greens by 10 a.m. on Friday, and upkeep crews used squeegees to take away water after every group completed a gap. However in time, with fairways all however flooded, officers ordered gamers off the course. The primary spherical continues to be not full.

“The golf course has simply reached some extent of saturation, and sadly the climate circumstances usually are not offering us any aid,” Gary Younger, the chief referee of the occasion, mentioned late Friday afternoon.

Younger added that the golf course had acquired nearly three inches of rain within the earlier 36 to 48 hours and that the event will restart no earlier than 11 a.m. on Saturday. The third spherical won’t be accomplished Sunday, and extreme climate was anticipated within the space Friday evening into Saturday morning, together with wind gusts that might attain 60 miles an hour. However the tour is anticipating clearer climate by noon Saturday although the T.P.C. Sawgrass structure will most certainly nonetheless be topic to appreciable wind.

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The circumstances, coupled with a difficult Pete Dye-designed course that options a number of daunting pictures over water hazards, may make for unpredictable outcomes. Furthermore, the final-round leaders will likely be pressured to finish greater than 18 holes on Monday.

On Friday morning, Younger mentioned the tour was probably contemplating a Tuesday end to the occasion, however hours later he mentioned, “We really feel very assured that we’re going to have the ability to accomplish the conclusion of this championship on Monday night.” A final spherical on Tuesday was “not likely in our thought course of,” Younger mentioned.

It’s the eighth time that the Gamers Championship, which was first contested in 1974, won’t end on Sunday. Whereas Monday finishes are rare on the PGA Tour and at main championships — the final Monday end on the Masters event was 1983 — they don’t seem to be unheard-of, and gamers have usually realized to adapt.

“You simply know that you just’re right here hopefully till the very finish of the event, and also you simply get on with it,” mentioned Tommy Fleetwood, who was one of some dozen golfers to finish 18 holes on Thursday and is tied for the lead at six underneath par. “All people’s in the identical circumstances. When it’s your flip to play, you play.

“It’s straightforward to get caught off guard whenever you’re hanging round for a very long time after which impulsively you need to attempt to swap it again on. However you nearly should chill out as a lot as you’ll be able to and save your vitality however at all times sort of keep prepared and in that mind-set that you just is likely to be going out at any time,” Fleetwood mentioned.

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The unprecedented million-dollar recruitment of the nation’s best softball player

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The unprecedented million-dollar recruitment of the nation’s best softball player

John and Tracy Sellers arrived in Lubbock, Texas, the evening of Monday, July 22, with dinner reservations and an intention: to woo the best college softball player in the world to play for Texas Tech.

The dinner was at Las Brisas, a white-tablecloth steakhouse just south of Texas Tech’s campus that serves up lobster guacamole and a 25-ounce bone-in ribeye. The player was NiJaree Canady, USA Softball’s Collegiate Player of the Year.

There were six seats at the table: the Sellers, Marc McDougal (a board member of the Matador Club, a Texas Tech-affiliated name, image and likeness collective), Canady and her parents. No coaches or university administrators. Just a few well-connected Tech supporters and a family with a menu full of options. The group made fast friends over a nearly three-hour meal.

Canady, a 6-foot pitching phenom from Topeka, Kan., was visiting Lubbock for the first time. She was less than two months removed from leading Stanford to the Women’s College World Series semifinals as a sophomore, garnering mainstream headlines in the process. A few weeks later, she entered the transfer portal, the biggest star of a burgeoning sport hitting the open market.

The youngest person at the table that night, Canady held all the power. But she also had a tough decision ahead, still wary of leaving Stanford behind. Texas Tech softball isn’t on the same level as Stanford, and cowers in comparison to a blue blood like Oklahoma, but the Sellers could offer a distinct perspective. John played football for the Red Raiders under Mike Leach. Tracy played softball at Tech and was on the search committee for newly hired softball manager Gerry Glasco, whom Tech lured from Louisiana after five Sun Belt Conference titles and a .773 winning percentage in seven seasons.

