With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grassNew Foto - With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grass

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — From thrilling goals to devastating knockout defeats, every four years the FIFA World Cup electrifies the globe. And in one year, 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off with the United States, Canada and Mexico co-hosting an unprecedented event. The tournament, which could feature the likes of superstars Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, will mark the first time three countries co-host across 16 different cities, making for what FIFA sees as the most complex World Cup in history. "Whether they're playing Seattle or Guadalajara, I need these pitches to behave absolutely the same. I want the same bounce. I want the same volleyball action from the players into the grass," said FIFA senior pitch management manager Alan Ferguson, who wants every team to play on a consistent surface, whether it's keeping cool in the Pacific Northwest, at altitude in Mexico City or sweating it out in Miami. "The safety aspect is everything. It's paramount. That has to be my first thought," Ferguson said in an interview at the facility at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, where UT researchers, working with Michigan State University, have been helping FIFA finalize how each venue will prepare its pitch for tournament play. "They need to have confidence if they turn right sharply, left sharply, they have to know that the ground is going to stay where it is," he said. That's not so simple when you're dealing with over a dozen venues that host the NFL to concerts to monster trucks. U.S. venues are likely to face extra scrutiny after last summer's Copa América tournament, in which pitch conditions drew public criticism from players such as Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez, who called the temporary grass field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta a "disaster." "It's definitely upped the stakes, there's no doubt about that," Ferguson said about the fallout from last year's tournament featuring the 16 best teams from North, Central and South America, as well as the Caribbean. "The research was already happening. What we were able to observe at Copa was more traditional, provisional for international soccer pitches. Because your stadiums are so busy here, they are a multi-event business plan, and they flip in and out from event to event. It's not possible to put a traditional soccer field in there," said Ferguson, adding that with the research leading up to this summer's Club World Cup and next year's marquee event, "I'm quietly confident we're heading in the right direction." U.S. stadiums have been at the heart of theartificialturf-natural grassdebateover safety for years. Next summer, all venues will use a natural grass-artificial stitching blend with a focus on what's beneath the turf in addition to the playing surface itself. In April, NBC News was granted exclusive access to the Knoxville facility where researchers led by Professor John Sorochan have been solving for that issue. The team has studied artificial stitching, layering below the grass, root growth, grow light use and other details to ensure each pitch's consistency, whether outdoors or inside. Sorochan, professor of turfgrass science and management, said the secret sauce will include Bermuda grass for the warm season venues and perennial rye mixed with Kentucky blue grass for the cool season venues, as well as the indoor venues. There are also drainage layer recommendations for the indoor venues, which Sorochan said will also help with the pitches' firmness. "A lot of these in here are failures," Sorochan said as he showed us around a grid filled with dozens of grass plots marked by a variety of variables. Some had stitched fibers, making the playing surface firmer. Some sat on top layers simulating what may already be inside a World Cup venue, such as aluminum concert flooring or artificial turf. The team has a facility simulating an indoor stadium's growing conditions. There's even the fLEX machine, which tests the impact on a player's ankle by pushing a soccer shoe into the turf. Seemingly, no piece of data is irrelevant. "We can see how fast the ball comes in and out. We can break down all the film and know exactly the speed and angle and coefficient restitution that comes off of that ball," said Sorochan, standing over a machine that looks like it could be used to launch American footballs for punt return practice. Ferguson said: "It's a science behind the game. And that's what makes the game."

With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grass

With World Cup looming, these scientists are trying to create the perfect grass KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — From thrilling goals to devastating knock...
What is a cardiac ablation? Details of Jim Harbaugh's offseason procedureNew Foto - What is a cardiac ablation? Details of Jim Harbaugh's offseason procedure

