Rory McIlroy's late birdie burst means he'll be playing on the weekend at the Australian Open

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Not before a bit of back-nine drama at Royal Melbourne, Rory McIlroy has made the weekend at the Australian Open after shooting a 3-under 68 on Friday to finish inside the 36-hole cut line.

McIlroy, who was 2-under on the tournament, was seven strokes behind leaders Daniel Rodriques (64) and Rasmus Neergaard-Peterson (66), who had 9-under totals of 133.

The leading pair were one shot clear of third-place Min Woo Lee, who shot 65 Friday.

Adam Scott (66) was in a tie for fourth with Cameron Smith (65), who avoided adding to his tally ofseven consecutive missed cuts. Scott and Lee were playing in the same featured threesome as McIlroy.

McIlroy started the day at1-over after a 72on Thursday, tied for 57th and trailing the leaders by seven shots. At the time, that was just one shot inside the expected cut of 2-over.

He birdied one hole and had eight pars on his front nine Friday, then had four more pars before making a bogey on the par-5 14th. He missed the fairway to the right off the tee and ended up under a tea tree. McIlroy thenwhiffed on his next shotas his club got stuck in a branch but he recovered to make a 6.

That put him outside the 36-hole cut, but he birdied the next hole, the par-3 15th, to put himself back at even-par and safe, at least, at that stage.

He parred the 16th to stay at even-par then perhaps made his shot of the tournament — from the patchy rough on 17, swinging through a small bush this time, where he tapped in for birdie after a long eagle putt went just wide.

That moved McIlroy to 1-under on the tournament and up about 20 places on the leaderboard,leaving him safe for the weekend, particularly after he birdied the 18th.

"With the wind, it played like a different golf course today," McIlroy said. "I certainly haven't played my best over the past couple of days but it was nice to finish the way I did. Delighted to be here for the weekend . . . seven isn't too far back."

On his whiffed shot from under the trees, McIlory said: "Honestly I can't remember the last time I had a fresh-air shot. Not one of my finer moments but nice to be able to come back over the last few holes."

Co-leader Neergard-Peterson missed the cut last week at theAustralian PGA Championship.at Royal Queensland in Brisbane.

"Certainly I feel like I've proved over the last year or so that I have the level to compete out here and be in the thick of things on Sunday," Neergard-Petersen said.

The highlight of Australian Lee's second round came when he holed out with a 9-iron from 176 meters for eagle on the par-4 10th, raising both arms and waving them in an airplane-style celebration.

"I know it was just random, but it just felt good," Lee said. "It was a big crowd, so I was just doing random stuff."

McIlroy, whose pre-tournament news conferenceincluded commentsthat Royal Melbourne was not the best sandbelt course in the city, had a wild opening round containing six bogeys and five birdies.

McIlroy,the Race to Dubai winnerand whocompleted his career Grand Slamwhen he won the Masters this year, is making his first appearance at the Australian Open since 2015. He won it in 2013.

The winner of the Australian Open, which is the second event on the European tour's new schedule of tournaments for late this year and 2026,receives a Masters exemptionnext year. And the top three finishers not already exempt will qualify for the British Open in 2026 at Royal Birkdale.

AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Rory McIlroy's late birdie burst means he'll be playing on the weekend at the Australian Open

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Not before a bit of back-nine drama at Royal Melbourne, Rory McIlroy has made the weekend at ...
The top sports photos of 2025 by AP's photojournalists

Rory McIlroy let his putter fly high, put his head in his hands and dropped to his knees as fans celebrated wildly at Augusta National. McIlroy's sheer relief was laid bare as he ended his long wait towin the Mastersand complete a career Grand Slam.

Associated Press photographers were there to capture the raw emotion and unforgettable images as McIlroy won a playoff against Justin Rose.

And they were there to capture the perfect shot of St. Louis Cardinals' Victor Scott II sliding home to score against the San Francisco Giants in September.

They are just two of the best sports images caught by AP photographers in 2025.

