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Lionel Messi has been on a tear in Major League Soccer, and expected to be back on the pitch Saturday in Toronto.

Messi is expected to play with Inter Miami against Toronto FC on Saturday, Sept. 27 at BMO Field. The match is scheduled to begin at 4:30 p.m. ET.  

Messi enters the match in the lead for the MLS Golden Boot with 24 goals after scoring a brace with an assist in his last match, a 4-0 win against New York City FC on Wednesday, Sept. 24.

Messi also leads MLS with 37 goal contributions (24 goals, 13 assists), which could fuel his bid to become the first player in league history to win consecutive MVP awards.

All eyes will be on Messi as Inter Miami chases points, entering the match five points behind the Philadelphia Union in the standings for the Supporters’ Shield – which Inter Miami won in 2024.

Here’s everything you need to know about the Toronto FC vs. Inter Miami match:

Is Messi playing today?

Messi is expected to play. His status for the match will be confirmed when Inter Miami announces its starting lineup an hour before kickoff.

How to watch Toronto FC vs. Inter Miami?

The match will be available on MLS Season Pass via Apple TV, and the Apple TV+ channel on Amazon Prime, Xfinity and DirecTV.

Watch MLS games all season long on Apple TV

What time is Toronto FC vs Inter Miami match?

The match is on Saturday, Sept. 27 at 4:30 p.m. ET (5:30 p.m. in Argentina).

Buy Inter Miami tickets on StubHub

Where is the Toronto FC vs. Inter Miami match?

The match will be played at BMO Field in Toronto.

Will Inter Miami make the MLS p3layoffs?

Yes, Inter Miami has clinched a berth into the MLS Cup playoffs after their 4-0 victory against New York City FC on Sept. 24.

Toronto FC vs. Inter Miami betting odds

Here are the betting odds for today’s match, according to BETMGM.

Toronto FC: +290
Draw: +300
Inter Miami: -130
Over/under: 3.5 goals

What to know about Inter Miami and Toronto FC

Inter Miami is third in the MLS Eastern Conference standings (and fifth in MLS) with 55 points from 29 matches. They are five points away from Philadelphia Union for the MLS Supporters’ Shield lead with five matches remaining this season.

Toronto FC is 12th of 15 teams in the East with 27 points, but have already been eliminated from MLS Cup playoff contention. Toronto enters the match following six straight draws, where they allowed just one goal in five of the six matches.

Sergio Busquets announces his retirement

Inter Miami also enters the Toronto match, following news that legendary midfielder Sergio Busquets will retire at the end of the 2025 MLS season. Busquets made the announcement on his Instagram account on Thursday, Sept. 25. Busquets won the World Cup with Spain in 2010, and was the first former FC Barcelona star to join Lionel Messi at Inter Miami.

Lionel Messi Inter Miami contract update

Messi is nearing a contract extension with Inter Miami to keep him in MLS and the United States for at least two more seasons through 2027, USA TODAY Sports reported on Sept. 17.

Will Messi play in 2026 World Cup?

Messi has yet to declare whether he will play in the World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico next summer. But he did offer some insight after the Argentina match earlier this month.

“Because of my age, the most logical thing is that I won’t make it. But well, we’re almost there so I’m excited and motivated to play it,” Messi said on Sept. 4. “Like I always say, I go day by day, match by match. That’s it taking it day by day, going by how I feel. Day by day, trying to feel good and above all, being honest with myself. When I feel good, I enjoy it. But when I don’t, honestly, I don’t have a good time, so I prefer not to be there if I don’t feel good. So, we’ll see. I haven’t made a decision about the World Cup.”

Messi’s upcoming schedule with Inter Miami and Argentina

Here is Lionel Messi’s schedule with Inter Miami and Argentina through the end of the 2025 MLS season. The MLS Cup playoffs begin on Oct. 22.

Sept. 30: Inter Miami vs. Chicago Fire, 7:30 p.m. ET
Oct. 4: Inter Miami vs. New England, 7:30 p.m. ET
Oct. 10: Argentina vs. Venezuela, 8 p.m. ET (International Friendly in Miami)
Oct. 11: Inter Miami vs. Atlanta United, 7:30 p.m. ET
Oct. 13: Puerto Rico vs. Argentina, 7 p.m. ET (International Friendly in Chicago)
Oct. 18: Nashville vs. Inter Miami, 6 p.m. ET

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PHOENIX — The Los Angeles Dodgers, who are eagerly awaiting to see who they’ll be playing in the wild-card round beginning Tuesday, Sept. 30 at Dodger Stadium, have already identified their biggest obstacle without looking at a single page of their detailed scouting reports:

Simply, making sure their players keep a straight face when they take the field.