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The Sellers could offer distinct resources, too. John co-founded Double Eagle Energy, a multi-billion-dollar upstream oil-and-gas company that operates in the nearby Permian Basin region of West Texas. He also co-founded Matador Club, which he oversees with business partner and fellow Red Raiders alum Cody Campbell. The collective aims to sign every athlete on campus to an NIL deal – achieving it in football, men’s and women’s basketball, softball, baseball, track and golf, including $25,000 each for football players and $10,000 each for softball. In 2022, the Sellers gifted Texas Tech athletics $11 million, with $1 million going toward facility upgrades to Rocky Johnson Field, Tech’s softball stadium.

And on Monday night at Las Brisas, the Matador Club was prepared to make Canady a ceiling-shattering NIL offer: $1 million. But Canady wasn’t ready to accept it.

She wanted to tour the Tech campus and facilities on Tuesday and spend time with coach Glasco. She wanted to discuss her decision with her former Stanford teammates and coaches. She wanted to weigh her options. All of it only endeared her to the Sellers even more.

“She’s a superstar,” John Sellers said. “I wanted her to make the best choice she thought she could make.”

Less than 48 hours later, they got the answer they were hoping for. Canady announced on social media Wednesday afternoon that she was committing to Texas Tech, and Matador Club announced it had signed Canady to an NIL agreement soon after. The contract is for one year and $1,050,024, as The Athletic previously reported. It’s believed to be the highest-ever NIL contract for a softball player — by a wide margin.

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The $24 is for Canady’s jersey number. The $50,000 is for living expenses. And the $1 million is for Canady.

John Sellers declined to comment on the specific amount but described it as “a life-changing” deal.

“She deserves it,” he added. “She’s a complete game-changer for any program, but especially a place like Tech.”

Her commitment is a coup for a school with six NCAA Tournament appearances in softball, most recently in 2019, that has never reached a WCWS.

But as college football and basketball have become increasingly defined by the big-money free agency fueled by NIL and the portal, Canady’s million-dollar transfer marks a similarly seismic moment for college softball.

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“It’s absolutely unprecedented for an annual compensation for a D-I softball player,” said Blake Lawrence, the CEO of Opendorse, a company that facilitates and manages NIL deals. “Canady might be getting paid more than every single softball player in her conference combined.”


Canady dominated in her two years pitching at Stanford, leading the nation in ERA as a freshman (0.57) and sophomore (0.65) and registering a sport-leading 337 strikeouts in 230.2 innings pitched in 2024. Her pitches feature a lethal combination of velocity and movement, particularly a near-unhittable rise ball that leaves a trail of hapless batters in its jetstream.

“She’s one of a kind,” said ESPN broadcaster Jessica Mendoza, a former Stanford outfielder. “She’s not just a pitcher. She can win games just on her own, and we haven’t really seen a pitcher like that in our sport, we’ve actually got away from that.”

According to an individual with knowledge of Canady’s transfer and NIL negotiations this offseason and two other sources involved with Stanford, Canady’s family first approached Stanford’s NIL collective, Lifetime Cardinal, in the spring of her freshman season in 2023. The family was seeking a seven-figure offer.

At that point, Stanford had been slow to embrace an NIL landscape drifting deeper into pay-for-play, and the athletic department had yet to claim an affiliation with Lifetime Cardinal. The collective didn’t extend an offer to Canady after her freshman season, and it came as a surprise to some there when she did not enter the portal in 2023.

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Canady declined an interview for this article through representatives from her management team and Texas Tech. Canady’s mother, Katherine, did not respond to requests for comment.

This past April, Stanford athletic director Bernard Muir gave the department’s official blessing to Lifetime Cardinal, which has since involved several former Stanford athletes, including quarterback Andrew Luck, in the collective.

