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Justin Rose Drops 'Strong' Reaction to Ryder Cup Landing First Euro Player

Justin Rose Drops 'Strong' Reaction to Ryder Cup Landing First Euro Player

Newsweek4 days ago

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
There's still a lot of golf to be played between now and September, including the highly anticipated Open Championship. However, no fan has stopped keeping an eye on the upcoming Ryder Cup, especially now that the teams are starting to take shape.
The American team recently announced that Scottie Scheffler is the first player confirmed for Bethpage Black. It didn't take long for the Europeans to confirm Rory McIlroy as their first lock.
Another Ryder Cup veteran and fan favorite, Justin Rose, shared his excitement on his X account, which is followed by more than 913,000 users.
"Strong first player in team," he posted.
After finishing in the top 20 in the U.S. Open, McIlroy reached 3,040.95 points in the internal European Ryder Cup team ranking, securing his spot on the roster as the first of the six direct qualifiers.
His three PGA Tour victories this season, including the Masters Tournament, naturally played a significant role in this result.
The Northern Irishman also reacted on X to his official inclusion in the team:
McIlroy has played in seven Ryder Cups, winning five. He has contributed 18 career points, and his best performance was in 2023 when he earned four points in five matches.
At the beginning of the current season, the five-time major winner stated that winning the Ryder Cup again on American soil is among his goals for the remainder of his professional career:
"Winning The Masters, winning an Olympic medal and another away Ryder Cup, they are my three goals for the rest of my career," he said last January.
Only one of their five victories has come in the Americas. It was the famous 2012 edition, known as the "Miracle at Medinah," in which the Europeans trailed by four points (10-6) heading into the singles matches, but won 8.5 points on the final day to turn the score around and take the title.
Justin Rose of Team Europe celebrates winning his match 3&2 during the Saturday afternoon fourball matches of the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club on September 30, 2023 in Rome, Italy.
Justin Rose of Team Europe celebrates winning his match 3&2 during the Saturday afternoon fourball matches of the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club on September 30, 2023 in Rome, Italy.Rankings for the European Ryder Cup team
Justin Rose is one of the European players with a strong chance of competing at Bethpage Black in September. Currently ninth in the rankings, the Englishman is a strong candidate to be one of captain Luke Donald's six free picks.
Below are the top 12 rankings as of June 17:
1 Rory McIlroy
2 Tyrrell Hatton
3 Shane Lowry
4 Robert MacIntyre
5 Sepp Straka
6 Rasmus Højgaard
7 Tommy Fleetwood
8 Ludvig Åberg
9 Justin Rose
10 Viktor Hovland
11 Thomas Detry
12 Matt Wallace
More Golf: Sam Burns shrugs off controversial ruling during U.S. Open meltdown

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From Babe to Betts, The Wild Trades that Define the Red Sox After Devers Deal
From Babe to Betts, The Wild Trades that Define the Red Sox After Devers Deal

