Kirk killing increases Ryder Cup risk – New York police

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2025 Ryder Cup

Venue: Bethpage Black, New York Dates: 26-28 September

The recent killing of American conservative activist Charlie Kirk has increased the risk of the Ryder Cup being targeted by someone wanting to “make a statement”, according to the man leading security at the event.

US President Donald Trump will visit the Bethpage Black course, a short distance outside New York, once the competition gets under way on Friday.

Fifty thousand spectators will also descend on the course in Long Island for each of the three days of action.

After Kirk was shot dead in Utah on 10 September, a vast and multi-agency security operation is being implemented for the showpiece golf contest between teams representing Europe and the United States.

“If anything, the likelihood of somebody trying to use an event like this to make a statement is only increased,” Major Stephen Udice of New York State Police, and incident commander for the Ryder Cup, told BBC Sport.

“Some would argue it’s much higher. We are planning as if there’s threats.

“We have multiple different layers that someone looking to cause chaos and harm is going to have to get through.

Speaking from a command centre specially built on the outskirts of the course, Udice insisted that “a tremendous amount of resources” had been assigned to the event.

“It is on par with a Super Bowl and a World Series, but what makes this even more challenging is that it’s in a 1,400-acre park, not a contained stadium,” he said.

‘Hardest thing we’ll have to do’

Trump, who attended a memorial service for Kirk in Arizona this week, has visited various sporting events this summer, including the final of the men’s US Open tennis at Flushing Meadows in New York on 7 September.

Additional security measures caused delays there, with hundreds of fans missing the start of the match, and it remains to be seen how the president’s arrival at the Ryder Cup affects the day’s routine.

“It’s definitely going to create another challenge, but that’s also something that we incorporated into our plan a year and a half ago” said Major Udice.

“We’re trying to strike that balance between minimising the interruption to all the spectators but also keeping the president safe.”

Trump, a golf fanatic who owns courses around the world, is expected to arrive at Bethpage late on Friday morning and watch the afternoon fourballs.

It had been reported that the event’s PGA of America organisers were concerned about his initial plan to be present for the opening tee shots just after 07:00 EST (12:00 BST).

“It’s the hardest thing we’ll have to do, probably,” Ryder Cup director Bryan Karns told BBC Sport when asked about the challenge posed by the president’s visit.

“There’s some things that would certainly take a little bit longer, but I think not to the point that someone would be precluded from getting to a seat on the first tee. Obviously there are some logistical challenges, but none that we can’t solve.”

When asked if Trump’s arrival could mean a risk that play has to be paused, Karns said, “No, we won’t delay play, that’s pretty much set in stone in terms of how we operate. We don’t have the luxury of flipping the lights on and finishing this at 8 or 9pm.

“Obviously, we take our lead from the Secret Service and the White House, who have been incredibly collaborative. We have not felt like we’re not being listened to, and that’s been reassuring to us.”

When asked if Kirk’s recent murder and the highly divided political landscape in the US had added to the security challenge, Karns said: “This sort of event is unifying.

“New Yorkers, above all others, really rally together from opposite sides of the street, from totally different backgrounds, and these sort of moments are healing opportunities.

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Villa close to naming sporting director Olabe as Monchi replacement

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Aston Villa are in advanced talks with former Real Sociedad sporting director Roberto Olabe to replace outgoing president of football operations Monchi.

Olabe, 57, spent seven years at Sociedad before leaving at the end of last season.

Monchi’s imminent exit comes with Villa 18th in the Premier League after a winless start to the season.

He joined Villa in 2023 from Spanish side Sevilla, where he had been sporting director, having previously worked with Villa boss Unai Emery at the La Liga club.

Monchi and Emery helped take Villa to the Europa Conference League semi-finals in 2024 and secured a Champions League place as they finished fourth in the Premier League that season.

They went on to reach the Champions League quarter-finals last term, being knocked out by eventual winners Paris St-Germain.

Villa have started poorly this season, failing to win any of their opening five league games and scoring just once.

Isak, Odegaard and Zubimendi some of Olable’s successes

Villa boss Emery was involved in choosing Olabe as Monchi’s replacement.

Olabe is from Vitoria, part of the Basque Country in northern Spain, which is about 100 miles from Emery’s hometown of Hondarribia.

He managed Real Union between 2011 and 2012, the team which Emery holds a controlling stake in and where his brother Igor is president.

While Monchi’s departure comes at a time of poor results, it does not impact Emery’s position and his influence on Olabe’s arrival underlines that his position remains strong at Villa.

During Olabe’s time at Sociedad they won the 2020 Copa del Rey, their first major silverware in 33 years.

