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Golf Glance: The Open returns to Royal Birkdale; Critical points at stake in Puntacana

Scottie Scheffler during a practice round at Royal Birkdale on July 14, 2026.Scottie Scheffler during a practice round at Royal Birkdale on July 14, 2026.

The Open Championship returns to Royal Birkdale for the first time since 2017, while critical FedExCup points are on the line in the Dominican Republic as the regular season winds down.

PGA TOUR

THIS WEEK: The 154th Open Championship, Southport, England, July 16-19

Course: Royal Birkdale Golf Club (Par 70, 7,223 Yards)

Purse: $17.75M (Winner: $3.2M)

Defending Champion: Scottie Scheffler

FedEx Cup Leader: Scheffler

HOW TO FOLLOW

TV: Thursday-Friday: 1:30-4 a.m. (NBC Sports Network/Peacock); 4 a.m.-3:30 p.m. (USA); Saturday: 5-7 a.m. (USA), 7 a.m.-3 p.m. (NBC/Peacock); Sunday: 4-7 a.m. (USA), 7 a.m.-2 p.m. (NBC/Peacock)

Streaming: TheOpen.com/watch

X: @TheOpen

NOTES: Only four weeks remain before the start of the FedExCup Playoffs. … The Open returns to Royal Birkdale for the 11th time, and first since 2017, when it was won by Jordan Spieth. There are 41 players in this week’s field who also competed in 2017. … The field includes all players in the top 50 of the Official World Golf Ranking and each of the top 30 in the FedExCup standings. … An American has won each of the past three Open Championships: Scheffler, Xander Schauffele (2024), Brian Harman (2023). Each of the past 12 champions won the event for the first time. … Tom Kim seeks to become the first player since Rory McIlroy in 2014 to win a major the week after winning on the PGA Tour. … Adam Scott will make his 101st consecutive start in a major, dating back to the 2001 Open Championship. … Scheffler is attempting to become the first player since Padraig Harrington in 2008 to successfully defend at The Open. … Justin Rose finished fourth at Royal Birkdale as an amateur in 1998. He has finished T3-T10-T11 at the year’s first three majors.

BEST BETS: Scheffler (+650 at DraftKings) is coming off his first missed cut in four years and hasn’t won since the AmEx but did win by four shots last year. … Rory McIlroy (+840) finished T4 at Royal Birkdale in 2017, one of eight top-10 finishes in 16 starts in the event. … Matt Fitzpatrick (+1800) finished T4 last year and already has a trio of victories in 2026. … Tommy Fleetwood (+1900) is a Southport, England native seeking to become the first English winner of The Open since Sir Nick Faldo in 1992. … Jon Rahm (+1950) finished T2 in 2023 and has two LIV Golf wins this year. However, he followed a MC at the U.S. Open with a T36 last week. … Chris Gotterup (+2900) won his third title of the year before a T11 in his defense at the Scottish Open. … 2021 champion Collin Morikawa (+3300) is coming off a solo third at the Travelers. … Wyndham Clark (+3900) has a pair of wins and has not finished worse than T13 in his past six starts.

PGA TOUR

THIS WEEK: Corales Puntacana Championship, Puntacana, Dominican Republic, July 16-19

Course: Puntacana Resort, Corales Golf Course (Par 72, 7,670 Yards)

Purse: $4M (Winner: $720,000)

Defending Champion: Garrick Higgo

HOW TO FOLLOW

TV: Thursday-Friday: 12:30-3:30 p.m. ET; Saturday: Noon-3 p.m.; Sunday: 4-6 p.m. (Golf Channel)

X: @PGATour

NOTES: This is the ninth playing of the PGA Tour’s first and only event in the Dominican Republic. It has been co-sanctioned by the PGA Tour and DP World Tour since 2022, and moved to July from April this year. … The winner will receive 300 FedExCup points and a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour if not already exempt. … Higgo won by a single shot over five runners-up last year. One of them was Joel Dahmen, who bogeyed his final three holes, including a missed one-foot putt, to finish T2 after leading after each of the first three rounds.

Last Tournament: Genesis Scottish Open (Tom Kim); ISCO Championship (Steven Fisk)

Next Tournament: 3M Open, Blaine, Minn., July 23-26

LPGA TOUR

THIS WEEK: OFF

Race to CME Globe Leader: Nelly Korda

Last Tournament: Evian Championship (Haeran Ryu)

Next Tournament: Women’s Scottish Open, North Ayrshire, Scotland, July 23-26

LIV GOLF

THIS WEEK: OFF

2026 Season Leaders: Individual: Jon Rahm; Team: 4Aces GC

Last Event: LIV Golf Andalucia (Individual: Tyrrell Hatton; Team: Legion XIII)

Next Event: LIV Golf United Kingdom, July 23-26

PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS

THIS WEEK: OFF

Charles Schwab Cup leader: Stewart Cink

Last Tournament: Kaulig Companies Championship (Zach Johnson)

Next Tournament: Senior Open, Auchterarder, Scotland, July 23-26

DP WORLD TOUR

THIS WEEK: The 154th Open Championship, Southport, England, July 16-19

Race to Dubai Leader: Patrick Reed

Last Tournament: BMW International Open (David Puig)

Next Tournament: Danish Golf Championship, Funen, Denmark, Aug. 13-16

–Field Level Media

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England, Argentina anticipate 'special game' in World Cup semifinal

July 11, 2026; Miami Gardens, Florida, U.S.; England's Harry Kane reacts.  Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images July 11, 2026; Miami Gardens, Florida, U.S.; England’s Harry Kane reacts. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

ATLANTA — England are one win away from their first World Cup final appearance in 60 years.