Fox Sports

time2 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

From Babe to Betts, The Wild Trades that Define the Red Sox After Devers Deal

What is it about the Boston Red Sox and their penchant for blockbuster trades that often feel -- bigger? It could be across the team's 125-year history, their deals have had huge impacts. The infamous deal that sent Babe Ruth to the Yankees in 1920 and sparked an 86-year drought. Or more recently, when the team tempted fate again when trading Mookie Betts to the Dodgers in 2018. Now, Rafael Devers joins that list of superstar players after Boston traded him to the San Francisco Giants on Sunday. Devers was only in the second season of a 10-year, $313.5 million extension and is arguably one of the top 10 hitters in baseball. The 28-year-old will likely be named an All-Star for the fourth time in his career in the coming weeks. A decision that didn't exactly warm Red Sox fans about the direction of the team. And to cap off the chaotic week, Devers will welcome his former teammates to his new digs ahead of a three-game series at Oracle Park, starting Friday. Ahead of Devers' reunion with the Red Sox, let's take an all-time look at how each major trade in the team's history has panned out: [Related: Giants vs. Red Sox Odds: Will We See a Devers Dinger Against Former Team?] 1920: Babe Ruth to New York Yankees The setup and reaction: The transition from a star left-handed pitcher to one of the game's best sluggers would set up a showdown between Ruth and Red Sox owner Harry Frazee. At age 24, having already won three World Series in Boston and having set the season record with 29 home runs, Ruth wanted a deal that would double his salary to $20,000. Frazee balked at the idea and made a deal that sold Ruth's contract to the Yankees for $100,000 that was finalized on Jan. 5, 1920. The verdict: Fail! The amount of money made it an unparalleled move in sports at the time and was splashed on headlines across the country. Frazee got out of a financial pickle and moved from a player that frequently clashed with the organization. The actual cost? A unique place in American lore as one of the biggest blunders in the history of blunders. Ruth won four World Series titles with the Yankees and hammered 659 of 714 home runs in pinstripes. And of course, the "Curse of the Bambino" became one of the most ubiquitous descriptions for prolonged sports misery. 1997: Derek Lowe and Jason Varitek from Seattle Mariners for Heathcliff Slocumb The setup and reaction: It was the July 31 trade deadline, and the Mariners needed relievers. Desperately. They were 60-46 after losing both games of a two-game series to the Red Sox, the second of those on a walk-off. Willing to pay just about anything for anyone, they sent a pair of prospects for Heathcliff Slocumb, Boston's closer who had walked 6.6 batters per nine and had the ERA to show for it. Those prospects were former first-round pick Jason Varitek, and right-hander Derek Lowe. Given Slocumb's struggles and that the Sox were mediocre in '97, Boston media generally felt the deal was the kind the team needed to be making. Varitek hadn't delivered on his promise yet, and Lowe had struggled in a brief stint in the majors as a starter, but the potential was as obvious as Slocumb's control issues. The verdict: Pass! Varitek and Lowe both broke out in 1999, and eventually became vital to their 2004 championship team — the franchise's first since 1918. Lowe ended up in the majors for 17 seasons, was named an All-Star as both a closer and a starter, threw a no-hitter in 2002 and was on the mound for all three of Boston's series-clinching wins in 2004. Varitek played his entire 15-year career with the Sox, was named the third captain in team history and is now their Game Planning and Run Prevention coach on Alex Cora's staff. 1997: Pedro Martinez from Montreal Expos The setup and reaction: The Red Sox rotation was a mess. Knuckleballer Tim Wakefield was a quality arm, but Aaron Sele, Jeff Suppan and Steve Avery had all disappointed, while Tom Gordon had shifted to the bullpen and thrived. Red Sox general manager Dan Duquette had joined the team in 1994, and had let ace Roger Clemens walk as a free agent, thinking his time as that level of pitcher was behind him. (It was not.) Boston needed a new ace before '98, and they got one in reigning NL Cy Young winner Pedro Martinez, whom Duquette had already brought to the Expos in 1993 in what ended up one of the most lopsided deals in MLB history. The Sox gave up promising pitching prospects Carl Pavano and Tony Armas in the trade, and with Martinez set to