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A prominent New York Knicks fan is feeling sentimental in the wake of the team’s decision to fire coach Tom Thibodeau.

Actor Ben Stiller was one of several notable people that shared their thoughts about the firing on social media. He thanked Thibodeau for the coach’s contributions to the organization.

‘I am a Tom Thibodeau fan. He brought this team back. I felt he gave every bit of himself and was always looking to improve. I will always be grateful for how far he brought the Knicks. They are relevant again. They are championship contenders again. The Knicks became winners again with him,’ Stiller wrote. ‘Thank you Coach Thibs.’

The Knicks are known for having a plethora of celebrity guests at Madison Square Garden, and it was turned up a notch during the Eastern Conference finals series against the Indiana Pacers. However, Stiller has consistently been spotted courtside at New York home games throughout his career.

In these playoffs, which saw the Knicks make their way to the Eastern Conference finals for the first time since 2000, Stiller was frequently spotted sitting alongside fellow superfan Timothée Chalamet. The two were in attendance for Game 4 of the series in Indianapolis when they became the subject of a rant from former Colts punter and sports media giant Pat McAfee.

The Knicks lost the series in six games to end the season, and Stiller got a playful jab from Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton following Game 6.

Prior to the contest, Stiller commented: ‘Good thing he brought his duffel for the flight to NY’ in response to a video of Haliburton walking into the arena, indicating the series would go to Game 7 in New York.

After Indiana won, Haliburton responded: ‘Nah, was to pack y’all up.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley was chosen to be the cover athlete for Madden 26, the latest installment in EA Sports’ popular NFL video game franchise.

The 28-year-old isn’t worried about becoming the latest victim of the proverbial ‘Madden curse’ after his selection.

Barkley was asked by Tom Pelissero on NFL Network’s ‘The Insiders’ whether he believed in curses, specifically the one associated with appearing on the Madden cover.

‘Nah, I’m a believer in God,’ Barkley replied. ‘That’s my mindset, to be completely honest.’

Saquon Barkley discusses Madden curse

Some superstitious Eagles fans might cringe at the thought of their superstar running back on the cover of the video game franchise.

Barkley – who became the ninth NFL player to rush for 2,000 yards in a single season last year – remains unbothered by the superstition.

‘I’ve had injuries before. I tore my knee, I stepped on a foot and rolled my ankle and was out 4-to-6 weeks, and there was no curse then,’ Barkley said. ‘That’s just how life works. You’re gonna have your ups and downs, but my mindset is coming in, work, do what I need to do, and the rest is in God’s hands.’

The idea of the Madden curse dates back to Madden 1999, when San Francisco 49ers running back Garrison Hearst became the first athlete to appear on the international edition of the game’s cover.

Hearst enjoyed a quality 1998 NFL season, running for 1,570 yards and seven touchdowns with the 49ers. However, he suffered a gruesome broken ankle in a playoff game against the Atlanta Falcons. Complications from the injury – including avascular necrosis, which caused a bone in his injured foot to die – kept him out of the league for two seasons before he returned to play for the 49ers in 2001.

Since then, numerous stars to grace the Madden cover have also dealt with injury issues. That includes Madden 25 cover athlete Christian McCaffrey, who was limited to four games in 2024 because of Achilles tendonitis and a PCL sprain in his knee.

Meanwhile, the cover athletes who have remained healthy have often seen a step back in production.

Saquon Barkley Madden cover: How it was made

The Madden 26 cover features a snapshot of Barkley’s iconic hurdle from the 2024 NFL season, during which he jumped backward over Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback Jarrian Jones.

Barkley revealed during his interview with NFL Network that he received help in recreating the jump.

‘I would love to say I actually have that body control, but I would just be lying to you,’ Barkley said, referencing a brief clip he shared of the shoot on social media. ‘I was strapped in there and they’re pulling me up.’

Barkley credited the shoot with helping him to realize just how difficult his reverse hurdle was to execute.

‘That’s when I realized the play that I had when I jumped over someone backwards, how special it was,’ he said. ‘When we had to recreate it, I was like, ‘I don’t know if I feel comfortable doing this not in the midst of a game.”

