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Scottie Scheffler takes lead at the Open as Fitzpatrick drives British hopes | The Open

Imagine he cared. Imagine he really cared. Scottie Scheffler used media duties before the 153rd Open Championship to assess the pointlessness of golf in the grand scheme of life. “If I win, it’s going to be awesome for two minutes,” Scheffler asserted. The world No 1 should already prepare for his 120 seconds of ecstasy. There is an air of inevitability about Scheffler cradling the Claret Jug with only half of this tournament gone. It will be a shock should he not win from here.
Matt Fitzpatrick had the elements to contend with for spells on Friday afternoon. Next came Scheffler, marauding in the rear view mirror, which for a golfer is more troublesome than anything that drops from the sky. Fitzpatrick had only just signed his scorecard for a 66 and nine under total as Scheffler poured in a birdie putt at the 17th. Ten under par.
Scheffler had the good grace to leave an opportunity from 15ft on the last just short of the jaws of the hole. Things are at least still mildly interesting. It was just that Scheffler’s 64, the lowest of this Open so far, felt ominous for pretenders to his throne.
Fitzpatrick believes he reached a professional nadir at this year’s Players Championship. There, he was badly struggling for form and answers. His recent touch has been far more impressive and at least akin to the golfer who scaled the US Open mountain at Brookline in 2022. Fitzpatrick’s only frustration arrived from a missed birdie putt, all 3ft of it, on the penultimate hole. Given Scheffler’s mood, that could prove significant.
“I wouldn’t say I necessarily feel as much pressure,” said Fitzpatrick of a Saturday tee time with Scheffler. “He’s going to have the expectation to go out and dominate. He’s an exceptional player. He’s world No 1 and we’re seeing Tiger-like stuff. I think the pressure is for him to win the golf tournament. For me, obviously I hope I’m going to have some more home support than him but it’s an exciting position for me to be in given where I was earlier this year.”
Fitzpatrick also addressed timekeeping, after rounds stretched to close to six hours on day one. “I do think it’s ridiculous,” he said. “The pace of play has been a combination of the way the golf course is, reachable par fives and all that normal stuff. But it starts with the players as well and starts with the rules officials.”
Brian Harman had made the second-round running, his 65 putting him eight under atop the leaderboard at lunchtime. Li Haotong reached minus nine after 12 but was to tie Harman’s aggregate. Harman won the Open in 2023 and has done precious little over the intervening 24 months. Cue further questions about Harman’s fondness for hunting; animals, not golf titles. Li’s victory in Qatar in February was his first for three years.
Rory McIlroy was long gone by the time Fitzpatrick and Scheffler negotiated the closing stretch. The Masters champion has achieved his first target of Open week by surviving for the closing 36 holes, something he failed to accomplish here in 2019. McIlroy’s 69 for a three-under total has given hope to the vast galleries that have followed him. Saturday promises to deliver more of the Rory Roar.
“I’ve been somewhat close to my best over the first two days in little bits here and there,” McIlroy said. “I’m going to need to have it all under control and have it sort of all firing over the weekend to make a run.
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“It’s incredible to play in front of these fans. It was 20 years ago that I played the North of Ireland here and never in my wildest dreams did I think that I’d be coming back as a grand slam champion with the support of a nation behind me trying to win an Open Championship. I count myself very grateful and very lucky that I’m in this position. I’m excited for the weekend.”
So too is Keegan Bradley. While playing what he describes as the golf of his life, Bradley appears ready to play in and captain the US Ryder Cup team at Bethpage in September. This will be a dual role of genius or lunacy, depending on the result against Europe. Bradley is also three under. His 67 was bogey free. Chris Gotterup, who won the Scottish Open on Sunday, continues to ride the wave. He is five under in the company of Harris English, Bob MacIntyre, Rasmus Højgaard and Tyrrell Hatton.
Nobody who has made the cut can be completely ruled out of winning this major. Should Scheffler have an unlikely stumble, that is. The leaderboard is the most congested thing in Portrush, which takes quite some doing. Jordan Spieth, Jon Rahm and Viktor Hovland are even par. Tommy Fleetwood is one better off. The defending champion Xander Schauffele is two under. Bryson DeChambeau spent Thursday retrieving balls from the A2 to Coleraine yet blasted back to breeze into the weekend with a 65. Good old Bryson, never dull.
Those to make an early exit from Northern Ireland included Cameron Smith, whose decline in this environment since making a move to the LIV Tour has been incredible, Adam Scott, Collin Morikawa, Padraig Harrington and Min Woo Lee. What may turn out to be Darren Clarke’s final Open round was of 73 for a plus six total. Next stop, the Harbour Bar.
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TCU vs. North Carolina: Bill Belichick, UNC blown out by Horned Frogs in season opener