Really.

It may sound silly, but the challenge may be bigger than you can imagine.

Come on, you really think the Dodgers can possibly take this upcoming best-of-three wild card series seriously?

Look at the two teams they may be facing, after a third one was eliminated Friday:

The New York Mets (82-78)

They are 37-54 since June 12, losing 13 of their 19 games in September, and dropping another one Friday night, 6-2, to the Miami Marlins.

“We put ourselves in this position,’’ Mets manager Carlos Mendoza told reporters. “We’ve just to win the next two and see what happens, but we did it to ourselves.’’

The Cincinnati Reds (82-78)

Yep, the same dudes who were just swept by the lowly Athletics in Sacramento two weeks ago, and dropped two of three at home to the Pittsburgh Pirates, who happen to have the second-worst road record in baseball. They also are in the driver’s seat after their 3-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers, moving into a tie with the Mets but owning the tie-breaker.

“We’re like cockroaches man,’’ Reds infielder Gavin Lux said on the Reds’ broadcast afer the game. “You can’t kill us.’’

Eliminated: The Arizona Diamondbacks (80-80)

These guys should get a playoff share from the Seattle Mariners for helping them win the AL West while sinking their own chances. The D-backs were officially eliminated Friday after their 7-4 loss to the San Diego Padres, but they can’t help but wonder if they would have run away with the race if they didn’t gift-wrap third baseman Eugenio Suarez and first baseman Josh Naylor to Seattle, while dumping ace Merrill Kelly.

“It was a series of games, a series of missed opportunities throughout the course of the year that put us in this situation,’’ Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo told reporters before the game, “and we have to accept that. We’ve got to own that. We’ve got to wear it.’’

Looking ahead

The Dodgers will publicly tell you they really don’t care who they’re facing, but if they had their druthers, surely they would prefer the Mets.

This is a team that not only has self-destructed, its pitching staff is also in tatters. The Mets had to rely on three rookies who were called up to make their major-league debuts this past month, and even if they happen to survive to Sunday, they have no idea who would even pitch Game 162, let alone in a playoff series.

The Reds, meanwhile, led by future Hall of Fame manager Terry Francona, may have the fourth-worst offense in the National League – scoring three or fewer runs in their last five games – but they have an awfully talented starting rotation. If they make it, they are lined up to have ace Hunter Greene (7-4, 2.76 ERA) pitch in Game 1, Brady Singer (14-11, 3.95 ERA) in Game 2 and Nick Lodolo (9-8, 3.30 ERA) for a potential Game 3.

“I don’t think anyone would want to play us if we sneak in there, not with our pitching,’’ Lux told USA TODAY Sports last month. “We’re a young team with nothing to lose. We can match up with anyone.’’

Thanks to this mildest of wild-card races, it looks like we’re about to find out.

Follow Nightengale on X: @BNightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Another college football upset, another stormed field.

Mere moments after unranked Virginia defeated No. 8 Florida State 46-38 in double overtime in Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Virginia, the hometown Cavaliers celebrated in typical fashion: by storming the field.

ESPN cameras caught the events as they unfolded, with a sea of navy-and-orange fans rushing the field after defensive back Ja’Son Prevard sealed the game with an interception of Thomas Castellanos. The fans also engulfed at least two Florida State players as they rushed the field, including receiver Squirrel White, who was the intended target on the game-sealing interception.

The ACC has updated its event security policy in the case of a field-storming, ruling that the offending program will owe $50,000 as a first-time offender to the updated policy. The money associated with the Sept. 26 game will not go to Florida State, but instead will be donated the ACC’s scholarship fund.

Florida State itself should be familiar with the policy after its fans rushed the field following a Week 1 upset over then-No. 8 Alabama. Georgia Tech fans also stormed the field against Clemson, proving Friday’s events to be something of a recurring theme this season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Parents should consider if their involvement is taking the joy out of their child’s sports experience.
Families must evaluate if a demanding sports schedule is negatively impacting family dynamics and healthy habits.
Specializing in one sport may increase the chances of a college scholarship but also raises the risk of overuse injuries and burnout.

Steve,

We only let our daughter play one sport per season. No school team for one sport and a club for another.

This was of course to give her time for academics and some down time. Not only down time mentally but I think too many sports at one time takes its toll physically on the body and there is more chance for injury.