By the time Stanford reached a second straight WCWS last month, all parties realized a bidding war was coming for Canady’s right arm — but few outside of Lubbock could have predicted the final sale price. The going rate for a star pitcher in the portal was believed to be in the $100,000-$150,000 range.

Canady entered the transfer portal on June 17, drawing immediate attention from several elite programs. Texas Tech had to play catch-up. Glasco was hired June 20, and once he finally could reach out to Canady, he primarily dealt with her manager. Canady wanted to focus on traveling to Japan with USA Softball for an all-star event in early July, and her family wanted to insulate her as much as possible from what it knew would be a spirited recruiting process.

“It was different than any other recruitment I’ve been involved with,” said Glasco. “They really had a business-like approach to it early on.”

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It also became clear that NIL would be a motivating factor in Canady’s ultimate destination.

A person familiar with the negotiations said Lifetime Cardinal made Canady an offer shortly before she entered the portal on the last day the window was open.

Canady also changed management teams, and her new representation quickly fielded both scholarship and NIL offers, Texas Tech and Matador Club among them.

Canady’s recruitment out of high school was limited by the COVID-19 pandemic, so when she returned from Japan earlier this month, she leaned into her second chance on the trail, scheduling visits to Tennessee, Alabama, UCLA and Kansas, her home-state school, while still leaving open the possibility of a return to Stanford.

Upon hearing about potential six-figure NIL offers being floated elsewhere, Lifetime Cardinal worked to raise more funds from a wider pool of donors, including several Stanford softball alums, and was preparing to make a much larger offer later this month that would be “within shouting distance” of Tech’s, according to a person with knowledge of Canady’s transfer process

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“(Lifetime Cardinal was) incredibly competitive with every offer that NiJa was having thrown at her, and that’s saying something,” said Mendoza.

Still, Stanford’s chances of retaining the coveted ace withered after she touched down in Lubbock. Following dinner with the Sellers and McDougal on Monday night, Tech rolled out the Red Raiders carpet on Tuesday. Glasco gave Canady and her parents a tour of the facilities. He walked her through the roster he had already put in place for next season, featuring eight other transfers, five of whom followed him from Louisiana, including Sun Belt Player of the Year Mihyia Davis. Glasco knew Canady wants to hit too, emphasizing that she wouldn’t be confined to the circle.

Canady had expressed interest in personal branding and social media, so Glasco arranged a meeting to address how Tech could help foster that. They even appealed to the family’s Chiefs fandom, highlighting the school’s recently announced apparel deal with Adidas that features a brand partnership with Red Raiders alum Patrick Mahomes and his signature Adidas gladiator logo.

Glasco spared no detail, asking for the landscaping around the facilities to be touched up, the infield lined at Rocky Johnson Field and the scoreboard lit up for the visit.

“It was absolutely amazing to me to see how the entire athletic department jumped in to help us recruit,” said Glasco. “When NiJa first got here, I think there was a lot of skepticism that she might not like this place, this is a waste of her time. And the minute she walked on campus and saw the beauty, felt the love, things just clicked and we got the result that we got.”

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Just before 3:30 p.m. local time on Wednesday afternoon, Canady posted a tweet thanking Stanford for “the ride of a lifetime” while announcing Texas Tech as her new home, just above a photo of her seated on a throne in a Red Raiders uniform.

“These past two years at Stanford have been nothing but incredible — I truly mean that,” Canady told ESPN. “My goal every year is to win the Women’s College World Series, so that’s my goal right now. … I think there’s a good young core coming in and a lot of good players from Louisiana.”

“We’re disappointed we won’t be able to continue nurturing (Canady’s) growth, but understand the dilemma she and her family were faced with,” Muir said. “It’s not my place to judge her and their decisions. We understand it and respect it.”

Eleven minutes after her commitment post, the Matador Club sent a tweet welcoming Canady to Lubbock. The Texas Tech softball account posted a link for season ticket deposits minutes later.

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“I definitely think NiJa’s felt the love and support she’s going to get at Tech,” John Sellers said. “It speaks to what we’re willing to do here to create a good culture and win a lot of games, no matter what sport it is.”


