Cameron Smith is set to become the latest golf star to default to LIV Golf in a mega-money deal.
Just a day after Australian golfer Cameron Percy let slip that Smith and fellow Aussie Marc Leishman were set to join the breakaway tour, The Telegrpah reported Smith has inked a $AUD140 million deal.
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Smith’s first tournament with the rebel tour is set to be the LIV’s International in Boston which begins September 2.
Despite the report, Smith did not elaborate in his press conference ahead of the FedEx Cup play-offs.
“You know, my goal here is to win the FedExCup Playoffs,” Smith said.
“That’s all I’m here for. If there’s something I need to say regarding the PGA Tour or LIV, it’ll come from Cameron Smith, not Cameron Percy.
“I’m a man of my word and whenever you guys need to know anything, it’ll be said by me.”
Cameron Smith has reportedly signed on with the LIV tour.Source: Getty Images
MORE COVERAGE
Aussie golf’s ‘special’ $3.4m move earns big boost… but Smith wait goes on amid LIV link
‘They want to come back’: The final pieces in Aussie golf’s historic $3.4m shift
However, Smith confirmed he “absolutely” had plans to play in the President’s Cup even though the report claims he’d be with LIV Golf at the time.
After further LIV-related questions, Smith thanked the reporters and walked out of the press conference.
To date, LIV Golf has signed golf stars like Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka, but Smith’s arrival brings more credibility to the competition given he is World Number Two and recently won The Open.
The Australian star declined to comment after winning the Claret Jug but refused to deny it and sent the rumor mill into overdrive.
“I just won the British Open and you’re asking about that? I think that’s pretty- not that good,” Smith said.
Pressed on the matter, the Australian was coy.
“I don’t know, mate. My team around me worries about all that stuff, I’m here to win golf tournaments,” he said.
The Telegraph goes on to state that LIV CEO Greg Norman struck a deal prior to Smith’s famous Open triumph and that an official announcement confirming the latter’s move is not expected until the FedEx Cup play-off series is complete.
Whyalla tourism operators have been buoyed by recent figures showing a surge in Giant Australian Cuttlefish numbers.
Key points:
Giant Australian Cuttlefish congregate in waters around Whyalla during the winter months to breed
This season’s cuttlefish aggregation has attracted more than 137,000 individuals
It comes months after the government reintroduced a ban on fishing cuttlefish in the upper Spencer Gulf
Recently published figures reveal a 28 per cent increase in the numbers of cuttlefish migrating to waters around the Eyre Peninsula town for their breeding season.
The findings come just a few months after the South Australian government reimposed an upper Spencer Gulf fishing ban for cuttlefish north of Arno Bay and Wallaroo.
Whyalla Dive Shop owner Tony Bramley said his business relied on tourism generated by cuttlefish and was glad to see numbers increasing.
“I don’t think there’s anything else people who are concerned about the aggregation could ask for,” he said.
“It’s absolutely fantastic news because it shows the efficacy of that spatial closure, which was taken away two years ago because, according to the government at the time, it had done its job.”
The ban was originally put in place by the former state government after cuttlefish numbers fell from 200,000 to just 13,000 in a few years. It was repeated two years ago.
The latest aggregation has attracted more than 137,000 individuals.
Whyalla Diving Services owner Tony Bramley says his business relies on the cuttlefish.(ABC News: Declan Gooch)
A ‘reassuring’ result
Cutty’s Boat Tours began operating glass bottom boat tours for the first time this year, enabling more tourists to see the cuttlefish.
Owner Matt Waller said it was reassuring to see the numbers increasing.
“It just says to us that yes, this is a good thing. Yes, this is an industry that’s going to exist in the future,” he said.
“It gives us a bit more confidence for sure.”
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Permanent ban being considered
SA Regional Development Minister Clare Scriven said the latest ban would last until May 2023 but the government was looking at ways to make it permanent.
“Not only is the Giant Australian Cuttlefish spawning aggregation unique to South Australia, it creates opportunities for small businesses in regional areas to benefit from the extraordinary show of nature on our doorstep,” she said.
Cuttlefish gather in the waters around Whyalla to breed and hide their eggs under rocks.(Supplied: Jayne Jenkins)
Mr Bramley said that while he was happy with the current level of protection, he felt the cuttlefish had not yet recovered from fishing over the past few decades.
“Old timers like myself have been saying that since commercial fishing in the 90s, the numbers are nothing like what they were,” he said.
Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) said Monday night that he is going to bring a $35 cap on patients’ insulin costs back up for a vote this fall after Republicans blocked it over the weekend.
“They blocked a $35 price for insulin for non-Medicare people,” Schumer said on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show.” “We’re going to come back and make them vote on that again.”
The move can help put pressure on Republicans and highlight what Democrats view as a winning issue ahead of November’s midterm elections.
Democrats hammered Republicans for voting against the $35 cap over the weekend.
That vote came up in the context of overruling the parliamentarian’s decision that applying the $35 cap to people with private health insurance violated the complicated Senate rules Democrats were using to bypass a GOP filibuster.
Seven Republicans still voted with all 50 Democrats, three short of the 60 votes needed, and it is possible more Republicans would support it if it came up as a standalone measure, not in the context of a Senate rules vote.
“We got all 50 Democrats,” Schumer said in a separate interview Monday on NPR. “We did get seven Republicans. We’re going to bring that back in the fall, because there’s going to be huge heat on Republicans.”
Schumer did not specify whether he would bring the $35 cap up by itself or as part of a larger, bipartisan insulin measure from Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (DN.H.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), which had previously faced difficulties gaining enough GOP support.
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) suggested Monday he would support a $35 cap if it came up again.
“Vote on the cap was not [about] insulin It was [about] Others ignoring budget rules,” I have tweeted. “Dear colleagues join me in supporting the Collins-Shaheen bill to cap insulin at $35 & enact [pharmacy benefit manager] reforms in a bipartisan way.”
There are growing concerns a drop in investors buying into Tasmanian real estate could further shrink the availability of rental properties in the state.
Key points:
Overall, Tasmanian house sales have continued to trend down for the second consecutive quarter
Despite the falls, property sales for the June quarter were still slightly above the 10-year average of 1,739 properties
Mary Bennett from Anglicare says the drop in investment is concerning if it means properties are leaving the long-term rental market and not being replaced
The number of investors purchasing a Tasmanian property in the June quarter fell by 20 per cent compared to the previous quarter.
Out of 1,781 properties sold, just 16 per cent were purchased by investors, with even fewer Hobart properties (12 per cent) purchased as investments.
“That’s a worry,” the president of the Real Institute of Tasmania, Michael Walsh, said.
He fears properties being sold could be removed from an already tight rental market that has a current statewide vacancy rate of about 1 per cent.
“That’s probably a big discussion to be had on the implications for the rental market,” he said.
Mr Walsh said 30 per cent of buyers needed to be investors to properly support the private rental market.
“We just don’t have the private investment right now that tries to keep pace with that demand. Where people live is anyone’s guess,” he said.
Supply of affordable rentals ‘falling for over a decade’
Mary Bennett from Anglicare’s Social Action and Research Center said the drop in investment was concerning if it meant properties were leaving the long-term rental market and not being replaced by new supply.
“There has been a drop in the share of properties that changed hands being bought by investors,” she said.
“While this is an indicator of the level of investment in the long-term rental housing market, it may just reflect a drop in the number of investment properties changing hands.”
Ms Bennett also said it depended on how many investment properties entered the long-term or short-term rental market, and how much was being invested in building new housing supply.
“The supply of affordable rental housing has been falling for over a decade,” she said.
“If the supply of long-term rental properties in the private market falls, rents will continue to rise and we expect to see more Tasmanians turning to us for help as they also contend with other cost of living pressures.
“This is why it is so important that the government does not leave supply of affordable housing to the private rental market.”
Earlier this year the state government unveiled a $1.5 billion, 10-year housing plan to build 10,000 affordable homes.
On average, 1,000 new public housing homes would have to be built each year to keep the plan on track.
The Real Institute of Tasmania’s Michael Walsh said the market was in a transitional period.(abcnews)
Market ‘slowing but not collapsing’
Overall, Tasmanian house sales have continued to trend down for the second consecutive quarter.
House sales fell 4.7 per cent on the previous quarter, and 9.5 per cent on the same period last year.
“We saw a white-hot market last year,” Mr Walsh said.
“So it’s only normal after that to have house prices stabilize and readjust to what we’re seeing now.”
Despite the falls, property sales for the June quarter were still slightly above the 10-year average of 1,739 properties.
Mr Walsh said there were no fears of a housing market collapse.
“Prices are definitely not collapsing. That’s a strong message out of the figures we have for the last quarter,” he said.
“We’re in a transitional period. Is the market going to slow from last year? Absolutely. Last year was one out of the books.”