Barkley also explained that being strapped into the harness to create the cover photo wasn’t necessarily easy.

‘It made me grow so much more respect for any superhero – Spider-Man, Superman any of those guys, those actors or actresses that have to put that on and perform,’ Barkley said. ‘Shoutout to them.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The New York Yankees are expected to be without closer Luke Weaver for at least a month after he injured his hamstring while warming up during Sunday night’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

ESPN reports Weaver will be put on the injured list Tuesday and miss 4-6 weeks, which will put the Yankees’ closer situation in flux once again.

Weaver, who served as the Yankees closer last year during their run to the World Series, began this season as a setup man after the team acquired two-time All-Star Devin Williams in a trade with the Milwaukee Brewers.

However, Williams struggled mightily in his introduction to New York − posting an 11.25 ERA in his first 10 appearances − and Weaver reclaimed closing duties.

Weaver sports an impressive 1.05 ERA in 24 appearances this season with one win and eight saves.

Williams has pitched better lately (2-0, 1 save, 1.80 ERA in his last 11 appearances) and should return to the closer’s role while Weaver is out.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY
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A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to continue to provide accommodations and care for transgender inmates in federal prisons, saying officials had not provided a serious explanation for why medical treatment for gender dysphoria should be handled differently than other cases. 

The order Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth, a Ronald Reagan appointee, blocks officials from carrying out President Donald Trump’s executive order, which required Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) officials to stop providing medical procedures related to sex changes. 

‘Neither the BOP nor the Executive Order provides any serious explanation as to why the treatment modalities covered by the Executive Order or implementing memoranda should be handled differently than any other mental health intervention,’ Lamberth wrote in a 36-page opinion. 

The judge granted an injunction requested by three transgender inmates diagnosed with gender dysphoria to block the implementation of Trump’s executive order. Lamberth ruled the plaintiffs’ merits are likely to succeed under the Administrative Procedure Act. 

‘The import of the opinion is essentially this: Under the APA, the BOP may not arbitrarily deprive inmates of medications or other lifestyle accommodations that its own medical staff have deemed to be medically appropriate without considering the implications of that decision,’ Lamberth wrote.

Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House. A BOP spokesperson told Fox News Digital the agency doesn’t comment on pending litigation or matters that are the subject of legal proceedings.

Trump’s order mandated the BOP stop providing ‘any medical procedure, treatment, or drug for the purpose of conforming an inmate’s appearance to that of the opposite sex.’

Prior to Trump‘s reversal of BOP gender dysphoria policies, the BOP began funding transgender surgical procedures for transgender inmates in December 2022, with Donna Langan, formerly known as Peter Kevin Langan, becoming the first federal prisoner to undergo taxpayer-funded gender surgery. 

Langan was convicted in 1997 for involvement in a series of armed bank robberies across the Midwest during the 1990s. Langan was a leader of the Aryan Republican Army, a White supremacist group that carried out these robberies to fund their activities, according to court documents.

Tuesday’s ruling comes as judges continue to block parts of Trump’s agenda. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS
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: President Donald Trump on Wednesday evening is hosting the more than 3,000 political appointees in his administration for one of the largest events ever held on the White House lawn to celebrate their work, Fox News Digital has learned. 

The event will be the first time ever that the president has invited all individuals hired across all departments to the White House at the same time for the same event, officials told Fox News Digital. 

Traditionally, events are held over several shifts for each department, but Wednesday’s event will honor the more than 3,000 individuals hired for the second Trump administration. 

‘This is his team. These are his people,’ an official told Fox News Digital. ‘These are individuals who are hand-selected by the president to work in the administration delivering on the historic mandate that he received in November.’ 

The president will attend the event and address the attendees. Most members of the Cabinet will also attend. 

Those familiar with the planning of the event told Fox News Digital that there will be food and entertainment for staff. 

‘President Trump’s Office of Presidential Personnel is breaking hiring records at an unprecedented pace,’ Director of Presidential Personnel Sergio Gor told Fox News Digital. ‘In just 135 days, we have filled 91% of all political appointments across the U.S. government, a historic achievement.’ 

