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Tag: Day

  • Japanese players Ai Suzuki, Momoko Ueda each shoot seven-under 65s to lead Toto Japan Classic after first round

    Japanese players Ai Suzuki, Momoko Ueda each shoot seven-under 65s to lead Toto Japan Classic after first round

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    Ueda: “I changed the shaft for my driver and also my putter. I normally do not change my putter very often, but it works very well this week”; Suzuki: “I made a decision to play without a coach anymore, and it just started to go well. I feel like I could have gone to 10-under today.”

    Last Updated: 03/11/22 9:08am

    Momoko Ueda is in a share of the lead with Ai Suzuki at the Toto Japan Classic

    Japanese players Ai Suzuki and Momoko Ueda each shot seven-under 65s on Thursday to sit top of the first-round leaderboard at the LPGA Tour’s Toto Japan Classic.

    Two other Japanese players were a shot behind: Ayaka Furue and Sakura Koiwai. The tournament is being played at the Seta Golf Club in Shiga, Japan.

    Furue is the defending champion and Suzuki won the event in 2019. Miyu Yamashita, another Japanese player, is two strokes behind after a 67.

    Suzuki said she has been struggling with her swing and hired a new swing coach, which did not work out.

    “Then I made a decision to play without a coach anymore, and it just started to go well,” she said. “I feel like I could have gone to 10-under today.”

    Ueda said she has also made recent adjustments.

    “I changed the shaft for my driver and also my putter,” Ueda said. “I normally do not change my putter very often, but it works very well this week.”

    Atthaya Thitikul of Thailand, the LPGA’s new No 1-ranked player, shot a 71. She is only the second player under the age to 20 to reach No 1. She turns 20 next year on February 20.

    Lydia Ko of New Zealand reached No 1 in 2015 when she was only 17 years old.

    “Being No 1 is pressure,” Thitikul said earlier in the week. “I don’t know how long I’m going to be No 1 in the world but at least it’s just a ranking.”

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  • Why Does Chronic Pain Hurt So Much?

    Why Does Chronic Pain Hurt So Much?

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    You never forget the first time a doctor gives up: when they tell you that they don’t know what to do—they have no further tests to run, no treatments to offer—and that you’re on your own. It happened to me at the age of 27, and it happens to many others with chronic pain.

    I don’t remember what film I’d gone to see, but I know I was at The Oaks Theater, an old arts cinema on the outskirts of Pittsburgh, when pain stabbed me in the side. This was followed by an urgent need to urinate; after bolting to the bathroom, I felt better, but a band of tension ran through my groin. As the hours went by, the pain resolved into a need to pee again, which woke me up at 1 or 2 a.m. I went to the bathroom—but, as if I was in some bad dream, urinating made no difference. The band of sensation remained, insusceptible to feedback from my body. I spent a night of hallucinatory sleeplessness sprawled on the bathroom floor, peeing from time to time in a vain attempt to snooze the somatic alarm.

    My primary-care doctor guessed that I had a urinary-tract infection. But the test came back negative—as did more elaborate tests, including a cystoscopy in which an apparently teenage urologist inserted an old-fashioned cystoscope through my urethra in agonizing increments, like a telescopic radio antenna. It certainly felt like something was wrong, but the doctor found no visible lesion or infection.

    What followed were years of fruitless consultations, the last of which produced a label, chronic pelvic pain—which means what it sounds like and explains very little—and a discouraging prognosis. The condition is not well understood, and there is no reliable treatment. I live with the hum of pain as background noise, flare-ups decimating sleep from time to time.

    That pain is bad for you may seem too obvious to warrant scrutiny. But as a philosopher, I find myself asking why it is so bad—especially in a case like mine, where the pain I feel from day to day is not debilitating. To my relief, I am able to function pretty well; sleep deprivation is the worst of it. What more is there to say about the harm of being in pain?

    Virginia Woolf may have invented the commonplace that language struggles to communicate pain. “English, which can express the thoughts of Hamlet and the tragedy of Lear,” she wrote, “has no words for the shiver and the headache.” Woolf’s maxim was developed by the literary and cultural critic Elaine Scarry in The Body in Pain, a book that has become a classic. “Physical pain—unlike any other state of consciousness—has no referential content,” she wrote. “It is not of or for anything. It is precisely because it takes no object that it, more than any other phenomenon, resists objectification in language.”