The Bill Belichick honeymoon at North Carolina lasted exactly one possession.
TCU scored 41 unanswered points on the way to a 48-14 win over North Carolina in Belichick’s first game as head coach. The Tar Heels opened the game with an impressive touchdown drive and then promptly got run over by the Horned Frogs until the game was out of reach.
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TCU put the game away one play into the second half when Kevorian Barnes broke a 75-yard TD run. The Horned Frogs led 20-7 at halftime and Barnes made the lead insurmountable at that point.
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The opener showed just how far North Carolina has to go simply to be relevant this season.
Belichick has preached fundamentals since his introductory news conference in December and, well, North Carolina was not fundamentally sound. The Tar Heels had tackling issues, dropped passes and even dropped punt snaps. It was a disastrous performance for nearly every unit.
Read Nick Bromberg’s story on the game right here and see how it all played out below.
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Landslide kills more than 1,000 in Sudan’s Darfur region, armed group says | Humanitarian Crises News

The Sudan Liberation Movement/Army appeals for UN help to recover bodies from a village buried by a landslide after heavy rain.
Published On 2 Sep 2025
A landslide has destroyed an entire village in Sudan’s western Darfur region, killing an estimated 1,000 people, according to a rebel group that controls the area.
News agencies said the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army issued a statement late on Monday reporting the disaster in the Marra Mountains area of Darfur.
The rebel group said the landslide struck on Sunday after days of heavy rainfall in the area, and the village was “completely levelled to the ground”, leaving only one survivor.
“Initial information indicates the death of all village residents, estimated to be more than one thousand individuals, with only one survivor,” the group said in a statement.
The rebels also appealed to the United Nations and international aid agencies for assistance in recovering the bodies of victims, which included children.
News of the disaster comes as Sudan’s ongoing civil war – now in its third year – plunges the country further into one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with famine already declared in parts of Darfur.
People fleeing clashes between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in North Darfur state had sought shelter in the Marra Mountains area, and food and medication were reported by the Reuters news agency to be in short supply.
Factions of the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army, which controls the area where the landslide occurred, have pledged to fight alongside the Sudanese military against the RSF.
Fighting has escalated in Darfur, especially in el-Fasher, since the army took control of the capital, Khartoum, from the RSF in March.
El-Fasher has been under siege for more than a year by the RSF, which is seeking to capture the strategic city, the last major population centre held by the army in the Darfur region.
The paramilitaries, who lost much of central Sudan, including Khartoum, earlier this year, are attempting to consolidate power in the west and establish a rival government.
كشفت السلطة المدنية في مناطق سيطرة حركة تحرير #السودان بقيادة عبد الواحد عن وفاة جميع سكان قرية ترسين في وسط جبل مرة نتيجة انزلاقات أرضية أمس الأحد.
الانزلاقات الأرضية المُدمّرة للقرية الواقعة في وسط جبل مرة حدثت بسبب الأمطار الغزيرة التي هطلت خلال الأسبوع الأخير من شهر أغسطس… pic.twitter.com/PFycp1xGbe— Sudan News (@Sudan_tweet) September 1, 2025
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Afghanistan: Rescue efforts resume after earthquake kills more than 800 – follow live

Some earthquake-hit local families were recently deported by Pakistan – local mediapublished at 03:54 British Summer Time
Some families affected by the earthquake had just recently been deported from Pakistan, according to local news outlet Tolo News.
Mohammad Aslam, who lives in Ghaziabad village in Kunar, said he’d lost five members of his family.
“The whole house collapsed on us. We lost five people – my father, two of my uncle’s sons, and two of my cousins’ children,” he told Tolo News, external.
It’s unclear what circumstances Aslam was in before being deported by Pakistan.
The quake-hit area of Kunar, which was hit by an earthquake late on Sunday, sits near Afghanistan’s border with Pakistan.
According to the UN, Pakistan had earlier this year accelerated its drive to expel undocument Afghans. In March, NGO Human Rights Watch said, external Pakistani authorities had been “coercing” Afghan refugees to return to Afghanistan – despite the risk of persecution by the Taliban and dire economic conditions.
More than 3.5 million Afghans have been living in Pakistan, according to the UN’s refugee agency. Pakistan has taken in Afghans through decades of war, but the government says the high number of refugees now poses risks to national security and causes pressure on public services.
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