Innovation, evolution, revolution – golf’s new faces championing change

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While this golfing year will be remembered for historic and thrilling action, manoeuvres off the course in 2025 also provide a highly significant legacy.

A group of new bosses are laying groundwork for rapid evolution, if not revolution, in the professional game.

We know that the world’s best players create captivating sport, as Rory McIlroy’s dramatic Grand Slam completing Masters victory, Scottie Scheffler’s ruthless domination that has led to him being named PGA Tour player of the year, and Europe’s sensational Ryder Cup victory all proved in 2025.

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February-August PGA Tour season?

PGA Tour chief executive Brian Rolapp presenting Tommy Fleetwood with the FedEx Trophy after the Englishman won the Tour Championship in AugustGetty Images

There has been unprecedented churn with new bosses installed at the PGA Tour, PGA of America and LPGA while Mark Darbon has just completed his first full year as head of the R&A.

Guy Kinnings has been in charge of the European Tour group for less than two years and on the breakaway LIV Golf League Scott O’Neil is only months into his role as Greg Norman’s successor leading the Saudi-funded disruptors.

And the presence of Darbon, O’Neil and the PGA Tour’s new chief executive Brian Rolapp at golf’s top table is most fascinating. All three have come from outwith the traditional confines of the sport they now run.

Rarely, if ever, has golf had such an influx of fresh perspectives and they have hit the ground running. It means 2026 is a transitional year and by 2027 the pro game could be significantly altered.

By taking charge of the game’s premier tour, Rolapp has become a key figure. He moved from the NFL, one of American sports’ greatest success stories.

He insists that sport requires three crucial components; competitive parity, simplicity and scarcity. He feels golf currently only has one of those ingredients.

Competitive parity is a real strength, the number of potential winners at any tournament is greater than in most sports. But golf’s structure is hard to follow and it is ubiquitous, with multiple tournaments across the globe every week.

“How do you make a competitive model simple to understand?” Rolapp said at a recent CEO Forum event in Florida. “And how do you make scarce events that actually fans want to follow?”

Already it is speculated that future PGA Tour seasons will start after the February date for the Super Bowl and finish before then NFL restarts in August. “Yeah, I could see that,” Rolapp said.

“Competing with football (NFL) in this country for media dollars and attention is a very hard thing to do do,” the American said.

He has an outsider’s view of how professional golf is structured. “It has grown up as a series of events that happen to be on television,” he told the forum.

Fines and ban can running out of road

LIV Golf chief executive Scott O'Neill with a LIV trophyGetty Images

Rolapp has assembled a Future Competitions committee chaired by 15 times major winner Tiger Woods. Given “more questions than answers” they are expected to report back with a blueprint for 2027 onwards in a matter of months.

There appears little prospect of unification with O’Neil’s LIV tour or a coming together with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund.

But the existence of a breakaway tour that is still populated by some of the most recognisable figures, Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm included, does not help Rolapp’s desire for a calendar that is simple to understand for general sports fans.

It also adversely affects the quest for scarcity of product to stimulate anticipation among fans.

O’Neil, though, has made a fast start to his LIV tenure. New backers such as HSBC, previously staunch supporters of establishment events, are eye-catching additions to their sponsorship portfolio.

His next priority is the same one that sits at the top of Kinnings’ in-tray at the DP World Tour’s Wentworth headquarters.

Between them they have to solve the so far intractable issue of punishing DPWT players for playing LIV events. Ryder Cup stars Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton are at the centre of this.

They are appealing against fines and bans. The hearing has not been scheduled, which enabled both players to represent Europe at last September’s Ryder Cup.

But the can is running out of road, it cannot be kicked much further. Locker room talk is that this could be be settled by April.

But how is anyone’s guess. And LIV players being able to compete in DPWT events as members without sanction would have huge implications for the global game.

How would Rolapp react if his strategic partners in Europe move closer to golfers from the rival LIV league?

O’Neil has already made a significant move to increase their shotgun start tournaments from 54 to 72 holes. This might help LIV’s desire for official world ranking points.

Certainly the OWGR’s Trevor Immelman, another new boss, seems more amenable than his predecessor Peter Dawson. But duration of tournaments is not the biggest sticking point.

O’Neil has to convince the official rankings body that there is sufficient promotion and relegation into and out of LIV to ensure it is not a closed shop exclusive to those who have been recruited on lucrative contracts.

The move to 72 holes was more about providing a format that more effectively prepares their players for the four major championships.

