2025 Open Championship purse, payout: See prize money for winnerNew Foto - 2025 Open Championship purse, payout: See prize money for winner

The2025 Open Championship, the esteemed and historical last major tournament of the year, is set to begin on July 17 at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland. The winner will not only receive a significant portion of the prize money but also the highly coveted and prestigious Claret Jug. The Open Championship prize purse for 2025 will be the same as the 2024's, a total of $17 million. The winner will claim a significant portion of the total, $3.1 million, while the runner-up will claim $ 1.7 million and the third place finisher will take home $1.1 million. Let's delve into the prize money distribution, shedding light on the substantial rewards that await the top finishers at the 2025 Open Championship. British Open 2025:Predictions, picks and odds to win Open Championship The total purse for the 2025 Open Championship is $17 million. The first-place winner will take home $3.1 million of the prize purse. Money amounts don't include ties. All figures according to thePGA Tour,where you can find the full list: First place: $3,100,000 million Second place: $1,759,000 million Third place: $1,128,000 million Fourth place: $876,000 Fifth place:$705,000 Sixth place:$611,000 Seventh place:$525,000 Eighth place:$442,500 Ninth place:$388,000 Tenth place:$350,600 11th place:$319,200 12th place:$282,800 13th place:$266,000 14th place:$249,000 15th place:$231,000 16th place: $212,700 17th place: $202,400 18th place: $193,000 19th place: $184,900 20th place: $176,200 21st place: $168,000 22nd place: $159,600 23rd place: $151,000 24th place: $142,600 25th place: $137,800 26th place: $131,800 27th place: $127,000 28th place: $122,600 29th place: $117,300 30th place: $111,200 This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:2025 British Open purse, payout: 2025 prize money for major

2025 Open Championship purse, payout: See prize money for winner

2025 Open Championship purse, payout: See prize money for winner The2025 Open Championship, the esteemed and historical last major tournamen...
Why College Football Playoff committee could be tested by these two SEC teamsNew Foto - Why College Football Playoff committee could be tested by these two SEC teams

Billy Napierchuckled when I asked him aboutFlorida's schedule. What else could the Gators coach do but laugh? Florida's gantlet in 2025 projects to be among the nation's toughest, while its fourth-year coach tries to stay off the hot seat. "I don't have control over" the schedule, Napier said in May as we chatted in a hotel basement during the SEC's spring meetings. Hard to imagine any coach asking for a schedule like the one Napier's Gators will play. Florida will face seven teams expected to be ranked in the preseason US LBM Coaches poll. With non-conference games against Miami andFlorida Statein the mix, the Gators are one of three SEC teams that will play 10 games against Power Four competition. "Big-picture wise, it can be an advantage or a disadvantage," Napier said of the schedule, "based off" how the College Football Playoff committee makes its at-large selections. Oklahoma'sBrent Venablescan relate. HisSoonerswill face seven, maybe even eight, teams likely to be ranked in the preseason Top 25. Florida and Oklahoma serve as a backbone of the SEC's quest for the playoff committee to more heavily weight strength of schedule when making at-large selections. The SEC continued its strength-of-schedule drumbeat this week during the conference's media days. PRESSURE POINTS:Alabama, Kalen DeBoer face big questions in post-Saban era GO TIME:Auburn's Freeze ends excuses, but is he ready for expectations? The SEC positioned three 9-3 teams for playoff consideration last season based on schedule strength, but neitherAlabama, Mississippi nor South Carolina earned selection. On paper, at least, Florida and Oklahoma will endure a more intense gantlet than those 9-3 SEC teams navigated in 2024. A 9-3 team from the SEC qualifying for the playoff would vindicate the conference's relentless messaging campaign touting its strength of schedule and as it implores the committee to more heavily weight those metrics. In truth, the committee traditionally values the SEC's strength of schedule, but Alabama, Ole Miss and South Carolina each presented résumés that were too flawed a year ago. Also, it became difficult to distinguish which of those three 9-3 teams most deserved playoff consideration. The committee opted for none of them. Ithought the committee erredby awarding the final at-large bid to SMU, which lacked a signature victory despite its 11-2 record, but I didn't interpret the committee's choice as a rule that it would never take a three-loss SEC team instead of a one- or two-loss team from another conference. Florida and Oklahoma, with their capable lineups but daunting schedules, are candidates to become the playoff's first 9-3 qualifier. Each toutsone of the nation's most talented quarterbacks, in Florida's DJ Lagway and Oklahoma's John Mateer, a Washington State transfer. Mateer highlighted Oklahoma's portal plunder that transformed its roster after a losing season. Alabama, too, could present a more compelling playoff case if it finished at 9-3 this season, compared to its three-loss résumé from 2024. The Crimson Tide will play 10 Power Four opponents, after facing nine last year. Two of Alabama's three losses last season came against teams that finished the regular season 6-6. Ole Miss, like Alabama, secured a marquee victory against Georgia, but the Rebels lost at home to woebegone Kentucky. Strength of schedule influences the committee's rankings, but losses to bad or mediocre teams become an anchor on a résumé. Interestingly, Oklahoma and Florida landed crippling blows to SEC's quest for four playoff bids last year, by upsetting Alabama and Ole Miss, respectively, in late November. Let Alabama and Ole Miss be a lesson for Florida and Oklahoma: If you must lose, don't lose to the weaker teams on your schedule. Score some wins against Top 25 opponents, let your strength of schedule work for you, and don't lose to Vanderbilt or Kentucky. Oklahoma won't need to worry about that last point. Its schedule includes neither Kentucky, nor Vanderbilt, nor any SEC opponent that's expected to finish among the bottom four of the conference standings. Oklahoma's schedule amounts to "the biggest challenge in all of college football," Venables said on the SEC Network in December. That's not hyperbole. I could say the schedules staring down Florida and Oklahoma seem engineered to get a coach fired. Alternatively, they're also designed to nudge a team that finishes 9-3 into the playoff. Blake Toppmeyeris the USA TODAY Network's national college football columnist. Email him atBToppmeyer@gannett.comand follow him on X@btoppmeyer. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Florida, Oklahoma could test College Football Playoff committee