To get there, all they’ll have to do is beat an Argentina side looking to become the first back-to-back champion since Brazil in 1958 and ’62.

The two sides with a heated World Cup history face off on Wednesday in Atlanta for the right to face the winner of Tuesday’s Spain-France semifinal in East Rutherford, N.J., on Sunday. The losers of each semifinal will meet in a third-place match Saturday at Miami Gardens, Fla.

“This is as big as it gets, so I’m really excited for this week,” England captain Harry Kane told ITV this week. “I think it’s going to be a special game and what a tough team to play against but hopefully, that brings the best out in us.”

England’s World Cup history against Argentina is favorable on the whole, with a 3-1-1 record. Those two non-wins, though, are among the darkest marks in the country’s soccer history, a 2-1 loss in the 1986 quarterfinals on the infamous “Hand of God” goal by Diego Maradona, and a 2-2 penalty-shootout loss in the round of 16 in 1998, a match marred by David Beckham’s second-half red card.

Kane downplayed any notion of those past matches weighing on this England squad.

“I think it’s not something you want to focus too much on, surrounding the history. Yeah, that’s all part of it and that’s what (media members) will talk about, the fans will be involved in,” Kane said. ” … It’s England versus Argentina, it’s two of the biggest nations going toe to toe. Two giants in the semifinal of a World Cup. The rest of it is just a small part.”

While Kane led the way early for England with five goals in their first four matches, Jude Bellingham has been carrying the weight of late. Bellingham has delivered consecutive braces in the last two wins against Mexico and Norway to pull even with Kane and France’s Ousmane Dembele in the Golden Boot race with six goals apiece.

But they’re all chasing Argentine superstar Lionel Messi, who is tied with France’s Kylian Mbappe atop the leaderboard with eight goals in this tournament.

Messi, 39, has already broken the World Cup records for career goals (21) and assists (10) in this year’s tournament, his record sixth appearance. But Argentina showed they are more than Messi the last time out.

He didn’t score in Argentina’s 3-1 extra-time defeat of Switzerland in the quarterfinals, snapping his record nine-match World Cup scoring streak. It was an important showcase of the squad’s depth after he scored eight of their 14 goals through the first five matches.

Despite Messi’s heroics and the rest of the team’s strides, it hasn’t yet felt like Argentina have reached their peak in the knockout stage. They needed extra time to win two of their first three elimination matches and rallied from down 2-0 in the final 12 minutes of regulation to beat Egypt in the round of 16.

“Luck was with us (vs. Switzerland),” Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said, a statement which could be applied to their entire knockout run. “We must be realistic, there are things we need to improve.”

And yet, here resilient Argentina are, respectful of their toughest opponent to date but certainly not intimidated.

“They have great players, but beyond the individual names they’re a team,” Argentina defender Gonzalo Montiel said. “Our focus is on ourselves first.”

–Field Level Media

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France D William Saliba departs with injury, replaced by Maxence LaCroix

Jul 4, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; France defender William Saliba (17) in action against Paraguay during a Round of 16 match in the 2026 FIFA World Cup at Philadelphia Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn ImagesJul 4, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; France defender William Saliba (17) in action against Paraguay during a Round of 16 match in the 2026 FIFA World Cup at Philadelphia Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

France defender William Saliba departed in the first half of Tuesday’s World Cup semifinal against Spain at Arlington, Texas, with an undisclosed injury.

Saliba sat down near midfield in the 28th minute while taking possession of the ball and was unable to continue. The Arsenal player has struggled with back issues for the past three years.

Saliba was replaced by Maxence Lacroix in the 30th minute.

The injury came shortly after Spain took a 1-0 lead on a goal from the penalty spot by Mikel Oyarzabal. The penalty was awarded when France defender Lucas Digne committed a foul on Spain forward Lamine Yamal.

Spain added a goal in the 58th minute, scored by Pedro Porro.

The winner of Tuesday’s semifinal advanced to Sunday’s World Cup Final at East Rutherford, N.J., against the winner of Wednesday’s semifinal match between Argentina and England.

–Field Level Media

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The Open distant fourth among majors with $17.75M prize pool

Jul 13, 2026; Southport, England; The Claret Jug on display at the driving range during a practice round for The Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Birkdale. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn ImagesJul 13, 2026; Southport, England; The Claret Jug on display at the driving range during a practice round for The Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Birkdale. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

While the Claret Jug that is handed to the winner of The Open Championship remains one of the most respected trophies in golf, the payouts for the tournament are lacking among sport’s four majors.

The 154th Open Championship at Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England, will hand out $17.75 million in prize money on Sunday.

The Masters and U.S. Open each handed out $22.5 million in prize money this year, while the PGA Championship had a $20.5 million purse. Of those three events, the U.S. Open had the biggest increase from 2025, adding $1 million.

The Open Championship increased its purse this year by $750,000, but that number is behind all three of the other majors.

Prize money for PGA Tour and DP World Tour events has increased steadily since the advent of LIV Golf in 2022.

LIV is paying out $32.3 million at each of its tournaments this year but recently lost its prime source of funding when Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund announced it would no longer bankroll the tour.

The winner of The Open Championship, which tees off Thursday, will receive $3.2 million. That sum is up $100,000 from last year.

Rory McIlroy earned $4.5 million for winning The Masters in April, while Aaron Rai took home $3.69 million for winning the PGA Championship in May and Wyndham Clark earned $4.5 million for winning the U.S. Open in June.

–Field Level Media

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