I recently talked with our local high school golf coach and he told me his No. 1 player broke his collarbone playing club ice hockey. Maybe it was just a freak thing, but also the overbooking could have had some effect on his game.

But in this day and age maybe overbooking is the way to go? Otherwise the kids will probably just be on their phones anyway.

Tom

Start by separating yourself from your kids’ sports experience, then answer these questions

Dear Tom,

As a regular reader of my column, you know I am a proponent of kids staying active and trying out as many sports as possible, especially when they are young.

But the moment we watch them step onto the field, the picture can get trickier, especially if we have played sports before.

Izzy! You take that ball, and you runnnn!

Those were the screams of U.S. women’s soccer icon Julie Foudy during her first game with her daughter.

“It came out, and my husband looked at me and he goes, ‘Uh, Paging crazy soccer mom?’” she told her former teammate, Abby Wambach, who was laughing uncontrollably after Foudy’s re-enactment during a recent episode of their new podcast.

“And I was like, ‘Oh my God. I don’t know where that came from,’ ” Foudy said.

As parents, she says, we can unintentionally suck the joy out of our kids’ games by getting too involved. Often when they start out, they meet for an hour or less once or twice a week. Let it be their time to enjoy and discover the sports they truly love.

Finding that separation, and a balance of oversight and fun, is a key to a happy sports family.

Are you allowing your kids to truly enjoy sports?

Foudy credits autonomy within her sport as molding her into a World Cup and Olympic champion. She says her parents rarely came to her games.

To Foudy, their actions weren’t about apathy but about allowing her to own and appreciate her experience. Too extreme? Let’s look at the other side of the coin.

Marv Marinovich, a former NFL strength and conditioning coach, was notoriously hands on.

“Better look up there at least a few times during the game so I can tell you what you need to work on,” Marv would tell Todd from the bleachers.

Todd Marinovich, who has a new memoir out about his soaring football heights and downward spiral out of the game with drug abuse, says his father didn’t push him into football. He was self-motivated, but he admits he would have benefited from his dad hitting the breaks at times.

If we find ourselves interrupting their experience, we can, like Foudy, move to the end of the sidelines, or to the top of the stands, to stay away from the masses.

Wambach, now a soccer mom to a NCAA Division 1 player like Foudy, says we can separate even when our young kids are not playing. If they have two games in one day at, say 10 and 3, and you don’t want to attend the team lunch, allow your son or daughter to go to it with a teammate’s parents.

You keep your peace of mind by sitting on the back deck and reading. Your kid can continue to bond with teammates, which, in my opinion, is the most important benefit of any sport.

Is playing more than one sport interrupting your family dynamics?

The average sports parent spends 3 hours, 23 minutes every day their child has a practice or game engaging in sports-related activities, according to an Aspen Institute national parent survey in partnership with Utah State and Louisiana Tech universities.

According to the survey, 56% of youth sports parents say they eat out for two to four meals per week due to their child’s sports schedule, while slightly more than 1 in 10 families eat out five to seven meals per week due to sports.

Every family can ask themselves: Are you establishing healthy habits and interactions? Are you making time to talk with each other? Are you eating together enough or grabbing too much fast food on the run?

Maybe you love the busy lifestyle and it is ingrained into your family life. Maybe you are overwhelmed, and you need to cut back on the time you invest in sports, and hold off from adding a new one to the mix.

What are your kid’s goals with sports?

About 6-7% of high school athletes (or a little more than 500,000) go on to compete at the NCAA level. There’s nothing wrong with going after those odds. You’ve likely already invested so much time and money into the process by the time your kids reach high school.

But you also have to be realistic. That percentage is cut in half (or lower, depending on the sport) to play Division 1 sports and is microscopic to play professionally.

“I wanted for my son to play football, basketball and baseball because I did,” says former American League MVP Mo Vaughn, who runs a sports academy in Florida and coaches his 13-year-old son, Lee. “But he can’t and be on the major circuit in baseball; he’s gotta work and train doing this all year round, or he’s gonna fall behind. Bo Jackson says nowadays: ‘People that are trying to play two sports, that’s great but you’re gonna be on the bench playing two sports.’

“So number one, the first thing is, let’s not get so caught up in this NIL situation that we forget that young people are still young people and need to grow. And the magic is in the work. And no matter what your status is, you’re gonna have to put in the time to be successful in any sport.”

Vaughn says he checks in with Lee to make sure he is enjoying baseball and the work father is requiring son to do.

