Cameron Young holds five-shot lead at Wyndham ChampionshipNew Foto - Cameron Young holds five-shot lead at Wyndham Championship

Cameron Young is in ideal position for his first PGA Tour victory after threatening to run away from the pack at the Wyndham Championship. Young shot 5-under-par 65 in Saturday's third round at Greensboro, N.C. Young is at 20-under 190 for a five-stroke advantage on Colombia's Nico Echavarria. Young has been a runner-up seven times since joining the tour in 2022. Chris Kirk (67), Mac Meissner (70) and defending champion Aaron Rai (69) of England are tied for third at 12 under. Young, who was at 15 under through the first two rounds with the 125 matching the tournament's 36-hole scoring record, was tearing through Sedgefield Country Club. Through six holes of the third round, Young's margin rose to eight strokes on a quintet that was trying to keep him in their sights. But Echavarria, who shot 64, had birdies on four of the final seven holes to rise into contention. He saw a leaderboard during his round when he was in second place -- but eight strokes behind Young. "That's not normal for a PGA Tour event," Echavarria said. "He's playing well. But there are still 18 more holes to go." Young had birdies on Nos. 3-6. Until the 15th hole Saturday, Young's lone bogey in the tournament came on No. 1 (his 10th hole) of the first round Thursday. He later added two birdies. Young, 28, played collegiately at nearby Wake Forest. He had three holes to finish in the second round Saturday morning before the third round. Rai lost momentum he had in the second round when he came back to complete that round. Then in the third round, he was 2 over through 12 holes before three consecutive birdies put him back in the mix. Amateur Jackson Koivun, a college golfer for Auburn, shot 65 and is alone in sixth place at 11 under. "It's just a lot of fun out here," Koivun, 20, said. "At the end of the day, I feel I can come out here and compete. Always that learning curve (because) these guys are really good. I'm just happy to be out there with that later tee time and see what I can do." South Korea's Sungae Im, after a pair of 64s and playing in the final group in the third round, dipped with a 73. It was a long day at the course. Some golfers had as many as eight holes to complete in the second round, which was suspended Friday afternoon because of storms. Tom Kim withdrew rather than completing the second round. The third round used threesomes, starting on the first and 10th tees. The Wyndham Championship marks the last tournament on the PGA Tour's regular season, so there will be crucial developments throughout Sunday's round as golfers aim to secure spots in the top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings in order to qualify for the postseason. After Saturday's third-round 70, Gary Woodland is right at No. 70 in the standings. He's at 9 under for the tournament. "I think I know I'm playing well," Woodland said. "I can rely on that." There hasn't been a golfer on the PGA Tour with a five-stroke lead or better through 54 fail to win since 2022. There were only 11 birdies on No. 18 in the third round, so golfers will want to make their moves as soon as possible Sunday. --Field Level Media

Cameron Young holds five-shot lead at Wyndham Championship

Cameron Young holds five-shot lead at Wyndham Championship Cameron Young is in ideal position for his first PGA Tour victory after threateni...
Lionel Messi exits Inter Miami match with apparent hamstring injuryNew Foto - Lionel Messi exits Inter Miami match with apparent hamstring injury

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Lionel Messi exited Inter Miami's Leagues Cup match against Necaxa on Saturday night after suffering an apparent hamstring injury in the opening minutes. After the match that InterMiami won in a penalty shootout, coach Javier Mascherano indicated that Messi would undergo testing on Sunday to determine the severity of the injury. "He felt discomfort," Mascherano said through an interpreter. "We will not be able to know until tomorrow how severe the injury is. There's probably something there. He was not in pain, but he did feel a pull." Messi was injured around the eighth minute when he fell while being challenged by a pair of defenders near the penalty area. He fell to the ground and slammed his fist in frustration before walking toward midfield as play continued. He walked slowly toward the Inter Miami bench before sitting down on the pitch. Trainers came out and worked on his right upper thigh area for a couple of minutes before he subbed out for Federico Redondo in the 11th and immediately walked to the locker room. Messi has dealt with numerous hamstring injuries throughout his career and has missed time over the past couple of seasons dealing with various leg injuries — the most recent issue was with his left adductor, which sidelined him for a pair of Argentina's World Cup qualifiers earlier this year. The injury puts his status for Inter Miami's next Leagues Cup match in jeopardy. The Herons take on Pumas UNAM on Wednesday. Mascherano has been tasked with managing Messi's packed workload all season. The 38-year-old star was experiencing fatigue late last month and skipped the MLS All-Star game, which led to aone-match suspensionby the league for violating its rules on participation in the exhibition match. Messi was unavailable for Inter Miami's match against Cincinnati on July 26, which allowed him a bit of rest. "He is someone who would rather play than rest," Mascherano said on Friday, adding that Messi would tell the team if he is experiencing fatigue. "Clearly, we talk about the situation and we manage it," he said. "But it has to be a conversation with the player. They know where they can push their body and up to which point they can't. Leo is a special case. ... Perhaps if you make him rest, he feels worse. If we see a red flag or a risk, we aim to speak to the players." ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Lionel Messi exits Inter Miami match with apparent hamstring injury