be a free agent in a year, there was genuine concern alongside the excitement. Was this a high-price rental? Even if Martinez was just as good as he had been for another year, what if he then walked like Clemens had, and now the Sox were out some prospects, too? The verdict: Pass! Weeks later, Martinez signed a then-record $90 million contract, beginning a legendary run in Boston. Over a seven-year span Pedro's ERA was 2.52, and at the height of MLB's steroid era: that figure translates to an adjusted ERA+ of 190, which is to say that he was basically the best season of Clayton Kershaw's career for his entire stint with the Sox. Martinez's "worst" full season in Boston produced 5.5 wins above replacement and the 2004 World Series championship, he led the majors in ERA in four of the six seasons he qualified while in town and ended up in a Boston cap in Cooperstown, to boot. No offense to Pavano or Armas' careers, but they didn't do any of that. 2003: Curt Schilling from Arizona Diamondbacks The setup and reaction: In need of starting pitching following their loss to the Yankees in the 2003 ALCS, Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein immediately set his sights on Schilling, who was the Arizona Diamondbacks' ace at the time. Schilling, however, wanted to pitch for the Yankees (or the "Evil Empire," as Red Sox brass called them at the time). During Thanksgiving weekend in 2003, Epstein successfully made the pitch to Schilling at the pitcher's Arizona home to get him to go to Boston. Schilling, who was the World Series MVP in 2001, waived his no-trade clause and agreed to a three-year, $37.5 million extension (Epstein later said Schilling was reading the book, "Negotiating for Dummies," in between negotiating sessions). The Red Sox sent pitchers Casey Fossum and Brandon Lyon, along with then-minor leaguers Jorge De La Rosa and Michael Goss, to the Diamondbacks for Schilling. At the time of the deal, many experts lauded Boston for landing Schilling, especially as New York was closing in on a deal to acquire Gary Sheffield in the arms race at the height of the Red Sox-Yankees rivalry. The verdict: Pass! Whatever effort Epstein put in to land Schilling ended up being well worth it for the Red Sox. He arguably had the most iconic pitching performance in Red Sox history 11 months after the trade, giving up just one run in seven innings to help Boston win Game 6 of the 2004 ALCS against New York. Schilling pitched that game as blood soaked through his sock, getting his ankle worked on prior to the game to help stabilize the tendon. Schilling's outing helped the Red Sox become the first team in MLB history to come back from a 3-0 series deficit and win en route to winning their first World Series title in 86 years a week later. Schilling also helped the Red Sox win it all again in 2007. 2004: Nomar Garciaparra to Chicago Cubs in 4-team trade The setup and reaction: Theo Epstein's tenure in Boston was full of bold moves. Arguably, his boldest came at the 2004 trade deadline, when he opted to move fan favorite Nomar Garciaparra to the Cubs as part of the four-team deal. Reasons for the Red Sox to trade Garciaparra had mounted in the months prior to the deal. He expressed dissatisfaction with his contract situation in spring training after the team had agreed to a deal to move him for Alex Rodriguez that winter, which fell through at the 11th hour. He was also dealing with an Achilles injury that caused him to miss the first two months of the year, hurting his defense and causing him to miss games even after he made his season debut. Some had even wondered if he quit on the Red Sox when he didn't enter a game against the Yankees earlier in July. Still, the trade was largely viewed as a surprise. Epstein even acknowledged at the time of the deal that it was "with mixed emotions" to let a player whose name had become synonymous with the Boston accent go, calling Garciaparra "one of the greatest Red Sox of all time." The verdict: Pass! While the Red Sox needed to land Schilling to win the World Series in 2004, they needed to move off Garciappara in order to win it all that year, too. Both Orlando Cabrera and Doug Mientkiewicz proved to be pivotal additions at the deadline that year, with the former being a fine replacement for Garciappara at short (.294/.320/.465 slashline in 58 regular season games with Red Sox; .288/.377/.356 slashline in 2004 postseason). Mientkiewicz, meanwhile, helped shore up the Red Sox' infield defense as they struggled during the first half of that season, often being used as a late-game defensive replacement at first. As for Garciaparra, he continued to hit well for a few seasons following the trade. But Epstein's bold move to let him go paid dividends when Cabrera and Mientkiewicz helped the Red Sox win the World Series three months after the trade. 