A stunning set of pictures include the Philadelphia Eagles' celebrations afterwinning the Super Bowlagainst theKansas City Chiefsand England's Lucy Bronze converting a penalty in the Women's European Championship, which the Lionesses went on to win.

As well as some of the year's biggest triumphs, AP photographers captured moments at the heart of the action like the Netherlands' Dani Baijens getting a finger in the eye as he tried to score at the Handball Men's World Championship — and New Zealand's Jorja Miller being tugged back by her hair as she tries to race away at the Women's Rugby World Cup.

Here are The AP's top sports photos of 2025.

Photo editing by: Tony Hicks and Matt York

AP sports:https://apnews.com/hub/sports

The top sports photos of 2025 by AP’s photojournalists

Rory McIlroy let his putter fly high, put his head in his hands and dropped to his knees as fans celebrated wildly at Aug...
Merab Dvalishvili heavily featured in UFC 323 rematch with Petr Yan

LAS VEGAS -- UFC 323, the promotion's final numbered event on the 2025 calendar, will be held in a familiar place at T-Mobile Arena on Saturday, headlined by a pair of title fights in which the champion enters as a decisive favorite against the challenger.

The main event features bantamweight belt holder Merab Dvalishvili in search of his fourth title defense this year against former champion Petr Yan.

Since earning the belt over Sean O'Malley at UFC 306 in September 2024, Dvalishvili (21-4) successfully defended the crown against Umar Nurmagomedov at UFC 311 in January, O'Malley at UFC 316 in Junes, and Corey Sandhagen at UFC 320 in October.

This fight also recalls some history between Dvalishvili and Yan (19-5), who previously met in 2023 in far different circumstances. That was the main event of a UFC Fight Night card in March of that year, held at The Theater at Virgin Hotels about a mile off the Las Vegas Strip. It was Yan who closed as a -250 favorite before the fight, but Dvalishvili dominated and beat him handily in what can be pinpointed as the moment that began the current champion's skyrocket to the top of the sport.

Not only did Dvalishvili dominate the heavily favored Yan that evening, he demoralized him. Dvalishvili landed 11 of a record 49 takedown attempts in the fight, controlling all 25 minutes in a dismantling that forced Yan into a year-long hiatus from the sport. However, Yan is 3-0 since his return and knows he has to go for the kill early.

Make no mistake, Dvalishvili knows as much as Yan does that a puncher's chance is the only one the challenger has.

"I'm sure he will make a lot of adjustments," Dvalishvili said. "I have to keep the same energy. I think it will be different because I think this time I will be more technical, I will show more skill, but he will be the aggressive one. He will chase me. I'm sure he will try to knock me out. That's the only way he can stop me."

The co-main event features 23-year-old Joshua Van, one of the sport's fastest rising stars, receiving his first title opportunity against a fighter so fearsome that he's nicknamed "The Cannibal," flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja.

Van, a Burmese-American who fights out of Houston, rose to prominence with a star-making performance on short notice against No. 1 contender Brandon Royval, prevailing in a stand-and-bang classic at UFC 317 that remains the consensus Fight of the Year.

After Pantoja defeated Kai Kara-France by rear-naked choke in the fight immediately after Van and Royval's war that night, Van stepped into the cage and faced off with the 35-year-old legend of the sport in a moment that set Saturday's bout in stone. Van would become the first fighter born in the 2000s to earn a UFC title if he were to beat Pantoja.

A victory would make Van the second youngest to claim any UFC belt. Jon Jones was 23 when he won the light heavyweight title in 2011.

Pantoja believes his experience gives him an advantage on Saturday, but he is wary of the fact that Van is not an opponent to take lightly despite his youth.

"He hasn't had a lot of wars like I've had in this division," Pantoja said. "He looks fresh, very young. But I can understand he wasn't 100% in that fight with Royval because he took it on short notice. I can expect a better version. I take this guy very seriously, and that's why I want to prove my best version of that."