Lionel Messi exits Inter Miami match with apparent hamstring injury FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — Lionel Messi exited Inter Miami's Leagu...
Jeanine Pirro confirmed as U.S. attorney for D.C. as Trump and Democrats trade barbsNew Foto - Jeanine Pirro confirmed as U.S. attorney for D.C. as Trump and Democrats trade barbs

WASHINGTON —Former Fox News host Jeanine Pirrowon Senate approval to become U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia on August 2 as Republicans raced during a weekend session to confirm a long list of PresidentDonald Trump's nominees. Pirro wasconfirmedin a party-line vote, 51-45. Republican Sens. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Roger Wicker of Mississippi and Democratic Sens. Ruben Gallego and Peter Welch did not cast votes. The conservative television star has been serving in the role on an interim basis since May, when Trumpwithdrewhis previous nominee, Ed Martin,amid Republican criticism of Martin'ssupport for Jan. 6 rioters. Trump granted clemency to the rioters on his first day in office. Pirro was the elected district attorney in Westchester County, New York, and a county judge before she joined Fox. She hosted "Justice with Judge Jeanine" on the network for 11 years and was named in a defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems that ended in a $787.5 million settlement. More:'Judge Jeanine' Pirro pushed election falsehoods. She's Trump's pick for D.C. prosecutor. Days before Pirro's confirmation, Trump directed lawmakersto postpone their summer recessand clear a backlog of nominees whose confirmations had been delayed by Democrats over objections to his agenda, including judicial nominees. The president reversed course amid the marathon vote session on Aug. 2 . In a post on Trump Social, Trump accused Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of "demanding over One Billion Dollars in order to approve a small number of our highly qualified nominees." "This demand is egregious and unprecedented, and would be embarrassing to the Republican Party if it were accepted," Trump wrote. "It is political extortion, by any other name. Tell Schumer, who is under tremendous political pressure from within his own party, the Radical Left Lunatics, to GO TO HELL! Do not accept the offer, go home and explain to your constituents what bad people the Democrats are, and what a great job the Republicans are doing, and have done, for our Country." Schumer blasted Trump at a late-night news conference, where he accused theGOPpresident of throwing in the towel "in a fit of rage" and refusing to negotiate. Contributing: Erin Mansfield and Aysha Bagchi This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Senate confirms Trump pick Jeanine Pirro as U.S. attorney for D.C.

Jeanine Pirro confirmed as U.S. attorney for D.C. as Trump and Democrats trade barbs

Jeanine Pirro confirmed as U.S. attorney for D.C. as Trump and Democrats trade barbs WASHINGTON —Former Fox News host Jeanine Pirrowon Senat...
Trump tells Schumer to 'go to hell' as Senate heads home after failed attempt to strike deal on nomineesNew Foto - Trump tells Schumer to 'go to hell' as Senate heads home after failed attempt to strike deal on nominees