Jim Harbaugh told reporters Tuesday he had two successful surgeries during the 2025 NFL offseason. One was a hip replacement; the other was a cardiac ablation done after the 61-year-old coach experienced atrial flutter – a condition during which the heart's upper two chamber beats 250 to 300 times per minute –in a game during the 2025 NFL season. Harbaugh's atrial flutter episode occurred during theLos Angeles Chargers' Week 6 game against theDenver Broncos. He briefly exited the game in the first quarter to get treatment in the locker room. He returned to the sidelines after receiving intravenous fluids and had various tests, including an electrocardiogram, performed. The incident marked Harbaugh's third atrial flutter episode and second during an NFL game. The other in-game incident occurred in a 2012 game between theSan Francisco 49ersandChicago Bears. He did not leave the contest because of the condition, instead opting to receive medical treatment after the game. Harbaugh did not miss any games either time he experienced atrial flutter on the sidelines. However, he did wear a heart monitor for a couple of weeks after the 2024 medical incident. But after his cardiac ablation, Harbaugh says he has a clean bill of health. "The doctors can't find anything wrong with me," Harbaugh said of his offseason procedures, perESPN. "A-grade." Here's what to know about the cardiac ablation procedure Harbaugh went through. AARON RODGERS:QB went to Mike Tomlin's backyard cookout. There was chemistry (and good food) A cardiac ablation is a treatment for irregular heartbeats. It's described by theCleveland Clinicas a "minimally invasive procedure that creates scars to stop the electrical impulses that cause irregular heart rhythms." They add that the procedure can be used to manage abnormal heart rhythms if they don't respond to medication. The Cleveland Clinic detailed how the surgery is done: "A cardiologist (heart specialist) performs a cardiac ablation by inserting a catheter (tube) through a blood vessel to your heart," the site reads. "They use heat (radiofrequency ablation), cold (cryoablation) or short bursts of energy (pulsed field) to create scars in areas where the arrhythmia starts. These scars help block abnormal electrical impulses and prevent abnormal rhythms." Per the Cleveland Clinic, patients typically receive sedation or general anesthesia. The scars do not cause any pain or impact the heart, but rather impact the tissues causing the problem. The surgery can take two to four hours to complete, but can go longer and ultimately varies from person to person. Per the Cleveland Clinic, patients stay at the hospital for six to eight hours after a cardiac ablation procedure. Patients can potentially go home that night, or stay overnight depending on their condition. It can take weeks to heal completely from the surgery, however, and strenuous exercise is to be avoided for at least a week. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What is a cardiac ablation? Jim Harbaugh's procedure, explained

What is a cardiac ablation? Details of Jim Harbaugh's offseason procedure

What is a cardiac ablation? Details of Jim Harbaugh's offseason procedure Jim Harbaugh told reporters Tuesday he had two successful surg...
Newsom and California confront Trump with a potential blueprint for DemocratsNew Foto - Newsom and California confront Trump with a potential blueprint for Democrats

