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McIlroy vows ‘the story isn’t over’ as he revels in Royal Portrush support at the Open

about 9 hours ago
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Rory McIlroy has promised to revel in the Northern Irish love during the Open Championship this week, with the 36-year-old also warning fellow competitors that he has regained focus after claiming the Masters in April.“The story certainly isn’t over,” he insisted.McIlroy has returned to Royal Portrush for the first time since 2019, when he admitted the scale of ovation on the Open’s first tee contributed to him whacking his ball out of bounds.He later missed the cut.Attention in the coming days promises to be even more intense, given his Masters win meant he became only the sixth golfer in history to complete a career grand slam.

“I think in ’19 I probably tried to isolate,” McIlroy said on Monday.“I think it’s better for everyone if I embrace it.I think it’s better for me.“It’s nice to be able to accept adulation, even though I struggle with it at times.But it’s also nice for the person that is seeing you for the first time in a few years.

It just makes for a better interaction and not trying to hide away from it.“I think it’s more of, embrace everything that’s going to come my way this week and not try to shy away from it or hide away from it.I think that’ll make for a better experience for everyone involved.”McIlroy was asked unsurprisingly to reflect on the first hole, six years ago, where he slumped to a quadruple‑bogey eight.He said: “The walk to the first tee and then that ovation, I was a little surprised and a little taken aback, like: ‘Geez, these people really want me to win.

’ I think that brought its own sort of pressure and more internally from myself, not really wanting to let people down.It’s just something I didn’t mentally prepare for that day or that week.“I learned pretty quickly that one of my challenges, especially in a week like this, is controlling myself and controlling that battle.I talked about it at the Masters on that last day.The battle on that last day wasn’t with Augusta National.

It wasn’t with Bryson DeChambeau,It wasn’t with Justin Rose,The battle that day was with myself,”It certainly appears as if McIlroy has found an appropriate level of motivation,After only four hours of sleep, he played 18 Portrush holes first thing on Monday morning.

McIlroy openly challenged the sense he will compete in the 153rd Open without any pressure, an event he had circled on the calendar at the start of 2025,Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion“I’ve done something that I’ve told everyone that I wanted to do,” McIlroy said,“But I still feels like I have a lot more to give,Anyone that sits up here at this table, we’re all competitors,We all want to do better.

We all think we can just get a little bit extra out of what we have.The BBC has secured a last-minute deal to show an early evening highlights programme from The Open Championship in Portrush this week.The Guardian has learned that the R&A has agreed a new three-year deal with the BBC for highlights for the Open, which also covers the women’s Championship, starting with the 2025 edition at Royal Porthcawl at the end of the month.The BBC’s late move comes as a surprise and is a boost for the R&A and golf fans, as the corporation has shown little interest in the sport in recent years.A long-term contract for live rights to the Open was terminated a year early by the BBC in 2016, with Sky Sports taking over live coverage, and while they have shown highlights since then they had opted not to renew a contract that expired last year.

The Rory McIlroy factor may have played a role in the BBC’s decision to make a late bid, with the reigning Masters champion playing on his home course in Northern Ireland likely to boost interest amongst casual fans.BBC Sport sources have expressed the belief that they made an error of judgment in not attempting to show highlights of the Masters this year, with coverage of McIlroy’s triumph at Augusta only available to viewers with Sky Sports.The Open is a more attractive property for the BBC however, due to the Championship’s earlier finishing times in this country, which should deliver a bigger audience.As a result this week’s highlights programmes are due to be shown at 9pm on Thursday and Friday before starting at 10pm on Saturday and Sunday.The R&A and BBC did not comment, but an announcement is expected in the next few days.

Matt Hughes“It’s been an amazing year.The fact that I’m here at Portrush with the Green Jacket, having completed that lifelong dream, I want to do my best this week to enjoy everything that comes my way and enjoy the reaction of the fans and enjoy being in front of them and playing in front of them.But at the same time, I want to win this golf tournament and I feel like I’m very capable of doing that.“I try to go about my business.I try to give the best of myself every time I’m out there.