Hours after President Donald Trump told Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer to "go to hell" in a Saturday post onsocial media, the Senate headed into recess without reaching a deal over confirming Trump's nominees. Senate Republican leader John Thune, Schumer and the White House had been engaged in a round of intense talks toend the standoffso senators could return to their home states, sources briefed on the conversations told CNN. Schumer had requested federal funds be released and that Trump agree not to push another legislative package that would slash federal funding, sources told CNN. But, on social media, Trump called Schumer's demands "egregious and unprecedented," a sign that talks had collapsed. Trump had wanted the Senate to confirm his nominees even if that meant skipping the August recess, but his post showed he wasn't interested in agreeing to Democrats' terms. "Tell Schumer, who is under tremendous political pressure from within his own party, the Radical Left Lunatics, to GO TO HELL! Do not accept the offer, go home and explain to your constituents what bad people the Democrats are, and what a great job the Republicans are doing, and have done, for our Country. Have a great RECESS," he wrote. On the Senate floor Saturday night, Thune asked for unanimous consent for the chamber to vote on a handful of nominations and then break for a month. Democrats had been slow-walking Trump's lower-level nominees, forcing Thune to keep the Senate in session this weekend to confirm them. In the minority, Democrats have the power to force Thune to jump over time-consuming hurdles before the chamber can vote. Schumer made several demands to agree to let a batch of nominations be quickly confirmed by the Senate, according to the sources. The demands included the unfreezing of federal funds for an array of programs, including the National Institutes of Health and foreign aid. The New York Democrat also wanted Trump to agree that he won't attempt to push through another package to slash federal funding known as "rescissions" —after a $9 billion packageto codify some cuts was approved earlier this summer. Schumer said in a news conference Saturday night that Democrats were "serious" about finding a "reasonable path" to allow bipartisan consideration of Trump's nominations, but that the president wouldn't agree to the terms. "In a fit of rage, Trump threw in the towel, sent Republicans home, and was unable to do the basic work of negotiating. Is this the 'Art of the Deal'?" Schumer said, pointing to a poster printed with Trump's social media post. Schumer declined to get into details of the negotiations with the White House and Thune but said that both sides were "getting close on a whole lot of issues, and Donald Trump just pulled the rug out from under people." CNN has reached out to the White House and to Thune for comment. This story and headline have been updated with additional developments. CNN's Samantha Waldenberg contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Trump tells Schumer to ‘go to hell’ as Senate heads home after failed attempt to strike deal on nominees

Trump tells Schumer to 'go to hell' as Senate heads home after failed attempt to strike deal on nominees Hours after President Donal...
Romy Gonzalez hits a first-inning homer and Red Sox go on to beat Astros 7-3New Foto - Romy Gonzalez hits a first-inning homer and Red Sox go on to beat Astros 7-3

BOSTON (AP) — Romy Gonzalez homered over the Green Monster on the first pitch faced by a Boston batter, Trevor Story added a two-run shot, and the Red Sox beat the Houston Astros 7-3 on Saturday. Abraham Toro added a two-run drive — one of three homers the Red Sox hit over Fenway Park's fabled left-field wall ­— and Story added an RBI double as Boston won its third straight. Houston's Christian Walker homered for the second straight day, a two-run shot off Walker Buehler in the first inning. The benches and bullpens cleared when Astros reliever Héctor Neris yelled at the Red Sox dugout and third-base coach Kyle Hudson at the end of the seventh. But order was quickly restored. After beating theAL West leaders on Roman Anthony's walk-off single in the series opener on Friday night, the Red Sox erased a quick 2-0 deficit when Story hit his drive in a three-run third against Colton Gordon (4-4) that pushed Boston ahead 4-2. Story's shot hit the top of a billboard over the Monster seats and bounced out of Fenway after Rob Refsnyder's RBI single. Justin Wilson (3-1) came on in the fifth inning with runners on second and third with Boston leading 6-3 and struck out the only two batters he faced. Aroldis Chapman got the final two outs for his 20th save. Gordon gave up six runs in four-plus innings. Key moment The Astros loaded the bases in the eighth against Jordan Hicks, but Carlos Correa struck out looking on a 99 mph fastball. Key stat Boston's bullpen went 4 2/3 scoreless innings. Up next Astros LHP Framber Valdez (11-4, 2.62 ERA) is set to face Red Sox RHP Lucas Giolito (7-2, 3.80) on Sunday in the series finale. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Romy Gonzalez hits a first-inning homer and Red Sox go on to beat Astros 7-3

