Sports
Bryson DeChambeau: PGA players hold his Tour return fate
Bryson Dechambeau on the 14th hole during the third round of The 153rd Open Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Mike Frey-Imagn Images Wounds created by Bryson DeChambeau’s divorce from the PGA Tour and his active, outspoken role in a player-driven lawsuit in 2022 might not be fully healed.
The 32-year-old said he understands the lingering acrimony, specifically among players on Tour and not new CEO Brian Rolapp, could be a lasting roadblock to a potential reunion. But from his perspective, DeChambeau said he’s always willing to help settle differences with compromise.
“I think that there’s a way to solve any problem. It’s really about if the membership wants me back,” DeChambeau said on the Beyond the Clubhouse podcast on Thursday. “If they want me back, that’s really what it’s about. It’s not anybody, I don’t think it’s even Brian Rolapp or anybody at the top that’s an executive. It’s about the players — if they want me back — and, if not, I understand that.”
DeChambeau and other players who joined LIV Golf to sign massive contracts are less certain about future paydays. Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund plans to end funding for all events and the league at the end of the 2026 season. DeChambeau said this week “your guess is as good as mine” as to whether he will receive payments due on the remainder of his contract beyond the current season.
That uncertainty is sparking DeChambeau to consider what might be next if LIV Golf hits a dead end.
Other than player concerns, DeChambeau said this week potential punishment by the PGA Tour as penance for his departure would be “quite unfortunate in my opinion, considering what I could do for them.”
“The egos need to get dropped,” DeChambeau said. “Everybody needs to come in with a level-headed playing field, with an opportunistic mindset to grow the game of golf. That’s why I came over here. That’s why I do what I do on YouTube.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Brendan Sorsby Case Highlights Growing Gambling Problem in College Sports
Brendan Sorsby’s college football career has to be over.
No matter what Texas Tech or Sorsby himself try to argue, a player who reportedly placed over 20,000 sports gambling bets over the last four years — including on his team’s games when he was at Indiana, per ESPN — can not continue to play that sport at the college level if that proves to be true.
An NCAA investigation is currently ongoing to determine the veracity and severity of the betting. But given the fact that Sorsby has checked himself into treatment for gambling addiction recovery, it seems likely that investigation is going to find some damning evidence that will be too much to overlook.
It remains to be seen how this could affect the NFL career of a prolific quarterback who was one of the top quarterbacks in this year’s transfer portal class after breaking out the last two seasons at Cincinnati. We’ll see if a team takes a chance on him in the supplemental draft, which seems the likeliest path forward.
For now, Sorsby has taken an indefinite leave of absence from Texas Tech. He also serves as an unfortunate example for the NCAA of how the proliferation of gambling, particularly on college sports, can create problems.
Mind you, the NCAA hasn’t outright pushed for gambling to grow exponentially as it has since it was legalized at the national level in 2018. But it also hasn’t seemed to object to how sports betting ad reads have taken over college sports broadcasts, promoting odds boosts, parlays, promos and various other deals sportsbooks are offering to try and differentiate themselves in a quickly crowding market.
The steps some states have taken to put some guardrails in place — a number of states, including Illinois, do not allow bets to be placed on games involving teams from that state — are possible fixes for the problem. But it goes deeper than just that, as even Sorsby betting on a different college football team or other sports that the NCAA holds championships for would be against the association’s rules.
This is certainly a watershed moment for college athletics when it comes to gambling. A top player and likely Heisman candidate on a team which made the College Football Playoff last year and was going to be favored to make it again this year as the Big 12 champion is now almost certainly going to be ineligible.
This situation paired with the one going on in professional baseball right now where two Cleveland Guardians pitchers are facing criminal charges for allegedly throwing balls on purpose to help gamblers fix bets for single-pitch results — ironically another type of bet Sorsby reportedly made when at Cincinnati Reds games — speaks to the problem of the moment.
As more and more states have implemented legalized sports gambling — we’re up to 39 states this year — it gets tougher and tougher to avoid sportsbooks, which can at times come off as downright predatory.
Sorsby is not that different from plenty of other Americans who have fallen under the allure of a gambling addiction. It’s just that he’s in a prominent enough position that maybe some positive change can come from his situation.
Because it seems clear that something has to change.
Sports
Kansas lands high-scoring Radford transfer Dennis Parker Jr.
