Sports
UCLA gymnastics team places second in regional, advances to NCAA championships

UCLA continues to be dancing.
With their finest ground rotation of the season, the Bruins superior to the NCAA championships for the primary time since 2019 by ending second in Saturday’s NCAA regional remaining at Pauley Pavilion.
Utah completed first with a rating of 198 factors, whereas the Bruins charged again from a two-tenth deficit on the midway level of the meet to edge out Missouri for second place. UCLA totaled 197.925 factors, whereas the Tigers, who stored the Bruins out of nationals by 0.025 factors final season, had a rating of 197.6. Washington, the one unranked group within the nation to make a regional remaining this season, completed with 195.65 factors.
Although the No. 4 Bruins entered the regional remaining with the highest qualifying rating from the semifinals, they obtained off to a sluggish begin on the bars and beam. They mustered only one rating higher than a 9.9 on the beam, a 9.925 from freshman Selena Harris, and had their worst beam rotation since Jan. 29 with a 49.325 whole. UCLA fell into third place.
The Bruins made their transfer on their signature occasion, the ground train, the place they charged again with 5 scores of 9.9 or higher on the ground train. Jordan Chiles anchored the lineup with an ideal 10 that cemented UCLA’s whole rating of 49.7.
The Bruins’ Jordan Chiles competes within the ground train. She scored a ten for UCLA, which had its finest ground rotation of the season.
(Katharine Lotze / Getty Photographs)
Needing a stable efficiency on their lowest-scoring occasion of the season, the Bruins delivered on the vault with a 49.5, their second-highest rating within the occasion this season. The whole trailed solely Thursday’s semifinal rating. Harris starred with the primary 10 of her profession.
UCLA advances to the NCAA championships April 13-15 in Fort Price. The Bruins will finish the longest nationals drought in class historical past and check out for his or her first nationwide title since 2018.

Sports
What Tour Leaders and Players are Saying About the Merger

PGA Tour officials and LIV leaders hailed the announcement on Tuesday that their competing golf series would be joining forces, but players were split on the news. Here’s what they were saying:
“After two years of disruption and distraction, this is a historic day for the game we all know and love.” — PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, who is expected to be the chief executive of the new entity.
“There is no question that the LIV model has been positively transformative for golf. We believe there are opportunities for the game to evolve while also maintaining its storied history and tradition.” — The Public Investment Fund governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan, who will become chairman of the board of the merged tour.
“Awesome day today.” — Phil Mickelson, who left the PGA Tour to join LIV Golf.
“Nothing like finding out through Twitter that we’re merging with a tour that we said we’d never do that with.” — Mackenzie Hughes, PGA Tour player.
“Very curious how many people knew this deal was happening. About 5-7 people? Player run organization right?” — Michael Kim, PGA Tour player.
“This is one of the saddest days in the history of professional golf. I do believe that the governing bodies, the entities, the professional entities, have sacrificed their principles for profits.” — Brandel Chamblee, a Golf Channel analyst who has been sharply critical of the LIV Tour.
“Welfare check on Chamblee.” — LIV golfer Brooks Koepka, referring to Chamblee, who last week declared that “any yielding to or agreement with them is a deal with a murderous dictator.”
“Now that we’re all friends, is it too late for us to workshop some of these team names?” — Max Homa, PGA Tour player, referring to LIV teams like Crushers, Iron Heads and Majesticks.
Sports
Jack Nicklaus on board with historic PGA Tour-LIV Golf merger: ‘Good for the game of golf’

Jack Nicklaus likes that golf is finally coming together globally instead of remaining pitted in a civil war.
“The Golden Bear,” like many others, reacted to the surprising landmark merger between the PGA Tour, Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) which runs the LIV Golf tour, and DP World Tour as one unified golf entity.
“The last three years have been difficult for the game and the players,” Nicklaus said, via The Palm Beach Post. “I spoke with PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan this morning. He seemed pleased with the arrangement that will once again bring together the best players in the world. I agree that this is good for the game of golf.
Jack Nicklaus reacts to a putt on the 10th hole during a celebrity shootout after the second round of The Ally Challenge at Warwick Hills Golf And Country Club on August 27, 2022 in Grand Blanc, Michigan. (Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)
“I also appreciate the commissioner’s comments about continuing the tradition of the Tour and the mission to support important charitable causes. I am certainly interested in seeing the details. Jay indicated that this all will happen in 2024, so very soon the proof will be in the pudding. Whatever is best for the game of golf enjoys my full support.”
Nicklaus previously took a swing at LIV golfers, saying that he didn’t “even consider those guys part of the game anymore.”
“I don’t mean that in a nasty way,” he told Golfweek during his annual Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club, also known as Jack’s Place. “This is a PGA Tour event, and we have the best field we can possibly have for a PGA Tour event for those who are eligible to be here. The other guys made a choice of what they did and where they’ve gone, and we don’t even talk about it.”
JACK NICKLAUS TAKES SWING AT LIV GOLFERS: ‘I DON’T EVEN CONSIDER THOSE GUYS PART OF THE GAME ANYMORE’
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said that negotiations for this new unity took around seven weeks to complete. It was just him and two other PGA Tour board members in a room during that time, with no players involved.
The agreement was finalized Monday night.
No one, even the players on tour, knew this was coming and many of them reacted in their own way on social media.
“I love finding out morning news on Twitter,” PGA Tour star Collin Morikawa wrote in a tweet. Fellow PGA Tour member Scott Stallings replied, “You and me both.”
LIV golfers like Brooks Koepka had some sarcastic remarks as well.
“Welfare Check on Chamblee,” he said, referring to former professional and current golf analyst, Brandel Chamblee, who has loathed LIV Golf since its existence and has been very public about it.