They also bought Alexander Isak from Willem II and sold him to Newcastle for £63m in 2022, while Martin Zubimendi came through the club’s academy before his £60m departure to Arsenal this summer.

The Gunners also signed Mikel Merino from Sociedad while Olabe brought in Martin Odegaard on loan from Real Madrid the season before he moved to the Emirates.

Financial restrictions hamper spending

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Monchi and Emery have tried to reshape Villa, spending big on defensive midfielder Amadou Onana, signed for £50m in 2024, and attacker Moussa Diaby, who arrived in 2023 for £43m.

But Diaby was sold to Saudi Pro League side Al-Ittihad after just one season while Onana has struggled with injury.

The imposing Belgium international made just 22 league starts last season after his club record move from Everton, and he is currently out with a hamstring injury having played just twice this term.

In the past 18 months Villa’s spending has been restricted because of Profit and Sustainability restrictions imposed by both the Premier League and Uefa.

In July, Villa were fined £9.5m by European football’s governing body for breaching financial rules.

They needed to sell Douglas Luiz in 2024 to balance the books, with the midfielder joining Juventus for £42m. He made just three Serie A starts last season and joined Nottingham Forest on loan last month.

The sales of Omari Kellyman to Chelsea for £19m and Tim Iroegbunam to Everton for £9m last year also generated important profit, while Jacob Ramsey was sold to Newcastle for £40m last month, with all three having come through the club’s academy.

Just two of the starting XI in Sunday’s 1-1 draw at Sunderland – Rogers and striker Evann Guessand – were signed by Emery and Monchi.

This summer Villa signed goalkeeper Marco Bizot from Brest and Guessand from Nice for £30m, before the deadline day arrivals of Harvey Elliott, Jadon Sancho and Victor Lindelof.

England Under-21 international Elliott joined on loan from Liverpool with a £35m obligation to buy, while Sancho moved on loan from Manchester United and his former Old Trafford team-mate Lindelof joined on a free transfer.

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  • Aston Villa
  • Premier League
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Villa close to naming sporting director Olabe as Monchi replacement

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Aston Villa are in advanced talks with former Real Sociedad sporting director Roberto Olabe to replace outgoing president of football operations Monchi.

Olabe, 57, spent seven years at Sociedad before leaving at the end of last season.

Monchi’s imminent exit comes with Villa 18th in the Premier League after a winless start to the season.

He joined Villa in 2023 from Spanish side Sevilla, where he had been sporting director, having previously worked with Villa boss Unai Emery at the La Liga club.

Monchi and Emery helped take Villa to the Europa Conference League semi-finals in 2024 and secured a Champions League place as they finished fourth in the Premier League that season.

They went on to reach the Champions League quarter-finals last term, being knocked out by eventual winners Paris St-Germain.

Villa have started poorly this season, failing to win any of their opening five league games and scoring just once.

Isak, Odegaard and Zubimendi some of Olable’s successes

Villa boss Emery was involved in choosing Olabe as Monchi’s replacement.

Olabe is from Vitoria, part of the Basque Country in northern Spain, which is about 100 miles from Emery’s hometown of Hondarribia.

He managed Real Union between 2011 and 2012, the team which Emery holds a controlling stake in and where his brother Igor is president.

While Monchi’s departure comes at a time of poor results, it does not impact Emery’s position and his influence on Olabe’s arrival underlines that his position remains strong at Villa.

During Olabe’s time at Sociedad they won the 2020 Copa del Rey, their first major silverware in 33 years.

They also bought Alexander Isak from Willem II and sold him to Newcastle for £63m in 2022, while Martin Zubimendi came through the club’s academy before his £60m departure to Arsenal this summer.

The Gunners also signed Mikel Merino from Sociedad while Olabe brought in Martin Odegaard on loan from Real Madrid the season before he moved to the Emirates.

Financial restrictions hamper spending

Getty Images

Monchi and Emery have tried to reshape Villa, spending big on defensive midfielder Amadou Onana, signed for £50m in 2024, and attacker Moussa Diaby, who arrived in 2023 for £43m.

But Diaby was sold to Saudi Pro League side Al-Ittihad after just one season while Onana has struggled with injury.

The imposing Belgium international made just 22 league starts last season after his club record move from Everton, and he is currently out with a hamstring injury having played just twice this term.

In the past 18 months Villa’s spending has been restricted because of Profit and Sustainability restrictions imposed by both the Premier League and Uefa.

In July, Villa were fined £9.5m by European football’s governing body for breaching financial rules.

They needed to sell Douglas Luiz in 2024 to balance the books, with the midfielder joining Juventus for £42m. He made just three Serie A starts last season and joined Nottingham Forest on loan last month.

