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Rory McIlroy explains media silence after driver ban

Rory McIlroy explains media silence after driver ban

CTV News2 days ago

Rory McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, hits his tee shot on the 11th hole during the second round of the PGA Championship golf tournament at the Quail Hollow Club, Friday, May 16, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
TORONTO -- Masters champion Rory McIlroy has explained his media silence during the PGA Championship admitting that he was unhappy at the way the news of his driver disqualification was leaked.
The Northern Irishman was forced to change his driver after an inspection by the US Golf Association found it was non-conforming.
World number one Scottie Scheffler later revealed that he too had been forced to change his driver for a similar reason but McIlroy was upset that only his issue had become public on the eve of the season's second major last month.
'I was a little pissed off because I knew that Scottie's driver had failed on Monday, but my name was the one that was leaked. It was supposed to stay confidential. Two members of the media were the ones that leaked it,' said the world number two, who skipped media duties throughout the entire week.
'I didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted...I'm trying to protect Scottie. I don't want to mention his name. I'm trying to protect TaylorMade. I'm trying to protect the USGA, PGA of America, myself.
'I just didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted at the time,' added McIlroy, speaking ahead of this week's RBC Canadian Open in Ontario.
McIlroy, who finished tied for 47th at three over for the tournament, also said that there were other factors behind his unwillingness to face reporters.
'A weird week'
'The PGA was a bit of a weird week. I didn't play well. I didn't play well the first day, so I wanted to go practice, so that was fine. Second day we finished late. I wanted to go back and see (daughter) Poppy before she went to bed. The driver news broke. I didn't really want to speak on that,' he said.
'Saturday I was supposed to tee off at 8:20 in the morning. I didn't tee off until almost 2:00 in the afternoon, another late finish, was just tired, wanted to go home.
'Then Sunday, I just wanted to get on the plane and go back to Florida. Yeah, look, and also the driver stuff...,' he said
Unlike in some US sports, such as the NFL, golfers are not contractually obliged to speak to the media and McIlroy said that meant he was within his rights to have a week of silence.
'If we all wanted to, we could all bypass you guys and we...could go on social media and we could talk about our round and do it our own way,' he said.
'We understand that that's not ideal for you guys and there's a bigger dynamic at play here, and I talk to you guys and I talk to the media a lot.
'We understand the benefit that comes from you being here and giving us the platform and everything else. So I understand that.
'But again, I've been beating this drum for a long time. If they want to make it mandatory, that's fine, but in our rules it says that it's not, and until the day that that's maybe written into the regulations, you're going to have guys skip from time to time, and that's well within our rights,' he said.
AFP

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B.C. cedes much of Nuchatlitz provincial park to Nuchatlaht First Nation
B.C. cedes much of Nuchatlitz provincial park to Nuchatlaht First Nation