(Eakin Howard / Getty Images)

How significant Canady’s $1 million NIL deal is to college softball and women’s sports writ large can’t be overstated.

Tech athletics generated $146.8 million in revenue in fiscal year 2023, according to the department’s NCAA financial forms, with football responsible for $80.3 million. Softball generated $1.38 million, but that includes the Sellers’ $1 million donation, and after expenses still posted a $1.15 million deficit. (In fiscal year 2022, softball generated just over $340,000 and operated at a deficit of $1.44 million.)  Glasco’s new coaching contract reportedly will pay him $1.33 million over five years, including $250,000 next season. Oklahoma’s Patty Gasso, believed to be the highest-paid coach in college softball, is set to make $1.8 million in 2024.

A select few women’s college players — Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, Livvy Dunne – have springboarded to national sponsorships and mainstream prominence in the NIL era. Still, Canady represents a new frontier for an Olympic, non-revenue sport.

Her NIL haul with Matador Club didn’t reset the market. It obliterated it.

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“(Canady will) forever be the one of the faces of the early NIL transfer portal stories,” said Sue Enquist, UCLA’s seven-time national champion head coach from 1989-2006 and a trailblazer in the sport. “From a business perspective, it’s great to see our sport keeping pace with other sports that are growing.”

Yet with that degree of growth and attention also comes a certain level of scrutiny. Texas Tech softball, suddenly boasting World-Series aspirations, will have to shoulder the pressure that comes with those well-funded expectations.

All of it further emphasizes the arrival of big-money NIL into the sport.

“If Caitlin Clark would have entered the transfer portal after her sophomore year, where would the bidding war have ended up, knowing what you know now?” OpenDorse’s Lawrence said. “The bet here is that the rise of women’s sports, the rise of softball viewership, and a once-in-a-generation talent like Caitlin Clark is on the market.

“The $1 million payment,” he added, “could be justified.”

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— The Athletic‘s Jayna Bardahl and Tobias Bass contributed to this report.

(Top illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photos: Eakin Howard / Getty Images)

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Chinese Olympic champion places blame on coaches following team's disappointing finish in Paris

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Chinese Olympic champion places blame on coaches following team's disappointing finish in Paris

Li Xiaoshuang, a two-time Olympic gymnastics champion, is placing blame at the feet of the Chinese national gymnastics team’s coaching staff.

The country’s men’s team came up short at the Paris Olympics this week and ultimately claimed the silver medal.

Li believed the athletes should not solely bare the responsibility for the team’s shortcomings at the Summer Games. 

“Our team of coaches have issues. Let’s not put all responsibilities on athletes. If they failed, the coaches did something wrong,” 50-year-old Li said in an online live broadcast that circulated across Chinese social media, according to Reuters.

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China wins silver in the men’s team final during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Bercy Arena in Paris on July 29, 2024. (James Lang-USA Today Sports)

Li also called for a fundamental change to the country’s approach to the sport.

“Our athletes are too old. Sports needs young people. We really need to change the way we train and select athletes,” he said. 

The average age of China’s five gymnasts who traveled to Paris is 26.2. 

US MEN’S GYMNAST STEPHEN NEDOROSCIK GOES VIRAL AS HE SHINES ON POMMEL HORSE: ‘AMERICAN ICON’

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Li first won Olympic gold in the floor competition at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics and again in the all-around at the 1992 Summer Games in Atlanta.

Xiao Ruoteng, 28, and Su Weide, 24, committed some critical errors in the final rotation of the all-around event. The mistakes proved costly as the Chinese saw their three-point lead over Japan after the first five apparatus evaporate.

Xiaoshuang Li at the men's all-around competition

Li Xiaoshuang performs at the Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia, on July 24, 1996. (Tony Duffy/Allsport)

Li said he had a painful experience watching the Chinese team compete at the Olympics.

