
-
'Not at 50' - Alonso sets retirement limit
-
Macron praises US-European-Ukraine talks as 'important occasion for convergence'
-
Verstappen dismisses Red Bull exit fears
-
Italy's Meloni, Trump talk up EU trade deal hopes
-
'Slow but steady' progress for Martin after Qatar MotoGP crash
-
Pogacar-Van der Poel duel inspires Evenepoel comeback
-
US judge rules Google monopolized online ad tech market
-
Bearman back at 'special' debut-track Jeddah
-
Swiss watch exports to US soared ahead of Trump tariffs
-
Alcaraz finds best to reach Barcelona Open quarters
-
Where are all the aliens?: Fermi's Paradox explained
-
France full-back Dulin to retire at end of season
-
World economy likely to avoid recession despite tariffs: IMF chief
-
57 killed in Sudan's Darfur as trapped civilians fear bloodbath
-
Vietnam ups wind, solar targets as energy demand soars
-
Pope says doing 'best he can' on jail visit before Easter
-
China's Xi meets Cambodian leader as part of regional diplomatic blitz
-
Ukrainian tennis player seeks legal justice over 'moral abuse'
-
Italy's Meloni seeks EU tariff deal from Trump
-
France's feminist icon Pelicot to sue Paris Match for privacy invasion
-
World economy should avoid recession despite tariffs, IMF chief says
-
Stocks waver as ECB cuts rate, Trump slams Fed chief
-
France, UK mull migrant swaps in bid to stem Channel crossings
-
Nuno says Forest still in control of Champions League chase
-
Malinin, Liu help US take early lead at skating's World Team Trophy
-
Clashes in Sudan's besieged Darfur city kill 57
-
Kyiv's Europe allies seek influence with US in Paris talks
-
Russia scraps Taliban's 'terror' label amid warming ties
-
Trump says Fed chief's 'termination cannot come fast enough'
-
China's Xi, seeking to build regional ties, meets Cambodian leader
-
ECB cuts rates as Trump tariffs raise fears for eurozone growth
-
Etzebeth returns to Sharks lineup after concussion absence
-
Gaza rescuers say 40 mostly displaced people killed in Israeli strikes
-
N.Ireland designer Jonathan Anderson takes helm at Dior Men
-
Turkish central bank raises interest rate to 46 percent
-
Trump's tariff storm a threat to dollar's dominance?
-
Bayern forced to watch on as home final dream 'shattered'
-
Trump clashes with Fed chief Powell over interest rates
-
UK mulls impact of landmark gender ruling
-
'Help us,' says wife of Gaza medic missing since ambulance attack
-
Stocks diverge as ECB rate cut looms, Trump tussles with Fed
-
UN nuclear chief says Iran, US running out of time to secure deal
-
Somalia air strikes, combat kill dozens of jihadists: govt
-
Book claims Vatican knew French charity icon accused of abuse from 1950s
-
Afrobeats star Davido sees Nigeria's star rising
-
Van Dijk signs new Liverpool contract
-
Gaza rescuers say 37 people killed in Israeli strikes, most of them displaced
-
Strongest 'hints' yet of life detected on distant planet
-
EU hopes Trump tariffs can nudge Mercosur deal past finish line
-
Nvidia CEO in Beijing as US tech curbs, trade war threaten sales

McIlroy in no mood to talk on the way to Masters win: DeChambeau
The Augusta National atmosphere was electric as Rory McIlroy stopped-and-started his way to a longed-for Masters triumph on Sunday, but inside the ropes the Northern Ireland star was strictly business, playing partner Bryson DeChambeau said.
"He wouldn't talk to me," DeChambeau said. "He was just like -- just being focused, I guess. It's not me, though."
DeChambeau started the day two strokes behind McIlroy, but quickly found himself tied atop the leaderboard when McIlroy double-bogeyed the opening hole.
DeChambeau then birdied the par-five second to take the lead, only to fall behind again at the third as he dropped a shot and McIlroy made his first birdie of the day.
Another two-shot swing on the fourth saw McIlroy push his lead to three and DeChambeau, the reigning US Open champion, wouldn't find a way to close the gap.
A double-bogey at the 11th essentially ended his challenge, DeChambeau carding a three-over 75 to finish tied for tied for fifth, four shots behind McIlroy and Justin Rose -- who fell to McIlroy at the first hole of a sudden-death playoff.
"Just more of the same with my irons," DeChambeau said, adding that they just weren't "dialed-in."
He did have time amid his own struggles to spare some sympathy for McIlroy when his second shot at the 13th bounced into the water for a costly double-bogey.
"I wanted to cry for him," DeChambeau said. "I mean, as a professional, you just know to hit it in the middle of the green, and I can't believe he went for it, or must have just flared it.
"There were times where it looked like he had full control, and at times where it's like, what's going on?" DeChambeau said. "Kind of looked like one of my rounds, actually."
McIlroy, who was making his 11th attempt to complete a career Grand Slam at the Masters, said he was so nervous before the round that he had to force himself to eat.
And he didn't try to calm himself with conversation with the player who took advantage of his late collapse at Pinehurst last year to win a second US Open title.
"No idea," DeChambeau said when asked how McIlroy was feeling on he course. "Didn't talk to me once all day."
M.Ouellet--BTB