Samsung’s almost unveiled its next-generation foldables, which means the days of relying on leaks are almost over. The company’s virtual Galaxy Unpacked event will start on Aug. 10 at 9 a.m. ET / 6 a.m. PT You can watch along with us on Samsung’s website or in YouTube embed below. Samsung will also publish all the new details from the event on its newsroom landing page.
As they’ve trained us to expect over the years, Samsung’s Unpacked events are when Samsung unwraps its new kit. Everyone’s anticipating the next generation Galaxy Z Flip 4 and Galaxy Z Fold 4. The two folding smartphones will likely take the reins from the Galaxy Note with the companion S Pen — that device has been replaced outright with the Galaxy S22 Ultra, now a part of the early-year flagship lineup.
If you were reading along with the rumours, you might know this year’s foldables are billed out to be as interesting as last year’s releases. The Z Flip 4 is a foldable device that flips down into a clamshell shape, while the Galaxy Z Fold 4 will be marketed toward multitaskers. But while Samsung was figuring out the look and feel of the smartphones the last few years, we’re thinking this year’s launch will be billed as the “upgrade” for folks who are finally foldable form-factor curious.
Since Samsung’s similarly-timed Unpacked event introduced new accessories into the ecosystem last year, there are also rumblings that a new Galaxy Watch 5 will join the brood of existing Samsung wearables alongside a Galaxy Watch 5 Pro with improved health tracking sensors aimed at training athletes. The Galaxy Buds Pro may also bump up to the next generation, which would be nicely timed against Google’s recently launched Pixel Buds Pro.
We will know everything in mere hours. Samsung has already opened pre-orders for those ready to drop cash on the unknown. For everyone else, join us back here during the Unpacked event time to see what’s new.
Editor’s Note: Release dates within this article are based in the US, but will be updated with local Australian dates as soon as we know more.
Nigella Lawson is delighting Australian viewers with her My Kitchen Rules debut.
The British home cooking queen, who has replaced controversial chef Pete Evans on the 2022 season of Channel 7 reality series, has managed to reinvigorate the struggling franchise with her on-screen charisma and star power.
And even though she’s been on the culinary circuit for decades, people have been surprised to learn of the food writer’s real age.
Lawson, who published her first cookbook in 1998 before breaking onto TV with her own show Nigella Bites the following year, turned 62 in January. Yes, you read that right.
Lawson, who has two children with her first husband, late journalist John Diamond, recently credited her youthful looks to avoiding sun exposure and eating “lots of fats.”
She also previously told Oprah.com she was “trying to go with” aging.
“I think what ages a face most is disappointment and a lack of enjoyment. So I try to do what I love,” she said.
The 12th season of the Channel 7 cooking show follows a two-year hiatus for MKRwhich suffered declining ratings in 2019 and 2020.
Presumably in a bid to compete with its rival prime-time show, Channel 9’s Married At First Sight, the series was copping criticism for overdoing it on the dramatics and straying from its humble roots.
In an effort to bolster the franchise, the network parted ways with original judge Evans following a slew of controversies, and promised the series would be bouncing back to its core values of “real food and real people” in 2022.
It’s understood Lawson will only feature in half of the season, with former MasterChef judge Matt Preston joining Feildel for the back half. Celebrity chefs Colin Fassnidge and Curtis Stone are also set to return as guest judges.
With AFL finals looming large, the focus is intensifying on the legitimate challengers for the flag.
Geelong and Collingwood are top of the form line, with impressive winning streaks ahead of September.
Hovering in third place, by virtue of a sliver of percentage that separates them from fourth and fifth, are the Demons.
Even after a dramatic loss to the unstoppable Magpies at a rocking MCG last Friday night, pundits are largely keeping faith with a Melbourne side that has now lost six of its past 10 games.
The reasons are clear: A stellar team mix of role players, stars and X-factors — and the experience of having made it to the mountaintop just 12 months ago, sweeping all before them in September to win a first flag in 67 years.
Essentially, everyone is expecting the Demons’ football muscle memory to kick in and drive them to a repeat of their premiership glory.
The fact is, however, that Melbourne’s performances — while showing occasional glimpses of the team’s best — are well off the mark they set in 2021.
And the fix starts with better final quarters and second halves.
Super stretch sealed flag for Melbourne
Last year, Melbourne came into the final four rounds of the season lying third, with 13 wins and a percentage of 124.2.
From there on, the Demons won seven games on the trot to finish top of the ladder — with 17 wins and a percentage of 130.8 — before sweeping through the finals series to claim the flag.
