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McIlroy finishes one shot behind Genesis winner Bridgeman

The Genesis Invitational – final round leaderboard

-18 J Bridgeman (US); -17 K Kitayama (US), R McIlroy (NI); -16 A Scott (Aus); -15 A Potgieter (SA); -13 J Knapp (US); -12 C Young (US), C Morikawa (US), T Fleetwood (Eng), R Fox (Aus), X Schauffele (US)

Selected others: -11 Scheffler (US), J Speith (US); -10 M Penge (Eng); -9 R MacIntyre (Sco); -7 S Lowry (Ire), M Fitzpatrick (Eng); -6 A Rai (Eng)

Rory McIlroy shot a four-under-par 67 but it was not enough to overhaul winner Jacob Bridgeman, who won by one shot at the Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles.

Northern Ireland’s McIlroy started the day six shots off the lead but despite making five birdies he could not catch American Bridgeman, who got over the line with a one-over-par 72 to finish on 18 under.

Bridgeman, who held a seven-shot lead early in the day, held back tears on the 18th green before sinking a three-foot putt for his first PGA Tour title.

He is also the first man to win the prestigious event in his tournament debut since 1975.

Bridgeman’s victory continues his good start to the year having had two top-10 finishes in his opening four events, including last week’s eighth place at Pebble Beach.

The 26-year-old’s three bogies on the final day at the Riviera Country Club gave the chasing players hope, including countryman Kurt Kitayama, who finished tied for second with McIlroy on 17 under after carding a seven-under-par 64.

World number two McIlroy was even par after the first nine holes, but made four birdies on the back nine, including a brilliant hole-out from the greenside bunker on the 12th, to put pressure on Bridgeman.

A nervy closing three holes saw Bridgeman bogey 16 then leave his putt on 18 over three feet short, after McIlroy had drained a 30 footer to get within a shot, to ensure a tense final stroke in front of tournament host Tiger Woods.

Bridgeman held his nerve though to claim a first PGA Tour title in style, with victory at one of the Signature Events moving him inside the top 25 of the world rankings for the first time.

England’s Tommy Fleetwood shot a four-under-par 67 to finish joint-seventh on 12-under, which included a slam dunk eagle with his approach shot on 15 from 173 yards out.

World number one Scottie Scheffler made a flying finish with his 65 seeing him recover from his bad start on Thursday to finish in joint 12th.

That meant an end to Scheffler’s brilliant run of 18 consecutive top-10 finishes on the PGA Tour.

England’s Marco Penge, who was the joint-leader alongside Bridgeman after the second round, ended in tied for 16th place on 10 under.

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North Korea’s Kim Jong Un re-elected as chief of Workers’ Party

⁠North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has been re-elected as secretary-general of the nation’s Workers’ Party, extending his 15-year rule of the country’s sole governing party.

The election took place on Sunday, the fourth day of the party congress, held every five years, according to the state news agency KCNA. During the event, Central Committee members were also elected, and ⁠some party rules were modified, it ‌said without providing details.

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Kim has been North Korea’s supreme leader since the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, in 2011.
In 2019, North Korea’s legislature approved constitutional changes to make Kim’s power “monolithic” over all state affairs, formally establishing him as head of state.

During this year’s Workers’ Party Congress, Kim assessed the party’s last five years of work and outlined new strategies and goals for the next five-year period.

⁠Speaking at the event’s opening session last week, Kim called the last five years a “proud period … in implementing the socialist cause of our own style”, while acknowledging challenges such as sanctions and “the global public health crisis”.

“Today, our Party is faced with heavy and urgent historic tasks of boosting economic construction and the people’s standard of living and transforming all realms of state and social life as early as possible,” the KCNA quote him as saying.

“This requires us to wage a more active and persistent struggle without allowing even a moment’s standstill or stagnation.”

Other high-level officials also delivered remarks at the Congress, including Minister of Foreign Affairs Choe Son Hui.

‘Optimism and confidence’

For decades, nuclear weapons and military prowess came before everything else in North Korea, even as food stocks dried up and widespread famine, which Pyongyang denied existed, gripped the nation.

But since assuming power, Kim has also stressed the need to fortify the impoverished nation’s economy, while keeping military might as the top priority,

Kim stated during his opening address that North Korea had overcome its “worst difficulties” in the last five years, and was now entering a new stage of “optimism and confidence in the future”.