Gor told Fox News Digital that ‘the quality of talent that we’ve assembled is remarkable.’ 

‘Each political appointee in the Trump administration is unwavering in their commitment to this president and his goal to make America great again,’ Gor said. 

Since the president took office Jan. 20, the administration has hired more than 3,200 appointees. 

An official in the Office of Presidential Personnel told Fox News Digital that at the Departments of Defense, Commerce and Treasury, more than 85% of political hires are complete; at the Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor and Homeland Security, 90% of political hires are complete; and at the Department of Veterans Affairs, 100% of political hires are complete. 

The official told Fox News Digital that the administration is filled with individuals who have served as Fortune 500 executives, accomplished business leaders, technical experts and ‘dedicated aides that are working to ensure that President Trump continues to deliver for the American people.’ 

‘We have hired the best and brightest to make America great again and advance the America First agenda,’ the official said. 

Trump’s Cabinet was also confirmed in record time, with officials noting that none of his Cabinet-level nominees failed in committee or on the Senate floor for confirmation. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Uber said Monday that Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty, one of the company’s longest-tenured top executives and the head of is delivery business is leaving after almost 13 years.

Gore-Coty joined Uber as a general manager in France in 2012, and worked his way up to become vice president of mobility for the Europe and Middle East region four years later, according to his LinkedIn profile. He was named senior vice president of delivery in 2021.

“It’s hard to imagine Uber without Pierre, because there hasn’t been much Uber without Pierre,” CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said in a statement that was part of a regulatory filing. “As one of our first employees, he was a driving force behind our global Mobility expansion and stepped up to run Uber Eats just weeks before the first Covid lockdowns.”

The company didn’t say what Gore-Coty plans to do next.

Uber also said that Andrew Macdonald, the company’s senior vice president of mobility and business operations, will become chief operating officer, reporting to Khosrowshahi. Macdonald, 41, will oversee the company’s global mobility, delivery and autonomous businesses in addition to “key cross-platform functions like membership, customer support, safety, and more,” the filing said.

Gore-Coty is one of 11 people listed on Uber’s executive team page. Macdonald is the only one who has worked at the company longer. He joined in May 2012, four months before Gore-Coty, according to LinkedIn.

“These last nearly 13 years have been the ride of a lifetime,” Gore-Coty said in the statement. “It was a true team effort, and I’m so proud of what we’ve built and the impact we’ve had on daily life in cities around the world.”

Uber shares were little changed in extended trading after closing on Monday at $83.64. The stock is up 39% this year, while the Nasdaq is about flat.

Last month, the company reported first-quarter results that beat on earnings but missed on revenue. A month earlier, the Federal Trade Commission sued Uber, alleging that the company engaged in “deceptive billing and cancellation practices” related to its Uber One subscription service.

In an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” Khosrowshahi characterized the lawsuit as “a bit of a head-scratcher for us.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Elon Musk’s brain tech startup Neuralink has closed a $650 million funding round, the company announced Monday.

ARK Invest, Founders Fund, Sequoia Capital, Thrive Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners and other firms participated in the round, according to a press release. Neuralink said the fresh capital will help the company bring its technology to more patients and develop new devices that “deepen the connection between biological and artificial intelligence.”

Neuralink is building a brain-computer interface, or BCI, which is a system that translates brain signals into commands for external technologies.

The company’s first system, called Telepathy, involves 64 “threads” that are inserted directly into the brain. The threads are thinner than a human hair and record neural signals through 1,024 electrodes, according to Neuralink’s website.

The initial aim of the technology is to help patients with severe paralysis restore some independence. As of Monday, five patients have been implanted with Neuralink’s technology, and are able to “control digital and physical devices with their thoughts,” the release said.

Neuralink is currently carrying out four separate clinical trials around its Telepathy system.

BCIs have been studied in academia for decades, and several other companies, including Synchron, Paradromics and Precision Neuroscience, are developing their own systems.

Paradromics on Monday announced it successfully implanted its BCI in a human for the first time.