Democratic politicians have spent the last few months talking about standing up toPresident Donald Trumpin his second term. California Gov. Gavin Newsom is among the first faced with figuring out what standing up actually looks like. Allies and opponents agree how Newsom handles the protests – including Trump's calling in the National Guard and sending in active-duty Marines over the governor's objections – will reverberate far beyond California, and long after this week. That's how Newsom is approaching what has become a fight on the streets and in the courts, only a few days after he was responding to aTrump administration effort to identify federal grantsgoing to the state that can be canceled. Other Democratic governors have been calling Newsom, checking in, ticking through scenarios in their minds of how what's happened in California could play out at home for them, according to multiple people briefed on the conversations. Every Democratic governor signed onto a statement over the weekend calling Trump'scall-up of the National Guardan "alarming abuse of power," but they have been treading carefully since then, their eyes on both the politics of potentially triggering Trump and on the legal concerns of how their words might be used in lawsuits they might have to bring. Newsom, people familiar with his thinking say, wants California to hold the line after some universities and law firms facing White House pressure reached concession deals with the administration. "What Donald Trump wants most is your fealty. Your silence. To be complicit in this moment," Newsom said in remarks released Tuesday evening. "Do not give into him." "If some of us can be snatched off the streets without a warrant – based only on suspicion or skin color – then none of us are safe. Authoritarian regimes begin by targeting people who are least able to defend themselves. But they do not stop there," Newsom said, reiterating accusations that Trump officials instigated and inflamed what started as peaceful protests, though there have been skirmishes and occasional violence that Newsom and others have condemned. "This is about all of us. This is about you," he said. "California may be first – but it clearly won't end here. Other states are next. Democracy is next." unknown content item - As obvious as Newsom's presidential ambitions are, several top Democrats say this is much more about America over the next few months than any talk of the 2028 presidential primary. Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, another potential 2028 candidate, has become one of the most outspoken Democrats calling attention to what he says is Trump's direct threat to democracy in his second term. Trump "is clearly trying to scare his opposition into silence, and that is definitely one of the ways that democracies die: when people fear that they are going to face physical harm if they turn out for protests, it often causes people to stay home. That is a tried and true path for democracies to be converted into autocracies. Elections still happen, but the opposition can never amount to any kind of numbers because people fear they'll get the shit kicked out of them if they show up," Murphy told CNN. New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, who acknowledged hisrecord-breaking 25-hour Senate speechcame during a different phase both for Trump and for Democrats' response, saw the faceoff the same way. "With this president's clear authoritarian bent, lack of respect for separation of powers and violations of the law, we're in dangerous territory with still three-plus years to go. That's what California has me concerned about," Booker said. For months, Newsom angered many Democrats by inviting Trump-friendly figures onto his podcast or taking shots at his own party for going too far on the issue of transgender athletes playing in women's sports. He tried to connect with Trump in an effort to get more federal money to rebuild after the devastation of the Los Angeles wildfires at the beginning of the year and suggested he'd work with Trump on tariffs aimed at bucking up the film industry that has been fleeing California, even as other leading Democrats called for more intense pushback, like when Illinois Gov.JB Pritzker said in a fiery speechin New Hampshire in April that, "never before in my life have I called for mass protests, for mobilization, for disruption. But I am now." But the events of the last few days have rekindled the long-simmering rivalry between Trump and Newsom. Newsom dared the Trump administration in one television interview to arrest him rather than targeting immigrant children. Trump then suggested in response to a reporter's question that Newsom should be arrested. The only rationale Trump has offered for making the threat of arresting a sitting governor is because "his primary crime is running for governor, because he's done such a bad job." "I like the fact that when one of Trump's henchmen threatened Newsom with arrest, he said, 'Well, come and get me, here I am.' We're not going to be afraid of Donald Trump because we have the rule of law on our side. We're standing up for the Constitution. The states are not the pawns of the federal government. The states have an independent constitutional and political existence," said Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin, who taught constitutional law before being elected to the House. "Other governors should stand up for the rule of law and stand up for the rights of their people." With some looters also taking to the streets while Trump and his deputy chief of staff refer to an "insurrection," the situationhasn't gone over well with every Democrat, including those who worry about playing into Trump's hands on a signature issue. Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman is among members of the party who have called for a more forceful condemnation of violent protesters. Newsom himself has said that those engaged in violence or attacking police officers would be prosecuted and noted that law enforcement is already reviewing videos of the events to track down more perpetrators. Even before Trump already threatened "very heavy force" if any protesters disrupt the massive military parade he is hosting this Saturday in Washington on his 79thbirthday, leaders in other centers of immigrants were expressing concern about what happens if federal agents target their communities. "I would hope that New Yorkers will speak up and do whatever they believe is their constitutional right in a non-violent way, and if Trump tried to tamp it up, I think the people would see it for what it is," said New York Rep. Greg Meeks. "I would say to New Yorkers and others, 'We know what he's trying to do.'" A few Republicans have joined Democrats in expressing concern, including swing district California GOP Rep. David Valadao, who tweeted Tuesday that he is "concerned about ongoing ICE operations through CA." But for now, most Republican leaders have either been expressing support for Trump or staying quiet about the situation. House Speaker Mike Johnson said he couldn't speak to the legal argument about arresting Newsom, but "he ought to be tarred and feathered." While some Democratic strategists, including some who have kicked in with advice to Newsom in recent days, have urged a more defensive position that echoes Trump's hardline approach to immigration so that they don't give the president a fight he clearly wants, others are glad to see Newsom taking a more forceful lead on his own terms. "Democrats need to recognize that voters are appalled by Trump's overreach on immigration – not just Democratic voters, but independent voters, libertarian leaning voters don't believe in arresting random peaceful people and separating families," said Texas Rep. Greg Casar, the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. "So we shouldn't be scared of going toe-to-toe with Trump on his overreach and abuse of people's rights." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Newsom and California confront Trump with a potential blueprint for Democrats

Newsom and California confront Trump with a potential blueprint for Democrats Democratic politicians have spent the last few months talking ...
Trump's Deportation Numbers, ExplainedNew Foto - Trump's Deportation Numbers, Explained

