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Report: Texans could finalize site of new headquarters soon

Report: Texans could finalize site of new headquarters soon

USA Today5 days ago

Report: Texans could finalize site of new headquarters soon
The Houston Texans are planning on building a new headquarters away from NRG Stadium and the location could soon be announced.
According to Jonathan M. Alexander of the Houston Chronicle, a decision could come fairly soon as talks with interested parties on where to break ground, per team president Mike Tomon. The Texans would like to have a location finalized and built within the next two seasons, according to multiple reports.
'We've had a number of suitors proactively reach out to us on different options that were really focused on us moving our headquarters and training facility to their respective spaces,' Tomon told the Houston Chronicle. 'They've gotten mature enough that it has become apparent to us that we need to get prepared to take advantage of something this significant.'
Tomon, who was influential in helping the Dallas Cowboys build the "Star in Frisco," said their goal is to create a training facility that is 'world-class,' which will likely include an entertainment district with retail stores, bars and entertainment for gameday activities. Similar to how Frisco has a secondary home for the NFC East franchise, Houston projects to build a similar facility that could spark economic development beyond the team's interest.
Currently, the Houston Rockets are the only local franchise to have a practice facility away from the stadium where they play their home games during the regular season and the move only came last summer. The Rockets' practice facility is still within the city limits, which could be the plan for the Texans, too.
According to Alexander's reporting, Harris County is one "vying to keep the Texans" within the lines. The county has several acres at NRG Park where the Texans could build a facility and revitalize that area. Should the two sides work out a deal, this could also lead to potential renovations at NRG Stadium, which the county, Texans and Houston Livestock Show & Rodeo have discussed in recent months within their lease negotiations.
Tomon said that the Texans are looking at many places in the greater Houston area and that a decision has not been final on any spot, though he did say the Texans are moving urgently to finalize a location.
'I don't have an exact timeline,' Tomon told the Chronicle. 'Is that 30 days? Is it six months? But what I would share is the conversations we're having and the opportunities in front of us are at a level where we know we need to get prepared."
The Texans return for the start of training camp late next month. They open the regular season on the road at SoFi Stadium on Sept. 7.

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Minjee Lee has 1st bogey-free round at windy Women's PGA to take 4-shot lead into final day
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timean hour ago

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Minjee Lee has 1st bogey-free round at windy Women's PGA to take 4-shot lead into final day

