
Tiger Christensen roars back with back-nine birdie rush to earn share of Turkish Open lead
World number 1,964 Tiger Christensen capitalised on a back-nine hot streak of six birdies to earn a share of the lead in the first round of the Turkish Open in Antalya.
The 22-year-old rookie, who qualified for The Open in 2023 as an amateur, carded a six-under 65 to end the day one ahead in a three-way tie at Regnum Carya.
He was not the only Tiger in contention, however, as that is also the middle name of South African Robin Williams who joined Christensen and France's Martin Couvra on six under after he birdied five of his first 10 holes.
Christensen, who turned professional in November after coming through Q-School, was making only his third start on the DP World Tour having missed the cut and finished 71st in his previous two.
He also has three missed cuts in five second-tier HotelPlanner Tour outings but after a bogey and birdie on his level-par outward nine he cut loose from the 10th.
"I stayed patient all day. The front nine I didn't get it close enough to the hole and then made a good one from the fringe on 10 and hit it really close on 11," the United States-educated German said in his post-round interview.
"I definitely enjoy these tournaments a lot, bouncing around from the HotelPlanner Tour to here is always a lot of fun. I'm happy to be here and take advantage as best I can."
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Reuters
16 minutes ago
- Reuters
Germany building something special, says Nagelsmann after defeat by France
June 9 (Reuters) - Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann said his side are still trying to close the gap on the top teams in the world after their 2-0 Nations League defeat by France on Sunday but he was confident they are building something special. Goals from Kylian Mbappe and Michael Olise earned France the victory and third place in the Nations League. Nagelsmann saw improvement in his side from their 2-1 semi-final defeat by Portugal on Wednesday. "If we perform like we did today and don't take a step back against the teams in the World Cup qualifiers, then hopefully, we'll march through and prepare well," he told reporters. "Of course, we're still a few percentage points behind where we want to be, and behind the top teams in the world. We can't tear down the world in a year or two and make up for everything that may not have gone 100% right over several years. "Nevertheless, I sense something in the whole group, both the players and the staff, something special. There's a special touch and a lot of potential still in waiting." Germany, who last won the World Cup in 2014 and have been eliminated in the group stage in the past two editions, are in Group A of Europe's qualifiers for the 2026 tournament in North America. They begin their campaign in September against Slovakia in Bratislava.


Telegraph
29 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Carlos Alcaraz has entered territory that even eluded the ‘Big Three'
Alcaraz has entered territory that eluded even Nadal, Djokovic and Roger Federer. At just 22, he is a back-to-back champion at both Roland Garros and Wimbledon, a double distinction that those three titans could not complete across their entire careers. While it is always tempting to find parallels, to equate Alcaraz's obduracy with Nadal's or his status as the crowd favourite with Federer's, the joy is that he is so defiantly his own man. Where Nadal won 14 of his 22 titles on the crushed brick, Alcaraz's great virtue is his versatility, with his five titles spread across clay, grass and hard courts. Melbourne Park, where he has curiously not advanced beyond the quarter-finals in four attempts, is the one stage he has left to conquer. The beau monde assembled on Court Philippe Chatrier cheered for Alcaraz as unashamedly as Centre Court, otherwise known as Basel-on-Thames, did for Federer. But their personalities could hardly be more different. Where Federer's emotions would be carefully modulated, Alcaraz's body language in this final was an open book: one moment he was chuntering at coach Juan Carlos Ferraro about how difficult Sinner was to break down, the next he was whipping up his audience to inspire him to one of sport's finest comebacks. The figure he most closely resembled was Djokovic. Just as the Serb saved two championship points against Federer to win Wimbledon in 2019, Alcaraz had to save three before finally seeing off Sinner. There were other reasons why he monopolised affections in Paris. As much as there was to admire in Sinner's play, it was also difficult to look beyond the issue of whether the Italian should have been in this tournament at all, with his three-month ban for two failed drug tests conveniently timed so that he did not miss a single major. Where every Alcaraz winner was wildly cheered by A-listers from Dustin Hoffman to Natalie Portman, Sinner drew little more than polite ripples for his own prodigious efforts. It appeared unfairly partisan at times, but it accurately reflected the two players' standings in the court of public opinion. Only Alcaraz can explain how, at 3-5, 0-40 in a match he trailed by two sets to one, he contrived a way to win one hour and 45 minutes later. He possesses that rarest of gifts, the capacity always to save his most stirring of feats for the grandest occasions. Five wins in his first five Grand Slam finals? That is the mark of a champion destined to become an immortal. Better yet, he wears that aura with uncommon poise. After the court had emptied, one of his first gestures, having strained every sinew for this achievement, was to celebrate with the ball boys and girls. Sinner exuded similar grace in the harshest circumstances. He was generous to Alcaraz in the aftermath, just as he had been sportsmanlike during the match over marginal line calls. While they might be polar opposites as characters, with Alcaraz's flamboyance the antithesis to Sinner's froideur, both carry themselves impeccably. Theirs, truly, is a tug-of-war to cherish.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Why golden-era Belgium came to dread 'bogey team' Wales