A Jamaican man is detained by federal agents after his immigration court hearing at the Ted Weiss Federal Building in New York City on on June 9, 2025. Credit - Adam Gray—Getty Images President Donald Trump campaigned on delivering the largest mass deportation effort in US history. What he has delivered so far is a dramatic surge in arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement of people who were living in the U.S. The data shows that interior enforcement has more than doubled since Trump took office, filling up immigration detention facilities across the country. It's those stepped-up efforts by ICE agents in workplaces, courthouses and homes to arrest people that prompted protests in Los Angeles last week. Trump's decision to deploy the California National Guard there over the objections of state and local officials sparked an escalation in protests and violent clashes with law enforcement over the weekend, according to local officials. Trump's upswing in ICE arrests may be starting to yield a surge in deportations. The total number of deportations has stayed essentially level compared to the Biden era—until recently, when the numbers appear to have risen sharply. Here's what the data shows about how the Trump Administration has revamped immigration enforcement and deportations in a few short months. In Trump's first six months, the number of people being apprehended on the Southern Border has plummeted. Instead, an increasing share of those held in immigration detention are people who were arrested by ICE. The most recent ICE detention data shows the average number of people held has gone up 25% since Trump took office. This represents a dramatic shift from how immigration enforcement has long been conducted in the U.S. Under the Biden administration, the majority of people who ended up in immigration detention were those who had recently crossed the border and were arrested by agents with Customs and Border Patrol (CPB). Holding border crossers in detention put them on a faster docket in removal proceedings, paving the way to send them out of the country at a faster clip. One major reason for this shift away from CPB arrests is that fewer people are coming to the border illegally than they were during most of the Biden era. Read more:Inside Donald Trump's Mass Deportation Operation In a recentinterviewwith TIME, Trump border czar Tom Homan said he would like to double the amount of bed space ICE has in detention from 50,000 to 100,000. Having more people held in detention centers could increase the pace of both ICE arrests and deportations. TrumptoldTIME last year he wanted to target 15 million people for removal. He said he was open to using the military to do it, in the face of restrictions in the Posse Comitatus Act that limits the use of the military on U.S. soil. In a campaigninterviewwith ABC News in August, J.D. Vance said, "Let's start with 1 million." At the end of April, the Administration said it had deported more than 139,000 migrants, which was behind pace to reach their aggressive targets. That is a reflection of just how time-consuming and challenging it is to find and remove people living in communities. On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security provided TIME with updated figures from Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin: more than 207,000 deported. That represents a significant increase in the Administration's deportations and may reflect the more sweeping and intrusive actions immigration officials have taken in recent weeks. For context, the federal government deported 271,484 people in the 2024 fiscal year, which ended on Sept. 30. The total number of people being deported has basically been stable, if slightly up, even as an increasing portion are those arrested inside the US by ICE. In May, ICE increased the pace of removal fights, a sign that the number of deportations could increase at a faster rate in the coming months. The Trump administration has asked Congress for more funding to pay for deportations and an increased pace in immigration enforcement. The most recent version of the"Big Beautiful Bill" that Trump is pushing Congress to pass has $168 billion for immigration and border enforcement. That would be a five-fold increase in such funding over the current year, which Congress set at $33 billion. Part of the challenge is finding places to accept deportees. Trump has defied long-standing norms and, some argue, broken laws bysending migrants to a notorious prison in El Salvador and the U.S. military base at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba, while putting others on planes bound for Panama and South Sudan. Homan tells TIME the Administration isin talks with three more countriesto accept U.S. deportees. With the number of deportations not increasing as fast as they would like, Trump officials are pressuring ICE and other government agencies to boost immigration arrests. They are also encouraging migrants in the U.S. to return to their home countries on their own. Trump has offered $1,000 and a free commercial flight to people willing to "self deport."  But even with that incentive, immigrants aren't leaving the country at the pace Trump promised. Muzaffar Chishti, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, says the Administration's self-deport campaign is unprecedented. "Once they realized that fast deportation is not an easy enterprise, they started selling the idea of self deportation at a scale of which probably has not been detected in our history," he says. Contact usatletters@time.com.

