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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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Gold medal gymnast Suni Lee returning ahead of LA28

Jun 28, 2024; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Sunisa Lee celebrates her uneven bars routine during the U.S. Olympic Team Gymnastics Trials at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn ImagesJun 28, 2024; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Sunisa Lee celebrates her uneven bars routine during the U.S. Olympic Team Gymnastics Trials at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images

United States gymnast Suni Lee announced on social media Tuesday that she is returning to the sport after not competing since the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Lee, 23, helped the United States win gold in the team competition at Paris and grabbed individual bronze medals in the all-around competition and the uneven bars.

The commitment to return to competition for the St. Paul, Minn., native comes two years before the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

Lee’s comment on an Instagram post read, “I’m back.”

“I know what I’m capable of. I’m willing to do whatever it takes to get there,” Lee said in a short video that included highlights of her gymnastics career. “Back in the gym. We’ll see.”

The video ends with the words, “This is more than a comeback, stay tuned,” typed onto a black screen.

Lee also competed at the 2021 Summer Olympics in Tokyo where she won the all-around gold medal and helped the U.S. to a runner-up finish in the team competition. She also won a bronze in the uneven bars.

–Field Level Media

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Folarin Balogun: Red-card reversal 'controversy' distracted USMNT

July 1, 2026; Santa Clara, California, U.S.; Folarin Balogun of the U.S. celebrates scoring their first goal.  Mandatory Credit: Phil Noble-Reuters via Imagn Images July 1, 2026; Santa Clara, California, U.S.; Folarin Balogun of the U.S. celebrates scoring their first goal. Mandatory Credit: Phil Noble-Reuters via Imagn Images

United States men’s national team striker Folarin Balogun said Tuesday that his overturned suspension in the World Cup went from elation among his teammates to a sense of uneasiness that impacted the side’s final match of the tournament.

In a visit to “CBS Mornings,” Balogun described the whirlwind of emotions that started with his red card in a round of 32 match against Bosnia-Herzegovina to FIFA rescinding his mandatory one-game ban for a round of 16 match against Belgium.

Resentment for the USMNT grew after President Donald Trump admitted that he reached out to FIFA for a review of the decision. The animosity picked up even more momentum when Belgium coach Rudi Garcia said his side was prepared to defend the credibility of the sport after Balogun was ruled eligible.

Belgium dominated the second half of a 4-1 victory on July 6 at Seattle that eliminated the United States from the tournament.

The USMNT’s ineffective play against Belgium was criticized, as was star player Christian Pulisic, who struggled to spark the offense before departing with a leg injury.

“It was a difficult game against Belgium and that can kind of overshadow whether we were focused or not,” Balogun said during his studio visit. “From me, being inside the camp and inside the setup, I know we had full concentration going into the game.”

And yet the team carried the weight of what became a heavy dose of world politics.

“My initial reaction was I was happy to be back in the team, but when I kind of started to reflect, I knew it was going to cause a lot of controversy,” Balogun said. “And I could almost see within my teammates a bit of nerves. Because it is something that is so unique.

“The closer we got to the game, I tried to just focus as best as I could, but it was difficult (with) a lot of outside noise. That’s hard to avoid.”

While the United States won Group D with victories in its opening two matches and won again in the knockout round, it failed to equal its best run in the tournament. The USMNT advanced to the quarterfinals of the 2002 World Cup at Japan and South Korea.

–Field Level Media

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Report: Michigan AD warned coach not to travel with staffer

Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel walks on the court after 96-66 win over USC at Crisler Center in Ann Arbor on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026.Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel walks on the court after 96-66 win over USC at Crisler Center in Ann Arbor on Friday, Jan. 2, 2026.

Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel was concerned about former football coach Sherrone Moore’s improper relationship with a staff member long before the coach’s firing, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

Moore was terminated in December 2025 for violating university policy by having a relationship with executive assistant Paige Shiver.

A law firm hired by Michigan to investigate the culture inside the athletic department found that the school missed a major warning sign prior to Moore’s first game as the Wolverines’ head coach in 2024, per the report.

Two days before the 2024 season opener, Manuel raised concerns about Moore’s relationship with Shiver.

“I told him I didn’t remember if we had already discussed, but that she couldn’t accompany him on trips,” Manuel wrote in a previously unreported note on Aug. 29, 2024, handwritten on Michigan letterhead.

The law firm of Jenner & Block’s findings indicated that the physical relationship between Moore and Shiver began on a January 2022 recruiting trip in Colorado, when Moore was an assistant on then-head coach Jim Harbaugh’s staff.

Allegations about a relationship between Moore and Shiver “surfaced repeatedly” beginning after Moore became the head coach in January 2024, including a hotline complaint received by Manuel and a report to school officials from Shiver’s father, per the report.

Shiver reported the relationship to the university in late 2025, leading to Moore’s dismissal.

Manuel, who was hired in 2016 and is under contract through 2030, is under fire for his handling of the scandal. ESPN reported Monday that the school’s regents are holding a meeting later this week that could lead to his ouster.

Manuel reiterated Tuesday that he remains the athletic director at Michigan.

“I think I’ve been fired by social media three times in my 10 years,” Manuel said on WTKA-AM, a local radio station. “I just move through it because, to me, it’s nonsense.”

He also defended the accomplishments under his tenure in Ann Arbor.

“I don’t need the credit (for Michigan’s success),” Manuel told The Michigan Insider, “but I’m not going to stand idly by and let people say all this happened despite Warde Manuel.”

–Field Level Media

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