For Jon Rahm, COVID downtime had a silver lining: more family time

If there was a silver lining to Jon Rahm’s ill-timed positive COVID tests, it was that he gained family time with his wife and new son.

Jon Rahm still can’t believe that he’s reached the end of a season in which six majors counted toward the beginning of the FedEx Cup Playoffs. He’ll miss having so many majors in a season, Rahm said Tuesday ahead of The Northern Trust, but there’s arguably a fatigue factor at play, too.

Some guys have racked up an obscene amount of sky miles these past few weeks – Patrick Reed and Justin Thomas, both Olympians, talked of mileage totals upwards of 20,000 upon returning from Tokyo earlier this month. That’s one trip that Rahm didn’t take.

Rahm spoke for the first time on Tuesday since another series of positive COVID-19 tests prevented him from representing Spain in the Summer Games.

His season already took a COVID hit in early June when he was forced to withdraw from the Memorial despite having the third-round lead because he tested positive for the virus. He came back the next week to win the U.S. Open.

Northern Trust: Tee times, TV info | Odds | Fantasy

The positive test that knocked him out of the Olympics was tougher to take, he admitted.

“I understand it’s a weird case because I tested negative so quickly and tested negative and tested negative all throughout the UK, and I get here and the test is positive,” he said of the pre-Olympic testing cycle. “It really is unfortunate. It sucked because I wanted to represent Spain. I wanted to play that one. I wanted to hopefully give Spain a medal. I was wishing for a gold medal, but just being part of that medal count for the country would have been huge. It was more devastating in that sense. I was more in the mindset of playing for them more than me.”

Rahm confirmed he was never ill but knowing people close to him who did suffer with COVID, he understands the seriousness of the virus.

“That’s why I don’t take it lightly.”

U.S. Open
Jon Rahm celebrates holding the trophy as he poses with his wife Kelley Cahill and son Kepa Cahill Rahm after winning he U.S. Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course. Photo by Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports

While his medal chances were dashed, Rahm did point to one silver lining in the form of some unexpected downtime: the new dad got the opportunity – a scarce one for Tour players – to remain home for a month with baby Kepa. He hasn’t competed since a T-3 at the British Open four weeks ago.

That translates to rejuvenation.

“I was with my family. I was with my wife and our son and had a great time, also trained hard and practiced hard,” he said. “Yeah, I feel like I’m a little – I’m probably going to be a little bit more rested than most people, but at the same time, I haven’t played competitively in four weeks. So there might be a slight bit of rust, but I’m pretty sure that’s going to go quickly just because of how happy and how excited I am to be back and be competing.”

For the next three weeks, the obvious goal is to win, but Rahm also wants to make sure he sticks around for the whole stretch. He’ll take it week by week to get there.

“The important one is the last one,” he said, “so it’s a bit of kind of like a qualifying few rounds where you’re just trying to get ready and get positioned for the Tour Championship.”

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Texans’ Jonathan Owens describes feeling sick over girlfriend Simone Biles’ struggles

Texans’ DB Jonathan Owens said he felt sick watching his girlfriend Simone Biles’ mental struggles in Tokyo

Simone Biles came home from the Tokyo Olympics with a bronze medal from the balance beam and a legion of new admirers, given the way she stood up for her mental health rather than risk competing.

The GOAT of gymnastics’ boyfriend is Houston Texans’ safety Jonathan Owens and he related what it was like to watch her challenges in Japan.

“I was sick for her, just because I can see her face, I kind of know her facial expressions, I can kind of read her lips and kind of know what was going on and kind of what she was telling her coach,” Owens said Thursday. “I kind of already knew what was going on beforehand, so I was just really hoping she was going to get over it and be able to go out there and perform. So I was sick to my stomach because she wasn’t able to go out there.”

Owens said he had not been apart from Biles for this long since they started dating and that compounded his stress.

“It was hard for me to really understand what she was going through because I’m not on that stage and dealing with those pressures and everything, but I just try to be as understanding as possible,” Owens said.

“I was so proud of her. Just to be able to overcome mentally what was going on. She kind of altered her beam routine, but I was just happy for her.”

 

 

Kevin Durant leads Team USA to win over Spain in Olympic quarterfinals

Durant scored a team-high 29 points, the ninth-most ever by an American in the Olympics.