Trump's Deportation Numbers, Explained

Trump's Deportation Numbers, Explained A Jamaican man is detained by federal agents after his immigration court hearing at the Ted Weiss...
Los Angeles Rams are 'right place' for wide receiver Davante AdamsNew Foto - Los Angeles Rams are 'right place' for wide receiver Davante Adams

Editor's note: This story is a part of a series by USA TODAY Sports calledProject: June. We will publish at least one NFL-themed story every day throughout the month because fans know the league truly never sleeps. Puka Nacuawas already in the process of changing his number from 17 to 12 whenDavante Adamssigned with theLos Angeles Rams. "Yeah, I had already planned to make the switch over to number 12. It was perfect timing," Nacua said last week. Nacua is more than happy to wear No. 12, as Adams will continue to don No. 17. The seamless transition epitomizes Adams' fit early on with the Rams. "It's been exactly what I've needed. I'm feeling rejuvenated," Adams said Tuesday. "It feels like I've been on this team for a couple years now based on how open and receptive the guys have been to me." The Rams are Adams' third team in two seasons and fourth overall. Adams noted the atmosphere already feels a lot different on the Rams following a bitter breakup with theRaidersand a disappointing finish as a member of theJets. "It feels like a college-type of camaraderie. I don't think I've seen a linebacker and a punter talking as much as I have since I've been here, or the kicker and quarterbacks, or whoever it is. There's just so much crossover. "Adams said. "I feel like this is what I needed just based off the vibe and the aura of the building. Everybody's in a good mood. It's not like a dark cloud over the building, and I've experienced that quite a bit over the last few years. So, it's a glaring difference when you come into a building like this." The quarterback and wide receiver connection is important on all teams, but particularly for Adams. Adams has been close with his starting quarterback for most of his career. The wideout played withAaron Rodgersfor eight seasons in Green Bay before he reunited with his college teammateDerek Carrwith the Raiders. Carr signed with the Saints in 2023 after being released by the Raiders. Adams became disgruntled in Las Vegas, was traded during the 2024 season and rejoined his friend Rodgers with the Jets. The relationship between Adams andMatthew Staffordhas grown since the wide receiver joined the Rams in March and continues to develop. "It's always a work in progress. We're always talking out there, which is a lot of fun. A guy that's a veteran player, has played a lot of football, and had a lot of success, so it's fun just trying to communicate as much as I can with him," Stafford said. "It's fun to work with guys that understand the game and still have a lot left in the tank. So, it was good." The connection between Adams and Stafford on and off the field could determine whether the Rams can repeat as NFC West champions and be a legitimate contender. Stafford's already built chemistry with Nacua and had a well-documented rapport with Cooper Kupp that helped the franchise win Super Bowl 56. The Rams essentially replaced Kupp, who's battled injuries since the Super Bowl-winning season, with Adams. Adams is one of best wide receivers of his era. He's produced five straight 1,000-yard seasons, tied for the second-longest active streak in the NFL. Additionally, he's one of four players in NFL history to record 100-or-more receptions and 1,000-or-more yards in four consecutive seasons (2019-22) and is the only player in NFL history to tally three seasons of at least 110 receptions, 1,350 receiving yards and 11 touchdowns. According to NFL Next Gen Stats, Adams averaged over three yards of separation last season. He's 32 years old and is entering his 12th season, but he's shown he's got plenty of Pro Bowl-level football in front of him. And the onboarding process thus far is going as seamless as obtaining his No. 17 jersey number. "We've got a really good quarterback in here. You've got a really good young team that shows a lot of promise and was obviously really close to being able to have a chance at the whole thing last year," Adams said. "So just knowing how hungry this team is and seeing the work they're still putting in after having a year like last year—it just kind of confirms that I'm in the right place." Follow USA TODAY Sports' Tyler Dragon on X@TheTylerDragon. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'I'm feeling rejuvenated': Rams are good match for Davante Adams

Los Angeles Rams are 'right place' for wide receiver Davante Adams

Los Angeles Rams are 'right place' for wide receiver Davante Adams Editor's note: This story is a part of a series by USA TODAY ...
2025 U.S. Open Preview: At stately Oakmont, carnage awaits (plus our picks to win)New Foto - 2025 U.S. Open Preview: At stately Oakmont, carnage awaits (plus our picks to win)