Globe and Mail

time25 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

B.C. cedes much of Nuchatlitz provincial park to Nuchatlaht First Nation

The B.C. government has quietly ceded a large portion of a provincial park off the west coast of Vancouver Island, in response to a precedent-setting court ruling on an Indigenous land claim. Public access to parts of Nuchatlitz Park is no longer assured, after the B.C. Supreme Court declared last year that the Nuchatlaht, a First Nation with 180 members, has proved Aboriginal title to 1,140 hectares of land on the north end of Nootka Island. The remnants of the park are not marked, and the province says it is up to visitors to ensure they are not trespassing. Kayakers and recreational boaters are only just learning, through word of mouth, that the popular destination is no longer public land. Meanwhile, the First Nation is building a road through the former parkland for its members. The lawyer for the Nuchatlaht says it is the first time parkland has been included in a title ruling from the courts. The title lands include 320 hectares of old-growth forest in Nuchatlitz Park, which was established in 1996 with the primary goal of protecting special natural features. The land, about 110 kilometres northwest of Tofino, includes critical habitat for several at-risk species, including sea otters, the wandering salamander and the marbled murrelet (a small seabird), and features increasingly rare coastal sand ecosystems. The Nuchatlaht argued that the park was created without their approval and brought many visitors to the area without any benefit to the Indigenous community. A spokesperson for the First Nation says that guidance for the public has yet to be determined. 'We know the kayakers and the guys with the four-wheelers will be going there,' said Archie Little, an elder and councillor, 'and so we have to set the policies that they don't harm or damage the land.' Mr. Little said the Nuchatlaht plan to develop their title lands. 'Hopefully we will have some logging to do but with really strict guidelines.' Much of their traditional territory on Nootka Island has already been commercially logged, making the former parkland one of the few pockets of intact forest. Robert Devault, who has lived on a private island adjacent to Nuchatlitz for more than 50 years, is concerned about the road being built. It appears to be designed for resource development, he said. 'I'm hoping that what they're doing now won't be completely destructive, but my main disappointment is the lack of response from the government.' While he supports the Nuchatlaht people in asserting their Aboriginal title, Mr. Devault said the province should have negotiated some protections. 'We have entrusted the government to save those parks for everybody, for the future, not only humans, but for the environment. And so it's a betrayal.' The NDP government has committed to reconciliation with First Nations. Last year, it signed a groundbreaking agreement to recognize that the Haida Nation has Aboriginal title to all one million hectares of the Haida Gwaii archipelago. It has also agreed to temporary close the popular Joffre Lakes Park near Pemberton for parts of this summer, at the request of the Lil'wat and N'Quatqua First Nations. Tamara Davidson, B.C.'s Minister of Environment and Parks, declined to comment on the Nuchatlaht case. A member of her staff said the matter is still before the courts. The Nuchatlaht are appealing the decision because it granted them only roughly 5 per cent of the territory they claim. The appeal, however, does not apply to the existing title lands. The province still promotes Nuchatliz Park as a destination for wilderness camping, although the boundaries of its remaining 175 hectares of parkland are not obvious. The province has simply ceased to apply the law that governs parkland and protected areas for the portion that is now Nuchatlaht land. Jack Woodward, the lawyer who represented the Nuchatlaht, said that the courts have set a precedent establishing that Aboriginal title can supersede park protections on Crown land. 'When you have Aboriginal title, you are entitled to the full economic benefit of the land,' he said in an interview. 'You're unencumbered by a whole bunch of things that would prevent you from using the land.' Jacinthe Goulet, a spokesperson for Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, said there are no Aboriginal title lands outside of British Columbia, although there is active title litigation across Canada. Currently, there is no federal law that defines governance of Aboriginal title lands, but Ottawa asserts that federal laws and provincial laws of general application - statutes that apply to all residents without exception - continue to stand on those lands. Mr. Woodward said the governments of Canada and B.C. have failed to provide legal guidance for Aboriginal title lands. 'We're left in a complete legislative vacuum. There are now two places in Canada where we know that there's Aboriginal title. That is the Tsilhqot'in territory, and also Nuchatlaht territory. We know that there's Aboriginal title there, but there is no legislation guiding this,' said Mr. Woodward, who also won the Tsilhqot'in case in B.C. 11 years ago. Indigenous groups in U.S. and Canada clash over cross-border land claims Thomas Isaac, an expert in Aboriginal law at the Vancouver law firm Cassels, said the province has legislative tools to protect the park, but is not using them. 'The legislative objective of protecting the environment can justifiably infringe an Aboriginal right, including title,' he said. 'The government is negligent, asleep on the job. The Nuchatlaht is not responsible for the public interest‚' he said, adding that it's up to governments to balance Indigenous interests with those of the wider public. 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Roughriders hold off Redblacks 31-26 in CFL season opener
Roughriders hold off Redblacks 31-26 in CFL season opener