2012: Mega trade with Los Angeles Dodgers (Josh Beckett, Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Nick Punto) The setup and reaction: The Red Sox were supposedly the team to beat in 2011 … until they weren't. 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They then were able to add Jake Peavy and the rest of his $14.5 million salary at the trade deadline, rather than bargain-bin shopping for damaged rotation goods like they had in the recent past. Every one of those players played a significant role in the Red Sox going not just from worst-to-first, but also winning the 2013 World Series. 2020: Mookie Betts to Dodgers The setup and reaction: In 2018, the Red Sox won their fourth World Series of the century with a set of core players that seemingly extended the dynasty embodied by David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez. Betts was already a star player by 2018, but capping off a season in which he won the AL MVP and led the league in batting average and runs scored with a ring? Seeing him walk would be unfathomable. But the seeds of change had been planted even prior to that season. After an arbitration year in 2018 and a 2019 season that barely avoided it, it was obvious Betts was rightfully holding out for a big payday. The Red Sox were uneasy about committing to a long-term deal in an attempt to stay under the $208 million tax threshold. Enter the title-hungry Dodgers, who Boston had beaten in the 2018 Fall Classic. By February 2020, Betts and pitcher David Price were in Dodger blue as part of a three-team deal with Minnesota that netted Jeter Downs, Alex Verdugo, and Connor Wong. The verdict: Fail! A risky move by the Dodgers to essentially take on Price's bloated salary and risk having Betts for just one season ahead of free agency. But Betts signed his 12-year, $365 million deal in Los Angeles ahead of the COVID-19 season and has since led the Dodgers to two World Series titles. A farm product of Boston's system, it'll now be certain Betts finishes his career having played more games for the Dodgers. Verdugo and Downs are gone, and the departure of Devers (after Betts and then two-time champion Xander Bogaerts) now leaves Boston as the clear loser of this deal. Trying to keep Betts, Bogaerts, and pitcher Chris Sale would have been prohibitively expensive, but each of those moves (add Devers to this list now) has hardly brought Boston any success. There likely won't ever be another Bambino-style curse, but the Betts trade sure is beginning to feel like it. BONUS! Landing Rollie Fingers from Athletics (1976): The Red Sox acquired the future Hall of Famer in June 1976, straight-up buying him from the Athletics for $1 million because then-owner Charlie Finley was … doing Charlie Finley things, mostly. Fingers never suited up, though, as commissioner Bowie Kuhn vetoed the transaction — and Oakland's $1.5 million sale of Vida Blue to the Yankees — using his best interest of baseball powers. Manny Ramirez to Dodgers (2008): After years of trade rumors, the Red Sox pulled the trigger on moving Ramirez at the 2008 trade deadline, sending him to the Dodgers in a three-team trade. The move wasn't too surprising at the time, with calls for him to be traded growing in the weeks leading up to it as some thought he wasn't hustling on ground balls. While Ramirez played so well in his two months with the Dodgers that season that he finished fourth in NL MVP voting, the Red Sox emerged from the trade relatively unscathed. Jason Bay was more than a viable replacement for Ramirez, helping the Red Sox reach the ALCS in 2008 before being named an All-Star in 2009. Fred Lynn to Angels (1981): The Red Sox learned that deadlines matter in a painful way during the 1980-81 offseason. Their failure to send contracts to Lynn and Carlton Fisk ahead of the Dec. 20 deadline in 1980 cost them two franchise legends. They got ahead of the Lynn situation by trading him to the Angels shortly later, but accepting a relatively modest deal for a nine-time All-Star in his prime. Fisk, meanwhile, won his arbitration case and became a free agent, later signing with the White Sox. 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FOLLOW Follow your favorites to personalize your FOX Sports experience Boston Red Sox Major League Baseball recommended Get more from Major League Baseball Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more