OAKMONT, Pa. — There are mountains, and then there's Everest. There are tournaments, and then there is the U.S. Open. There are golf courses, and then there's Oakmont. If you've managed to score an invitation to play here, in this tournament, at this moment, you may think you're ready. You're not ready. This week, Oakmont hosts the 125th U.S. Open, the 10th time this venerable old battleship has hosted the national open. No course has hosted more U.S. Opens, and no American course outside of Augusta National has hosted more majors. Oakmont has been the site of some of golf's finest moments — Arnold Palmer lost in a playoff in 1962 to a beefy youngster winning his first tournament, an Ohio kid by the name of Jack Nicklaus. Eleven years later, Johnny Miller authored one of the greatest Sunday rounds in major championship history, carding a 63 to capture the U.S. Open. Most recently, Dustin Johnson overcame a mid-round rules controversy to win the 2016 U.S. Open. Designed by Henry Fownes, a steel industry magnate and amateur architect — he designed just this one course — Oakmont opened in 1904, immediatelyestablishing itself as one of the toughest courses in the country. The course initially played to a par 80, even featuring a par 6 hole. For the 2025 U.S. Open, the course will run 7,372 yards and play to a par of 70. One of Oakmont's most notable features is its sloping, ultra-slick greens. The entire green surface slopes either toward or away from play, posing a challenge no matter where approaches land. Sam Snead once joked that when he put down a dime to mark his ball, it slid all the way off the green. The course's signature elements are its two distinctive bunkers, the Church Pews — islands of fescue in the middle of a bunker between the 3rd and 4th holes — and the Piano Keys — similar peninsulas adjacent to the 15th. They're visually distinctive, and fortunately for today's players, they don't still have one of Oakmont's most diabolical creations: long furrows, carved in the Allegheny River sand by a hundred-pound rake called the "Devil's Backscratcher." Oakmont delights in tormenting players, but that was too much. Can anyone stop Scottie? No one is riding higher right now than Scottie Scheffler, three-time major winner and golf's reigning alpha dog. He's flirted with the U.S. Open — he has three top-seven finishes in his last four Opens — but even he will need to be at the top of his considerable game to bring this one home. Rory's next act After completing his life's mission by winning the Masters back in April, Rory McIlroy has, understandably, slowed down considerably. He posted unspectacular rounds at the PGA Championship in May, and missed the cut last week in Canada — not exactly the way you want to come into a major. The Bryson Empire There's nobody in golf — heck, nobody in sports — quite like Bryson DeChambeau, who has completely remade himself from sullen nerd to affable YouTube star … and, amazingly enough, he's one of the best players in the world besides. He won last year's U.S. Open in one of the most dramatic finishes you'll ever see, and he's primed to delight his millions of social media viewers with an encore. Career salvation Several recent U.S. Open champions — Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka and Collin Morikawa — have found themselves unexpectedly adrift in recent years. All three could use another win to realign the trajectory of their careers. Another missed opportunity — or, worse, another missed cut — and the already-loud questions will grow deafening. The Great Unknown Since Tiger Woods captured that epochal U.S. Open victory in 2008, a few future Hall of Famers (McIlroy, Rahm, Koepka) have captured titles — but a whole lot of one-major champs have had the best week of their lives on the biggest week of their lives. Guys like Graeme McDowell, Webb Simpson, Lucas Glover, Gary Woodland, Matt Fitzpatrick and Wyndham Clark have stepped up when the spotlight was the brightest. Will we have another champion come from out of (almost) nowhere this week? He'll earn it, no matter who he is. Jay Hart:Collin Morikawa —Have you heard the rough is thick at Oakmont? If you haven't, you will within 30 seconds of the start of Round 1 on Thursday. So it doesn't take a genius to figure out that you're going to have to stay out of trouble this week to survive. For that reason, I'm going with Morikawa, who's ranked second in hitting fairways this season. A win would also put him one leg (The Masters) from the career grand slam. Ryan Young:Scottie Scheffler —This is the easiest pick out there, and it doesn't need much of an explanation. Nobody in the golf world is playing better than Scottie Scheffler right now. Not even close. He's won three of his last four starts without much of an issue whatsoever, so why would things be any different at Oakmont? It's only a matter of time before Scheffler breaks away from the field this week. By Sunday afternoon, he'll have won his second straight major championship. Jay Busbee:Bryson DeChambeau —This is what I get for picking last. I don't have confidence in Rory McIlroy's driver or Jon Rahm's closing speed, so they're out. I also am not entirely thrilled about the state of Bryson DeChambeau's iron play — he effectively shot himself right out of both the Masters and the PGA Championship with his balky approaches — but distance is a serious weapon at Oakmont, and DeChambeau appears willing to just blast the hell out of the ball and figure out what to do next when he's down in the shadow of the flagstick. Since this is a multi-day sporting event in the year 2025, naturally all coverage is spread out over a range of networks and streamers. NBC has the broadcast rights this year, which means you'll need to locate USA Network on TV and sign up for a free preview — er, log in to your Peacock account in addition to watching on broadcast NBC.Full day-by-day schedule is right here; naturally, no two days are anywhere close to alike. The U.S. Open begins Thursday morning. But if you happen to miss this one, don't worry. The tournament is coming back to Oakmont in 2034, 2042 and 2049. Oakmont is going to be part of the U.S. Open story for a long, long time.