Romy Gonzalez hits a first-inning homer and Red Sox go on to beat Astros 7-3 BOSTON (AP) — Romy Gonzalez homered over the Green Monster on t...
Rookie Agustín Ramírez hits two solo homers as the Marlins beat the Yankees 2-0New Foto - Rookie Agustín Ramírez hits two solo homers as the Marlins beat the Yankees 2-0

MIAMI (AP) — Rookie Agustín Ramírez homered twice for the only runs of the game and the Miami Marlins beat the New York Yankees 2-0 on Saturday. Eury Pérez pitched six innings of two-hit ball as the Marlins won their fourth straight and clinched the series against the Yankees following Friday's 13-12 series-opening win. After experiencing problems with his pitchcom device that caused three brief delays in the first inning, Pérez (4-3) struck out six and walked three in his 88-pitch outing. Relievers Ronny Henriquez and Tyler Phillips followed Pérez with perfect innings before Calvin Faucher retired the three batters he faced in the ninth for his 11th save. Miami has won six consecutive series and is 29-14 since June 13. The Marlins struck quickly when Ramírez connected off Yankees starter Cam Schlittler in the first. Ramírez drove a fastball 421 feet into the left-center field seats for his 16th homer. Ramírez hit another solo drive against Schlittler (1-2) in the fourth. Making his fourth major league start since being promoted from Triple-A on July 9, Schlittler allowed two runs and four hits while striking out six in five innings. Saturday's announced attendance of 34,645 surpassed the Marlins' previous season-home high of 32,299 in Friday's opener against New York. Key moment Pérez struck out Ryan McMahon and retired Anthony Volpe on a groundout after he allowed a one-out double to Ben Rice and walked Paul Goldschmidt in the fifth. Key stat Marlins left fielder Kyle Stowers had his sixth assist of the season when he threw out Trent Grisham at the plate as he attempted to score from second on Giancarlo Stanton's single in the first. Up next RHP Luis Gil will make his season debut when he starts the series finale for the Yankees on Sunday. The reigning AL Rookie of the Year has been sidelined since spring training because of a lat strain. The Marlins will go with RHP Edward Cabrera (4-5, 3.35). ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

Rookie Agustín Ramírez hits two solo homers as the Marlins beat the Yankees 2-0

Rookie Agustín Ramírez hits two solo homers as the Marlins beat the Yankees 2-0 MIAMI (AP) — Rookie Agustín Ramírez homered twice for the on...
Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 monthsNew Foto - Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 months