Open qualifying tweaked

R&A chief executive Mark Darbon hitting a golf shotGetty Images

At the R&A, Darbon has injected a new dimension to The Open by introducing a last chance qualifying competition for a dozen players to be staged on the Monday of championship week.

There will be one last berth available. The field will include the two highest ranked non exempt players, golfers who lost in final qualifying play-offs and the runner-up at the Amateur Championship.

Darbon came to the R&A from rugby union’s Northampton Saints and this development for the 154th championship at Royal Birkdale next July is a sign that some old conventions are being kicked to touch.

More pressing now is announcing a venue for the 2028 championship. Time is pressing for what will be the 156th staging of golf’s oldest major and one that will have an unfamiliar later date because of a clash with the LA Olympics.

It means Open week will start on 30 July. Diminishing daylight a fortnight later than usual suggests a Scottish venue would be best – Muirfield, Carnoustie or even Turnberry? Or a return to England’s most northerly Open outpost at Royal Lytham and St Annes.

Turnberry would be the most interesting and controversial selection. There are conflicting pressures given its ownership (US President Donald Trump) and infrastructure issues (lack of transport and accommodation) remain, so the Ayrshire course is the outsider in every respect.

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US military kills 8 in latest attacks on vessels in eastern Pacific

The United States has said it killed eight people in new attacks on vessels in the eastern Pacific Ocean, days after the US military seized a Venezuelan oil tanker amid Washington’s continuing military buildup in Latin America.

In a post on social media, the US Military Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) said that “lethal kinetic strikes” targeted three vessels in international waters on Monday, at the direction of Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

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Eight people were killed in total, SOUTHCOM said in a statement.

“Three in the first vessel, two in the second and three in the third,” it said, while claiming without providing any evidence that those killed were linked to drug trafficking.

At least 90 people have been killed in similar US attacks on dozens of vessels in the Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea near Venezuela since September, in what international law experts have criticised as extrajudicial killings by the US military.

US lawmakers have questioned Hegseth over his role in the attacks, including whether he personally ordered a second strike on a boat targeting two people who had survived a first attack and were left clinging to the debris in September.

The Pentagon has also deployed warships, a submarine, drones and fighter jets to the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico, in what it claims are efforts to tackle drug smuggling in the region.

Venezuela said the attacks and US military buildup were aimed at allowing “external powers to rob Venezuela’s immeasurable oil and gas wealth“, even before US forces seized an oil tanker off the coast of Venezuela last week, with US President Donald Trump telling reporters, “I assume we’re going to keep the oil.”

US military to use Trinidad airports, on Venezuela’s doorstep

The latest attacks on vessels in Latin American waters come as the US continues to build up its considerable military presence in the region surrounding Venezuela, with Trinidad and Tobago saying on Monday that it had authorised US military aircraft to use its airports.

Trinidad and Tobago said it had given the green light for the US military to use its airports “in the coming weeks”, adding that Washington would use them for “logistical” operations, including “facilitating supply replenishment and routine personnel rotations”.

The Caribbean island nation, which is located only 12km (7.4 miles) from Venezuela at its closest point, has been supportive of the US military buildup in the region, in contrast to some other Central and South American leaders.

Trinidad and Tobago’s prime minister, Kamla Persad-Bissessar, has said she would rather see drug traffickers “blown to pieces” than have them kill citizens of her nation.

In response, Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro again said that his country would stop supplying gas to Trinidad and Tobago on Monday, according to the Venezuelan state television channel Telesur.

Billy Crystal and wife ‘saw bodies of Rob Reiner and his spouse Michele’ after murder

Veteran comedian Billy Crystal and wife Janice, whom he wed in 1970, “wanted to say their goodbyes” to their friends Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner, it is said

Comedy legend Billy Crystal and his wife Janice rushed to their friends Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner’s home to say their goodbyes moments after the couple were murdered, it is reported.

Billy and Janice arrived in time to see first responders tend to the bodies, it is said, Rob, 78, and Michele, 70, were found knifed at their $13.5million (£10million) mansion. Their son, Nick, 32, has been booked for murder, police confirmed during a press conference yesterday.

The couple were found dead by their daughter, Romy, who called the Crystals about the tragedy after reporting the murders to the police, it is reported. A photograph has emerged today, purporting to show Billy, 77, and Janice outside the address, as the first responders worked on the bodies.

Dad-of-two Billy is seen appearing emotional as he walked arm-in-arm with his wife, holding his hands go his face and seemingly wiping tears from his eyes.