--Field Level Media

Merab Dvalishvili heavily featured in UFC 323 rematch with Petr Yan

LAS VEGAS -- UFC 323, the promotion's final numbered event on the 2025 calendar, will be held in a familiar place ...
IKEA to ramp up US production as tariffs bite

By Helen Reid and Greta Rosen Fondahn

LONDON/STOCKHOLM, Dec 5 (Reuters) - IKEA plans to source more products from factories in the United States, the Swedish furniture group's top supply chain executive told Reuters, as President ​Donald Trump'stariffsdrive up the cost of importing bookcases, mattresses and sofas.

This marks a big shift for ‌IKEA after the share of the company's U.S.-made products declined over the past decade. Inter IKEA, the brand franchiser, used to have a factory in ‌Danville, Virginia, but shut it in 2019 and moved production back to Europe.

IKEA's push to source products closer to where it sells them aims to support the retailer's expansion in the U.S., its second-biggest market, and the wider region, where it has stores in Canada, Mexico, Chile and Colombia, with plans to open in Costa Rica and Panama.

"We are designing our supply chain network to ⁠be much more resilient, robust, and responsive," ‌Susanne Waidzunas, Global Supply Manager at Inter IKEA said in an interview with Reuters, adding that the company's stores in North and South America are very dependent on furniture being shipped in, ‍with long lead times.

"The closer we can build, the faster we can react from a supply perspective, both when it goes up in demand but also when it goes down."

The plan to produce closer to U.S. consumers predates this year's tariff hikes and is part of ​a global initiative, Waidzunas said.

But the timing is now beneficial: IKEA prides itself on low prices but was forced ‌to increase them on some products in the U.S. to offset the tariff impact. The retailer's sales have declined for two years running as it lowered prices to attract inflation-weary shoppers.

HIGHER PRODUCTION COST, LOWER TRANSPORT COST

SBA Home, a Lithuanian supplier to IKEA, is ramping up its first U.S. factory in Mocksville, North Carolina, a $70 million investment supported in part by Inter IKEA. The factory will make products for IKEA like top-selling KALLAX shelves.

Jurgita Radzevice, CEO of SBA Home, said manufacturing capacity at the ⁠largely automated factory, which is expected to produce 2 million pieces of ​furniture a year, is steadily increasing.

IKEA depends more on imports in the ​U.S. than elsewhere.

Just 15% of IKEA products sold in U.S. stores are made in-country, down from 19% in 2014. In Europe, 70% of the products IKEA sells are made in the region, while ‍the equivalent figure for Asia ⁠is 80%. Its top sourcing countries are China, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, and Poland.

Producing in the U.S. is more expensive, Waidzunas said, but shipping products across the world is also more costly and more unpredictable now than before ⁠the COVID-19 pandemic.

IKEA plans to buy more from existing U.S. suppliers, which include Ohio-based Sauder Woodworking, and look for new suppliers particularly of bulky items, ‌aiming, for example, to source most of its mattresses in the U.S.

(Reporting by Helen Reid in London ‌and Greta Rosen Fondahn in Stockholm. Editing by Jane Merriman)

IKEA to ramp up US production as tariffs bite

By Helen Reid and Greta Rosen Fondahn LONDON/STOCKHOLM, Dec 5 (Reuters) - IKEA plans to source more products fro...
US appeals court rejects Trump administration bid to halt grants for school mental health workers

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal appeals court on Thursday rejected the Trump administration's bid to halt an order requiring it to release millions of dollars in grants meant to address theshortage of mental health workersin schools.

The mental health program, which was funded by Congress after the 2022school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, included grants meant to help schools hire more counselors, psychologists and social workers, with a focus on rural and underserved areas of the country. But President Donald Trump's administration opposed aspects of the grant programs that touched on race, saying they were harmful to students and told recipients they wouldn't receive funding past December 2025.

U.S. District Judge Kymberly K. Evanson,ruled in October thatthe administration's move to cancel school mental health grants was arbitrary and capricious.

The U.S. Department of Education and Secretary of Education Linda McMahon requested an emergency stay and on Thursday, a panel from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied that motion.

The panel wrote in its decision that the government hadn't shown it is likely to succeed based on its claims that the district court doesn't have jurisdiction or that it will be "irreparably injured absent a stay."