It’s not clear what devices Neuralink will look to develop next, but Musk has for years espoused grand ambitions for the brain tech startup. He has even claimed that he would be willing to get an implant himself.

One of the capabilities Musk has repeatedly highlighted is the ability to restore vision to blind patients.

Neuralink received a “Breakthrough Device” designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for a device called Blindsight. This designation is granted to medical devices that have the potential to provide improved treatment for debilitating or life-threatening conditions.

In a post on his social media platform X in September, Musk said Blindsight will enable even those who have lost both eyes and their optic nerve to see.

Neuralink still has a long road ahead before it can commercialize these technologies.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

The 2025 French Open is into its second week, and the stakes are only getting higher.

Defending champions Iga Swiatek and Carlos Alcaraz are still alive in their bids to repeat on the storied clay courts of Roland Garros. But they still face a difficult road to get back to the winner’s circle. Swiatek knows how to navigate that road better than anyone, however, having won the title each of the last three years.

The second Grand Slam tournament of the 2025 tennis season will culminate with the women’s final on Saturday, June 7 and the men’s final on Sunday, June 8.

Here are the latest results and schedule from Paris.

How to watch the 2025 French Open

Date: Ongoing through Sunday, June 8
Where: Stade Roland Garros in Paris, France
TV: TNT, TBS, truTV
Stream: Sling TV, YouTube TV

2025 French Open: Men’s singles bracket

For a full list of results, visit the Roland-Garros 2025 tournament site.

Tuesday, June 3

Quarterfinal round

8-Lorenzo Musetti (Italy) def. 15-Frances Tiafoe (U.S.) 6-2, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2

2-Carlos Alcaraz (Spain) vs. 12-Tommy Paul (U.S.)

Wednesday, June 4

Quarterfinal round

1-Jannik Sinner (Italy) vs. Alexander Bublik (Kazakhstan)

3-Alexander Zverev (Germany) vs. 6-Novak Djokovic (Serbia)

Friday, June 6

Semifinal round

8-Lorenzo Musetti (Italy) vs. TBA

TBA vs. TBA

2025 French Open: Women’s singles bracket

Tuesday, June 3

Quarterfinal round

1-Aryna Sabalenka def. Zheng Qinwen (China) 7-6 (3), 6-3

5-Iga Swiatek (Poland) def. 13-Elina Svitolina (Ukraine) 6-1, 7-5

Wednesday, June 4

Quarterfinal round

7-Madison Keys (U.S.) vs. 2-Coco Gauff (U.S.)

6-Mirra Andreeva (Russia) vs. Lois Boisson (France)

Thursday, June 5

Semifinal round

1-Aryna Sabalenka vs. 5-Iga Swiatek (Poland)

TBA vs TBA

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

DAZN believes the FIFA Club World Cup could become the most live streamed event in sports history.

The Club World Cup begins June 14 with Lionel Messi and Inter Miami playing in the opening match in Miami, and ends with the Club World Cup final at MetLife Stadium on July 13. The Club World Cup winner will take home at least $125 million of a $1 billion prize pool on the line for the tournament.

All 63 matches of the Club World Cup will be available to live stream for free worldwide on DAZN.com, while TNT will broadcast select matches on TV in the United States in English. Univision, TUDN and ViX will broadcast matches in Spanish in the U.S.

‘If you take a global point of view, soccer is the biggest sport in the world. We think this will easily become the highest streamed live sports event ever because we’re going to have audiences not just in the U.S, but in South America, across Europe, across the Middle East, and so on,’ DAZN’s CEO of Growth Markets Pete Oliver told USA TODAY Sports.

‘It’s a really big moment to have a truly global sporting event available on one streaming platform. This is going to be an opportunity to bring in a big, new audience of fans onto DAZN, and for them to experience all of the things we do.’

Kylian Mbappe and Real Madrid, Champions League winners Paris Saint-Germain, Champions League runner-up Inter Milan, Chelsea, Manchester City, Atletico Madrid, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund are among standout clubs participating in the tournament.

