Sports
BetBoom Team, Vici Gaming earn spots in Dota semis at Esports World Cup
Dota 2 competition at the Esports World Cup BetBoom Team and Vici Gaming became the final two teams to advance to the semifinals of the Esports World Cup Dota 2 tournament thanks to their wins Friday in Paris.
Vici opened the day with a 2-0 victory over Team Falcons, and BetBoom added a 2-0 win over Nigma Galaxy in the quarterfinal stage.
BetBoom and Vici will square off in one semifinal match Saturday with Team Yandex and PARIVISION going head to head in the other after both advanced on Thursday. The winners move on to the grand final on Sunday and the losers will compete in the third-place match.
The Dota 2 event at the Esports World Cup is the final championship of the ESL Pro Tour, now in its fourth season. The tournament has a $2 million prize pool, with $750,000 and 1,000 EWC club points going to the first-place team.
The format consists of three phases: a group stage of 24 teams that competed in a round robin, a survival phase (Tuesday-Wednesday) formatted into a single-elimination bracket that saw four teams advance, then a final playoff stage (Thursday-Sunday), which is single elimination.
The four group winners advanced directly to the playoffs. Teams finishing second through fourth in their groups went to the survival stage, a two-round bracket that decided the other four teams to make the playoff field of eight.
All matches in Phase 1 were two games, while the matches in Phases 2 and 3 are best-of-three until the best-of-five grand final.
On Friday, Vici prevailed in 57 on red and 32 minutes on green over Falcons. Guo “Xm” Hongcheng of China led the way for Vici with a kill-death-assist ratio of 29-5-21 across the two maps.
BetBoom took down Nigma in 35 minutes on red and 49 minutes on green. Ilya “Kiritych” Ulyanov of Russia put up a dominant 17-3-28 K-D-A for BetBoom.
The Esports World Cup features competition in 25 titles and a $75 million prize pool. Other upcoming events include League of Legends, PUBG, EA Sports FC, Call of Duty: Warzone, Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, Rocket League, Counter-Strike 2 and Fortnite.
The tournament continues Saturday with the semifinal matches:
— BetBoom Team vs. Vici Gaming
–Team Yandex vs. PARIVISION
Dota 2 Esports World Cup payouts (prize money, club points)
1. $750,000, 1,000 — TBD
2. $340,000, 750 — TBD
3. $200,000, 500 — TBD
4. $120,000, 300 — TBD
5-8. $70,000, 200 — Team Spirit, Rune Eaters, Nigma Galaxy, Team Falcons
9-12. $40,000, 0 — LGD Gaming, 1w, Team Liquid, Aurora Gaming
13-16. $20,000, 0 — MOUZ, Xtreme Gaming, Virtus.pro, PlayTime
17-20. $10,000, 0 — GamerLegion, Level UP, REKONIX, OG
21-24. $7,500, 0 — Poor Rangers, L1 Team, Team Nemesis, Inner Circle x Insanity
–Field Level Media
Sports
McIlroy 'not fond' of DeChambeau, held The Open 'hostage' over controversy
Jul 18, 2026; Southport, ENG; Rory McIlroy makes his putt on the first green during the third round of The Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Birkdale. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images While revealing that he’s not a fan of Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy said Saturday he had no doubt that the two-time major champion deserved to be penalized for improving “the area of his intended swing” in tall grass on the fifth hole Friday at The Open.
McIlroy, the two-time reigning Masters champion and a six-time major champion, was in the players’ lounge watching on TV with other golfers when DeChambeau stamped down on different patches of tall grass near his ball on the fifth hole at Royal Birkdale Golf Club.
“As soon as he made the step into the ball, we all sort of looked at each other, and we were like, ‘That didn’t seem right,'” McIlroy said. “Then when I heard that he was called in by the rules officials, I think it was pretty obvious for why.”
DeChambeau vehemently disagreed with the ruling as officials shuttled him back to the scene of the alleged misdeed before he could enter the scoring trailer to sign his second-round scorecard.
A popular but divisive figure in the world of golf, the LIV Golf star originally posted a 4-under 66 to move to 7 under, one shot behind Australia’s Lucas Herbert. Now, rather than waking up Saturday in second place and part the final pairing for the third round, DeChambeau entered the weekend three behind Herbert instead of one, his bogey 5 at the fifth hole changed to a triple-bogey 7.
“Yeah, I think there’s no doubt that he improved the line of his backswing,” McIlroy said following his 1-under 69 third round that left him at 2 under after 54 holes. “Again, it’s like, whether it was careless or whether it was intentional, I don’t think it matters. Hopefully, it was careless, but I think the two-shot penalty was justified for sure.”