    But as someone who has lived with pain for 19 years, I think Woolf and Scarry are wrong. Physical pain has “referential content”: It represents a part of the body as being damaged or imperiled even when, as in my case, it isn’t really. Pain can be deceptive. And we have many words for it: Pulsing, burning, and contracting are all good words for mine.

    That pain represents the body in distress, bringing it into focus, helps us better understand why it is bad. Pain disrupts what the philosopher and physician Drew Leder calls the “transparency” of the healthy body. We don’t normally attend to the bodies itself; instead, we interact with the world “through” it, as if it was a transparent medium. Being in pain blurs the corporeal glass. That’s why pain is not just bad in itself: It impedes one’s access to anything good.

    This accounts for one of pain’s illusions. Sometimes, I think I want nothing more than to be pain free—but as soon as pain is gone, the body recedes into the background, unappreciated. The joy of being free of pain is like a picture that vanishes when you try to look at it, like turning on the lights to see the dark.

    Philosophy illuminates another side of pain—in a way that has practical upshots. This has to do with understanding persistent pain as more than just a sequence of atomized sensations. The temporality of pain transforms its character.

    Although I am not always in notable pain, I’m never aware of pain’s onset or relief. By the time I realize it has vanished from the radar of attention, it has been quiet for a while. When the pain is unignorable, it seems like it’s been there forever and will never go away. I can’t project into a future free of pain: I will never be physically at ease. Leder, who also suffers from chronic pain, traces its effects on memory and anticipation: “With chronic suffering a painless past is all but forgotten. While knowing intellectually that we were once not in pain we have lost the bodily memory of how this felt. Similarly, a painless future may be unimaginable.”

    We can draw two lessons from this. The first is that we have to focus on the present, not on what is coming in the future: If you can treat pain as a series of self-contained episodes, you can diminish its power. I try to live by what I call the “Kimmy Schmidt rule,” after the sitcom heroine who endured 15 years in an underground bunker with the mantra “You can stand anything for 10 seconds.” My units of time are longer, but I do my imperfect best not to project beyond them. You can have a good day while experiencing pelvic pain. And life is just one day after another.

    The second lesson is that there’s less to what philosophers call “the separateness of persons” than might appear. Moral philosophers have argued that concern for others does not simply aggregate their harms. If you have to choose between agony for one person or mild headaches for many others, you should choose the headaches, no matter the number. The relief of minor pain for many cannot offset the agony of one, because the pains afflict distinct and separate people. They don’t add up.

    Do trade-offs like this make sense within a single life? Philosophers often say they do, but I’ve come to believe that’s wrong. If what I was experiencing was just a sequence of atomized pains, without effects on memory or anticipation, I don’t think it would make sense to trade them for short-lived agony—a three-hour surgery performed without anesthetic, say—any more than it would make sense to trade a million mild headaches for the agony of one person. If I would choose to undergo that surgery, it would be because of the temporal effects of chronic pain, the shadow it casts over past and future.

    A lot has been made of pain’s unshareability, how it divides us from one another. In fact, pain is no more shareable over time. My mother-in-law once asked, rhetorically, “Why can one man not piss for another man?” But you can’t piss for your past or future self either. And as we bridge the gulf between now and then to sympathize with ourselves at other times, we sympathize too with the suffering of others. Self-compassion is not the same as compassion for other people, but they are not as different as they seem. There is solace in solidarity, in sharing the experience of chronic pain, in compassion’s power to breach the boundaries that separate us from other people, and ourselves.

    This article has been excerpted from Kieran Setiya’s new book, Life Is Hard: How Philosophy Can Help Us Find Our Way.

    When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.

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  • Bermuda Championship: Seamus Power and Ben Griffin tied for lead going into final round

    Bermuda Championship: Seamus Power and Ben Griffin tied for lead going into final round

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    Seamus Power of Ireland shares the lead with American Ben Griffin heading into the final round of the Bermuda Championship; watch live action on Sky Sports Golf from 5.30pm on Sunday

    Last Updated: 29/10/22 11:22pm

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    Highlights of Day 3 of the Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course.

    Highlights of Day 3 of the Bermuda Championship at Port Royal Golf Course.