Along with Inter Miami, the Seattle Sounders and Los Angeles FC will represent Major League Soccer and the U.S. in the field. Club World Cup matches will also be played in Atlanta, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, Orlando, Nashville, Philadelphia, Seattle and Washington D.C.

Consider the Club World Cup a precursor to the 2026 World Cup, which will be co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico from June 11-July 19, 2026. 

‘Well, it’s a very big moment. It’s a big moment for America, first of all, because it’s the first time this tournament (this size) has ever happened,’ Oliver said. ‘The biggest teams in the world are going to come and play in the U.S., which we think is hugely exciting. We think it’s going to be a very big cultural moment ahead of next year’s World Cup.’

Oliver expects viewership to be in the ‘hundreds of millions’ and believes DAZN has the infrastructure in place to handle streaming the tournament worldwide.

DAZN streams over 90,000 live events annually and is available in more than 200 markets worldwide – showcasing soccer matches from LaLiga (Spain), Serie A (Italy), Bundesliga (Germany), Ligue 1 (France), women’s football, boxing and MMA, the NFL and NBA internationally, and auto racing from Formula One and Moto GP.

‘We’re planning for hundreds of millions of people because, of course, it’s free. And that makes a big difference. No one has to buy a subscription to watch it. They can just download the app and watch,’ Oliver said.

‘It’s going to be very big for us globally. As proving ourselves as a global platform, this is going to be very important for us from a technology point of view as well as a customer point of view.’

DAZN plans to make the soccer-viewing experience unique for fans.

The Fan Zone within the DAZN app will allow viewers to participate in polls, chat with each other, and talk to influencers while watching the action.

DAZN also will have a referee camera in a FIFA tournament for the first time.

DAZN also will broadcast the tournament in 15 different languages so respective regions across Europe, the Middle East and Asia, and South America will be able to experience the tournament like they would any other soccer broadcast by the company.  

More than 100 popular social media influencers and creators with a combined reach of more than 32 million followers from countries like the U.S., England, Belgium, Spain, Ireland, Libya, France, Venezuela, Italy, Norway, Brazil, and Portugal will bring a wide range of perspectives and cultural energy for the tournament. 

There also will be alternative watch-along streams, and daily wrap-up shows to recap the tournament.

‘The coverage we’re going to bring is going to be very focused on bringing influencers, younger players who’ve retired recently and got a more contemporary view, players and pundits who represent all the different countries involved,’ Oliver said.

‘We think fans will see a very different premium experience, plus all of those interactive features through the app, making it a much more social and interactive viewing experience than maybe they’ve had before.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Have you been this kid?

‘I wouldn’t raise my hand in class to answer a question in case I would say the wrong thing,’ Annika Sorenstam says. ‘I was always afraid that my classmates would laugh at me.’

She would even miss on purpose – maybe hit a three-putt, maybe leave the ball at the bunker – coming down the stretch at junior golf tournaments so she wouldn’t have to speak in front of a crowd.

‘They wanted the winner to give remarks of some kind, even at early ages,’ she tells USA TODAY Sports, ‘just to kind of  teach you more than the game itself, and I remember just being so afraid of it. I could finish second or third and still get a prize.

‘But you can imagine that would haunt me because I practiced a lot and I’m very competitive and got home knowing that I could have won it.’

Sorenstam, who would go on to win 10 major tournaments, 72 events on the LPGA Tour and make hundreds of post-round comments, says shyness has always been her weakness. But today it’s a smaller hurdle she can clear because of lessons she learned from her parents and from sports that she has continued to apply.

She’s now a mom of two teenagers (Ava, 15, and Will, 14) trying like us to distinguish their individual traits, and to give them room to grown into them, like she did.

‘I always tell people, ‘Get back to me in 10 years,’ ‘ she says. ‘I’ll let you know if it worked.’

Sorenstam, 54, has been instructing for 18 years through her ANNIKA foundation, which empowers and advances the cause of young women in golf and life. This spring and summer, she is running clinics for Bank of America’s ‘Golf with Us’ program to help give more boys and girls access to experiences similar to what she had.