Marinovich has had similar conversations with his son, Baron, a budding high school quarterback in Orange County, California. Baron is learning how much training and practice he has to do away from the field to excel at a sport.

“I don’t think people that have never competed at high school or even college know how much time was spent, and there’s just no shortcut there,” Marinovich says. “But if there’s the love behind it, you can spend the time. But there are still those days where I didn’t want to do it, that I just was in a habit of doing it. And the discipline that it taught me because I wouldn’t have spent that time if I wasn’t getting results.

“I’m not talking about just football – (it’s) anything you choose to do.”

Is it worth getting hurt?

Ryan Klesko, another former major league All-Star and advisor for young players via Perfect Game, says he tells athletes to look at themselves in the mirror. If they want to play multiple sports in high school, they need to be OK with another sport ending their competitive baseball career.

“I have seen some injuries happen from players who had a really good chance to go play in college somewhere, get hurt on their secondary sport,” says Klesko, who has coached his son, Hunter, a junior, on the Atlanta Braves scout team.

One in particular, he said, was an elite pitcher who was a high school quarterback. He took a helmet to the shoulder and had reconstructive surgery. Years later, he came to Klesko and said, “Man, I just wish I wouldn’t have played football my senior year, because I was going to get drafted (in MLB).”

All athletes, regardless of skill level, can get into the habit of valuing the intrinsic values of sports – such as developing healthy relationships with lots of people – over the monetary and financial gains we can get from them.

Doing so might help you better shape your focus as you move through high school.

“You know what’s underrated is the club model for sports in college,” says Tom Farrey, who directs Project Play, a national initiative to get more children involved in athletics. “You wear the uniform, you’re representing Cal or Stanford, you’re playing for the rugby team, but you, as students, own the experience more. You might have a coach. If you do, you’re the one that selects the coach. The travel is not to the East Coast for some midweek game that has two stops. It’s more regional.

“I’m struck by this idea of like, ‘Can’t we just build up the college club model and intramural model? Create more participation opportunities, reduce the incentive for parents to try to get their kids into that pipeline and chase these scarce scholarships or preferential admission to selective universities.’ ”

If you’re going for it, are you overtraining?

Specializing in a sport can lead to overuse injuries, which result from cumulative microtrauma to bone, muscle, and/or tendon as a function of repetitive stress with insufficient recovery, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

There can be a psychological component of them, too.

“I always ask all my athletes when they’re coming into the office what their training load is, what is their routine, how much time off do they have over the past 12 months and if they’re still enjoying the sport,” says Joel Brenner, the medical director of the sports medicine program at Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters in Norfolk, Virginia.

“There’s times that they say that they’re not really enjoying it and then we have to go into, ‘Well, then why are you doing it?’ ” Brenner says. “And if they are not enjoying it and they’re burned out, then we talk about other possibilities that they could do, like taking a break from the sport, finding a different sport or other activity. Sometimes, especially if they’re burned out or overtraining, just taking a break, having a few months off, can really refresh them both physically and mentally, and maybe they don’t want to get back to that sport but maybe they’ll pick up another sport.”

The AAP recommends one day of complete rest per week and two to three months off from participation in any specific sport to let your body recover. They don’t have to be consecutive months and you can still train and lift weights during that time.

When you’re not playing, where’s your phone?

Marinovich, the former Raiders phenom, says playing basketball in high school made him a much more athletic football player.  Wambach says playing the sport growing up and learning how to jump for rebounds helped her with headers in soccer.

If you play only one sport, what else are you doing?

“If your phone time is more than your practice time then don’t complain about your playing time,” says Larissa Mills, who directs the London, Ontario-based Mental Game Academy, which helps athletes develop emotional and social awareness.

Mills, who works with players from the youth through professional levels, says 80% of the athletes the academy sees are in what she calls “yellow.”

“They don’t like themselves,” she tells USA TODAY Sports. “They’re on their phones probably six to nine hours a day, and this is the leading cause of behavioral issues in our society. It’s global. But we go in and show them how phones change their brain, and show them how it really hurts their performance, their speed, their strength, their decision making, and then, bam, they just get off them. …

“Kids need to be bored and go play. Our brains are simply not designed to be on tech. They’re designed to talk and walk, so psychologically, we’re kind of stunting the development.”

Here’s my tip, courtesy of Jeff Nelligan, who has written a book about sports parenting. While raising three boys, who played collegiately at the varsity or club level, Nelligan would take an evening walk with them.

I recently started doing this with one or both of my teenagers and the dog. We don’t bring phones, or we leave them in our pockets.

