Entertainment
Emma Raducanu Needs to Swallow Her Pride, But She Won’t
There is a moment from the 2026 Australian Open that tells you almost everything you need to know about where Emma Raducanu is right now as a tennis player, and more importantly, as someone who consistently gets in her own way. During her United Cup match against Maria Sakkari, Francisco Roig had been instructing her to add variety and to think tactically.
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Join us on WhatsAppAt the start of the second set, Raducanu appeared to decide she had heard enough. She stopped listening, started swinging freely, and played a great set. She then lost the match. That sequence, in miniature, is the entire Raducanu story. She gets advice from accomplished, experienced coaches. She rejects it when it conflicts with what she already believes. And then she wonders why the results are not coming.
Four and a half years have passed since Raducanu produced one of the most extraordinary individual achievements in the history of tennis, winning the US Open as a qualifier without dropping a set. She was 18 years old, ranked outside the top 150, and she played the tournament of her life. Since then, she has cycled through coach after coach, accumulated a record that falls well short of her ability, and offered explanations for each departure that consistently locate the problem everywhere except where it actually lives.
She is now searching for her tenth coach in five years, with the longest single coaching relationship of her professional career lasting just 13 months. The question is no longer whether there is a pattern. There clearly is. The question is whether she will ever acknowledge it honestly enough to change it.
Can Emma Raducanu learn from past mistakes?
What She Has Done Wrong
The coaching carousel has been well documented, but the sheer scale of it still demands spelling out. After winning the US Open with Andrew Richardson by her side, Raducanu chose not to extend their arrangement less than two weeks after the victory. She then worked with Torben Beltz, Dmitry Tursunov, Sebastian Sachs, Nick Cavaday, Vladimir Platenik for a fortnight, Mark Petchey, and Francisco Roig in rapid succession.
Tursunov, notably, later stated he had seen red flags in her camp that he felt could not be ignored for a long-term commitment. Each departure has been announced with a warm Instagram post and the implication that the split was mutual and amicable. The cumulative picture is considerably less tidy. The Roig departure is particularly damning, because Roig was not a mediocre hire. He had been a central part of Rafael Nadal’s coaching team for years, and landing him was widely viewed as a sign that Raducanu was finally serious about building something substantive. What actually happened was different.
Roig’s approach involved adding drop shots, variations in spin, and even experimenting with new rackets as he tried to give Raducanu the tactical range to compete with the best players in the world. This is sound, sophisticated coaching. Sabalenka, Swiatek and Rybakina are not players you can simply out-hit in a straight exchange. You need variety, disguise, and the ability to change patterns under pressure. Roig knew this. He had spent years watching Nadal do exactly that.
Raducanu, however, had other ideas. After her loss to Potapova in Melbourne, she was explicit: she wanted to revert to hitting the ball to the corners and hard, playing in a way more similar to when she was younger. That is not a tactical adjustment. That is a 23-year-old rejecting the professional judgement of one of the most decorated coaches in the sport because she prefers to do what she has always done.
The forehand Roig had been working on, with a higher and longer takeback designed to generate more spin, was visibly present against Potapova and visibly not working. She hit 19 forehand unforced errors in two sets, landing just 70% of her forehand returns compared to 96% from Potapova. She had not trusted the shot enough to make it work, which is the inevitable consequence of only half-committing to what a coach is trying to build.
The telling detail, offered in her own post-match comments, was this: when asked why she looked over to Roig less and less during the match, she explained that she had realised the best way to deal with tricky situations was to find the answers from within, and that looking over brought more negativity. She had, in other words, already mentally checked out of the coaching relationship while the tournament was still in progress. Roig was gone a week later.
She has also said, with considerable confidence, that it was never her interest or philosophy to chop and change coaches, and that she is a very loyal person who eats the same things every single day. When you compare that to the fact it does not look pretty. Ten coaches in five years is not loyalty. Not now, not yesterday, not ever.
Entertainment
Paige Spiranac’s surprising NFL fandom confession triggers heated debate over loyalty, authenticity, and fan culture
The 2026 NFL Draft starts Thursday night in Pittsburgh, and the spotlight isn’t only on prospects and front offices. Golf influencer Paige Spiranac has again found herself pulled into NFL conversation, this time for her open support of multiple teams.