She doesn’t formally coach Will, her rising junior golfer, though.

‘I’ve learned you don’t want to be a helicopter parent,’ she says. ‘You’re so invested and you’re so engaged and you’re so caring. We all love them so much and we just want them to succeed, and then it’s just, how do you handle it?’

Here’s her advice for parents and their athletes to help us all try and figure out golf, sports and overcoming our fears.

Foster independence through enjoyment of sport

Sorenstam’s mother, Gunilla, would swing a golf club when she was pregnant with her. She jokes with her daughter about how the action propelled her into her future.

Sorenstam describes her development as more of ‘one of those slow loves.’ Slow, indeed.

She grew up near Stockholm, Sweden, where she could whisk down ski slopes. Tennis, which she played for eight years, was her first love, not golf.

‘I really didn’t like it in the beginning,’ she says. ‘It was for older people and I wanted to chase a ball.’

Gunilla and her father, Tom, weren’t experts as much as facilitators for Sorenstam and her sister, Charlotta, who would also play on the LPGA Tour. The freedom to choose their favorite sport sparked curiosity.

‘It was just giving us the resources,’ Annika says. ‘Driving us to the golf course or driving us to the tennis tournaments, providing the stuff that we needed. Not like a coach or anything; it was more they’re loving parents and not very pushy and just kind of help us and guide us through the steps. And I think that worked quite well.

‘I disappointed them in my own way, but not through the score. And I always felt like they had my back. And on the contrary, I wanted them to be pleased and happy with what I was doing.’

She reflects today with a knowing chuckle about how right it felt: the way the support built her up inside and helped her along her teenage journey.

A seminal moment came when she was 16, and she had found her sport. ‘I want to play golf,’ she told her parents.

‘I don’t think I really knew where the golf would take me,’ she says. ‘It was more just kind of a hobby. I enjoyed playing. And then I got a little better. And then I played some tournaments. And then one thing kind of led to another.’

‘Go with the flow’: Instead of having expectations for your kid athletes, be willing to adapt and change as they do

It’s a process she started over again when her kids were very young and they traveled with her to golf events.

‘They probably thought that was work,’ Sorenstam says, ‘and that’s not what they wanted to do.’

These can be delicate times with our kids and their sports. We can teach lessons on grip, ball position and aim by sprinkling them in while playing with friends (‘It’s very convincing when friends play a certain sport,’ she says) or having putting competitions.

‘I am a big believer in understanding the fundamentals of the sport early on,’ Sorenstam says, ‘and then just let them learn and let them test.’

We don’t always have to emphasize drilling. We can take breaks, she says, to stack golf balls into pyramids or stress the concepts of the sport with a soccer ball.

‘Introduce them to the game so it doesn’t become so focused on golf and having to do everything perfectly,’ she says. ‘I think that’s when you lose your kid early, because it’s all this structure. There’s a fine line of having structure. There’s a fine line of having etiquette. And I think you have to find that balance.

‘When your kid leaves the golf course or the driving range you want them to have a smile on their face. Then I think you’ve been successful.’

Over the years, we have seen Will’s eyes drawn to not only Tiger and Charlie Woods but to his mom as they play the course at the PNC Championship together.

‘Slow down, Mommy,’ he said in 2023 as they walked down the 18th fairway in Orlando, Florida. ‘I don’t want this moment to end.’

Will and his sister tried just about every other sport Sorenstam and husband Mike McGee played – ‘I was the mean mom; I didn’t give him a chance to play football,’ Annika says – before Ava made the varsity softball team and he settled on golf. It’s all he wants to do.

‘We practice a lot together,’ Sorenstam says, ‘but he’s also kind of a student of the game, so about a year ago, I said, ‘I think you need to find a real coach’ and he was like, ‘Well, I want to work with you.’ I said, ‘That’s fine, but then you have to listen.’ That didn’t really work out very well so he’s working with somebody.

‘It’s good to get a different perspective. I love to attend some of his lessons and learn so that when we do play, I can be of help a little bit, because I know what they’re working on. … I know a little golf and sometimes he wants to talk about it and I feel like I can add some value, and sometimes I’m just his mom and let him do his thing.