I don’t say anything when we begin, and, without prompting, they usually just start talking. That dreaded question – “How was your day?” – that rarely gets more than a one-word response is magically answered.

As parents, sometimes we just need to tweak the current dynamics.

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.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Scottie Scheffler, the world’s No. 1 golfer, struggled on the first day of the 2025 Ryder Cup, losing both of his matches.
Scheffler cited his putting as the primary reason for his and his partners’ losses on Friday.
Despite his individual success, Scheffler has a 2-9 record at the Ryder Cup and has not won in his last six matches.

FARMINGDALE, NY – What must be frustrating for the U.S. squad at the 2025 Ryder Cup is that they don’t need Scottie Scheffler to be a superhero. They just need the world No. 1 player to play as he normally does. And he showed up, eventually, here at Bethpage Black on Friday, Sept. 26.

Scheffler birdied holes No. 15 and 16 in the afternoon session, but so did Jon Rahm and Sepp Straka, respectively. 

For the Americans, they better hope that Scheffler can figure it out before he goes to the first tee Saturday, although he won’t have Donald Trump to point at this time. Scheffler and reigning U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun went on to win the first hole on Spaun’s birdie – and that was their lone victory for the rest of the match against Rahm and Straka. 

“It really just came down to me not holing enough putts,” Scheffler said. “We put up a good fight at the end. The guys just really turned it on on the back nine, but it really came down to us not taking advantage of the holes early in the match that we needed to. But overall it was a good fight.”  

Scheffler fared even worse in the morning session. He and Russell Henley, his playing partner in the Friday morning foursome (alternate shot) session, were throttled by Ludvig Åberg and Matthew Fitzpatrick and lost by five holes. 

The nemesis for Scheffler on Friday wasn’t the opposition as much as it was his putter. 

“We just didn’t hole enough putts early,” he said after the first match. “We had some chances.”

Since September 2021, Scheffler has won 19 of the 116 events he’s played in. In that same time frame, he’s 2-9 at the Ryder Cup. He hasn’t won his last six Ryder Cup matches (two ties, four losses).  

The Americans don’t need him to be 9-2. But a serviceable performance from the best player in the world? Surely that can’t be too much to ask for.

The United States’ other stars didn’t fare well on Day 1 of the tournament, either. Bryson DeChambeau also turned in zero points, for example. But Scheffler is a four-time major winner who has been consistently at the top of his sport for years. 

‘I think if you ask Scottie, he would say he’s excited tomorrow to go out and play his best golf,’ U.S. captain Keegan Bradley said. ‘When you’re the No. 1 player in the world, you have a day that maybe it wasn’t his best, normally you bounce back. We are not worried about Scottie Scheffler. He’s been in great spirits in the team room. He’s eager to get back out there tomorrow.’

Of course, Scheffler isn’t the first all-time great to lose his dominance in the team format of the Ryder Cup. Tiger Woods was part of a winning U.S. squad just once and has the most foursome losses in U.S. Ryder Cup history (nine) and the most fourball losses (10). (Woods’ overall record was 13-21-3).

Scheffler became the first No. 1 player since Woods to lose both his matches on opening day of the Ryder Cup since the latter did so in 2002 at The Belfry in England. 

Rahm – to be somewhat trivial for a moment – is the European avatar of Scheffler, a multi-major championship winner with long stints as the world’s best player. But the Spaniard, unlike his counterpart, consistently shows up at the Ryder Cup and has a 8-3-3 record after Friday. Rahm is undefeated (5-0) in foursomes. 

Scheffler is paired with Henley in foursome play again Saturday, proof that Bradley has ultimate confidence in his star. Now it’s time for the game’s best player to reward that faith and start reversing his Ryder Cup narrative.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Unranked Virginia upset No. 8 Florida State in a 46-38 double-overtime victory.
The loss marked Florida State’s first of the season, dropping them to 3-1.
Florida State’s loss was marked by several missed opportunities, including multiple turnovers and a dropped touchdown pass in overtime.

The Atlantic Coast Conference has once again provided one of the biggest upsets of the college football season.

For the second time this year, Mike Norvell and Florida State football were at the center of it — though on the opposite end. The No. 8-ranked Seminoles, ahead of a massive Week 6 game against No. 6-ranked Miami, went on the road to Virginia for a Friday night game and left with their first blemish on the season.