BATON ROUGE, La. — Awife of a Marine Corps veteran and mother of twowas released from ICE custody on Monday after being detained in May during what she says she thought was a routine immigration office visit, she and her husband tell CBS News. "I feel like a mom again, because well, I was, at some points, I was feeling guilty, like I failed my kids, because I was, you know, without them," Paola Clouatre, 25, said in a phone interview Thursday. Asked how she feels being reunited with her husband and children, she said, "It feels good — good to be back with my family and my babies." She had just given birth to their second child and was still breastfeeding when she was detained on May 27. She was taken to an ICE detention facility in northern Louisiana, about four hours away from their Baton Rouge home. Her husband, Adrian Clouatre, would drive eight hours round-trip each week to visit with their infant daughter and 2-year-old son. "It was very difficult," Paola said. "They gave me a pump so I could pump milk and continue producing milk for when the baby came to be able to give it to her." Adrian Clouatre, 26, served in the Marine Corps for five years as an intelligence analyst. He said his wife was put in handcuffs in the lobby of an immigration enforcement field office in New Orleans after wrapping up a meeting with a staffer from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services about her green card application. "I was furious," he said in an interview with CBS News in June about the arrest. "I felt betrayed. They told us we passed the interview. ... They knew I was a veteran, they knew that my wife was breastfeeding our 9-week-old daughter, they knew we had two kids. ... I cried the whole way to my car after I left the building." Asked about the conditions she experienced during her time inside the detention facility, Paola said, "It's difficult to be there, because they have a lot of rules. They are very strict. So it's very, very, hard to be there." But this week, Adrian said he finally got the call he'd been hoping for — his wife said she was going to be released, and he needed to make the drive one last time to pick her up. "She called me from a CPO [officer's] phone, like one of the ICE agent's phones," he said. Paola said she didn't meet anyone else detained inside the facility who had a military family member or who was still breastfeeding. The couple met when he was still in the service in California, and they married in 2024. Adrian says his wife now wears a monitor on her ankle, as part of her condition of release on a recognizance bond, and has to check in every two weeks with an ICE parole officer. The couple had one such appointment Thursday morning. "It was good to meet him today in the morning," Paola said about meeting with the parole officer assigned to her case. "He is a nice person." Paola says she and her mother came to the U.S. from Mexico when she was a child, but her mother abandoned her when she was still a teenager, leaving Paola homeless. She said she hadn't spoken to her mother in years. It wasn't until this spring that she learned her mother had skipped a 2018 immigration hearing, and she says she had "no idea" the federal government had issued a deportation order against both of them as a result. "There was no way for her to know about the removal order," Adrian said. Adrian said they thought they were going through the proper channels to obtain a green card for Paola after their marriage, and the process had previously gone smoothly. Instead, Paola became one of tens of thousands of people in custody and facing deportation as theTrump administration pushesfor immigration officers to arrest 3,000 people a day. As of June 27,arrests by ICEduring President Trump's second term had reached 109,000 — an increase of about 120% from the same time period in 2024 under President Biden — according to a CBS News analysis of government data. The majority of those arrests took place in border and Southern states, figures show. The couple's attorney, Carrey Holliday, a former immigration judge, said Paola's detention was unreasonable. "There are lots of reasons why this shouldn't have happened. No. 1, Adrian, her husband, is a marine veteran, discharged honorably. She's the mother of two small children, and was nursing one," Holliday said. "She really didn't know that she had an order of removal outstanding until about a week before she had an interview for a green card. They were trying to do things legally; they just didn't get the right advice." Holliday said Paola's case is an example of the new administration's "hyper-enforcement environment." "We're in a hyper-enforcement environment right now, and all the laws are being enforced without any real consideration for the individuals involved," Holliday said. "DHS is taking some positions that... they've never taken before, especially on bond... DHS has now decided that everybody who comes across illegally can be considered an arriving alien. That has never been the definition, and it's quite a bad legal argument to make, but that's what they're making, nonetheless, and some immigration judges are buying it." Holliday said Paola no longer has a final order for removal, but she still has a long road of immigration court proceedings ahead to obtain a green card.  Once some jurisdictional matters are resolved, they will seek to obtain a status called "parole in place," which helps immediate family members of military service members have a more streamlined path to obtaining a green card. On June 9, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Servicespostedon social media about the case, writing that when Paola Clouatre "was apprehended by @CBP and ordered removed by a judge in 2018, she chose to defy the order and stay in the U.S. 7 years later, she had another bad idea and applied for a Green Card. @ICEgov took her into custody at our New Orleans office. @DHSgov has a long memory and no tolerance for defiance when it comes to making America safe again." New federal priorities to detain immigrants with pending deportation orders are taking higher precedence than the deference previously afforded to military families, immigration law experts say. According to federal memos, the Trump administration has madeany non-citizenswith pending deportation orders a priority for arrests. CBS News reached out to ICE for a comment for this story, but has not yet received a response. During his wife's months in detention, Adrian sent letters to elected officials pleading for their help — even two letters to President Trump. He says it was office staff of Louisiana Republican Sen. John Kennedy that stepped up and advocated for his wife's case. CBS News has reached out to Kennedy's office for comment, but has not received a response. "I'm ecstatic, I'm extremely grateful to my lawyer, to John Kennedy's office, and the community for all the support," Adrian said. Paola echoed those feelings of appreciation. "I feel happy, grateful," she said. "Thankful for the senator (staff) spending time with my husband. Thank you to the community." Black swimmers teach others amid history of aquatic segregation Lawyer says political pressure helped Marine Corps veteran, wife reunite after her ICE detention Katie Ledecky breaks her own record in women's swimming

Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 months

Wife of Marine veteran released from ICE detention after 2 months BATON ROUGE, La. — Awife of a Marine Corps veteran and mother of twowas re...

 

MARIO VOUX © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com