FRISCO, Texas — Minjee Lee knows how to play in windy conditions having growing up in Australia and now living in North Texas. She also has experience winning majors. The two-time major champion is in position for another one after the first bogey-free round for anyone during the wind-swept KPMG Women's PGA Championship. Her 3-under 69 in the third round Saturday pushed her into the lead, four strokes ahead of Jeeno Thitikul. 'I'm constantly practicing in windy conditions ... It is windy, but not this windy, and it's really consistent as well,' Lee said. 'Yes, I can hit a knock-down shot, but you also have to play the wind. You have to play so much extra out here that you have to be a little more creative.' Lee was at 6-under 210 after beginning the round three strokes behind Thitikul, the world's No. 2-ranked player who led alone at the end of each of the first two days. Lee went ahead to stay with a 2-foot par at the 405-yard 12th hole when Thitikul had her second consecutive bogey, and fourth of the day on way to a round of 76. 'She played absolutely an `A' game for sure,' Thitikul said. 'I never saw her miss today at all.' When Lee did miss, she was 7-for-7 scrambling. Far from tree-lined Sahalee outside Seattle where the Women's PGA was last year, Fields Ranch East at PGA Frisco is much more open and exposed to the ever-present Texas wind that was the strongest it had been all week. There were gusts of more than 30 mph Saturday, with much the same forecast for Sunday. Temperatures were again in the mid-90s. Nelly Korda, the world's top-ranked player, described the conditions as 'just brutal' after her round of 72 that began with back-to-back bogeys. She finished with five birdies and five bogeys and is tied for sixth at 2-over 218. Lee and Thitikul, seeking her first major title, were the only players still under par and will play together again Sunday. Lexi Thompson (75), after a triple-bogey start , was tied for third at 1 over with Hye Jin Choi (72) and Miyu Yamashita (73). Thitikul, from Thailand, had the only birdie Saturday among the 78 players on the 172-yard, par-3 eighth hole, which generally plays downwind and where only 29% of the tee shots all week have stayed on the green. That 13-foot birdie was her first of the day and got her to 5 under, two strokes ahead of Lee. But Thitikul's lead was gone after back-to-back bogeys on the back side. She pushed a 4-foot par chance past the hole at the 383-yard 11th, her first miss inside 5 feet this week. Then her drive at the 417-yard 12th hole went way right into a penalty area. Lee, who won the 2022 U.S. Women's Open and 2021 Evian Championship in France, was steady Saturday with eight consecutive pars before a 4-foot birdie at the 487-yard ninth hole. Her other birdies were an 18-footer at the 515-yard, par-5 14th and a 1 1/2-foot at the bunker-surrounded 236-yard par 4 15th hole. While acknowledging that a four-stroke lead 'feels really big,' Lee isn't taking anything for granted. 'Obviously, major Sunday is a different story. This is round three, so I think, you know, I have to still dig deep and post a score, even with a four-shot lead,' she said. 'So I'm just going to put my head down and just work on the things that I can do and do it to the best of my ability.' Thitikul three-putt from 50 feet at No. 14 was her third bogey in a four-hole stretch. 'Definitely frustrated about the result today a little bit, like not really making putts like the first two days,' Thitikul said. 'But like still on the positive side that, just two players making under par after three rounds, and I'm one.' Semi-retired Thompson, in the second-to-last group, hit her tee shot into the fairway on the 517-yard par-5 first hole, a 207-yard drive into the wind. But she topped her second shot that went only 117 yards, then shanked her next shot right, a ball that was never found for a penalty on way to triple bogey. She followed with another bogey on the second hole, but had two birdies and only one bogey the rest of the way. Thompson, playing for only the seventh time in 16 tournaments this season, won her only major in the 2014 Kraft Nabisco Championship, but her 13 top-five finishes in majors since 2013 are the most by any player and among her 20 top-10 finishes in those events. LPGA rookie Rio Takeda opened with a bogey 6 at the first hole after starting the round tied with with Lee for second place. Takeda later had a pair of double bogeys/ Grace Kim had the best round of the day with a 68 that included six birdies and two bogeys, moving up from a tie for 68th to tied for 10th. Minjee Lee and Andrea (71) had the only other under-par rounds. Kim, among 11 players who got to the weekend right on the 7-over cut, teed off at 6:55 a.m. local time, six hours before the final group did. There was even a hole-in-one, Brianna Do acing the 150-yard fourth hole. ___ AP golf:

Minjee Lee grabs four-shot lead at 'brutal' Women's PGA Championship
Minjee Lee grabs four-shot lead at 'brutal' Women's PGA Championship

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time3 hours ago

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Minjee Lee grabs four-shot lead at 'brutal' Women's PGA Championship