Unranked Virginia, which didn’t receive a single vote in the most recent US LBM Coaches Poll, knocked off FSU with a 46-38 double-overtime win, dropping the Seminoles to 3-1 on the season and 0-1 in ACC play. The Cavaliers, meanwhile, improved their record to 4-1 and 2-0 in conference play.

The hero of the game for Virginia may end up being junior defensive back Ja’Son Prevard, who twice intercepted Florida State quarterback Thomas Castellanos on the night. The first of those occurred at the end of the first quarter, negating what stood to be a Florida State scoring drive after he rushed the quarterback, tipped the ball and brought it in for the pick.

The second pick was less acrobatic, but more consequential, as it sealed Virginia’s win. He targeted Castellanos’ pass intended for Squirrel White, bringing the ball safely to the turf to end the game.

Florida State may look back at its first loss of the season and see missed opportunities across the board. In the first quarter alone, the Seminoles’ three offensive drives consisted of a punt, fumble and interception, followed by three straight second-quarter touchdown drives to enter halftime tied 21-21.

Florida State also had a missed field goal in the third quarter, a turnover on downs in the fourth and the game-sealing interception in double overtime.

The Seminoles may also look back at what would have been a game-tying touchdown in the second OT period, as receiver Duce Robinson bobbled the ball the entire length of the end zone, failing to get control of it before he exited out the back of the end zone.

Virginia was able to capitalize on those mistakes and pull out the win in a back-and-forth game. Cavaliers quarterback Chandler Morris wasn’t perfect, completing 26 of 35 passes for 229 yards and two touchdowns to three interceptions. But he also rushed eight times for 37 yards and three touchdowns, accounting for all but one of the Cavaliers’ touchdowns (the other being a 26-yard J’Mari Taylor score to even the game at 21-21 in the second quarter).

The Cavaliers will next travel to Louisville on Saturday looking to keep its undefeated ACC record intact. Florida State, meanwhile, will look to respond positively in its rivalry game vs. Miami that, despite losing some of its luster, will have massive implications for the College Football Playoff.

This story has been updated with additional information.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Sports psychologists are divided on whether bitterness over the trade will help or hinder his performance.
Some experts believe bitterness can create a beneficial ‘fight mentality,’ while others say it is an unsustainable distraction.
Psychologists suggest Parsons could also draw motivation from gratitude for his new $188 million contract with the Packers.

Seemingly strung along during a contract impasse this summer.

Abruptly traded in late August.

Denied a tribute during his imminent return to the place he called home for four stellar seasons.

Micah Parsons, set to play against the Dallas Cowboys Sept. 28 for the first time since they traded him to the Green Bay Packers, has reasons to be bitter. That emotion could fuel the four-time Pro Bowl defensive lineman, or potentially derail him, according to psychologists.

“Because bitterness creates anger, and anger activates the body…your body becomes more intense,’’ said Jim Taylor, an expert on the psychology of performance who said he has worked with NFL players and other athletes. “It creates a fight mentality, and that can be beneficial to performance. …

“But it doesn’t feel good and it’s kind of unsustainable.’’

Jim Loehr, a renowned performance psychologist, told USA TODAY Sports, “I have never had any athlete perform well when driven by bitterness.”

Caroline Silby, a sports psychologist consultant who has worked with Olympic athletes, said, “Bitterness may provide a temporary spark for someone lower on the motivation continuum, but for athletes who already possess and display strong personal purpose and drive, it can be an unnecessary distraction.’’

But Carrie Hastings, a sports psychologist who’s in her eighth season of working with the Los Angeles Rams, views bitterness differently.

“If you are in control of it enough to where you are out there playing with a chip on your shoulder, that’s going to give you an edge,’’ she said. “An emotion like bitterness should maybe not (be) used as a tool when it becomes so overwhelming that it’s almost flooding your system, you’re carrying it with you throughout the day, in and out of football, on and off the field, and you’re not able to manage it.’’

Would another emotion spur Parsons?

Parsons has said he has ‘no hard feelings” toward the Cowboys. But is there any way to know for sure?

After all, Parsons has battled with Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who may have aggravated the situation by saying the team will not honor Parsons at AT&T Stadium.

Taylor, the psychologist who specializes in performance, said he would look for the presence of bitterness in Parsons considering what Parsons endured with the Cowboys during training camp.

“As soon as we engage thinking about the experience, that reduces the negative emotions,” Taylor said. ‘It turns the volume down.”

But what if Parsons wants to turn the volume up?

Earlier this month, he told Amazon Prime Video of the Cowboys, “There’s nothing more motivating then when you find out that people you love don’t truly believe in you and they thought less of you.’’