Ahead of the congress, Kim held a ceremony unveiling dozens of nuclear-capable rocket launchers, which he hailed as “wonderful” and “attractive”.

White House post after US hockey win over Canada stirs controversy

The White House has celebrated the US’s victory over Canada in the men’s hockey final at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics 2026 with a politically charged message, sharing a social media post showing a bald eagle appearing to assault a goose – two animals that symbolise each country respectively.

The image on Sunday was in response to a 2025 post by then-Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that said, “You can’t take our country — and you can’t take our game.”

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Trudeau’s statement had come after Canada beat the United States at the 4 Nations Face-Off hockey tournament, when US President Donald Trump was regularly making the case that Canada should become the 51st state of the US.

While Canadian politicians did not comment directly on the White House post, which came after the US claimed the Olympic gold medal following a 2-1 sudden-death overtime win in Italy, journalists and other observers criticised the Trump administration for its tone.

“Stay classy, America,” Stewart Prest, a political science professor at the University of British Columbia, wrote in response to the post.

Journalist David Rider responded to the White House post by highlighting the dwindling number of Canadian visitors to the US.

“There should be scoreboard tallying the billions of Canadian tourism dollars lost to the US that accelerates as Trump and his White House gloat, faster than border states, Florida and Vegas can roll out their ‘come back, we love you’ campaigns,” Rider wrote on X.

After the US win on Sunday, Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform: “Congratulations to our great U.S.A. Ice Hockey team. THEY WON THE GOLD. WOW!.”

“LOTS OF WINNING!!! President DONALD J. TRUMP,” he added.

US-Canada tensions

While Canada-US hockey games always ignite good-natured banter between fans, Sunday’s contest comes amid months of political tensions between the neighbouring countries.

Shortly after his election in 2024, Trump began floating the idea of annexing Canada to be the 51st state, sparking condemnation from Canadian politicians.

Once he took office early last year, the US president quickly made it clear that he views Ottawa – one of Washington’s closest allies, historically – as a rival.

Throughout the past year, Trump has imposed or threatened to impose additional tariffs on Canada, often pointing to the US trade deficit with its northern neighbour.

Most recently, the US president threatened to impose 100 percent tariffs on Canadian imports to punish Ottawa for reaching a trade deal with Beijing.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney articulated a scathing critique of Trump, without naming the US president.

He argued that the global order of accepting US hegemony in exchange for the “public good” Washington produces, which he described as a “bargain”, was no longer working.

“Let me be direct. We are in the midst of a rupture, not a transition,” Carney said.

“Over the past two decades, a series of crises in finance, health, energy and geopolitics have laid bare the risks of extreme global integration. But more recently, great powers have begun using economic integration as weapons, tariffs as leverage, financial infrastructure as coercion, [and] supply chains as vulnerabilities to be exploited.”

During his election campaign last year, Carney filmed an advertisement with comedian Mike Myers, in which both wore Team Canada hockey gear.

Meyer’s shirt said “Never 51”.

Trump appeared to take a special interest in Sunday’s game, sharing three different posts about it.

Meanwhile, the White House’s X account shared seven posts about the US victory.

US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, who is facing calls for resignation for suggesting he would not object if Israel were to expand across most of the Middle East, took the conversation in a widely different direction.

“What??? The guy scoring goal for 1st USA Gold Medal in hockey since 1980 is a Jew? Oh my. I’m sure the Jew-haters will say Mossad was behind it!” Huckabee wrote in a social media post.

“I say just celebrate the incredible victory for the USA & be grateful for Jack Hughes love for the USA & his teammates!”

Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics - Ice Hockey - Men's Victory Ceremony - Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, Milan, Italy - February 22, 2026. Gold medallists Brady Tkachuk of United States, Jack Hughes of United States and Quinn Hughes of United States celebrate during the victory ceremony REUTERS/Mike Segar
Jack Hughes, left, and his brother, Quinn Hughes, right, celebrate the US’s gold medal victory [Mike Segar/Reuters]

Carney expressed pride in his country’s performance at the Olympics, including the hockey team.

“You’re coming home with 21 hard-fought Olympic medals,” he said on X. “Though what Canadians will remember most is how you wore the Maple Leaf: with pride, with grit, and with determination.”

Congressman Randy Fine, a Trump ally with a history of racist and Islamophobic statements, responded to Carney’s message with “Congratulations, Governor”, as though the prime minister were the leader of a US state, not a sovereign country.