Why College Football Playoff committee could be tested by these two SEC teams

Why College Football Playoff committee could be tested by these two SEC teams Billy Napierchuckled when I asked him aboutFlorida's sched...
Syrian forces withdraw from Sweida after ceasefire goes into effectNew Foto - Syrian forces withdraw from Sweida after ceasefire goes into effect

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Syrian government forces largely withdrew from the southern province of Sweida Thursday following days of vicious clashes with militias of the Druze minority. Under a ceasefire agreement reached the day before, which largely halted the hostilities, Druze factions and clerics have been appointed to maintain internal security in Sweida, Syria's interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa said in an address broadcast early Thursday. Thedayslong fightingthreatened to unravel Syria's postwar political transition and brought in further military intervention by its powerful neighbor Israel, which on Wednesday struck the Syrian Defense Ministry headquarters in the heart of Damascus. Israel said it was acting to protect the Druze religious minority. Druze leaders and Syrian government officials reached a ceasefire deal mediated by the United States, Turkey and Arab countries. Convoys of government forces started withdrawing from the city of Sweida overnight as Syrian state media said the withdrawal was in line with the ceasefire agreement and the military operation against the Druze factions had ended. It remained unclear if the ceasefire would hold after the agreement was announced by Syria's Interior Ministry and in a video message by a Druze religious leader. Aprevious agreement Tuesday quickly broke downafter being dismissed by prominent Druze cleric Sheikh Hikmat Al-Hijri. The escalation in Syria began with tit-for-tat kidnappings and attacks betweenlocal Sunni Bedouin tribes and Druze armed factionsin the southern province of Sweida. Government forces that intervened to restore orderclashed with the Druzemilitias, but also in some cases attacked civilians. The Syrian government has not issued a casualty count from the clashes, but some rights groups and monitors say dozens of combatants on both sides have been killed, as well as dozens of largely Druze civilians killed in sectarian attacks. Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, says at least 374 combatants and civilians were killed in the clashes and Israeli strikes, among them dozens of civilians killed in the crossfire or in targeted attacks against the minority group. Videos circulated on social media showed government forces and allies humiliating Druze clerics and residents, looting homes and killing civilians hiding inside their houses. Syrian Druze from Sweida told The Associated Press that several family members who were unarmed had been attacked or killed. Al-Sharaa appealed to them in his address and vowed to hold perpetrators to account. "We are committed to holding accountable those who wronged our Druze brethren," he said, calling the Druze an "integral part of this nation's fabric" who are under the protection of state law and justice, which safeguards the rights of everyone without exception. TheDruze community had been dividedover how to approach al-Sharaa's de facto Islamist rule over Syria after largely celebrating the downfall of Bashar Assad and his family's decades-long dictatorial rule. They feared persecution after several attacks from the Islamic State militant group and al-Qaeda-affiliates the Nusra Front during Syria's 14-year civil war. While it first appeared many Druze hoped to resolve matters diplomatically, with al-Sharaa promising an inclusive Syria for all its different communities, over time they became more skeptical, especially after a counterinsurgency in the coastal province in February turned intotargeted attacks against the Alawite religious minority. The Druze religious sectbegan as a 10th-century offshoot of Ismailism, a branch of Shiite Islam. More than half of the roughly 1 million Druze worldwide live in Syria. Most of the other Druze live in Lebanon and Israel, including in the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in the 1967 Mideast War and annexed in 1981.