Hastings, the Rams sports psychologist, pointed out Parsons could draw on another emotion for motivation.

Gratitude.

After the Cowboys traded Parsons to the Packers, he signed a four-year, $188 million contract.

‘He’s going to be back in his old stadium with his familiar fans, who will probably still be rooting for him and seeing his old teammates,” Hastings said. ‘So there’s also a lot to look forward to in this sense. And he got a pretty good contract out of the trade, so there’s that, too.

“But if he does carry any bitterness, if he’s able to channel it in a way that is helpful to him, then certainly he could and should use it.’’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

President Donald Trump kicked off the week delivering remarks at the United Nations General Assembly, and closed it out by attending the 2025 Ryder Cup golf competition. 

During his address to the U.N. General Assembly debate Tuesday, Trump cautioned that Europe is in a crisis due to an influx of illegal immigration and warned that U.N. countries are ‘going to hell’ in the ‘failed experiment of open borders.’ 

‘Europe is in serious trouble,’ Trump said Tuesday. ‘They’ve been invaded by a force of illegal aliens like nobody’s ever seen before. Illegal aliens are pouring into Europe. Nobody is ever. And nobody’s doing anything to change it, to get them out. It’s not sustainable. And because they choose to be politically correct, they’re doing just absolutely nothing about it.’ 

The Trump administration has taken a tough stance against illegal immigrants to advance Trump’s mass deportation agenda. 

‘The U.N. is supposed to stop invasions, not create them and not finance them,’ Trump said. ‘In the United States, we reject the idea that mass numbers of people from foreign lands can be permitted to travel halfway around the world, trample our borders, violate our sovereignty, cause unmitigated crime, and deplete our social safety net. We have reasserted that America belongs to the American people, and I encourage all countries to take their own stand in defense of their citizens as well.’ 

After his remarks before the General Assembly and after meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Trump said that he believes Ukraine, with the backing of the European Union, could secure back all of its territory as the war between Russia and Ukraine persists. 

‘After getting to know and fully understand the Ukraine/Russia Military and Economic situation and, after seeing the Economic trouble it is causing Russia, I think Ukraine, with the support of the European Union, is in a position to fight and WIN all of Ukraine back in its original form,’ Trump said in a Tuesday Truth Social post. ‘With time, patience, and the financial support of Europe and, in particular, NATO, the original Borders from where this War started, is very much an option.’ 

‘Why not? Russia has been fighting aimlessly for three and a half years a War that should have taken a Real Military Power less than a week to win,’ Trump said. ‘This is not distinguishing Russia. In fact, it is very much making them look like ‘a paper tiger.’’ 

Meanwhile, Trump headed to Farmingdale, New York, Friday along with his granddaughter Kai for the Ryder Cup golf competition at Bethpage Black Course. 

Trump has appeared at two other sporting events in New York in September: the U.S. Open men’s final and a New York Yankees game Sept. 11. 

Fox News’ Paulina Dedaj and Ryan Morik contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Team Europe established a 5.5-2.5 lead over the U.S. after the first day of the 2025 Ryder Cup.
President Donald Trump attended the event, and Air Force One dramatically flew over the first tee.
Despite a slow start, the crowd atmosphere became electric, with a notable and vocal contingent of European fans.
U.S. captain Keegan Bradley faced scrutiny for his player pairings, particularly the decision to reuse an unsuccessful duo.

FARMINGDALE, NY – Before the sun barely rose above the tree line in the distance, the grandstand behind the first tee at the 2025 Ryder Cup was packed to the brim by 6:30 a.m. local time. 

The atmosphere – promised to be electric, a Ryder Cup in New York, after all – was lacking in those wee hours of the morning. That eventually changed once the players headed out in the first foursome matches Friday morning.

From presidents to antics to potentially questionable decision-making by the U.S. captain, here are three takeaways from Day 1 of the Ryder Cup, which ended with the Europeans racing out to a 5.5-2.5 lead.

Welcome to the Ryder Cup, Mr. President

Two flyovers – one before each session – wasn’t enough, apparently. As Donald Trump landed on Long Island via Air Force One, the aircraft passed over the first hole to mark a one-of-a-kind spectacle. 

Trump, accompanied by his granddaughter Kai (a high school senior committed to play golf at the University of Miami next year), predominately watched from behind a bullet-proof glass enclosure set up behind the first tee. He also left that area to get an up-close look of Bryson Dechambeau’s driver shot in the afternoon session. 