    Ireland’s Seamus Power enjoyed another six-under 65 to share the lead with Ben Griffin at the Bermuda Championship on Saturday.

    The Waterford native struck with some late birdies for another round of six-under to head into Sunday’s final round level with American Ben Griffin on 18 under.

    The 35-year-old Irishman is no stranger to windy conditions having played at the tournament the last few years.

    He sealed his spot on the top of the board late in the third round, which started out with four straight birdies.

    Further birdies followed on 11, 16 and 17, with a double bogey on the par-three 13th the only blemish on his round.

    “I knew I had to get birdies before 11,” Power said. “I don’t know how comfortable you get when you get to 16 and you’re having to aim your ball in the ocean.”

    Power has one PGA Tour victory, the Barbasol Championship in Kentucky last year. He would love nothing more than a win for a strong early start to the PGA Tour and to assure his spot at The Masters.

    Griffin gave up on the game a few years ago before making a comeback

    Griffin gave up on the game a few years ago before making a comeback

    Griffin, who was previously working as a loan mortgage officer, earned his full card onto the PGA Tour last year.

    “It’s been surreal really the last year and two months of just being comfortable on the golf course and just going out and trying to win,” Griffin said.

    “When you’re playing mini-tour events and you’re trying to grind for top 10 just to break even, just have enough money to maybe do a Monday qualifier, it’s not necessarily the easiest in terms.

    “Now that I have this little bit of freedom, I can go out there and just try to win golf tournaments.”

    Australia’s Aaron Baddeley and Kevin Yu of Taipei are two shots back at 16-under, with another American, Brian Gay, alone in fifth place on 15-under following a third straight 66.

    Overnight leader Ben Crane struggled in round three, with four birdies and six bogeys in a two-over 73 and he now sits in joint ninth, six shots off the pace.

    Watch the Butterfield Bermuda Championship throughout the week live on Sky Sports. Live coverage continues Sunday from 6.30pm on Sky Sports Golf.

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  • LIV Golf Invitational Series: Ian Poulter hits back at Rory McIlroy over Ryder Cup ‘betrayal’ claims

    LIV Golf Invitational Series: Ian Poulter hits back at Rory McIlroy over Ryder Cup ‘betrayal’ claims

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    Poulter: “My commitment to the Ryder Cup I think goes before me. I don’t think that should ever come in question. I’ve always wanted to play Ryder Cups and have played with as much passion as anyone else that I’ve ever seen play a Ryder Cup.”

    Last Updated: 26/10/22 6:00pm

    Ian Poulter responded to comments made by Rory McIlroy in a Guardian interview, where he described a ‘betrayal’

    Ian Poulter has hit out at Rory McIlroy describing his Ryder Cup team-mates joining LIV Golf as a “betrayal” and insists he still wants to represent Team Europe in the future.

    LIV Golf members are still currently able to compete on the DP World Tour and earn Ryder Cup qualification points, although it remains unclear whether they will be allowed to feature at Marco Simone GC next September.

    McIlroy said in an interview with the Guardian he felt “betrayal” from his Ryder Cup team-mates joining the Saudi-backed circuit and questioned their commitment towards Team Europe, while Poulter remains adamant his love for the biennial contest remains as strong as ever.

    Ryder Cup captains Luke Donald and Zach Johnson avoided talk about LIV Golf earlier this month, due to a current lack of clarity with regards to qualification for the Ryder Cup

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    Ryder Cup captains Luke Donald and Zach Johnson avoided talk about LIV Golf earlier this month, due to a current lack of clarity with regards to qualification for the Ryder Cup

    Ryder Cup captains Luke Donald and Zach Johnson avoided talk about LIV Golf earlier this month, due to a current lack of clarity with regards to qualification for the Ryder Cup

    “A betrayal? We can still qualify for the team as far as I’m aware,” Poulter said ahead of LIV Golf’s season-ending Team Championship. “Unless we’ve been told we can’t qualify, then I’m still ready to play as much as I possibly can and try and make that team.

    “My commitment to the Ryder Cup I think goes before me. I don’t think that should ever come in question. I’ve always wanted to play Ryder Cups and have played with as much passion as anyone else that I’ve ever seen play a Ryder Cup.

    “I don’t know where that comment really has come from, to be honest.”

    Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood said earlier in the summer that they remained unsure of their Ryder Cup playing status

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    Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood said earlier in the summer that they remained unsure of their Ryder Cup playing status

    Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood said earlier in the summer that they remained unsure of their Ryder Cup playing status

    Five of Europe’s team beaten by a record-breaking margin at Whistling Straits last September have already joined LIV Golf, including Poulter, record points scorer Sergio Garcia and Ryder Cup stalwart Lee Westwood.

    Paul Casey and Bernd Wiesberger also made the switch, along with former Ryder Cup winners Graeme McDowell and Martin Kaymer, while Henrik Stenson was stripped of Team Europe captaincy for the 2023 contest after joining the breakaway tour.

    Scottie Scheffler said in September that there's more talent on the PGA Tour than the LIV Golf circuit

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    Scottie Scheffler said in September that there’s more talent on the PGA Tour than the LIV Golf circuit

    Scottie Scheffler said in September that there’s more talent on the PGA Tour than the LIV Golf circuit

    Mickelson praises McIlroy and tones down LIV Golf claims

    McIlroy has regularly spoken out in support of golf’s traditional tours and ahead of his CJ Cup title defence rejected claims from six-time major champion Phil Mickelson, who previous suggested LIV Golf was on the way up while the PGA Tour was on the way down.

    “First of all, what a great win he had last week,” Mickelson said about McIlroy on Wednesday. “He played some great golf. I think it was an impressive victory.

    Rory McIlroy has hit back at Phil Mickelson's claim that LIV Golf is on the rise and the PGA Tour is on the decline

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    Rory McIlroy has hit back at Phil Mickelson’s claim that LIV Golf is on the rise and the PGA Tour is on the decline

    Rory McIlroy has hit back at Phil Mickelson’s claim that LIV Golf is on the rise and the PGA Tour is on the decline

    “Maybe I shouldn’t have said stuff [about the PGA Tour] like that, I don’t know. But if I’m just looking at LIV Golf and where we are today to where we were six, seven months ago and people saying this is dead in the water.

    “We’re past that, and here we are today – a force in the game that’s not going away, that has players of this calibre that are moving professional golf throughout the world and the excitement level in the countries around the world of having some of the best players in the game of golf coming to their country and competing.

    Jon Rahm has rejected Phil Mickelson's claim the PGA Tour is on a 'downward trend' and says animosity between players won't work in a Ryder Cup team after Sergio Garcia said he would rather not take part if he negatively affected his team mates

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    Jon Rahm has rejected Phil Mickelson’s claim the PGA Tour is on a ‘downward trend’ and says animosity between players won’t work in a Ryder Cup team after Sergio Garcia said he would rather not take part if he negatively affected his team mates

    Jon Rahm has rejected Phil Mickelson’s claim the PGA Tour is on a ‘downward trend’ and says animosity between players won’t work in a Ryder Cup team after Sergio Garcia said he would rather not take part if he negatively affected his team mates

    “It’s pretty remarkable how far LIV Golf has come in the last six, seven months. I don’t think anybody can disagree with that.”

    Smith to face Mickelson in Team Championship

    The draw was made for LIV Golf’s Team Championship on Wednesday, with captains from teams ranked fifth to eighth in the season-long standings getting to pick their opponents for Friday’s opening round.

    Six-time major winner Mickelson will take on reigning Open Champion Cameron Smith as one of the day’s featured singles matches, which will also pit top Chilean pro Joaquin Niemann against former world No 1 Martin Kaymer.

    Phil Mickelson says he believes he's on the 'winning side' of the current divide within the sport, having chosen to play in the LIV Golf Invitational Series

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    Phil Mickelson says he believes he’s on the ‘winning side’ of the current divide within the sport, having chosen to play in the LIV Golf Invitational Series

    Phil Mickelson says he believes he’s on the ‘winning side’ of the current divide within the sport, having chosen to play in the LIV Golf Invitational Series

    Poulter – serving as captain this week for Majesticks GC instead of Lee Westwood – will face Iron Heads GC captain Kevin Na, with four-time major winner Brooks Koepka up against Harold Varner III of Niblicks GC.

    Two singles and one foursome match will take place in each fixture on Friday, with all 32 players competing simultaneously and each match winner receiving one point. The first team to earn two points will advance to Saturday’s semi-finals.