READ MORE: Rob Reiner’s masseuse discovered grim murder scene after heated argument with sonREAD MORE: Rob Reiner’s son Nick booked for murder as police share update

Billy, who has been nominated for three Golden Globe Awards, had hoped to “say goodbye” to his friend, having received the phone call from Romy, reports TMZ.

Rob is known for making many of the best-known movies of the 1980s and 1990s, including Stand By Me and The Princess Bride in 1987, legal thriller A Few Good Men in 1992 and romantic comedy When Harry Met Sally in 1989, starring Billy.

The two had already had a decade-long friendship, as they first met on the set of classic sitcom All In The Family in 1975 when the two were cast as best mates.

READ MORE: Rob Reiner’s son Nick in custody after his parents were gruesomely murdered

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Initially, Rob’s son Nick had been placed on a $4million (£3million) bail – but this has since been revoked. He’s now being held in custody in Downtown Los Angeles. Rob and Michele’s daughter, Romy, initially told police that a family member “should be a suspect” as they were “dangerous”. Nick and Rob allegedly became involved in a heated argument while attending a party hosted by an American chat show legend just hours before the film director was killed.

The bodies of the Hollywood actor and director, 78, and his 68-year-old wife were discovered at their property in Brentwood, Los Angeles, on Sunday. An LAPD spokesperson confirmed they are investigating an “apparent homicide” and speaking to family members.

Hollywood pays tribute to filmmaker Rob Reiner and wife Michele as son arrested for murder

Hollywood tributes flow for filmmaker Rob Reiner and wife Michele as son arrested for alleged murder

Tributes are flooding in from Hollywood following the alleged murders of actor-director Rob Reiner and his wife Michele, with Barack Obama, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Elijah Wood a few of the many issuing their heartfelt condolences.

Tributes continue as the couple’s 32-year-old son Nick Reiner languishes in the lock-up of Los Angeles Police Department, arrested on suspicion of murder and held without bail until Monday in connection to the stabbing deaths of his parents.

Actors Jamie Lee Curtis shared a statement on behalf of herself and her husband, fellow actor Christopher Guest.

They said: “Christopher and I are numb and sad and shocked about the violent, tragic deaths of our dear friends Rob and Michelle Singer Reiner and our ONLY focus and care right now is for their children and immediate families and we will offer all support possible to help them.

“There will be plenty of time later to discuss the creative lives we shared and the great political and social impact they both had on the entertainment industry, early childhood development, the fight for gay marriage and their global care for a world in crisis. We have lost great friends. Please give us time to grieve.”

Monty Python star Eric Idle said: “Rob Reiner was a lovely man. I spoke to him last night for over an hour. I always enjoyed his company. I met him at his Dad’s in 1975. He was telling me about filming at Stonehenge and his thoughts for the future. This is so awful. I shall miss him. A clever, talented and very thoughtful man. So awful.”

Sir Elton John, who recently made an appearance in this year’s Spinal Tap sequel, said: “I am in disbelief at today’s news of Rob and Michele. They were two of the most beautiful people I’d ever met and they deserved better.”

British actor Cary Elwes, who starred in Reiner’s iconic 1997 film The Princess Bride, said he had “no words”, alongside a photograph from the set of the 1997 movie on social media.

Acclaimed author Stephen King, whose work was brought to the silver screen by Reiner, wrote on X: “I’m horrified and saddened by the death of Rob Reiner and Michele. Wonderful friend, political ally, and brilliant filmmaker (including 2 of mine).”

He added, referring to the film adaptations of Stand By Me and Misery: ”Rest in peace, Rob. You always stood by me.”

Stand By Me actor Jerry O’Connell kept it simple with: “Love you, Rob.” He later added, talking to CBS about Reiner’s life and legacy, that the director was “like a father to me.”

Corey Feldman, who also starred in Stand By Me as Teddy Duchamp, added on X in all caps: “OMG THIS IS HORRIBLE NEWS! IM SO SORRY 4 ROB & HIS WIFE, & THEIR CHILDREN & THE WHOLE REINER FAMILY! ALL I CAN SAY IS IM SHOCKED & SADDENED, BUT I LOVE U ROB! U WILL B 4EVER MISSED!”

Former US president Barack Obama wrote on X, formerly Twitter: “Rob’s achievements in film and television gave us some of our most cherished stories on screen. But beneath all of the stories he produced was a deep belief in the goodness of people—and a lifelong commitment to putting that belief into action.”