2025 U.S. Open Preview: At stately Oakmont, carnage awaits (plus our picks to win)

2025 U.S. Open Preview: At stately Oakmont, carnage awaits (plus our picks to win) OAKMONT, Pa. — There are mountains, and then there's ...
Trump wants to 'liberate' Los Angeles, residents say 'no thanks'New Foto - Trump wants to 'liberate' Los Angeles, residents say 'no thanks'

By Brad Brooks (Reuters) -U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpsays he sent in the National Guard and Marines to "liberate" Los Angeles from the violence of protesters, but some residents of Little Tokyo, a neighborhood hit hardest by the unrest say "no thanks" Mr President. A dozen people who live, work or frequent the neighborhood, where Japanese is heard spoken as frequently as English in shops and restaurants, on Tuesday told Reuters that Trump's use of the military was inflaming the protests against recent immigration raids in Los Angeles. "The president sending in the National Guard and Marines has only made things worse, it's made the protesters go crazy," said Sulieti Havili, who lives nearby and helps run a Pokemon club with over 6,000 members that routinely plays in Little Tokyo. "They are doing nothing to protect this community." Havili, 25, who was out picking up trash in Little Tokyo with her Pokemon club partner Nolberto Aguilar, 42, said it was clear to her that Trump sending in thousands of military personnel had "brought out the worst in the protesters" and only served to aggravate the situation. Aguilar added that Trump's deployment of troops was thwarting the will of most Los Angeles citizens and local leaders, fanning the flames created by ICE immigration raids, that he said targeted law-abidingimmigrants. The Trump administration says its immigration raids are rounding up de facto criminals for lacking proper documents to stay in the United States. California Governor Gavin Newsom has said the use of military personnel to combat the protests had "inflamed a combustible situation" and warned that "democracy is under assault." Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has said that Trump's use of troops was a deliberate effort to create "chaos." The Trump administration strongly rejects the accusations and says their actions were needed in the face of local and state leaders inability to get the situation under control. 'INSTIGATING' ACTION Little Tokyo, a charming neighborhood with shops selling Japanese goods and restaurants serving up some of the city's finest sushi, abuts the federal buildings where protesters have gathered for five nights in a row. For the past two nights, when police and National Guard troops have forcibly dispersed protesters in the early evening, demonstrators scatter into smaller groups into Little Tokyo, which has been covered with anti-ICE and anti-Trump graffiti. Running skirmishes well into the night in the neighborhood has seen police use booming flash-bangs and firing other "less lethal" munitions at protesters. Several of those interviewed in Little Tokyo asked that they not be named, saying they feared reprisals - from the federal government. Many were immigrants themselves or had family members who were not born in the U.S., and feared making themselves or their loved ones targets of ICE. One of those was Anthony, who works at a tea shop in the neighborhood. "There is no question that the president sending in thousands of National Guard and 700 Marines has done nothing but make the protesters more aggressive," he said. "It's instigating the protesters and making things worse." Samantha Lopez, a descendent of Filipino immigrants who works at a Korean ice cream parlor in Little Tokyo, said she felt empathy for the demonstrators but rejected any acts of vandalism or violence they carry out. Still, she blamed the use of military personnel for creating the unrest. "It's just poor handling of protests that stay peaceful until they're confronted by officers," Lopez said. "It's bad for business, and it's bad for this neighborhood." (Reporting by Brad Brooks in Los Angeles; Editing by Michael Perry)

Trump wants to 'liberate' Los Angeles, residents say 'no thanks'

Trump wants to 'liberate' Los Angeles, residents say 'no thanks' By Brad Brooks (Reuters) -U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpsays h...

 

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