CBC

time30 minutes ago

  • CBC

Roughriders hold off Redblacks 31-26 in CFL season opener

The Saskatchewan Roughriders won the CFL's first game of the 2025 season, but the 31-26 victory over the Ottawa Redblacks on Thursday was costly. The Roughriders lost four starters to injury, including three in the first 17 minutes. Receiver Kian Schaffer-Baker appeared to injure his left ankle; tailback A.J. Ouellette suffered a suspected head injury; and defensive back Rolan Milligan left the game with an apparent neck injury. Offensive lineman Payton Collins was injured in the third quarter of his CFL debut when an Ottawa player rolled up the back of his right leg. None of the four injured Riders returned to the game. The Roughriders dealt with injury issues last season and focused on a next-man-up mentality. Thursday's game took that to another level, and one that head coach Corey Mace expects from his players. "The next-man-up mentality, that certainly that has been our experience in the past, but the expectation is you've got to get the job done," Mace said. "You're on this team; you're a professional athlete. We're not going to change too much stuff up just because somebody else is in there. If you're on the active roster, things keep rolling. I'm extremely proud of the guys who had to step up and double duty, because a lot of those guys also are on special teams, having to suck wind in Week 1." Saskatchewan took a 31-17 lead into the fourth quarter, but the Redblacks, behind the impressive play of quarterback Dru Brown, cut the deficit to 31-26 with four minutes left in the game. Brown, who completed 34 of 41 passes for 413 yards with two touchdowns, had the Redblacks on their own 41-yard line with 1:11 left to play. After an incompletion, Brown was sacked for a 16-yard loss by Saskatchewan's Malik Carney. Facing a third-and-26 situation, Brown connected with William Stanback on a 14-yard completion that turned the ball over on downs. "It sucks to lose," Brown lamented. "I wish it was different but at the end of the day, it's one game. It's a game we felt we could've won. Great teams still thrive in this type of environment and there were some encouraging things going on. "We're on our way. We're not there yet but we'll get there." When Ouellette went down, Thomas Bertrand-Hudon stepped into the void and rushed for 57 yards and one touchdown on 14 carries. He also gained 17 yards and one touchdown on two receptions. Betrand-Hudon benefited from the blocking of Samuel Emilus on his rushing touchdown, which gave the Riders a 31-14 lead. "He blocked his tail off the entire game, and he helped me out score a couple of times, so I've got to give props to him. He actually swung me into [the end zone]," Bertrand-Hudon said. It was the second two-touchdown game of Betrand-Hudon's CFL career. He scored twice in a 33-26 loss to the B.C. Lions on Sept. 29, 2023, during his rookie season. Despite some big offensive numbers by Ottawa — Brown's 413 passing yards and Justin Hardy and Bralon Addison with 133 and 112 receiving yards respectively — Mace felt Saskatchewan's defence answered the bell when it mattered. "This is what I do understand about this defence, and it has been this way since even I played — I don't care how many yards, just tell me if it's a W or an L," the coach stated. "As far as the defence being able to stand up when we needed it, to make a big play, yeah, they made them when we needed them." Roughriders starting quarterback Trevor Harris also wasn't concerned about how the victory looked. "It's early in the season and we've got to understand that these are full 60-minute football games," Harris said. "It's tough to win in this league. "Our defence stepped up, our specials did a great job. We're going to be all right. We're going to be a different team when it comes to Week 15 and playoff time and Labour Day. "We're going to be improved from where we are right now. But make no mistake, these wins matter at the end of the year, so a win is a win." Ottawa scored a touchdown on their first possession of the season. The Redblacks drove 87 yards on 10 plays with backup quarterback Dustin Crum reaching the end zone on a one-yard sneak. Brown was seven-for-seven passing for 84 yards on the drive. Harris completed 19 of 26 pass attempts for 277 yards and two touchdown throws in the game. His backup Tommy Stevens scored on a one-yard run 13 seconds into the second quarter and Emilus hauled in a 10-yard touchdown pass from Harris seven minutes later to increase Saskatchewan's lead to 14-7. A 17-yard field goal by Brett Lauther with 17 seconds left in the quarter gave the Riders a 17-7 halftime lead. Emilus had an impressive first half with six receptions for 106 yards and one touchdown. He finished the game with eight catches for 133 yards. Geno Lewis, on an eight-yard reception, and Stanback, on a two-yard run, also scored second-half touchdowns for the Redblacks.