    Smash GC vs Niblicks GC

    • Foursomes: Jason Kokrak and Chase Koepka vs Turk Pettit and Hudson Swafford
    • Singles: Brooks Koepka vs Harold Varner III
    • Singles: Peter Uihlein vs James Piot

    Majesticks GC vs Iron Heads GC

    • Foursomes: Sam Horsfield and Henrik Stenson vs Sadom Kaewkanjana and Phachara Khongwatmai
    • Singles: Ian Poulter vs Kevin Na
    • Singles: Lee Westwood vs Sihwan Kim

    Torque GC vs Cleeks GC

    • Foursomes: Adrian Otaegui and Scott Vincent vs Graeme McDowell and Richard Bland
    • Singles: Joaquin Niemann vs Martin Kaymer
    • Singles: Jediah Morgan vs Laurie Canter

    HY Flyers GC vs Punch GC

    • Foursomes: Bernd Wiesberger and Cameron Tringale vs Matt Jones and Wade Ormsby
    • Singles: Phil Mickelson vs Cameron Smith
    • Singles: Matt Wolff vs Marc Leishman

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  • Rory McIlroy returns to world No 1 after starting PGA Tour season with impressive CJ Cup victory

    Rory McIlroy returns to world No 1 after starting PGA Tour season with impressive CJ Cup victory

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    Rory McIlroy’s 23rd PGA Tour title and third of the year sees him return to world No 1 for a ninth time; the reigning FedExCup champion carded a final-round 67 to claim a one-shot win and make a winning start to his 2022-23 season

    Last Updated: 23/10/22 10:50pm

    Rory McIlroy will replace Scottie Scheffler as world No 1 after his CJ Cup victory

    Rory McIlroy will move back to world No 1 for the first time since 2020 after completing an impressive title defence at the CJ Cup in South Carolina.

    McIlroy carded a brilliant four-under 67 on the final day at Congaree Golf Club, with four birdies in a five-hole stretch on his back nine helping him pull clear of the chasing pack.

    The four-time major champion finished a shot clear of playing partner Kurt Kitayama, despite bogeying his final two holes, with KH Lee claiming third spot ahead of Jon Rahm and Tommy Fleetwood.

    McIlroy had already won the RBC Canadian Open and the Tour Championship during an impressive 2022

    McIlroy had already won the RBC Canadian Open and the Tour Championship during an impressive 2022

    McIlroy’s third win of the year and 23rd PGA Tour title sees him become the first FedExCup champion to begin his PGA Tour season with a victory since Tiger Woods in 2008, with his latest success also leapfrogging him above Scottie Scheffler at the top of the world rankings.

    More to follow…

    This is a breaking news story that is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh this page for the latest updates.

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  • Zozo Championship: Keegan Bradley ends four-year PGA Tour title drought as Rickie Fowler fades

    Zozo Championship: Keegan Bradley ends four-year PGA Tour title drought as Rickie Fowler fades

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    Keegan Bradley wins fifth PGA Tour title of his career and first since 2018 with one-shot triumph over Rickie Fowler and Andrew Putnam at Zozo Championship in Japan; overnight leader Fowler fades and remains without a victory on the PGA Tour since February 2019

    Last Updated: 16/10/22 9:36am

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    Highlights from the fourth round of the Zozo Championship as Keegan Bradley claimed his first PGA Tour win since 2018

    Highlights from the fourth round of the Zozo Championship as Keegan Bradley claimed his first PGA Tour win since 2018

    Keegan Bradley secured his first PGA Tour victory in four years at the Zozo Championship as fellow American Rickie Fowler’s title drought extended.

    Bradley – previously winless since the 2018 BMW Championship – shot a two-under-par 68 to end on 15 under for the tournament and scoop close to $2 million.

    Overnight leader Fowler finished on 14 under after a level round of 70, with Andrew Putnam also on 14 under after a final-round 68 at the Narashino Country Club in Japan.

    Bradley poses with the trophy in Japan after edging Rickie Fowler and Andrew Putnam by one shot

    Bradley poses with the trophy in Japan after edging Rickie Fowler and Andrew Putnam by one shot

    It is closing in on four years since Fowler claimed the most recent of his five PGA Tour successes – the Waste Management Phoenix Open in February 2019.