When it came time for Scottie Scheffler and J.J. Spaun to tee off in the afternoon, Scheffler – who was complimentary of the president earlier in the week – pointed to the Commander in Chief and smiled while Spaun did his own rendition of the “Trump dance.” 

“That was really a cool experience,” U.S. captain Keegan Bradley said. “Seeing an active President on the grounds of a Ryder Cup or at a golf event, what a cool thing. The flyover with Air Force One, I’ll never forget that the rest of my life. It was really cool.” 

Crowd gets going … eventually (and New Yorkers aren’t even the best part)

OK, whoever decided comedian Heather McMahan would be the one to hype up the crowd before Friday’s action got underway missed there. The comedian and the golf fanbase weren’t exactly a mix, especially at that hour of the morning. 

Maybe the expectations were too rosy for the effect the crowd would have on Team Europe. But they did not appear fazed at all throughout the day, despite some clever chirps from the crowd (the guy who threatened to cut Tommy Fleetwood’s hair almost took it too far). 

But the crowd mix isn’t as in favor of the U.S. as originally thought. The Europeans traveled well for this event (there appeared to be a lot of fans from Sweden, interestingly enough) and their chants and demeanor make for a better atmosphere compared to anything the American crowd threw out there. 

Keegan Bradley got – and is still being – too cute with it

Putting Russell Henley with Scheffler was certainly a choice, but the thinking that Henley’s approach game would pair well with Scheffler’s length off the tee was well-founded. But it certainly didn’t play out that way. But even more egregious was the Collin Morikawa-Harris English pairing. According to golf analytics site Data Golf, English and Morikawa ranked 132nd out of 132 possible optimal foursome pairings for a foursome session. They lost five holes on the front nine to Rory McIlroy and Tommy Fleetwood and their match ended after the 14th hole. 

One would think that would give Bradley a moment of reflection when making his Saturday pairings. Instead, the captain is sending the duo back out – again against McIlroy and Fleetwood.

If at first you don’t succeed, try again, sure. But with only 20 matches left and the U.S. in a hole, the logic feels flawed.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Atlantic Coast Conference has once again provided one of the biggest upsets of the college football season.

For the second time this year, Mike Norvell and Florida State football were at the center of it — though on the opposite end. The No. 8-ranked Seminoles, ahead of a massive Week 6 game against No. 6-ranked Miami, went on the road to Virginia for a Friday night game and left with their first blemish on the season.

Unranked Virginia, which didn’t receive a single vote in the most recent US LBM Coaches Poll, knocked off FSU with a 46-38 double-overtime win, dropping the Seminoles to 3-1 on the season and 0-1 in ACC play. The Cavaliers, meanwhile, improved their record to 4-1 and 2-0 in conference play.

The hero of the game for Virginia may end up being junior defensive back Ja’Son Prevard, who twice intercepted Florida State quarterback Thomas Castellanos on the night. The first of those occurred at the end of the first quarter, negating what stood to be a Florida State scoring drive after he rushed the quarterback, tipped the ball and brought it in for the pick.

The second pick was less acrobatic, but more consequential, as it sealed Virginia’s win. He targeted Castellanos’ pass intended for Squirrel White, bringing the ball safely to the turf to end the game.

Florida State may look back at its first loss of the season and see missed opportunities across the board. In the first quarter alone, the Seminoles’ three offensive drives consisted of a punt, fumble and interception, followed by three straight second-quarter touchdown drives to enter halftime tied 21-21.

Florida State also had a missed field goal in the third quarter, a turnover on downs in the fourth and the game-sealing interception in double overtime.

The Seminoles may also look back at what would have been a game-tying touchdown in the second OT period, as receiver Duce Robinson bobbled the ball the entire length of the end zone, failing to get control of it before he exited out the back of the end zone.

Virginia was able to capitalize on those mistakes and pull out the win in a back-and-forth game. Cavaliers quarterback Chandler Morris wasn’t perfect, completing 26 of 35 passes for 229 yards and two touchdowns to three interceptions. But he also rushed eight times for 37 yards and three touchdowns, accounting for all but one of the Cavaliers’ touchdowns (the other being a 26-yard J’Mari Taylor score to even the game at 21-21 in the second quarter).

The Cavaliers will next travel to Louisville on Saturday looking to keep its undefeated ACC record intact. Florida State, meanwhile, will look to respond positively in its rivalry game vs. Miami that, despite losing some of its luster, will have massive implications for the College Football Playoff.

This story has been updated with additional information.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY