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Collin Morikawa returns to action at RBC Canadian Open

May 16, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Collin Morikawa reacts on the sixth hole during the third round of the PGA Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn ImagesMay 16, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Collin Morikawa reacts on the sixth hole during the third round of the PGA Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

Collin Morikawa is feeling relaxed — if not exactly well-rested — as he competes at the RBC Canadian Open following a four-week absence from the PGA Tour.

Morikawa, 29, has not played since a T55 finish at the PGA Championship while dealing with a nagging back injury and also becoming a first-time father.

“Just a different perspective on life, I think. I’m just enjoying every day. I can stare at a camera, I can stare at my little one just non-stop and kind of forget about what else is going on,” the World No. 10 told reporters Wednesday at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley in Caledon, Ontario.

“I know at the same time I still have a job to do when I’m out here and that’s what’s great kind of being back. But at the same time when I’m out there playing you’re kind of playing a little bit differently, your mind’s in a different spot. I think I’m a lot more positive out there and hopefully I can kind of just allow my body to relax and go out and play golf and enjoy it again.”

Morikawa has received “new dad” tips from many of his friends on the PGA Tour but said the “sleep thing” still got to him and his wife, Katherine Zhu.

“That’s a real thing,” he said. “So, I won’t push it on my wife that I’m getting some great sleep out here. But your body gets used to taking 50-minute naps and learning how to run off that.”

Morikawa won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in February and has four other top-10 finishes this season, including a T7 at the Masters.

The two-time major winner’s back injury first flared up during a practice swing at The Players Championship in March, which forced him to withdraw.

“I left the PGA Championship uncomfortable in a way,” he said. “I’ve been grinding this kind of back injury since The Players. It still hadn’t felt that comfortable. So it was nice to take a full reset. And just focus on other things going on in life. I think after that I’ve just been able to relax a little bit more.

“There’s still a trust factor that I’m looking for that I’m trying to find this week, I think, going into tomorrow and into next week (the U.S. Open) essentially. But it’s a lot better of a swing than I’ve been putting on and that’s for me a positive thing.

“I think when the body fully is able to kind of have that last little puzzle piece of fully relaxing, I think the game’s going to be exactly how I want. I still feel like I’m hit great shots when I need to. But just the consistency-wise I think if I can build that into this week it will be a great boost into next week.”

Morikawa is competing in the RBC Canadian Open for the first time since making his professional debut at the event in 2019, when he tied for 14th.

–Field Level Media

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WNBA champion Aces not invited to White House

Las Vegas Aces center A'ja Wilson (22) celebrates as she receives the MVP trophy after defeating the Phoenix Mercury 97-86 to win the WNBA Championship in a four-game sweep in Game Four of the WNBA Finals at Mortgage Matchup Center on Oct. 10, 2025, in Phoenix.Las Vegas Aces center A’ja Wilson (22) celebrates as she receives the MVP trophy after defeating the Phoenix Mercury 97-86 to win the WNBA Championship in a four-game sweep in Game Four of the WNBA Finals at Mortgage Matchup Center on Oct. 10, 2025, in Phoenix.

The Las Vegas Aces did not receive an invitation to the White House after winning the 2025 WNBA title in October, a team spokesperson confirmed to USA Today on Wednesday.

The decades-old tradition of championship sports teams visiting 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. has not included any WNBA or NBA teams during President Donald Trump’s second term in office.

The New York Liberty did not visit the White House after winning the 2024 WNBA championship. The 2024-25 NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder did not go either, due to what the team called a timing issue.

The Aces, who will be in Washington, D.C., for a July 22 game against the Mystics, have won three of the past four WNBA championships. They visited the White House twice during the Biden Administration.

The Aces had considered visiting the National Museum of African American History and Culture as an alternate way of commemorating their championship during next month’s trip to the nation’s capital, but ran into a scheduling conflict, per USA Today.