‘You just gotta go with the flow. He asks a lot of questions, not so much technique with me maybe, but just (about) traveling and what was your greatest shot, your most important memory. I love to have that discussion.’

Coach Steve: When is it time to stop coaching your child in sports? Ask yourself these 3 questions

‘Feel the temperature’: Put your kids in situations to succeed, fail and express themselves

Golf was hard, but Sorenstam dove into the challenge to figure it out. It was like finding a missing piece of the puzzle that formed her identity. 

Playing it was fun, but then it became terrifying.

Tom and Gunilla started to see a pattern in Annika’s near-misses at tournaments. They called ahead to an upcoming one. When it was complete, Annika was asked to say something.

‘My reply was, ‘Well, I didn’t win,’ and they said, ‘We know, but we’d like to hear from you,’ ‘ Sorenstam says.

Her heart was pumping, her palms sweating. Her dad told her to grab her seven iron and make a simple statement like, ‘I let my clubs do the talking.’

‘I realized after that, ‘Oh, that was it,’ ‘ she says, and public speaking became easier.

‘It’s interesting how parents sometimes, they say we did so well, but she or he played so poorly,’ she says. ‘It’s like they have a third person. I think it’s really important to separate the athlete vs. the human and just really understand that the sport is helping you to grow as a human being, and not vice versa. Be able to separate that and not judge by the score.’

Her dad’s was a calculated nudge she has learned to use as a parent herself.

She likes to ask Will three questions after he plays:

How did it go?

What did you do well?

What can you do better?

‘And it’s kind of up to him. I’m not going to tell him: ‘I think you should do this better,’ ‘ she says.

He’ll tell her something, and then say, ‘I got it.’

‘Whether he actually knows or not, he’s telling himself, ‘That’s probably what I need to do,’ ‘ she says. ‘And I think for us, it’s worked quite well, because I want him to be accountable and responsible for his own thing, and then if he doesn’t know, then just ask me. I don’t want him to feel when we get in the car ride home that he’s like trapped in a car, and I’m bombarding him with questions. You have to kind of feel the temperature.’

Coach Steve: Tips for the car ride home. Hint: Don’t be like Andre Agassi’s dad

It’s putting the power of the experience in our kids hands for their own self-discovery, she says, no matter what our level of accomplishment. We learn with each kid when to push and when to pull back.

‘Hopefully he feels the safety net, but I’m only there if he needs it,’ she says. ‘Otherwise, I’m just gonna let him do his thing because that’s how he learns. I’ve learned that myself: If he gets in a sticky situation, or if he’s on the golf course (and) it’s not working, he can’t ask me anyway. He’s gotta try to figure it out. So I might as well try to give him all the help early on and let him learn from his mistakes.’

‘The goal is to make great individuals’: We can go the distance with sports

Bank of America is offering kids 6 to 18 a free one-year membership through June 15 to its Youth on Course program, which grants access to rounds for $5 or less at affiliated courses. The clinics are open to Youth on Course members in the market and to children from youth partner organizations like Boys & Girls Clubs of America.

Sorenstam says she’s not necessarily trying to create the next superstar but use golf, or whichever sport they choose, to help unlock things like dedication, curiosity, competitiveness and attention to fitness.

‘The goal is to make great individuals that represent the sport, and not so much just result and performance,” she says. “It’s really tough today with pressure and expectations. It’s better if you can build a solid foundation and then once you have that, you can go out and be successful in whatever you choose.

“There’s so many things you can do within the sport, whether it’s running an event or sports marketing or manufacturing. If you love sports, there’s so many things you can do more than just play it and you can still be around the sport.

[Don’t forget sports writing.]

To help kids find the right fit, we can be engaged from a distance while letting them learn, explore, hit and miss on their own.

Kids are more resilient than you think, especially the shy ones.

‘People think that people that have done well, it’s a straight line, straight journey; that you have no issues, you’re not scared, things come really easily,’ she says. ‘But I think we all have weaknesses that we got to work on and try to improve.’

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

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