    The 33-year-old led Bradley by two strokes and Putnam by one going into the final round and the trio each headed the field during different stages of Sunday’s action.

    Fowler led after round three but was unable to go on and secure a first victory since February 2019

    Fowler led after round three but was unable to go on and secure a first victory since February 2019

    Bradley surged two clear following a 20-foot birdie putt at the 11th before Putnam moved level with his countryman at the 16th.

    However, Bradley – the 2011 PGA champion – re-established a two-stroke advantage at the 17th as he bagged a birdie and Putnam recorded a bogey.

    Putnam’s birdie on the last was not enough as Bradley made par to earn a fifth PGA Tour crown.

    Bradley said afterwards: “It’s why I practice so hard. Things aren’t easy for me normally, so the birdie on the 17th was one of the best holes of my life.

    “This is so special. I played in the final group here when Tiger Woods won here [in 2019]. I’m so proud to win this tournament.”

    Live PGA Tour Golf

    October 20, 2022, 8:00pm

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    Fowler’s hopes of a sixth PGA Tour victory faded when he bogeyed the 15th before wasting a birdie chance at the next with another disappointing putt.

    He did birdie the 18th, though, to finish tied for second with Putnam – one shot ahead of Emiliano Grillo (13 under) and two above Viktor Hovland, Sahith Theegala and Hayden Buckley (12 under).

    Watch more PGA Tour action live on Sky Sports Golf from 8pm on Thursday as the CJ Cup begins in South Carolina. Rory McIlroy won that event in 2021.

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  • The European Tour group commits to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2040

    The European Tour group commits to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2040

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    Keith Pelley, chief executive of the European Tour group, said: “Our net zero commitment shows that through Golf for Good we are serious about environmental responsibility and the role we can play”

    Last Updated: 10/10/22 10:07am

    Keith Pelley, chief executive of the European Tour group

    The European Tour group has become the first professional golf tour to announce its commitment towards net zero carbon emissions.

    The group has become a signatory to the United Nations Sports for Climate Action Framework and the Framework’s Race to Zero pledge, which requires all signatories to commit to reduce direct emissions by 50 per cent by 2030 and achieving net zero by 2040.

    The Sports for Climate Action Framework was created by the United Nations and made for sports organisations and their stakeholders to tackle climate change through a set of five principles.

    Climate change is threatening sport. Sky Zero and Sky Sports are helping fans take action against the climate crisis so there is always a place to play

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    Climate change is threatening sport. Sky Zero and Sky Sports are helping fans take action against the climate crisis so there is always a place to play

    Climate change is threatening sport. Sky Zero and Sky Sports are helping fans take action against the climate crisis so there is always a place to play

    Those principles are: Undertaking systematic efforts to promote greater environmental sustainability, reducing overall climate impact, educating for climate action, promoting sustainable and responsible consumption, as well advocating for climate action through communication.

    It will be a key focus of Golf for Good, the European Tour group’s commitment to Driving Golf Further in an environmentally and socially sustainable way, ensuring the Tour has a positive long-term impact on the courses, countries and the communities it visits.

    Keith Pelley, chief executive of the European Tour group, said: “The group’s DP World Tour is a global brand with millions of followers, so we have a clear responsibility and opportunity to use our platforms in the right way.

    “Our net zero commitment shows that through Golf for Good we are serious about environmental responsibility and the role we can play.

    “Our staff and leadership, under the guidance of our Head of Sustainability, are determined to ensure we fully meet all our pledges, and we appreciate the support of our expert partners and advisers in helping us do so. Of course, we also invite our partners and stakeholders to join us in making effective change.”

    Becoming a signatory to the United Nations Sports for Climate Action Framework is the logical next step in the Tour’s Green Drive initiative, which has grown in scale and impact over several years and was re-launched on World Environment Day last year.

    The most recent Sustainability Strategy further aligns Green Drive with the Tour’s wider Golf for Good programme to create a new, holistic approach to sustainable development – on and through the Tour.

    Lindita Xhaferi Salihu, UN Sports for Climate Action Lead, added her support: “The Sports for Climate Action Framework is about driving sports to net zero emissions no later than 2040 in line with keeping the global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees.