World Cup qualifier: Belgium v WalesVenue: King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels Date: Monday, 9 June Kick off: 19:45 BSTCoverage: Live on BBC One, S4C, iPlayer, BBC Radio Wales and Radio Cymru, the BBC Sport website and app, plus live text commentary. Kevin De Bruyne once said he was "bored" of facing Wales, such was the regularity of their games against Manchester City midfielder made the comment in 2022 as Belgium were preparing to take on Wales for the ninth time in 10 in cheek as the quip perhaps seemed, De Bruyne might have added that these meetings also carry a sense of dread for Belgium's lofty world ranking and galaxy of stellar talents, at one stage during their decade-long rivalry Wales enjoyed a four-match unbeaten run against their illustrious opponents, including two wins that rank among the greatest in their 2015, Gareth Bale's goal secured a seismic European Championship qualifying victory in Cardiff which propelled Wales towards their first major tournament for more than half a a year later, at Euro 2016 itself, Belgium – among the pre-tournament favourites – were blown away in Lille as Wales stormed to an historic and euphoric 3-1 quarter-final win which took them to stratospheric new heights."For me it was one of the greatest games in Welsh football," says Joe Ledley, who played in both victories."I don't know what it is, they're just one of those teams. Wales are a bogey team for Belgium."On Monday night, a decade on from that stirring triumph in Cardiff – a night that changed the course of Welsh football – the two sides renew their rivalry with a World Cup qualifier in Brussels. 'A special night that made a nation believe' Welsh football had known hope before. Now there was had not played at a major tournament since the 1958 World Cup but, with world-class players such as Bale and Aaron Ramsey in their prime, there was growing belief that the wait could soon be after years of hype and hypotheticals about this golden generation, Wales started their qualifying campaign for Euro 2016 in a manner that suggested, this time, this was in their opening five matches, in June 2015 Wales hosted a Belgian side ranked second in the world – and featuring the likes of Eden Hazard, Romelu Lukaku and De Bruyne – having already held them to a goalless draw in Brussels."We were going into that game not expected to win, but we worked so hard," says Ledley. "You want to play against the best players in the world and, for me, Belgium was that team."Fitness levels were all over the place. A few of our players in the Championship and League One were finished three weeks before. You could see the ones who'd been away on a lads' holiday!"If preparations were not ideal, Wales hid it well with a ferociously energetic and disciplined Chris Coleman had sprung a surprise with his team selection as he started fringe Swansea City defender Jazz Richards at right-wing-back. Chris Gunter, who usually played there, shifted to the right of a back three for the first time in his international proved to be an inspired move as together they stifled the threat of that year's Premier League player of the season, Hazard, on Belgium's left."The whole defensive unit and team, all our roles and responsibilities were really clear. We had trust in whoever was playing in each position," Gunter recalls."The aim before any campaign was to qualify and we always said we needed to start one well and get some momentum, so we had done that. Then it was 'right, if we're serious about this, we have to take points off the best team in the group'."It had all the ingredients of a really special football night in Wales. It was a Friday night, there was rain, but it was warm and the atmosphere was incredible."Wales delivered a performance to match the occasion, as Bale fired past Thibaut Courtois in the first half to send a heaving Cardiff City Stadium into pressed for an equaliser but, inspired by the home crowd's spellbinding, impromptu rendition of the Welsh national anthem, Wales clung on for a heroic victory."The belief after that result, you could feel it, not just with us players, but with the fans as well, and you could sense we were on the verge of qualifying," says Ledley."Fans play a massive part. I think at Cardiff City Stadium that night they carried us over that finish line."More than possible, this result made qualification with their team three points clear at the top of the qualifying group, some Wales fans still needed some all, it had been 57 years since Wales had been to a major tournament and that barren period was littered with agonising tales of near this time was different."There was a real belief inside the changing room and the squad, and maybe for the fans it was more hope and desperation for us to do it," says Gunter."I think definitely after that win, everybody really believed."Victory in Cyprus the following September put Wales in touching distance, only for a goalless draw at home to Israel to delay the you have waited 57 years, though, a month does not seem so long. Wales finally sealed qualification in Bosnia-Herzegovina when they suffered their only defeat of the campaign, but had their place in France confirmed by Cyprus' win in the rain poured down in Zenica, Wales had their moment of catharsis, released from the shackles of their history, dreaming of the golden summer to come. 