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America’s 46th president, Joe Biden and his wife Jill added: “Jill and I send our deepest condolences to everyone whose lives were touched by Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner’s extraordinary contributions. We take solace in knowing their work will live on for generations to come.”

The Clintons shared in the grief of the many left reeling in Tinsel Town. “Hillary and I are heartbroken by the tragic deaths of our friends Rob and Michele Reiner. They inspired and uplifted millions through their work in film and television. And they were good, generous people who made everyone who knew them better through their active citizenship in defense of inclusive democracy, setting an example for us all to follow. Hillary and I will always be grateful for their friendship, unfailing kindness, and support.” — In a statement.

Actor and director Ben Stiller, who recently earned acclaim for his direction on visionary hit TV series Severance, said: “What a huge loss. Rob Reiner was one of my favorite directors. He made some of the most formative movies for my generation.”

Iconic director Ron Howard shared memories of his own of Reiner. “Our careers and lives intersected often over the decades, from Rob writing the pilot script for Happy Days and then as we each shifted from acting careers into directing and producing,” Howard said. “He proved to be a superlative filmmaker, a supportive colleague, and at all times a dedicated citizen. Rob will be missed on so many levels. My heart goes out to his family and his many close friends.”

Actor Elijah Wood, who starred in Reiner’s 1994 film North, wrote: “Horrified to hear of the passing of Rob Reiner and his wonderful wife Michelle. So much love to their kids and family.”

Current US President Donald Trump offered some choice words of his own in the wake of the tragic deaths of the Reiners. Instead of condolences, Trump chose to launch a brutal political attack on the two victims by claiming their deaths were the result of opposition to Trump and his policies.

In Trump’s own words: “The anger he caused others through his massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction with a mind crippling disease known as TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME.”

Reiner, his wife Michele, and their son Nick – who is now in custody for alleged felony murder – had attended celebrity host Conan O’Brien’s party in Los Angeles on Saturday evening.

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Authorities arrested Nick on Sunday afternoon and booked him for felony murder on Monday morning. They are now questioning Nick, who is being held on bail of USD$4 million (£2.9 million).

Why a Bollywood spy film sparked a political storm in India and Pakistan

New Delhi, India – A newly released Bollywood spy thriller is winning praise and raising eyebrows in equal measure in India and Pakistan, over its retelling of bitter tensions between the South Asian neighbours.

Sunk in a sepia tone, Dhurandhar, which was released in cinemas last week, is a 3.5-hour-long cross-border political spy drama that takes cinemagoers on a violent and bloody journey through a world of gangsters and intelligence agents set against the backdrop of India-Pakistan tensions. It comes just months after hostilities broke out between the two countries in May, following a rebel attack on a popular tourist spot in Pahalgam, in Indian-administered Kashmir, which India blamed Pakistan for. Islamabad has denied role in the attack.

Since the partition of India to create Pakistan in 1947, the nuclear-armed neighbours have fought four wars, three of them over the disputed region of Kashmir.

The film stars the popular actor Ranveer Singh, who plays an Indian spy who infiltrates networks of “gangsters and terrorists” in Karachi, Pakistan. Critics of the film argue that its storyline is laced with ultra-nationalist political tropes and that it misrepresents history, an emerging trend in Bollywood, they say.

A still from the trailer of Dhurandhar [Jio Studios/Al Jazeera]

What is the latest Bollywood blockbuster about?

Directed by Aditya Dhar, the film dramatises a covert chapter from the annals of Indian intelligence. The narrative centres on a high-stakes, cross-border mission carried out by India’s Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW), and focuses on one operative who conducts operations on enemy soil to neutralise threats to Indian national security.

The film features a heavyweight ensemble cast led by Singh, who plays the gritty field agent tasked with dismantling a “terror” network from the inside. He is pitted against a formidable antagonist played by Sanjay Dutt, representing the Pakistani establishment, and gangsters such as one portrayed by Akshaye Khanna, while actors including R Madhavan portray key intelligence officers and strategists who orchestrate complex geopolitical manoeuvering from New Delhi.

Structurally, the screenplay follows a classic cat-and-mouse trajectory.

Beneath its high-octane set pieces, the film has sparked an angry debate among critics and audiences over the interpretation of historical events and some key figures.

A still from the trailer of Dhurandhar. Credit: Jio Studios
A scene shown in the trailer of the new Bollywood film, Dhurandhar [Jio Studios/Al Jazeera]

Why is the film so controversial in Pakistan?