US Open '25: Oakmont's par-3 8th hole requires removing a head cover
US Open '25: Oakmont's par-3 8th hole requires removing a head cover

Winnipeg Free Press

time32 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

US Open '25: Oakmont's par-3 8th hole requires removing a head cover

OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — Maybe no one would complain about the eighth hole at Oakmont Country Club if the term 'par' had never been created in championship golf. But there it sits in the middle of the this tough U.S. course, the longest par 3 in major championship history, 289 yards on the scorecard and certain to top 300 yards in actual distance for one round, just as it did in 2007 at Oakmont. 'I couldn't tell you a par 3 over 250 yards that's good, architecturally,' said Justin Thomas, who took a scouting trip to Oakmont two weeks before it hosts the U.S. Open for a 10th time. 'That's not my favorite hole in the world,' he said. 'I think you could do some other things with that. But everyone's going to have to play the same hole and going to have to execute the same shots, and I would love four 3s on it right now if I could take it.' Jack Nicklaus, who won the first of his 18 professional majors at Oakmont in the 1962 U.S. Open, was asked what he thought about the par-3 eighth. 'I haven't played it since they lengthened it to be a short par 5,' Nicklaus said with a smile. Viktor Hovland speaks for the majority when he said the best par 3s in golf are under 200 yards. But the topic on this day was 300 yards — more or less, depending on how the USGA sets it up each round. Hovland was not a fan. 'As soon as you start to take head covers off on par 3s, I just think it gets a little silly,' he said. This is nothing new in major championship golf. The PGA Championship at Quail Hollow last month featured the 252-yard sixth hole that required a fairway metal for some. The toughest par 3 at the Masters is the 240-yard fourth. And last summer at Royal Troon in the wind and rain, Scottie Scheffler hit his best 3-wood of the year into the par-3 17th on Saturday. There's no doubting No. 8 is a tough hole. A bunker named 'Sahara' juts out some 80 yards before the green. That's easy enough to carry, and then the ball runs onto a putting surfaces that is not as contoured as the others at Oakmont. It's just long. And the numbers indicate it is hard. It ranked No. 8 in difficulty in 2016, with 36% of the field hitting the green in regulation. Go back to 2007 and it ranked No. 4 in difficulty, with 33% of the field finding the green. 'The psychology of par is amazing, which goes to the point of long par 3s,' said Geoff Ogilvy, a U.S. Open champion and now highly regarded in golf course design. 'If it's a par 5 and you're coming in with a fairway metal, you're thinking there's a chance you can make 3,' he said. 'But if it's a par 3, you hope you don't make 4 or 5. And you've got it off a tee! … No one likes to get a wood out on a par 3. There's a bit of ego involved. But sometimes you have to.' Ogilvy presented one other observation about the par-3 eighth at Oakmont that at least should give critics pause. 'Eight at Oakmont almost is the easiest of the four par 3s, even though it's so long,' he said. 'It has a wide fairway and probably is the only flat green on the course so you can run it up. I think it's too much at 300 yards. But like at 250, it's a really good hole.' John Bodenhamer, the USGA officer in charge of setting up the course, has said the tee and the pin will be adjusted enough to make it play 301 yards for one round — not 300, but 301. That's part of the fun the USGA likes to have, but not always. The distance for the par-3 11th at Los Angeles Country Club was 299 yards in the 2023 U.S. Open (there is a 40-foot drop in elevation), and the seventh hole at LACC also measured one yard short of a perfect game in bowling. Both of those were in the second round. Phil Mickelson was fuming over the 274-yard third hole in the final round of the 2013 U.S. Open at Merion, where he made double bogey. He was overheard telling an official, 'That's terrible — 274, we can't even reach it.' As for Oakmont, it's worth noting when Johnny Miller had his historic 63 in the final round to win the U.S. Open, his only bogey came at the par-3 eighth. Given the modern game, maybe the value of a super long par 3 is for players to show they can hit a long iron or fairway metal. Ludvig Aberg was asked how often he hits a 3-iron. 'I don't carry one,' the big-hitting Swede said. He has a 4-iron and then swaps out the 3-iron with a 7-wood. But he brings his 3-iron with him in case it makes sense. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. 'You don't get a lot of long irons into par 4s,' Aberg said. 'It would be a second shot into a par 5. I've never had anything against a long par 3. I guess I'm different.' Harris English played Oakmont in the 2016 U.S. Open and had no beef with No. 8 because 'it gives you room to play.' But when asked for some of the other long par 3s he likes, English struggled to come up with even a short list. 'The long ones aren't as memorable,' he said. ___ AP golf:

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