'It was meant to be' – Wales' greatest game of all To be Welsh in France during Euro 2016 was to live a dreamlike seeing the country play at a major tournament was enough for many. The opening win over Slovakia in Bordeaux was glorious, and the dismantling of Russia in Toulouse brought joy that few thought was those group-stage victories and a tense second-round triumph over Northern Ireland, they were reunited with Belgium for a quarter-final in Lille."Euro 2016 is still seen as the major opportunity for the golden generation to win a trophy," says Bart Lagae, a journalist for Belgian newspaper De Standaard."They should have gone through and beaten Wales, probably beaten Portugal [the eventual champions]. Most feelings Belgians have about Wales are based on that night in Lille."Among the pre-tournament favourites, Belgium thought they were about to rid themselves of their nuisance opponents when Radja Nainggolan put them in front with a stunning long-range strike."I think the reason we started a bit slowly is because a lot of us were probably still hungover from the Northern Ireland game," Ledley jokes."Maybe the pressure and the hype got to us. But once we conceded, you could see the pressure release and then we just came out of our shells and absolutely destroyed them."Ashley Williams headed Wales level shortly before half-time, haring over to celebrate with his team-mates and coaches on the bench so quickly that he clocked his fastest running speed of the was no fluke, though. Wales missed several chances to take the lead before Hal Robson-Kanu, without a club having been released by Reading, scored a goal to rank among the finest in European Championship history, bamboozling Belgian defenders with a Cruyff turn and finishing with a the 85th minute, Gunter received the ball on the right wing. Manager Chris Coleman was on the opposite touchline, screaming – with some amusingly industrial language, a documentary later revealed – for the wing-back to take the ball to the corner to waste a pragmatic defender by nature, could not hear those instructions, and it was just as well because he delivered the cross of his life for Sam Vokes to head in Wales' third goal."For sure, that was my best cross," Gunter says with a bashful smile. "There weren't many other good ones!"It's funny, even now when you bump into different people from Wales, the more the years go by, the more I've heard it [Coleman's quote]."He was spot on to tell me not to cross it. If that happened another 100 times, it's definitely not going on Vokesy's head. It was just meant to be."Wales were on their way to their first semi-final. That was where their epic journey would end, with defeat by Portugal, but what a ride it was. 'Will there be another Robson-Kanu this time?' Since those landmark Welsh wins, the teams have met four times, with two draws in Wales and two wins for Belgium on home Belgium have been widely regarded as underachievers during that period, perhaps unfairly when they finished third at the 2018 World Cup, Wales built on their 2016 success by qualifying for the next European Championships as well as their first World Cup for 64 now, the teams look very different; only a few players remain from their respective golden likes of Bale and Hazard may no longer be around, but both sides have gradually ushered in a new still boast a squad of enviable depth and quality, with Manchester City's Jeremy Doku among the emerging stars of recent evolution has been uncomfortable at times, as Friday night's draw in North Macedonia demonstrated, a result that made it one win in eight games for the Red are six points behind Wales with two games in hand, and Craig Bellamy has made it clear his side will be going all out for victory in Brussels, refusing to sit back and settle for a draw."Sometimes when you play a team a lot, it can actually be more challenging because you have a shorter distance of analysis in between matches, and you know each other," says Luke Benstead, Belgium's head analyst under previous managers Roberto Martinez and Domenico Tedesco."With the introduction of Craig Bellamy, you see they've gone to another level, and you can see this is the type of coach that is forward-thinking, wants to be on the front foot."Belgium also have huge talent, great young players coming through, and I think no team underestimates each other, no matter how much they play, and it'll be a great contest with both teams going for it."Iffy as their recent form might be, Belgium will still be favourites to win but, as history has shown, that offers no guarantees when they play Wales."Most people think Belgium should be able to win the game," says Lagae. "There's still a feeling of Wales as a bit of a bogey team, they certainly seem to make us play worse than we should be able to."They obviously had some great players, but it wasn't Gareth Bale that night [in 2016] but Hal Robson-Kanu, an unknown player to most and perhaps all Belgians. I wonder if there will be another Robson-Kanu this time."