Great day at Eaton G.C with Cheshire U14’s versus Shropshire and Herefordshire. A close fought battle with the final match on the final hole being the deciding factor. S&H just coming out on top 5 to 4 but great experience for the team against some good opponents.
Officers pulled this guy over for a broken tail light and suspicion of DUI. What they got instead was a sobriety test they will never forget.
We’ve seen thousands of hours of body cam footage, but this footage from Conway, Arkansas, remains in a league of its own. Most drivers get a pit in their stomach when the red and blues start flashing—but Blayk Puckett saw a stage.
Blayk, a student at the University of Central Arkansas, was driving home from a late-night study session at the library. A Conway PD officer noticed he had a broken brake light and was driving a bit slow, leading to a pull-over on suspicion of a DUI.
When asked if he had anything on him the officers should know about, Blayk didn't reach for his ID—he mentioned he was a magician and had a "magic wand" in his pocket. Instead of a standard field sobriety test, Blayk made a legendary proposition:
"I'll do some magic/juggling if you insist."
With the officers’ blessing (and their own phones out to record), Blayk grabbed his juggling pins and went to work right there in the parking lot of a local BBQ joint. His coordination was so flawless that the officers didn't just realize he was sober—they became his biggest fans. You can hear the genuine laughter in the background as one officer admits, “You just made my night.”
No handcuffs, no tickets—just a warning for the brake light and a handshake. Blayk later said he wanted to show that police interactions can be positive and humanizing.
In a world of high-speed chases and intense legal battles, this remains a gold standard for what happens when a little personality meets a lot of professional courtesy.
This was great to see how the officers were having a good time while on a stop. Something that rarely ever happens.
Incredible where this game of ours takes you. This time it was Buckingham Palace with the boss! Now back to Leicester Golf Centre and bringing golf to everyone.Thank you for all the support so far ❤️
It’s official! Some day with the finest people. Truly honoured to be the very very lucky recipient of the British Empire Medal for doing things I love. Next stop Buckingham Palace for reception with HM the King. Unbelievable really ❤️ @ThePGA@TitleistEurope@EWBlindGolf
Matt and Alex Fitzpatrick from Sheffield shoot rounds of 64, 65, 57 and 71 to win the Zurich Classic by 1 shot, breaking the course and tournament records.
Alex now earns a full PGA Tour card through the 2028 season and an invite to the PGA Championship.
Big bro comes through!!!
On 18 Matt Fitzpatrick needed to get up and down on this hard long bunker shot to win his brother a PGA Tour Card.
Maybe the shot of the year considering the stakes!
Told you guys on Thursday that Zurich is a sleeper!
How good did young Matt Fitzpatrick swing it! 😯
Obviously he’s made some changes that better suit him now, but he swung the club so good “aesthetically” when he was young
@MattFitz94
The 45th Peter McEvoy Trophy starts tomorrow, an event founded to celebrate the success of our celebrated member.
A 2x Amateur Champion, 5x Walker Cupper with two captaincies, 2x Low-Am at The Open, and the first British amateur to make the cut at The Masters.
@EnglandGolf
Justin Rose has finished runner up on 3 occasions at the Masters, with painful playoff losses to Sergio Garcia in 2017 and last year to Rory McIlroy. Ahead of this years tournament he gave another classy answer on how he deals with adversity:
“I kind of realized that even before I won a major. I knew I was going to win some; I knew I was going to lose some. I kind of wanted to not get in my way too early, and I kind of realized when the opportunity presents myself to win a major, don't make it too important in the moment.
“Also, I kind of realized that you can't skip through a career without a little bit of heartache and heartbreak, no chance. If you're going to be willing to win them, you've got to be willing to kind of be on the wrong side of it as well.
“The key is showing up. The key is to try to be as free as you can in those moments. Yeah, you kind of have to hope a little bit along the way that it's your day. There's definitely been -- it could have been my day in a couple of major championships that I wouldn't have had to have done anything different really to be the winner as well. Hopefully with that mindset, keep chipping away, my day might still happen where a little bit of something goes my way.
“The point is you've got to put yourself there. That's the hard part. All we can do as players is to focus on our game, focus on our skill set, and make the odds in our favor the best we can. Sometimes the ultimate result, yeah, sometimes it's in your control, but sometimes there's a lot of other factors and little bits of movement that all have to kind of sync up.
“The better player you are, the more chances you're going to have and the more you're going to win.”
This is such a great quote and it sums up perfectly why it’s so hard to win golf tournaments, especially major championships.
Justin comes to Augusta National off the back of a T13 at The Players and a wire to wire win at The Farmers to climb him upto 9th in the World Rankings.
@JustinRose99@TheMasters
September 18, 2023, Gary Woodland's life changed forever. Two-and-a-half years later, he achieves the unthinkable.
This is Gary's incredible path back to the winner's circle after brain surgery.