    Two-time major winner Suzann Pettersen warns that some golf courses could go under as a result of climate change

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    Two-time major winner Suzann Pettersen warns that some golf courses could go under as a result of climate change

    Two-time major winner Suzann Pettersen warns that some golf courses could go under as a result of climate change

    “It is no small or easy undertaking, but to safeguard the future of sport, we all must all join hands and efforts to win the race against climate change. We look forward to working with the Tour alongside other signatories to set the pace for climate action and achieve the ambitious goals we have set for the Sports for Climate Action community.”

    Jonathan Smith, executive director of the non-profit GEO Foundation for Sustainable Golf, the delivery partner to the European Tour group’s Green Drive programme, added: “Over the last 12 months there has been a significant upscaling of commitment, resourcing and action across the European Tour group – led by the board.

    “We are delighted to help guide the ongoing development of the Tour’s emissions reduction strategy; support effective delivery; and track progress through externally accredited programmes and tools developed over many years for this specific purpose.”

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  • LGPA: England’s Jodi Ewart Shadoff jumps in front at Mediheal Championship

    LGPA: England’s Jodi Ewart Shadoff jumps in front at Mediheal Championship

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    Jodi Ewart Shadoff is yet to find a win in the LPGA Championship; She carded eight-under-par 64 on day one of the Mediheal Championship; Alison Lee and Ruixin Liu are tied for second

    Last Updated: 07/10/22 7:37am

    Jodi Ewart Shadoff is yet to secure an LPGA Tour win but has set herself up nicely on day one of the Mediheal Championship

    England’s Jodi Ewart Shadoff, a 34-year-old veteran still looking for her first career LPGA Tour win, holds a two-shot lead after the first round of the LPGA Mediheal Championship on Thursday.

    ​​​​Ewart Shadoff carded an eight-under-par 64 at The Saticoy Club while Alison Lee and China’s Ruixin Liu are tied for second at 66, with Danielle Kang, South Africa’s Paula Reto and Thailand’s Atthaya Thitikul sharing fourth place at 67.

    Ten players are tied for seventh place at 68.

    Ewart Shadoff has finished in the top 10 on tour 27 times, including this year at the LPGA Match-Play when she tied for fifth and the ShopRite LPGA Classic when she finished third.

    On Thursday, she started on the back nine and opened with a birdie, then added an eagle at the par-five 14th hole.

    She made the turn following consecutive birdies, then had her lone bogey of the day at the par-four first hole before finishing hot and making four straight birdies ahead of a closing par.

    Lee’s bogey-free round concluded with four birdies on the front nine.

    “I feel like I was hitting it really good all day today,” Lee said.

    “I feel like I pretty much hit all my shots in makeable birdie range.

    “I could have made a lot more…. I just feel like I played really awesome today.

    “I would say it’s not a super easy course. It felt easy today obviously because I played so well. Other than that, you definitely need to think a little bit when you hit your approach shots and really need to keep in mind where the pin is and where the slopes are, too.”

    Liu was one over par through five holes, but a string of four consecutive birdies straddling the turn sparked her bogey-free run for the rest of the round.

    Kang produced a strong round in her homecoming to Ventura County, where she grew up.

    “All my friends aren’t out here yet, so I’ll let you know when they all come,” Kang said.

    “My brother coming is a big deal for me, because I love it when he watches.

    “He’s kind of my big teacher. He always knows how my game works.

    “Today, he’s going to tell me what went well and what didn’t, and I learn from that.”

    Defending champion Matilda Castren of Finland, who established the event’s scoring record of 14-under 274 while beating Taiwan’s Min Lee by two shots last year, is tied for 71st after a one-over 73. Lee is tied for 39th at one-under

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  • Hundreds of Americans Will Die From COVID Today

    Hundreds of Americans Will Die From COVID Today

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    Over the past week, an average of 491 Americans have died of COVID each day, according to data compiled by The New York Times. The week before, the number was 382. The week before that, 494. And so on.

    For the past five months or so, the United States has trod along something of a COVID-death plateau. This is good in the sense that after two years of breakneck spikes and plummets, the past five months are the longest we’ve gone without a major surge in deaths since the pandemic’s beginning, and the current numbers are far below last winter’s Omicron highs. (Case counts and hospital admissions have continued to fluctuate but, thanks in large part to the protection against severe disease conferred by vaccines and antivirals, they have mostly decoupled from ICU admissions and deaths; the curve, at long last, is flat.) But though daily mortality numbers have stopped rising, they’ve also stopped falling. Nearly 3,000 people are still dying every week.