“After watching the competition, I felt so much pain. It was really painful. Good soldiers need a good general. China has a great gymnastics team, but we lack leadership and that’s a problem,” Li said.

General view of Bercy Arena

An overview of men’s gymnastics qualification during the Olympic Games at Bercy Arena in Paris on July 27, 2024.

“Su got the job at the last minute and barely had any training. We don’t have anyone that is 18, 19 or 20 years old. How are we going to make it to the next Olympics?” said Li, who was 18 when he won his first Olympic gold.”

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Li argued that his country has failed to produce gymnasts who can compete at a high level on the vault since Cheng Fei, who earned gold in the women’s team event at the Olympics 16 years ago.

“We are good on the beam and not bad on the uneven bars but how come our vault – I find it unacceptable! The routines haven’t changed since ’92,” said Li.

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Simone Biles leads dominant U.S. to gold in Olympic gymnastics team competition

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Simone Biles leads dominant U.S. to gold in Olympic gymnastics team competition

Fans at Bercy Arena wore white T-shirts with the Olympic rings printed across the front. Each ring featured a photo of a U.S. gymnast inside. Underneath, there was a single word: “Redemption.”

This felt like more. It was relief. It was a release.

It was gold.

2024 Paris Summer Olympic Games

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The four members of the Olympic team who remembered their Tokyo disappointments rewrote their narratives by leading the United States back to gold with a dominant wire-to-wire performance in the team final on Tuesday. Finishing with an untouchable 171.296 score, the Americans ran across the floor after Simone Biles clinched the victory on floor, raising the U.S. flag to all sides of the arena and posing for photos.

Three years after withdrawing in the Olympic final because of mental health concerns, Biles blew a kiss to the crowd as she saluted the judges after her floor routine.

The U.S. has won three of the last four Olympic team gold medals and 10 of the last 11 major team championships, including seven consecutive world titles.

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The Americans were so dominant that they still won by 5.802 points over silver medalists Italy despite watered-down routines and a fall from Jordan Chiles on beam. Biles did not compete featuring her eponymous vault, sacrificing eight-tenths of a point in difficulty marks. Lee did a straight-forward straddle split mount on the beam instead of a high-flying round-off, back layout.

Brazil claimed the bronze medal.

Chiles bounced back from her fall on beam — the only blemish in her otherwise excellent Olympic performance that included a third-place all-around finish in qualifying — with a thrilling floor routine that had the entire crowd clapping along with her Beyoncé music. Fans erupted when she nailed her final tumbling pass. She blinked back tears in her ending pose.

After wilting under the deafening silence of the crowd-less Tokyo Games, the U.S. gymnasts soaked up the energy from a loud, pro-U.S. arena. American flags waved in every corner of the sold-out arena as the U.S. rotated to each event. They pumped their fists as fans chanted “U-S-A!” Stars including Serena Wiliams, Michael Phelps, Natalie Portman, Nicole Kidman, Spike Lee and Nadia Comaneci were in attendance for one of the most in-demand tickets of the Games.

Jordan Chiles, of the United States, performs on the floor during the women's gymnastics team finals at Bercy Arena

Jordan Chiles of the United States performs on the floor during the women’s gymnastics team finals at Bercy Arena on Tuesday in Paris.

(Natacha Pisarenko / Associated Press)

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As Biles stood at the end of the vault runway waiting for her first routine, a single fan shouted through a quiet lull: “We love you, Simone!”

Since Tokyo, the 27-year-old’s star has only grown. She’s transcended the sport, becoming a mainstream star attending red carpet events. She’s a vocal advocate for mental health that other athletes in the Olympics have looked to for inspiration. She’s a businesswoman and wife.

She didn’t have to go back to being a gymnast. Yet focusing on the other parts of herself seemed only to elevate her greatest strength.

“Nobody’s forcing me to do it,” Biles said after U.S. Olympic trials. “I wake up every day and choose to grind in the gym and come out here and perform for myself.”

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