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Join us on WhatsAppWith the Steelers hosting the first round, her long-standing connection to Pittsburgh has resurfaced. But it’s not just about hometown ties. Her broader fandom, which stretches beyond one franchise, continues to draw mixed reactions at a time when fan loyalty is often treated as non-negotiable.
Paige Spiranac roots for 2 NFL teams: Who are they?
Paige Spiranac has never hidden where her loyalties lie, even if they don’t fit the usual mold. She has consistently pointed to her roots while leaving space for other allegiances.
“Both my parents are from Pittsburgh so I’ve been a Steelers ..fan since the day I was born. I also love the Bills. It’s a complicated relationship…Who’s your team?” she previously asked her followers. It’s a candid admission, one that reflects personal history more than calculated fandom.
Still, the reaction has been sharp. NFL culture tends to rew ..
Entertainment
Quiet moments on the course can say a lot about what’s coming next.
Sometimes the most important work happens when nobody is really watching.
Lexi Thompson was out on the 18th green, working through her putting during a practice round ahead of the Chevron Championship in Houston.
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Join us on WhatsAppIt’s a simple scene, but it shows the kind of quiet preparation that goes into these big tournaments—getting the feel of the greens, adjusting to conditions, and building trust in every stroke.
These are the small details that can shape how a player starts when the pressure kicks in.
Entertainment
Predicting what will happen to Bryson DeChambeau and Phil Mickelson if LIV Golf collapses
It looks like LIV Golf is over.
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Join us on WhatsAppThe Saudi Public Investment Fund has reportedly decided that this league simply isn’t worth the hole it’s burning in their pocket, and they’re pulling funds at the end of 2026.
That gives them less than a year to seek new investment. While CEO Scott O’Neil seems confident, it’s going to be extremely difficult to secure funding for a league that is operating at such eye-watering losses.
So this probably pulls the curtain closed on one of the most turbulent, frustrating, confusing, and ridiculous eras in golfing history. Hopefully, we can all return to some reality after the year is over.
But there is still so much uncertainty surrounding golf’s future thanks to this. Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed saw the signs early and jumped ship, but they did that with some leverage. So what on earth is going to happen to the rest of these players who didn’t take the olive branch when it was offered to them?
Feelings will be hurt, and careers will be ended. Let’s take a look.
Jon Rahm rejoins the PGA Tour
Koepka returned to the PGA Tour under the returning member program, which saw him pay $5 million to charity, accept that he’ll receive no FedEx Cup bonus money, and agree he cannot be a sponsor exemption for the 2026 signature events.
That same deal was offered to Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau. They didn’t accept it, but a similar offer will likely be handed out to them again.
If LIV Golf folds, Rahm will not hold the same leverage as Koepka did, but he is a bigger star at this stage of his career. Make no mistake, the PGA Tour will want him back immediately.
But Rahm does risk leaving himself without any options at all. Reed didn’t come straight back to the PGA Tour, so he’s spending a year on the DP World Tour first. You’d imagine Rahm would consider doing the same, but it might not be so easy for him.
Rahm is in a feud with the DP World Tour, as the only one of eight players to reject a deal which would have seen him retain his full-time membership. If Rahm agreed to play in six DP World Tour events this year, then he could have played on both LIV Golf and the tour. He did not agree.
For now, his membership is at risk. So, will it be possible for him to spend a season on the DP World Tour like Reed? Maybe not. That makes it all the more likely that Rahm will be back on the PGA Tour the moment LIV folds.
Bryson DeChambeau does YouTube full-time
With DeChambeau, I don’t think it’s as much of a done deal that he returns to the PGA Tour. Not immediately anyway.
He’s been negotiating his contract with LIV, which expires at the end of this season. During these negotiations, he’s made it very clear that he is completely willing to step away from full-time competition and be a full-time YouTuber.
DeChambeau’s channel has over two million subscribers, so he could feasibly do that with all of the money he’s making there.
He was annoyed to see LIV move to a four-day format, so he could commit himself fully to being the content king. It would be a wild thing to do, but it’s also exactly the kind of move you could see the two-time major winner making.
He could qualify for The Open Championship and the US Open, and earn enough points there to play The Masters and the PGA Championship. It’s possible.
He does seem to live for competition, so maybe YouTube won’t quite scratch the itch, but it is on the table for DeChambeau. At least for a year until his suspension expires. Out of Rahm and DeChambeau, the American is absolutely the least likely to take a deal.
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