Syrian forces withdraw from Sweida after ceasefire goes into effect

Syrian forces withdraw from Sweida after ceasefire goes into effect DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Syrian government forces largely withdrew from th...
Drone attack targets Tawke oilfield in Iraq's KurdistanNew Foto - Drone attack targets Tawke oilfield in Iraq's Kurdistan

BAGHDAD (Reuters) -A drone attack targeted an oilfield operated by Norwegian oil and gas firm DNO in Tawke, in the Zakho Administration area of northern Iraq, on Thursday, the Kurdistan region's counter-terrorism service said. The attack is the second on the DNO-operated field since a wave of drone attacks began early this week. DNO, which operates the Tawke and Peshkabour oilfields in the Zakho area that borders Turkey, temporarily suspended production at the fields following explosions that caused no injuries, the counter-terrorism service said. DNO did not immediately reply to a request for comment. This week's drone attacks have reduced oil output from oilfields in Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdistan region by between 140,000 to 150,000 barrels per day, two energy officials said on Wednesday, as infrastructure damage forced multiple shutdowns. The Ain Sifni oilfield, operated by U.S.-based Hunt Oil, was attacked on Wednesday in the Dohuk region of northern Iraq. Hunt Oil said that none of its team members were injured and its facilities are shut down while it assesses the damage. No group has so far claimed responsibility. However, Iraqi Kurdistan security sources said initial investigations suggest the drone came from areas under the control of Iran-backed militias. (Reporting by Ahmed Rasheed, Writing by Ahmed Elimam; Editing by Hugh Lawson, Barbara Lewis and Sharon Singleton)

Drone attack targets Tawke oilfield in Iraq's Kurdistan

Drone attack targets Tawke oilfield in Iraq's Kurdistan BAGHDAD (Reuters) -A drone attack targeted an oilfield operated by Norwegian oil...
Police: Home of Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte burglarized during All-Star breakNew Foto - Police: Home of Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte burglarized during All-Star break

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — A home belonging to Arizona Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte was burglarized during the Major League Baseball All-Star break, according to police. Scottsdale, Arizona, police confirmed that the department is investigating a "high-dollar residential burglary" that is believed to have happened on Tuesday night, which is when Marte was playing for the National League in its All-Star game win in Atlanta. Numerous personal items and jewelry were stolen. No one was at home when the burglary occured. Police said the home is "reportedly" owned by Marte. Maricopa County Assessor's Office records show Marte owns a home on the block near the investigation. Police say the investigation is ongoing. Marte hit a two-run double in the first inning of the NL's win, whichwas secured after a home run contestat the end of the game after the score was tied after nine innings. The burglary is the latest in a series of thefts from the homes of high-profile athletes acoross the country this year. Players have been targeted because of the high-end products believed to be in their homes and sometimes the thefts occur when they are away with their teams for road games. TheFBI has warnedsports leagues about crime organizations targeting professional athletes. The NFL and NBA haveissued security alertsto athletes. A Seattle man wascharged last monthin connection with a string of burglaries at the homes of prominent active and retired professional athletes in the area. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Police: Home of Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte burglarized during All-Star break