The grants were first awarded under Democratic President Joe Biden's administration. The Education Department prioritized giving the money to applicants who showed how they would increase the number of counselors from diverse backgrounds or from communities directly served by the school district.

The Trump administration said in a statement after the ruling in October that the grants were used "to promote divisive ideologies based on race and sex."

The preliminary ruling by Evanson, a U.S. District Court judge in Seattle, applies only to some grantees in the 16 Democratic-led states that challenged the Education Department's decision. In Madera County, California, for example, the ruling restores roughly $3.8 million. In Marin County, California, it restores $8 million.

US appeals court rejects Trump administration bid to halt grants for school mental health workers

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal appeals court on Thursday rejected the Trump administration's bid to halt an order req...
SoftBank's Arm plans to set up chip design facility in South Korea

SEOUL, Dec 5 (Reuters) - South Korea's industry ministry and SoftBank's chip unit, Arm Holdings, have signed an agreement to strengthen the ​country's semiconductor andArtificial Intelligencesectors, a presidential policy adviser ‌said on Friday.

The memorandum of understanding includes a plan for Arm to set up a ‌chip design school in the country to tap its expertise in this area, Kim Yong-beom told reporters at a briefing.

The programme aims to train about 1,400 high-level chip design specialists, a move that Kim said would help bolster ⁠the relatively weak system-semiconductor ‌and fabless segments in Asia's fourth-biggest economy.

British chip and software company Arm licenses its chip designs and earns funds ‍through royalties.

SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, who met with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on Friday, said that demand for chips will rise dramatically as AI advances, Kim ​quoted Son as saying.

Son repeated on Friday that he believes AI ‌is set to surpass human intelligence and that Artificial Superintelligence would be "10,000 times smarter than people."

He said it was time to move beyond the notion that humans could control, teach or manage AI, and instead consider how to live with it harmoniously.

South Korea has ambitions to become one ⁠of the world's top three AI powers ​and Lee has recently also held talks with ​other global technology leaders including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman andNvidiaboss Jensen Huang.

In October, South Korea's Samsung Electronics and ‍SK Hynix signed ⁠letters of intent to supply memory chips for OpenAI's data centres.

Nvidia said in late October that it would supply more than 260,000 ⁠of its most advanced AI chips to South Korea's government and some of the country's ‌biggest businesses, including Samsung Electronics.

(Reporting by Heekyong Yang, Hyunjoo Jin ‌and Joyce Lee;Editing by Ed Davies)

SoftBank's Arm plans to set up chip design facility in South Korea

SEOUL, Dec 5 (Reuters) - South Korea's industry ministry and SoftBank's chip unit, Arm Holdings, have signed an a...
Week 14 Preview: Why Did AJ Brown LIE To Fantasy Managers?! + 5 Stashes You NEED For Fantasy Playoffs

Week 14 is upon us as is our fantasy preview show for the weekend slate. Justin Boone joins Matt Harmon to breakdown every fantasy angle of Week 14. The two tackle Boone's 6-pack of questions and a special edition of Fantasy Film Room. The two then end the show with our wildly entertaining 'hurry up offense' segment.

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(1:00) - Matt's Solo TNF Recap: Lions 44, Cowboys 30

(27:00) - Justin Boone's 6 pack of fantasy questions for Week 14

(1:27:50) - No One's Games of the Week

(1:46:30) - Hurry Up Offense

Week 14 is upon us as is our fantasy preview show for the weekend slate. Justin Boone joins Matt Harmon to breakdown every fantasy angle of Week 14. The two tackle Boone's 6-pack of questions and a special edition of Fantasy Film Room. The two then end the show with our wildly entertaining 'hurry up offense' segment.

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Week 14 Preview: Why Did AJ Brown LIE To Fantasy Managers?! + 5 Stashes You NEED For Fantasy Playoffs

Week 14 is upon us as is our fantasy preview show for the weekend slate. Justin Boone joins Matt Harmon to breakdown ever...

 

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