Club World Cup upsets continue as Flamengo topples powerhouse Chelsea
Club World Cup upsets continue as Flamengo topples powerhouse Chelsea

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Club World Cup upsets continue as Flamengo topples powerhouse Chelsea

Brazilian clubs have made the biggest splash in the FIFA Club World Cup with Flamengo's victory coming on the heels of of Botafogo's shocking defeat of Paris Saint-Germain. The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup has not gone according to plan for some of European soccer's biggest clubs, with Brazilian side Flamengo stunning Chelsea 3-1 on Friday, June 20, providing the latest example. Before a raucous, pro-Flamengo crowd of 54,619 at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, the Brazilian club came from a goal down to provide the latest surprise at the Club World Cup, striking three times in the second half to jump to the top of Group D. The upset came one day after another Brazilian team, Botafogo, shocked the world by taking down UEFA Champions League winners Paris Saint-Germain 1-0. It didn't seem like this game would follow the script of Thursday's shocking result. Neto put Chelsea ahead in the 13th minute after a defensive blunder from Flamengo that could have caused the Brazilian side to lose belief. Instead, a wild six-minute spell in the second half changed everything. First, Bruno Henrique pounced for a 62nd-minute equalizer, and Flamengo nosed in front three minutes later thanks to an acrobatic finish from veteran Brazilian national team defender Danilo. If that served to stagger Chelsea, the English side's fortunes went into a tailspin in the 68th minute, as striker Nicolas Jackson received a straight red card for stomping on the foot of Flamengo defender Ayrton Lucas. Young striker Wallace Yan then completed Chelsea's misery in the 83rd minute, powering a close-range shot past goalkeeper Robert Sánchez. The upset victory left Flamengo – widely regarded as Brazil's most popular soccer team – at the top of Group D with six points, with Chelsea three points behind. MLS's LAFC and Tunisian side Espérance Sportive de Tunis played later on Friday, June 20 in Nashville, and a win for either side would draw them level on points with one of European soccer's giants with one round of games to play. CLUB WORLD CUP: Win, draw or lose, Inter Miami could reach knockout stage Flamengo vs. Chelsea Club World Cup highlights Club World Cup: Brazilian teams, Inter Miami notch early upset wins Most soccer experts felt that the massive spending advantage for Europe's biggest teams would be insurmountable at the Club World Cup, which draws teams from every one of the six confederations that govern soccer in each continent. However, the reality has been far different. Whether it's the oppressive heat that most games have been played in, the timing of the tournament coming in what is normally the early weeks of the European offseason, or a pack of hungry underdogs eager to prove themselves, the Club World Cup has been very competitive thus far. Brazilian clubs have made the biggest splash. Flamengo's win over Chelsea is a stunning outcome, while Botafogo's defeat of PSG – who less than three weeks ago crushed Inter Milan 5-0 in the the UEFA Champions League final, and who opened the Club World Cup by demolishing Atlético Madrid 4-0 – is nothing short of a monumental shock. These aren't isolated incidents, either. Another Brazilian side, Palmeiras, held Portuguese powerhouse Porto to a 0-0 draw earlier in the tournament, while the nation's fourth representative Fluminense came up with the same scoreline against German giant Borussia Dortmund. Thus far, Brazil's contingent has gone unbeaten, winning five times and picking up two ties. Lionel Messi and Inter Miami joined the fun as well, producing what is arguably the biggest international win in MLS history by downing Porto 2-1 on Thursday. That victory unsurprisingly came thanks in large part to a glorious, game-winning free kick from Messi. Elsewhere, Benfica (Portugal's other entrant) needed a late comeback to secure a 2-2 draw with iconic Argentine club Boca Juniors, and Mexican team Monterrey secured a 1-1 draw with Italy's Inter Milan. Mighty Real Madrid, long considered a tournament specialist, started their Club World Cup off with a disappointing 1-1 draw with Saudi Arabian club Al-Hilal. Club World Cup 2025: How to watch, TV, streaming Every one of the 63 games at the Club World Cup will stream for free on DAZN, while select matches will be carried on TBS, TNT and truTV in English. Univision, TUDN, and ViX will all carry games in the U.S. in Spanish. Watch the entire Club World Cup FREE on DAZN

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