Police: Home of Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte burglarized during All-Star break SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — A home belonging to Arizona Diamond...
12-year-old Yu Zidi of China takes stunning times to the world swimming championshipsNew Foto - 12-year-old Yu Zidi of China takes stunning times to the world swimming championships

Yu Zidi of China is only 12 years old and will race at the world swimming championships later this month in Singapore. That's amazing. But her age is only part of the picture. Not only is she very young, but her times in three events this year are among the best in the world. And here's the kicker. Those times would have been very close to medals in last year's Paris Olympics. Again, she's 12. That's a sixth- or seventh-grade student depending on the school system. Not yet a teenager. "I think it's a great story. I don't know where it will lead," Greg Meehan, the national team director for the American squad in Singapore, told The Associated Press. The world is watching As promising young swimmers do, Yu is clocking personal bests almost each time she competes. Her PBs are more than just confidence boosters, they put her in sight of records, medals and stardom. Yu has qualified in the 200- and 400-meter individual medleys, and the 200 butterfly. She could win a medal in all three. Her time of 2 minutes, 10.63 seconds in the 200 IM at the Chinese championships in May was the fastest ever by a 12-year-old swimmer — male or female — according to World Aquatics, the global governing body of the sport. That was only the start. Her time of 2:06.83 in the 200 butterfly in the same meet would have placed her fourth in last year's Paris Olympics. It was the fifth-fastest time in the world this year and would have been good enough for gold in the 2024 worlds. Again, Yu is 12 years old. To cap off the national championships she swam 4:35.53 in the 400 IM, the fifth-fastest time of the year in that event. That also would have been good for fourth place last year at the Olympics, just 0.6 behind bronze medalist Emma Weyant of the United States. Faster than McIntosh at 12 The 400 IM is dominated by 18-year-old CanadianSummer McIntosh, whoholds the world recordof 4:23.65 and the 200 IM mark of 2:05.70. She's a generational talent, the winner of three gold medals in Paris. By comparison, Yu at 12 is swimming roughly 15 seconds faster in the 400 IM than McIntosh did at 12, and about 12 seconds faster in the 200 IM. In a 50-meter pool, 12 to 15 seconds would be a half-lap of the pool, depending on the event. Yu is not the first young swimmer to excel, but it's how she's doing it — the stunning times and the promise of more to come. Of course there are no guarantees of success, and young swimmers can burn out. Started out as fun Yu said she began swimming at 6 in a water amusement park. "The summer was too hot, and my dad took me to the water park," she told China's official Xinhua News Agency. "I enjoyed the coolness of the water and spent a lot of time in different small pools for kids. One day, a coach approached me and asked if I wanted to swim faster." The rest is history, as they say, as she explained her event preference. "Since I am not competitive in the sprint events, I have to choose the 400-meter individual medley and the 200-meter butterfly as my favorites," Yu told Xinhua. "My age is currently an advantage and I hope to grow and develop more strength in the future." Yu trains at the Hebei Taihua Jinye Swimming Club in Hengshui City, south of Beijing in Hebei Province. Alzain Tareq of Bahrain swam in the 2015 worlds at only 10. She finished last in her event. World Aquatics now has stricter age rules than a decade ago. Swimmers must be at least 14 unless their times meet qualification standards. In effect, this means there is no age limit. Looking to LA Olympics If Yu were to win Olympic gold in three years in Los Angeles, she would be 15. But that wouldn't make her the youngest swimmer to take gold. Kyoko Iwasaki of Japan was 14 years and 6 days old when she won gold in the 200 breaststroke at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. Swimmers tend to peak early, particularly females. The specialty publication and website SwimSwam lists seven swimmers — all women — who won Olympic gold before they turned 15. Three, including Iwasaki, did it in individual events, and four got gold in relays. American superstar Katie Ledecky was 15 years and 139 days when she won the 800 freestyle at the 2012 London Olympics — the first of her nine gold medals over four Olympics. She's still swimmingand is the overwhelming favorite to win the 1,500 meters in Singapore. Ledecky has the top 23 times in history in the event, and also No. 25. For another jolting perspective, consider this. Ledecky's first gold came several months before Yu was born — Oct. 6, 2012. "I have no idea what it's like to compete abroad," Yu told Xinhua. "I really want to experience the world-class competition." The world is watching. ___ AP sports:https://apnews.com/hub/sports