The sales of Omari Kellyman to Chelsea for £19m and Tim Iroegbunam to Everton for £9m last year also generated important profit, while Jacob Ramsey was sold to Newcastle for £40m last month, with all three having come through the club’s academy.

Just two of the starting XI in Sunday’s 1-1 draw at Sunderland – Rogers and striker Evann Guessand – were signed by Emery and Monchi.

This summer Villa signed goalkeeper Marco Bizot from Brest and Guessand from Nice for £30m, before the deadline day arrivals of Harvey Elliott, Jadon Sancho and Victor Lindelof.

England Under-21 international Elliott joined on loan from Liverpool with a £35m obligation to buy, while Sancho moved on loan from Manchester United and his former Old Trafford team-mate Lindelof joined on a free transfer.

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  • Aston Villa
  • Premier League
  • Football

Legendary umpire Bird dies aged 92

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Dickie Bird, a legendary former cricket umpire, passed away at the age of 92.

One of the most well-known umpires in the game was Bird, whose first-class playing career was hampered by injury.

He also served as an official witness for three World Cup finals and 66 Tests and 76 one-day internationals.

Bird’s native Yorkshire, where he played and served as president, called him a “national treasure, known for his eccentricities and warmth as well as his umpiring excellence.”

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Cheltenham to reduce capacity and price of a pint

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Following criticism from the audience, the Cheltenham Festival organizers are changing the venue and price of a pint.

The four-day meeting in March serves as the jumping racing calendar’s star, but there has been a marked decline in attendance, with some competitors complaining about the cost.

At all the course meetings this season, the price of a pint of draught beer or cider will be reduced by 30p to £7.50.

The Cheltenham Gold Cup’s opening day, which featured the Festival’s final day, was sold out this year, but some attendees complained of crowd overcrowding that day.

Although there was a lag of 56, 000 in attendance on the first three days of 2025, the daily capacity will be decreased from 68, 500 to 66, 000.

Drinkers have been particularly sore lately due to the high prices of alcohol, and especially Guinness, with an estimated 265,000 pints sold in the week.

According to course CEO Guy Lavender, “We regularly benchmark our food and beverage prices against those of other major sports venues and comparable events.”

We have chosen to lower the price of draught beers and cider for the 2025/26 season despite being subject to the same price increases in goods and services as all other industries.

He claimed that the price reduction would be in line with 2022.

Absent regulars cited overcrowding in previous years, as well as the cost of lodging, tickets, travel, and food and beverage as reasons for skipping the meeting, which was cut from three to four days in 2005.

According to reports that thousands have traveled to Spain to watch the action on big screens, including Benidorm and Tenerife, it costs less to spend a week in the sunshine than to attend the game.

A year ago, race organizers made changes that were supposed to enhance the experience of spectators and increase competition.

What other changes are planned?

What are Cheltenham’s ticket prices?

The 2026 Festival’s “super early bird prices” ranged from £35-£83 for the first three days of the event to £50-£99 for the Friday.

What kind of crowds did Cheltenham have this year?

The total attendance for the week was significantly lower than the record 280, 000 people who attended the first post-Covid meeting that was free for spectators in 2022.

The lowest daily attendance since 1993 was 41, 949.

Crowds in 2025 (2024 in brackets and then 2022)

Tuesday: 55, 498 (60, 181) 68, 567

Wednesday: 41, 949 (46, 771) 64, 431

Thursday: 53, 366 (53, 918) 73, 754

Friday: 68, 026 (69, 129) 73, 875

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Wales contact Moore over international switch

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Wales and Tottenham Hotspur winger Mikey Moore have discussed changing their allegiance to another country.

The 18-year-old Londoner has represented England Under-19s but is eligible for Wales through a grandparent. He is currently on loan at Scottish Premiership side Rangers.

Sources have told Wales’ BBC Sport that the Football Association of Wales has contacted Moore, with men’s head coach Craig Bellamy among those to have spoken to him.

In May 2024, Moore made his Premier League debut at the age of 16 years and 277 days. He is the youngest player to do so.

He also broke Jimmy Greaves’ record as the youngest English scorer in a major European competition during the club’s Europa League-winning campaign last year, breaking the club’s previous record.

Due to the addition of several players to their respective national teams over the years, he is not in a rush to decide what his future holds abroad.

Declan Rice, an Arsenal midfielder, and David Brooks, Jordan James, both played for England at the youth level, while Declan Rice, a senior member of the Republic of Ireland, has since made a switch to England.

Players can switch now if they haven’t played more than three senior competitive games before turning 21. This leaves more room for change as of 2020.

A change of eligibility would not be possible based on appearances in World Cup finals or continental finals like the European Championships. However, being a participant in a qualifying tournament would not.

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  • Men’s football teams from Wales
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