McIlroy also expressed his disdain with DeChambeau holding off on signing his scorecard due to arguing his case, which delayed The R&A from releasing Saturday’s tee times.
McIlroy said he was also irritated that DeChambeau took so long to argue his case before signing his scorecard. It delayed The R&A from releasing tee times for Saturday’s third round.
“Late night for everyone,” McIlroy said. “Yeah, look, I won’t pretend to be up here and defend Bryson. I’m not particularly fond of him. I think a lot of it’s performative. I think a lot of it’s for attention. To hold the tournament hostage like that, and to have all of us, players, volunteers, everyone waiting on him to depart, I didn’t feel like it was a great look.”
Meanwhile, Max Homa and other golfers came to DeChambeau’s defense, disagreeing with The R&A’s ruling and saying DeChambeau would never break the rules of golf.
“All I know is I’ve known Bryson for a very long time, and he’s an interesting human at times, but I know he would never cheat the game of golf,” Homa said after his 3-under 67 in the third round left him 3 under for the tourney. “I don’t really love how it happened. It’s not that the R&A said that he did it intentionally, but that rule as a professional golfer feels like it’s written inherently to protect against people trying to improve their lie. I just hope that doesn’t create a narrative because I don’t believe that of him.”
Xander Schauffele, a two-time major champion, saw the replay and did not think DeChambeau committed a penalty.
“He’s just stepping in how you’d normally step in to hit a golf shot,” Schauffele said. “I think the R&A said something along the lines of whether it’s intentional or not, it’s still a penalty. It’s a tough spot to be, obviously, when you’re in high brush, kind of having to dance around to get to your golf ball is a tricky thing. It’s not something we’re used to doing that often.”
R&A CEO Mark Darbon defended the decision, which he said was based on the rules in a BBC Radio interview on Saturday.
“It was an unfortunate decision but really clear-cut from a rules perspective,” Darbon said. “So, obviously, our team discuss it. The final decision sits with our chief referee and we have a responsibility to our championship and to the rest of the field.
“And so, irrespective of which player this affected it’s the same decision. From a rules perspective, it was clear-cut.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Spain cancels final World Cup tuneup; Argentina practices after weather delay
July 16, 2026; East Hanover, New Jersey, U.S.; Spain’s Lamine Yamal during training. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images Spain were forced to cancel their final training session on Saturday ahead of the World Cup final due to thunderstorms in New Jersey.
The weather system also affected Spain’s opponent, Argentina, although the latter held practice after a delay of roughly 45 minutes.
The two nations battle for the title on Sunday at East Rutherford, N.J.
Under tournament protocol, training must be postponed if lightning is detected within an eight-mile radius. Lightning is typically checked every 30 minutes until it is safe to resume activity. The protocol has delayed several matches throughout the tournament, held in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
With a steady rain throughout the morning and into the early afternoon, Spain waited out the storm for around 40 minutes before opting to cancel.
Though the inclement weather affected the last practices, the rain was expected to clear the haze in the area caused by the Canadian wildfires, which would make for better conditions for Sunday’s 3 p.m. final at nearby MetLife Stadium. The Air Quality Index (AQI), which was at 160 on Saturday — an “unhealthy” level — is also predicted to drop to 100 — a “moderate” level — by Sunday.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Spain cancel final World Cup tuneup; Argentina practice after weather delay
July 16, 2026; East Hanover, New Jersey, U.S.; Spain’s Lamine Yamal during training. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images Spain were forced to cancel their final training session on Saturday ahead of the World Cup final due to thunderstorms in New Jersey.
The weather system also affected Spain’s opponent, Argentina, although the latter held practice after a delay of roughly 45 minutes.
The two nations will battle for the title on Sunday at East Rutherford, N.J.
Under tournament protocol, training must be postponed if lightning is detected within an 8-mile radius. Lightning is typically checked every 30 minutes until it is safe to resume activity. The protocol has delayed several matches throughout the tournament, held in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
With a steady rain throughout the morning and into the early afternoon, Spain waited out the storm for around 40 minutes before opting to cancel.
Though the inclement weather affected the final practices, the rain was expected to clear the haze in the area caused by the Canadian wildfires. That should make for better conditions for Sunday’s 3 p.m. final at MetLife Stadium.
The Air Quality Index, which was at 160 on Saturday and considered to be an “unhealthy” level, also is predicted to drop to 100 — a “moderate” level — by Sunday.
–Field Level Media