12-year-old Yu Zidi of China takes stunning times to the world swimming championships

12-year-old Yu Zidi of China takes stunning times to the world swimming championships Yu Zidi of China is only 12 years old and will race at...
Senate approves $9 billion in cuts to foreign aid, public media fundingNew Foto - Senate approves $9 billion in cuts to foreign aid, public media funding

Washington— The Senate passed President Trump's request to rescind $9 billion in foreign aid and public broadcasting funding early Thursday, culminating an hours-long "vote-a-rama" and sending it back to the House ahead of a Friday deadline. In a 51-48 vote, Republicans Susan Collins, of Maine, and Lisa Murkowski, of Alaska, joined Democrats in opposing the package. Vice President JD Vance, who casttwo tie-breaking votesTuesday for the measure to clear procedural hurdles, was not needed for final passage. Democratic Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota was hospitalized and missed the vote. Both chambers need to approve the request before it expires at the end of the week, or the funds will have to be spent as lawmakers previously intended. The House approved the original $9.4 billion rescissions request last month, but it faced pushback in the Senate, where some Republicans opposed slashing global health assistance and funding for local radio and television stations. The Senate began the lengthy vote series Wednesday afternoon, rejecting dozens of amendments on retaining international aid and sparing public broadcasting from cuts. The Senate's version targets roughly $8 billion for foreign assistance programs, including the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID. The package also includes about $1 billion in cuts for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which supports public radio and television stations, including NPR and PBS. Senate Republicans met with Mr. Trump's budget director, Russell Vought, on Tuesday as GOP leaders worked to get holdouts on board ahead of the procedural votes later in the day. Vought left the meeting saying there would be a substitute amendment that would eliminate $400 million in cuts to an AIDS prevention program, one of Collins' main concerns. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, a South Dakota Republican, said he hoped the House would accept the "small modification." When asked about the $400 million change, House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, told reporters "we wanted them to pass it unaltered like we did." "We need to claw back funding, and we'll do as much as we're able," Johnson added. But the change did not satisfy Collins and Murkowski. The holdouts said the administration's request lacks details about how the cuts will be implemented. "To carry out our Constitutional responsibility, we should know exactly what programs are affected and the consequences of rescissions," Collins said in a statement Tuesday. In a floor speech ahead of the procedural votes, Murkowski also said Congress should not give up its budget oversight. "I don't want us to go from one reconciliation bill to a rescissions package to another rescissions package to a reconciliation package to a continuing resolution," she said. "We're lawmakers. We should be legislating. What we're getting now is a direction from the White House and being told, 'This is the priority, we want you to execute on it, we'll be back with you with another round.' I don't accept that." Cuts to local radio and television stations, especially in rural areas where they are critical for communicating emergency messages, were another point of contention in the Senate. Republican Sen. Mike Rounds, of South Dakota, who had concerns about the cuts, said funding would be reallocated from climate funds to keep stations in tribal areas operating "without interruption." Republican Sen. Thom Tillis, of North Carolina, who voted for the package, said he expected that Congress would have to try later to fix some of the cuts once their impacts are determined. "I suspect we're going to find out there are some things that we're going to regret," he said Wednesday on the Senate floor. "I suspect that when we do we'll have to come back and fix it, similar to what I'm trying to do with the bill I voted against a couple of weeks ago — the so-called Big, Beautiful Bill, that I think we're going to have to go back and work on." Son of man who was violently detained by ICE reacts after release Mike Johnson breaks from Trump, calls on DOJ to release Epstein files 7.3 magnitude earthquake hits southern Alaska

Senate approves $9 billion in cuts to foreign aid, public media funding

Senate approves $9 billion in cuts to foreign aid, public media funding Washington— The Senate passed President Trump's request to resci...

 

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