–Field Level Media

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World Cup primer: Players, places, plotlines and politics

Argentina's Lionel Messi during training for the World Cup in Kansas City on June 3.  Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images Argentina’s Lionel Messi during training for the World Cup in Kansas City on June 3. Mandatory Credit: Denny Medley-Imagn Images

After an unusual and at times underwhelming buildup, the 2026 World Cup is suddenly, finally the spectacle on everyone’s mind.

From questions surrounding Neymar’s health and fitness for Brazil, to political drama between co-hosts United States and Iran, to European complaints about the intensity of North American summers, the World Cup is dominating the headlines.

It can be overwhelming for a casual soccer fan who wants to tune in and have some context but isn’t sure which stories are the most important.

Fortunately, we have you covered with this handy cheat sheet, breaking down the tournament basics, its biggest stars, most anxious injury worries, most prominent off-field dramas and most tantalizing group-stage matches.

5 World Cup Tournament Basics

The teams: 48 teams will contest the largest-ever World Cup across 16 host cities, including 11 in the United States, three in Mexico and two in Canada.

The format: Each team plays in a group of four in a three-match round robin, earning 3 points for a win and 1 for a draw. The knockout phase, now doubled in size to 32 teams, will include every first- and second-place group finisher, and the eight best third-place teams.

The favorites: Spain, France and England are rated highest by oddsmakers, followed in varying order by Portugal, Argentina, Brazil and Germany.

The defending champions: Led by Lionel Messi, Argentina won their third World Cup title in 2022. They’re attempting to be the first repeat champions since Pele helped Brazil to the 1958 and 1962 crowns.

The debutants: Thanks in part to the expanded field, four nations will be making their World Cup debuts: Cape Verde, Curacao, Jordan and Uzbekistan.

–5 Huge World Cup Stars

Kylian Mbappe (France): Already a World Cup winner in 2018, Mbappe became the second player in history to score a hat trick in the World Cup final in 2022. He also was the first to do so and not win the tournament, after Argentina triumphed on penalties following a 3-3 draw.

Lamine Yamal (Spain): The 18-year-old FC Barcelona prodigy is the most-hyped teenager at the World Cup since the 17-year-old Pele dazzled the world in Sweden in 1958. Unlike Pele, Yamal already has major tournament experience from Spain’s Euro 2024 title run.

Erling Haaland (Norway): The Viking-esque striker is a major reason his nation has returned to the World Cup finals following a 28-year absence. He’s also the three-time Premier League goal-scoring champion with Manchester City.

Lionel Messi (Argentina): The eight-time Ballon d’Or winner is now 38 years old and no longer the tornado-like player of his prime. But he is also wiser than he was in those days and can still find the net, having led all of South America in World Cup qualifying scoring.

Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal): Like Messi, the 41-year-old Ronaldo has lost a step from his peak years with Real Madrid. But he’s still the focal point of Portugal’s attack under manager Roberto Martinez, and one of their two most important players along with Bruno Fernandes.

–5 Anxious Injury Situations

Neymar (Brazil): Now age 34, Neymar is no longer the tactical focal point of Carlo Ancelotti’s Selecao. But if he can recover from a calf ailment to contribute to competitive matches, he would provide an enormous emotional lift as well as another still-devastating attacking weapon.

Chris Richards (USA): The 26-year-old is considered the Americans’ best central defender. But he has only returned to full team practice this week. Richards hasn’t been able to play in either pre-tournament friendly since arriving from his club side, Crystal Palace, with an ankle ligament injury.

Alphonso Davies (Canada): The 25-year-old Bayern Munich fullback has battled injuries for a year-plus, beginning with an ACL tear in March of 2025. He looks unlikely to be ready for the co-hosts’ opener against Bosnia on Thursday as he rehabs a more recent hamstring issue.

Julio Enciso (Paraguay): The 22-year-old Atletico Madrid attacker left Paraguay’s final World Cup qualifier at home in visible pain, suggesting a tournament-ending injury. It turned out to be only a thigh bruise, Paraguay will go without its best player for at least two matches.

Bukayo Saka (England): The 24-year-old Arsenal winger has managed a nagging Achilles issue for months. It appears to be a question of load management and pain tolerance, with manager Thomas Tuchel saying Saka has been unable to train on consecutive days.

–5 Off-The-Field Storylines

USA-Iran tensions: With the two nations currently at war, Iran has moved its training base to Tijuana, Mexico, with plans to travel for matches in the United States on the day of the match. The Iranian federation also said Tuesday it had been stripped of its allocation of match tickets.

Continuing U.S. immigration actions: Somali match referee Omar Artan was refused entry into the United States upon his arrival in Miami on Saturday. Switzerland’s Breel Embolo endured a travel delay. Other players have reported being stopped for extended questioning.

Summer simmer: While five World Cup venues are climate-controlled, the combination of high temperatures and afternoon kickoffs for European audiences could influence results, perhaps at the expense of European sides accustomed to milder conditions.

The price of admission: It’s still unclear whether FIFA has sold all of its ticket inventory in the primary market. As for the secondary market, after weeks of declining prices, they are heading north again as the matches approach, according to Ticketdata.com.

Tournament legacy: The conventional wisdom is that any nation hosting a World Cup should receive a boost to its domestic soccer scene. But with an extraordinary number of questions surrounding this year’s tournament, that’s far from a sure thing.

–5 Huge Group-Stage Games

Brazil vs. Morocco (June 13, 6 p.m. ET, East Rutherford, N.J.): After mid-cycle struggles, Brazil can show they have recovered under Carlo Ancelotti by beating a 2022 World Cup semifinalist in their Group C opener.

France vs. Senegal (June 16, 3 p.m. ET, East Rutherford, N.J.): The colonial history would be enough. But this Group I encounter also is a meeting of one of Europe’s most consistent sides in recent World Cup history against the reigning Africa Cup of Nations champions.

England vs. Croatia (June 17, 4 p.m. ET, Arlington, Texas): These Group L foes have clashed in several major fixtures since Croatia gained independence from the former Yugoslavia, including a 2-1 Croatian win in the 2018 World Cup semifinals.

United States vs. Australia (June 19, 3 p.m. ET, Seattle, Wash.): This could be the pivotal Group D game for both teams. It’s also a meeting of nations whose embrace of soccer is more recent after spending much of their earlier histories pursuing other sporting passions.

Portugal vs. Colombia (June 27, 8 p.m. ET, Miami Gardens, Fla.): It’s possible both teams could have places in the knockout phase secured by this point. But it could still be a chance to see Cristiano Ronaldo and James Rodríguez square off one last time in Group K action.

–Ian Quillen, Field Level Media

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Josh Berry out at Wood Brothers Racing in 2027

Mar 22, 2026; Darlington, South Carolina, USA; Wood Brothers Racing Josh Berry (21) comes out for the Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway. Mandatory Credit: Scott Kinser-Imagn ImagesMar 22, 2026; Darlington, South Carolina, USA; Wood Brothers Racing Josh Berry (21) comes out for the Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway. Mandatory Credit: Scott Kinser-Imagn Images

Josh Berry confirmed Wednesday that he will not be back with Wood Brothers Racing in 2027.

Berry, 35, will finish out his second NASCAR Cup Series season in the shop’s No. 21 Ford. He currently ranks 30th in the drivers’ standings through 15 starts, with two top-10 finishes.

“You hear the rumor mills start going, so I’m not going to say that I was completely caught off guard,” Berry said. “I didn’t exactly feel great about it. I probably would have said myself I was probably 50-50 in what was going on.

“I’ve been extremely fortunate to get the opportunities I’ve had, and been extremely fortunate to drive for the Wood Brothers and this team. And unfortunately, it’s going a different direction.”

Berry experienced some early success with Wood Brothers Racing in 2025, winning at Las Vegas in just his fifth race. His best finish this season was ninth place in the season-opening Daytona 500 on Feb. 15.

He joined Wood Brothers Racing following his first full-time campaign in the Cup Series with Stewart-Haas Racing in 2024.

Berry won five times in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series across the 2021 and 2022 seasons.

–Field Level Media

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