Jay Monahan, Commissioner of the PGA Tour speaks to the media in a press conference prior to THE PLAYERS Championship on THE PLAYERS Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass on March 07, 2023 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. (Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)
Chamblee called Tuesday “one of the saddest days in the history of professional golf” following news of the unexpected merger.
Monahan released a statement regarding the merger, saying it will “benefit golf’s players, commercial and charitable partners and fans.”
“Going forward, fans can be confident that we will, collectively, deliver on the promise we’ve always made — to promote competition of the best in professional golf and that we are committed to securing and driving the game’s future,” the statement read.
PGA TOUR ANNOUNCES LANDMARK MERGER WITH SAUDI-BACKED LIV GOLF
The new agreement will be merging PIF’s golf businesses into the PGA Tour and DP World Tour as a “new, collectively owned, for-profit entity to ensure that all stakeholders benefit from a model that delivers maximum excitement and competition among the game’s best players.”
PIF will be adding a “capital investment” into the new entity as part of the agreement. Also, all pending litigation between these three golf powers will be dropped.
All players that left the PGA Tour for LIV Golf — Koepka, Phil Mickelson and many more — can re-apply for membership after the 2023 season is complete.

The 2022 Jack Nicklaus Award Recipients are announced at a press conference during the final round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday at Muirfield Village Golf Club on June 5, 2022 in Dublin, Ohio. (Chris Condon/PGA TOUR)
“We are pleased to move forward, in step with LIV and PIF’s world-class investing experience, and I applaud PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan for his vision and collaborative and forward-thinking approach that is not just a solution to the rift in our game, but also a commitment to taking it to new heights,” Monahan added.
“This will engender a new era in global golf, for the better.”
Nicklaus and golf fans everywhere certainly hope that’s the case.
Sports
Donald Trump and others react to PGA and LIV’s ‘big, beautiful, and glamorous deal’

Former President Trump predicted this day would come.
Last July, while taking part in a pro-am during an LIV Golf event at his Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J., Trump heaped praise on the newly formed, Saudi-backed tour while criticizing the PGA Tour and the golfers that remained loyal to it.
“You have really the best players in the world, many of the best players in the world,” he said at the time, “and soon you’ll probably have all of them because remember this, [when] there’s a merger, the people that didn’t come, they will never get anything except a thank you from people that took advantage.”
That merger happened Tuesday — and Trump was quick to share his excitement with a post on his Truth Social platform.
“Great news from LIV golf,” he wrote. “A big, beautiful, and glamorous deal for the wonderful world of golf.”
The PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, which operates LIV Golf, announced an agreement Tuesday that combines the two entities and will also encompass the DP World Tour, which is also known as the European Tour. The new group’s name will be announced at a later date.
The former president wasn’t the only one to respond on social media to the announcement. Greg Norman, LIV’s chief executive, and two of the biggest names on the LIV roster — Brooks Koepka and Phil Mickelson — expressed their pleasure. Koepka got in a dig at Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee, who had criticized the golfers who had joined the controversial new tour.
Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, two PGA golfers who had been among the most vocal objectors to LIV Golf, have not yet publicly responded to the merger. Other PGA golfers expressed surprise, and often anger, at an announcement that caught many off guard.
-
Vermont8 months ago
Button Up for winter with these weatherization tips from Efficiency Vermont
-
Midwest1 year ago
Kansas lawmaker doesn’t want to share restroom with ‘huge’ transgender colleague
-
Northeast1 year ago
Seattle convict admits he used Facebook to coerce Massachusetts girl to run away with him
-
West1 year ago
San Diego Unified School Board unanimously passes resolution in support of abortion rights
-
West1 year ago
Armed and dangerous Oregon fugitive wanted for rape, assault after prison escape: ‘Somebody very scary’
-
West1 year ago
Utah man allegedly high on meth driving 100 mph crashes, kills two 3-year-old boys, sheriff says
-
Colorado10 months ago
Colorado Rockies game no. 116 thread: Zac Gallen vs José Ureña
-
Midwest1 year ago
See it: Tesla crashes into Columbus convention center at 70 mph