Australian Minjee Lee waves to fans after finishing the third round of the Women's PGA Championship with a four-shot lead (Sam Hodde) Australia's Minjee Lee defied difficult, windy conditions with a remarkable bogey-free three-under par 69 on Saturday to seize a four-stroke lead over Jeeno Thitikul at the Women's PGA Championship in Texas. Lee, chasing her third major title, fired three birdies in one of just three sub-par rounds at Fields Ranch East in Frisco, north of Dallas, where soaring temperatures and wind tested golfers for a third straight day. Advertisement "I just try to stay patient out there," the 29-year-old said after building a six-under total of 210. "You can't get ahead of yourself, especially in these conditions." Trailing Jeeno by three to start the day, Lee grabbed her first birdie at the ninth, where she blasted out of a greenside bunker to four feet and made the putt. She finally took control at the par-five 14th, drilling a 19-foot birdie putt as Jeeno three-putted for a bogey that dropped her three strokes back. Lee added a birdie at the 15th, and remained bogey free with a par save at 18 -- where her second shot raced through the green but she chipped to three feet. Advertisement "I try to stay within myself and play the shot as best as I could," she said. "Just stayed patient, just take it as it comes." Lee, whose 10 LPGA victories include major titles at the 2021 Evian Championship and 2022 US Women's Open, said there would be plenty of work to do on Sunday despite her four-shot cushion. "It's just only getting harder and harder just with I think pressure of a major championship, and also just the course just demands so much from you," she said. World number two Jeeno's hopes of a first major title took an early hit with bogeys at the third and sixth. Advertisement She rolled in a 12-foot birdie at the eighth, but dropped into a tie for the lead after back-to-back bogeys at 11 and 12. She bounced back from her bogey at 14 with a birdie at 15, but gave back a shot at the 16th, finishing with a four-over 76 for 214. Lee and Jeeno, both based in the Dallas area, were the only players under par heading into the final round. US veteran Lexi Thompson, playing a limited schedule this season, shook off a horrendous start to post a three-over par 75 to headline a trio sharing third place on one-over 217. Thompson opened with a triple-bogey and a bogey and added another bogey at the eighth before she made two birdies coming in. Advertisement She was joined on one-over by South Korean Choi Hye-jin, who carded a 72, and Japan's Miyu Yamashita, who shot 73. - No momentum - World number one Nelly Korda had five birdies and five bogeys in her even par 72 to headline a group of four on 218. "It's brutal out there when it comes to the setup of the golf course, wind conditions, everything," Korda said. "I'm very happy with even par. "You're just happy to get 18 under your belt on a day like this," added the American, who said having substantial waits on several tees only added to the difficulty of the day. Advertisement "You don't want to be spending 20 minutes and getting up to the next tee and then you're 15 minutes and getting up to the next tee and it's another 15 minutes," she said. "There is just, like, no momentum in it." Korda was tied with Ireland's Leona Maguire, Japan's Chisato Iwai, South Korean Lee So-mi and American Yealimi Noh -- who had two eagles but also six bogeys in her 74. Australian Grace Kim had the low round of the day, firing six birdies in an impressive four-under par 68 that gave put her among a group of five players on three-over 219. bb/js

Magical Minjee Lee leads Women's PGA Championship
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Minjee Lee is on the precipice of landing a third career major and the biggest cheque in women's golf after seizing a commanding lead at the PGA Championship in Texas. The Australian superstar defied more brutal conditions with a sublime third-round three-under-par 69 to skip out to a four-shot lead at PGA Frisco's scorching and windswept Fields Ranch East course. Lee started the day three shots behind world No.2 Jeeno Thitikul and was unable to make any inroads on the Thai before hitting top gear around the turn. So when's the masterclass in putting @minjeegolf? She sinks this 18-footer to move her lead to three 💪 — LPGA (@LPGA) June 21, 2025 Brilliant off the tee and with the broomstick in hand, the Perth prodigy collected her first birdie of the day on the ninth hole, then nabbed two more on 14 and 15 to turn a three-shot deficit into a four-stroke buffer. After hitting 11 of 14 fairways and needing just 26 putts, Lee finished round three at six under, a score Thitikul briefly reached before stumbling with four back-nine bogeys in a rough four-over round of 76. The leading duo are the only players in red numbers as the season's third major shapes as a Sunday match-play showdown. South Korean Hye-Jin Choi (72), Japan's Miyu Yamashita (73) and American Lexi Thompson (75) are tied for third at one over, seven shots behind the runaway leader. Victory for the 29-year-old would earn Lee the third leg of women's golf grand slam following her 2021 Evian Championship triumph and 2022 US Open success. It's safe to say, @minjeegolf is in her element 😎Tune in now on @Peacock — LPGA (@LPGA) June 21, 2025 Lee is also hoping to snap a 19-month winless run, the longest drought of her decorated career. Victory would also secure Australian women's sport's highest earner another monster cheque of $US3.4 million ($A5.25 million), the equal-highest pay day in her game's history.

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