Nov 18, 2025; Columbia, South Carolina, USA; Radford Highlanders guard Dennis Parker (11) drives past South Carolina Gamecocks forward Myles Stute (10) in the second half at Colonial Life Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Blake-Imagn Images Kansas landed a commitment Thursday from high-scoring Radford transfer Dennis Parker Jr.
The 6-foot-6 guard announced his decision to join coach Bill Self and the Jayhawks to The Field of 68.
Parker averaged 18.3 points for the Highlanders last season, including a 53-point game against Coppin State on Dec. 14. He made 19 of 24 shots in the 107-77 win, including 10 of 14 from 3-point distance.
The Richmond, Va., native began his collegiate career at North Carolina State and has career averages of 9.1 points and 3.9 rebounds in 88 games (44 starts) with the Wolfpack (2023-25) and Radford.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Why the 2026 Yankees Feel Different From Every Team Since 2009
If not for Texas Rangers right-hander Nathan Eovaldi, the New York Yankees would look invincible right now.
Eovaldi shut down the Yankees for the second time in eight days Wednesday night in a 6-1 victory in the Bronx, handing New York just its third defeat in 17 games since April 17.
Eovaldi has allowed one earned run in 15 innings against the Yankees this season over two starts, compared to 21 earned runs in 32 2/3 innings against everyone else. The Rangers are a postseason contender because the AL West stinks, but if they fall behind the pack before the trade deadline, whoever remains might want to acquire Eovaldi just to give the rest of the field a chance against the Yankees in October. The Yankees themselves might want to re-aquire Eovaldi, just to keep him away from the Tampa Bay Rays or, gasp, the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Other than that, the Yankees certainly look like Canyon of Heroes parade material, more than at any point since 2009, the last time they won it all. Seventeen years without a title wouldn’t be much of a drought for most organizations, but for the Yankees it’s about as long as they’ve ever gone. Take away the first 20 years of the franchise’s existence, when they didn’t even play in the Bronx and nobody knew what they were missing, and the current drought is only one year less (and counting) than the infamous 1979-1995 period. (How did George Steinbrenner keep himself sane?)
The youth of today have no clue about lost Yankees dominance. Not only has it seemed like forever since the Yankees won the World Series, they haven’t gotten all that close since ’09. They lost the Series to the Dodgers in five games in 2024. While most of the games were competitive(-ish), the only reason the Yankees won even once was because of a lopsided bullpen game by the Dodgers in Game 4. It’s not like Dodgers manager Dave Roberts went full 1919 Black Sox and lost Game 4 on purpose, but let’s just say that sacrificial tactics were employed.
The Yankees just haven’t had many (or any) great teams since the A-Rod squad won it all in 2009. (That’s Minnesota Timberwolves majority owner and Co-Chair Alex Rodríguez to you kids, by the way.) The Yankees have taken first place in the AL East just five times in that span, and rarely in those years did they finish with the best regular-season record. But even the playoff teams had some kind of fatal flaw that left the Yankees exposed.
Aside from the law of averages catching up with everybody, the Yankees do feel more dominant in 2026. Only the Atlanta Braves have a better won-lost record. Only the Braves have scored more runs. Only the Los Angeles Dodgers have allowed fewer runs. Team defense has been neutral.
With slugger Ben Rice a top MVP candidate, the Yankees have the most powerful lineup in the league, one that’s not only reliant on Aaron Judge going off. Led by Cam Schlittler, they have the best starting pitching so far, and that’s without Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón, who both are in the injury rehab process. The Yankees don’t have the best bullpen in the league, but it’s up there, and strong at the back end with closer David Bednar.
When the time comes for general manager Brian Cashman to make trades, he’s got a big stockpile of talent and won’t need to patch big holes. The vibes are good. Manager Aaron Boone needs only to choose to play Rice every day despite the clubhouse political risk of sitting someone else with more seniority. Other than that, everything is coming up Yankees.
For anybody getting too excited about this finally being the Yankees year, they could take one or two other factors into account. One, the entire American League stinks, except for the Yankees and the Tampa Bay Rays. Two, the Dodgers probably await at the end of the line in the World Series. And if not the Dodgers, another team that’s likely better than anyone else on the AL side. The Yankees have a 1-5 record against teams with a record better than .500. A small sample, but a stinky sample.
It’s still a little early to game out the World Series. But with six months of notice, the Yankees are looking better than they have in a long time.