It’s amounted to some pretty nice things so far.I still feel like there’s a lot left in there.”
societySee all
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Rachel Reeves to announce £500m for investment in youth services projects

Rachel Reeves will announce £500m for charities and civil society organisations to invest in youth services on Monday as the government seeks to combat accusations it is not doing enough to tackle child poverty.The chancellor will launch a new “better futures fund”, which will give money to schemes helping children struggling with mental health difficulties, school exclusion or crime, with the hope of attracting an additional £500m from local government and other organisations.The move comes amid tensions between ministers and Labour backbenchers over whether the government should remove the two-child benefit cap, at an estimated cost of more than £3.5bn a year.Reeves said: “I got into politics to help children facing the toughest challenges

1 day ago
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Parents urged to get children vaccinated after measles death in Liverpool

Health officials have urged people to come forward for the measles vaccine if they are not up to date with their shots after a child at Alder Hey children’s hospital in Liverpool died from the disease.The city has experienced a surge in cases among young people, with the hospital warning parents last week that the spike in infections was due to falling rates of uptake of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine.The child was ill with measles and other health problems and was receiving treatment at the Alder Hey, according to the Sunday Times.A statement from the Alder Hey Children’s NHS trust said: “To respect patient confidentiality, we can’t comment on individual cases.”Uptake of the vaccine has fallen across the country in the past decade with rates across England now at 84%

1 day ago
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Tom Dolphin: BMA’s new chair who’s taking on government despite bid to be Labour MP

If things had turned out differently, Tom Dolphin would now be a Labour MP, sitting on the government’s backbenches and supporting Wes Streeting, the health secretary.Instead he is the newly elected chair of the British Medical Association, the UK’s main doctors union. Its almost 55,000 resident doctor members in England, gave the government a huge headache this week by voting to strike for up to six months in pursuit of a 29% pay rise, starting with a five-day walkout from 25-30 July.In his first interview this week, Dolphin staunchly defended that 29% figure and said that strikes may go on for a very long time. Despite his Labour background he does not look set to be a pushover for a government desperate to avoid more hospital picket lines

1 day ago
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Why is the number of first-time US homebuyers at a generational low?

A cornerstone of the American dream is drifting out of reach.The estimated number of first-time homebuyers in the US dropped to a little more than 1.1 million in 2024, according to data from the National Association of Realtors shared with the Guardian: the lowest level since the NAR started tracking new buyers, in 1989.Economic instability is keeping the housing market at a standstill, with the number of new home owners at its lowest point in three decades. How did we get here?Home prices and mortgage rates remain high years after the peak pandemic housing boom

1 day ago
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Crunching the data: are resident doctors in England badly paid?

Resident doctors in England have voted to strike for five days from 25 July, reigniting one of the NHS’s most bitter industrial disputes.At the heart of the row is pay: the British Medical Association (BMA) says resident (formerly known as junior) doctors have seen their real earnings fall by more than a fifth since 2008. The government says the union’s demands are unaffordable, and they’ve already received generous rises in recent years.So are strikes an “unnecessary and unreasonable” move, in the words of the health secretary, Wes Streeting? Or a necessary step on the path to restore doctor’s pay?After the global financial crisis of 2007-08, pay stagnated across the board in Britain. But resident doctors have had it worse than most

2 days ago
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Fundamental flaws in the NHS psychiatric system | Letters

I am disappointed to read such a scathing review of Bella Jackson’s book Fragile Minds (A furious assault on NHS psychiatry, 30 June). It is a difficult read, and yet I thought that Jackson wrote about her experiences with compassion for both patients and staff unwittingly caught up in erratic and overstretched services.I am a doctor, with experience as a psychiatric patient and as a senior “staff grade” doctor on an acute psychiatric ward. My memoir, Unshackled Mind: A Doctor’s Story of Trauma, Liberation and Healing, confirms Jackson’s claims that abuses do happen in these places. More subtly, there is a continued reliance on the disease-centred model of biomedical psychiatry without sufficient attention paid to the circumstances and adversities suffered by patients before they ever came in contact with psychiatry

3 days ago
technologySee all
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Scientists reportedly hiding AI text prompts in academic papers to receive positive peer reviews

about 21 hours ago
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Fathers plan legal action to get smartphones banned in England’s schools

1 day ago
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Brenda, 95, and her soft toys become unlikely stars on TikTok

1 day ago
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Ofcom head says age checks are ‘really big moment’ for children’s online safety

1 day ago
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Teach First job applicants will get in-person interviews after more apply using AI

1 day ago
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‘Workforce crisis’: key takeaways for graduates battling AI in the jobs market

1 day ago