Kevin Durant produced a team-high 29 points on Tuesday to lead USA Basketball to a 95-81 victory over Spain and advance to the semifinals in the Tokyo Olympics.

The United States jumped out to an early 10-point lead but Spain, thanks in large part to Ricky Rubio, stormed back.

Rubio scored 13 of Spain’s first 17 points to close the gap and take the lead. The Americans shot just 4-of-17 from 3-point range in the first half, enabling Spain to lead by 10 points with 3:25 left in the second quarter.

“We got wide-open looks in the first half, we just didn’t knock them down,” Durant said.

However, a 14-4 run by the U.S. tied the game up at 43 points apiece at halftime.

The U.S. stormed out on a 22-6 run to begin the third quarter and open up a 16-point advantage. Durant scored 13 points alone in the period to give the U.S. the lead for good. His 29 total points were the ninth-most ever by an American in the Olympics.

Jayson Tatum added 13 points, Jrue Holiday had 12 and Damian Lillard finished with 11 points in the win.

“I like how we played in the second quarter,” Durant said. “From the end of the second quarter all the way to finish the game, and that’s how we are going to need to play going forward.”

Rubio finished with 38 points, the most ever by a Team USA opponent, to lead Spain, who fell to 0-13 against the Americans in the Olympics. Sergio Rodriguez had 16 points while Willy Hernangomez had 10 points, 10 rebounds and three blocked shots.

Houston Rockets draftee Usman Garuba finished with three points and three rebounds.

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Team USA will now face Australia in the semifinals on Thursday (12:05 a.m. EDT) from Tokyo.

The Americans are 8-0 all-time against Australia in the Olympics but recently lost to the Boomers during their exhibition run last month in Las Vegas.

The loss to Australia was just the second game Team USA played together but they have since had the opportunity to gel and practice more on the court.

The group believes they are performing well at the right time, and hope to continue that in the semifinals.

“This game happened, and it’s not the way we wanted it to go, but we still have an opportunity,” Tatum said. “We still have a chance, and we’ve got to focus on the next game and keep building and keep growing together.”

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Spain loses to Slovenia, will play Team USA in Olympic quarterfinals

Spain, who has medaled in three straight Olympic Games, finished the group phase 2-1 to advance out of Group C.

Ricky Rubio scored a team-high 18 points and Alberto Abalde had 14 points on Sunday as Spain lost to Luka Doncic and Slovenia to wrap up preliminary play in the Tokyo Olympics.

The two teams traded baskets throughout the fourth quarter, with Spain leading by as many as six points. However, Slovenia ended the game on a 19-5 run to seal the 95-87 victory, and the top seed from Group C. Doncic registered 12 points, 14 rebounds and nine assists.

Slovenia will play Germany in the quarterfinals on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Spain, who has medaled in three straight Olympic Games, finished the group phase 2-1 after the loss to advance to the quarterfinals out of Group C. They were drawn to face the United States.

Spain will enter the quarterfinals with the fifth-highest odds of winning the gold medal, according to BetMGM. With a roster featuring several current or former NBA players, including draftee Usman Garuba, Spain figures to present a tough out moving forward.

They will tip off against the U.S. at 12:40 a.m. EDT on Tuesday.

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Nico Mannion, Italy to face France in Olympic quarterfinals

Italy finished 2-1 in preliminary play to advance out of Group B, along with Australia (3-0) and Germany (1-2).

Nico Mannion and Italy will face France in the quarterfinals of the Tokyo Olympics on Tuesday after the matchups were determined in the final phase drawing.

Italy finished 2-1 in preliminary play to advance out of Group B, along with Australia (3-0) and Germany (1-2). They defeated Germany to open the Tokyo Olympics before falling to Australia and beating Nigeria on Saturday to move onto the knockout round.

Simone Fontecchio led the Italians with 18 points per game during the group phase while Mannion averaged 15 points, five assists and 2.3 rebounds during their three contests. Fontecchio finished seventh in scoring with Mannion 15th among all players.

Italy earned a ticket to Tokyo after winning the qualifying tournament last month from Belgrade, Serbia. Mannion played a key role for Italy in winning the qualifying tournament, averaging 17.7 points, four assists and 1.7 rebounds per game.

The appearance by Italy in the Olympics is their first since 2004 when they finished with the silver medal in the Athens Games, and their fifth consecutive time reaching the quarterfinals.

Italy and France will tip off on Tuesday at 4:20 a.m. EDT.

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