    We could remain on this plateau for some time yet. Lauren Ancel Meyers, the director of the University of Texas at Austin’s COVID-19 Modeling Consortium, told me that as long as a dangerous new variant doesn’t emerge (in which case these projections would go out the window), we could see only a slight bump in deaths this fall and winter, when cases are likely to surge, but probably—or at least hopefully—nothing too drastic. In all likelihood, though, deaths won’t dip much below their present levels until early 2023, with the remission of a winter surge and the additional immunity that surge should confer. In the most optimistic scenarios that Meyers has modeled, deaths could at that point get as low as half their current level. Perhaps a tad lower.

    By any measure, that is still a lot of people dying every day. No one can say with any certainty what 2023 might have in store, but as a reference point, 200 deaths daily would translate to 73,000 deaths over the year. COVID would remain a top-10 leading cause of death in America in this scenario, roughly twice as deadly as either the average flu season or a year’s worth of motor-vehicle crashes.

    COVID deaths persist in part because we let them. America has largely decided to be done with the pandemic, even though the pandemic stubbornly refuses to be done with America. The country has lifted nearly all of its pandemic restrictions, and emergency pandemic funding has been drying up. For the most part, people have settled into whatever level of caution or disregard suits them. A Pew Research survey from May found that COVID did not even crack Americans’ list of the top 10 issues facing the country. Only 19 percent said that they consider it a big problem, and it’s hard to imagine that number has gone anywhere but down in the months since. COVID deaths have shifted from an emergency to the accepted collateral damage of the American way of life. Background noise.

    On one level, this is appalling. To simply proclaim the pandemic over is to abandon the vulnerable communities and older people who, now more than ever, bear the brunt of its burden. Yet on an individual level, it’s hard to blame anyone for looking away, especially when, for most Americans, the risk of serious illness is lower now than it has been since early 2020. It’s hard not to look away when each day’s numbers are identically grim, when the devastation becomes metronomic. It’s hard to look each day at a number—491, 382, 494—and experience that number for what it is: the premature ending of so many individual human lives.

    People grow accustomed to these daily tragedies because to not would be too painful. “We are, in a way, victims of our own success,” Steven Taylor, a psychiatrist at the University of British Columbia who has written one book on the psychology of pandemics and is at work on another, told me. Our adaptability is what allowed us to weather the worst of the pandemic, and it is also what’s preventing us from fully escaping the pandemic. We can normalize anything, for better or for worse. “We’re so resilient at adapting to threats,” Taylor said, that we’ve “even habituated to this.”

    Where does that leave us? As the nation claws its way out of the pandemic—and reckons with all of its lasting damage—what do we do with the psychic burden of a death toll that might not decline substantially for a long time? Total inurement is not an option. Neither is maximal empathy, the feeling of each death reverberating through you at an emotional level. The challenge, it seems, is to carve out some sort of middle path. To care enough to motivate ourselves to make things better without caring so much that we end up paralyzed.

    Perhaps we will find this path. More likely, we will not. In earlier stages of the pandemic, Americans talked at length about a mythic “new normal.” We were eager to imagine how life might be different—better, even—after a tragedy that focused the world’s attention on disease prevention. Now we’re staring down what that new normal might actually look like. The new normal is accepting 400 COVID deaths a day as The Way Things Are. It’s resigning ourselves so completely to the burden that we forget that it’s a burden at all.

    In the time since you started reading this story, someone in the United States has died of COVID. I could tell you a story about this person. I could tell you that he was a retired elementary-school teacher. That he was planning a trip with his wife to San Diego, because he’d never seen the Pacific Ocean. That he was a long-suffering Knicks fan and baked a hell of a peach cobbler, and when his grandchildren visited, he’d get down on his arthritic knees, and they’d play Connect Four, and he’d always let them win. These details, though hypothetical, might sadden you—or sadden you more, at least, than when I told you simply that since you started this story, one person had died of COVID. But I can’t tell you that story 491 times in one day. And even if I could, could you bear to listen?

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    Jacob Stern

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