Despite the longstanding geopolitical tensions between the two countries, India’s Bollywood films remain popular in Pakistan.

Depicting Pakistan as the ultimate enemy of India has been a popular theme retold for years, in different ways, especially in Bollywood’s spy thrillers, however. In this case, the portrayal of Pakistan’s major coastal city, Karachi, and particularly one of its oldest and most densely populated neighbourhoods, Lyari, has drawn strong criticism.

“The representation in the film is completely based on fantasy. It doesn’t look like Karachi. 
It does not represent the city accurately at all,” Nida Kirmani, an associate professor of sociology at Lahore University of Management Sciences, told Al Jazeera.

Kirmani, who has produced a documentary on the impact of gang violence in Lyari of her own, said that like other megacities in the world, “Karachi had periods of violence that have been particularly intense.”

However, “reducing the city to violence is one of the major problems in the film, along with the fact the film gets everything about Karachi – from its infrastructure, culture, and language – wrong”, she added.

Meanwhile, a member of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) has taken legal action in a Karachi court alleging the unauthorised use of images of the late former prime minister, Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in 2007, and protesting against the film’s portrayal of the party’s leaders as supporters of “terrorists”.

Critics, including Kirmani, say the film also bizarrely casts gangs from Lyari into geopolitical tensions with India, when they have only ever operated locally.

Kirmani said the makers of the movie have cherry-picked historical figures and used them completely out of context, “trying to frame them within this very Indian nationalistic narrative”.

Mayank Shekhar, a film critic based in Mumbai, pointed out that the film “has been performed, written, directed by those who haven’t ever stepped foot in Karachi, and perhaps never will”.

“So, never mind this dust bowl for a city that, by and large, seems wholly bereft of a single modern building, and looks mostly bombed-out, between multiple ghettos,” Shekhar said.

He added that this is also in line with how Hollywood “shows the brown Third World in action with a certain sepia tone, like with Extraction, set in Dhaka, Bangladesh”.

dhurandhar
Bollywood actor Ranveer Singh (centre) performs during the music launch of his upcoming Indian Hindi-language film Dhurandhar in Mumbai on December 1, 2025 [Sujit Jaiswal/AFP]

How has the film been received in India?

Dhurandhar has been a huge commercial success in India and among the Indian diaspora. However, it has not escaped criticism entirely.

The family of a decorated Indian Army officer, Major Mohit Sharma, filed a petition in Delhi High Court to stop the release of the film, which, they claim, has exploited his life and work without their consent.

The makers of the film deny this and claim it is entirely a work of fiction.

Nonetheless, the film’s storyline is accompanied by real-time intercepted audio recordings of attacks on Indian soil and news footage, film critics and analysts say.

People seen in front of a movie theater that is screening the film Kashmir files that
People linger outside a movie theatre that is screening The Kashmir Files, in Kolkata, India, on March 17, 2022 [Debarchan Chatterjee/NurPhoto via Getty Images]

Is this an emerging pattern in Bollywood films?

Shekhar told Al Jazeera that focusing on a deliberately loud, seemingly over-the-top, hyper-masculine hero’s journey is not a new genre in Bollywood. “There’s a tendency to intellectualise the trend, as we did with the ‘angry young man’ movies of the 1970s,” he said, referring to the formative years of Bollywood.

In recent years, mainstream production houses in India have, however, favoured storylines that portray minorities in negative light and align with the policies of the Hindu nationalist government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Kirmani told Al Jazeera that this frequently means “reducing Muslims across India’s borders and within as ‘terrorists’, which further marginalises Muslims in India culturally”.

“Unfortunately, people gravitate towards these kinds of hypernationalistic narratives, and the director is cashing in on this,” she told Al Jazeera.

Modi himself lavished praise on a recent film called Article 370, for what he said was its “correct information” about the removal of the constitutional provision that granted special autonomous status to the state of Jammu and Kashmir in 2019. Critics, however, called the film “propaganda” and said the film had distorted facts.

Another Bollywood film Kerala Story released in 2023 was accused of falsifying facts. Prime Minister Modi praised the film, but critics said it tried to vilify Muslims and demonise the southern Kerala state known for its progressive politics.

In the case of Dhurandhar, some critics have faced online harassment.

One review by The Hollywood Reporter’s India YouTube channel, by critic Anupama Chopra, was taken down after outrage from fans of the film.

India’s Film Critics Guild has condemned “coordinated abuse, personal attacks on individual critics, and organised attempts to discredit their professional integrity”, in a statement.