Their experience shows you can turn things around. After losing the final quarter in seven of their first 14 games in 2021, the Demons were beaten in the final term in only two of their last 11 games.
Melbourne’s final seven-game unbeaten stretch saw the team lose only one final quarter, to the Eagles but, in total, the Demons outscored their opponents by 26 goals to 10.
In terms of second halves, it was even starker. From round 16 through to the grand final in 2021, Melbourne lost only one second half, against Hawthorn in round 18.
Over that time, Simon Goodwin’s men outscored their opponents by 79 goals to 32. In finals, the equivalent figure was 30 goals to eight.
It was a combination of surge football in attack and tough defense that gave few openings to opponents.
So how are the Demons going in 2022?
Jamarra Ugle-Hagan’s late goal for the Bulldogs sealed one of six Melbourne losses in their last 10 games.(Getty Images: Darrian Traynor)
Whether or not you think the form line is still relevant back to round 11 — when the first questions were raised with the six-goal loss to the Dockers at the MCG — the Demons have been mixed, at best, after their brilliant start to the season.
They started with 10 wins in a row, but have lost more than they have won in their past 10 games.
More worryingly, after a brief bounce back beginning in round 15, Melbourne has now gone down in three of its past five games, losing to Geelong, Western Bulldogs and Collingwood.
In each of their six losses since round 11, the Demons have lost the final quarter, and every time they have conceded between four and six goals.
The issues aren’t limited to after half-time, either. If we look at the last seven games of 2021 — including finals — the Demons average score was a tick over 106 points a game. They also managed to keep opponents to a seriously stingy 57.3 points a game.
In short, Melbourne was flying on both sides of the ball. This time around, in the 10-game stretch starting with the loss to the Dockers, the Demons have scored an average of 80.4 points a game, and their opponents have scored an average of 77.2.
One possible reason is that their forward defensive pressure is not where it was — for pre-finals at least.
In the last four rounds leading into finals in 2021, the Demons brought fierce forward pressure, averaging 18.5 tackles inside 50 to their opponents’ 7.75.
From rounds 18-21 this year, Melbourne has averaged 7.25 tackles inside 50 to 11.5 for their opponents.
Last year, this turned around in finals, with the Dees being comprehensively out-done in forward 50 tackles (23-41 overall) — but that didn’t matter, because Melbourne’s attack was so potent that it swamped opposition teams, scoring an average of 119 points to 56 in September.
Melbourne’s surging attack made the Demons extremely hard to stop in the 2021 finals series.(Getty Images: AFL Photos/Michael Willson)
The thing that made Melbourne really dangerous was the prospect that they had the capacity — either while in front or trailing on the scoreboard — to hit teams with an unstoppable burst of scoring.
They still have the ability to put a run of goals together, but the other issue is that the Demons are now showing themselves vulnerable to giving up leads.
On five occasions this season, including twice in the past three rounds, Melbourne has given up leads of more than 20 points to lose games.
Does this all mean that we should write off Melbourne’s chances of going back-to-back? Absolutely not. The Demons are still a legitimate second- or third-favorite for the flag behind Geelong, despite their issues.
They also have the ability to turn these issues around — but it is clear that there still remains a fair bit of work to do to find their unbeatable best form. And that improvement needs to start happening soon.
All sex is rape, argued radical feminist Andrea Dworkin. She believed that because we live in a patriarchal society heterosexual sex can only be understood as domination: “the pure, sterile formal expression of men’s contempt for women.”
Dworkin’s polemics from the 1980s and 1990s made her the enemy of “sex positive” feminists who were pro porn and pro sex work. Indeed most people recoiled from her unyielding, dark take on sex, which seemed to strip women of all carnal agency, and joy. But I had a bit of time for Dworkin’s ideas of her, despite being heterosexual myself (within a measly margin of error). She was articulating something previously unsayable about encounters between men and women: the eroticism stems for the former violating the boundaries of the latter. Even when the parties are equally enthusiastic, the subtext of conquest and submission lurks in the bedroom like a third person.
A bill to pass affirmative consent laws was introduced to Victoria’s parliament last week. The proposed changes are in part driven by the #Metoo movement.Credit:Damian Dovarganes
Dworkin died in 2005. But as the New York Times′ Michelle Goldberg noted in 2019, in the #MeToo era, feminists began invoking the firebrand theorist “in a spirit of respect and rediscovery”. This is not because women suddenly believe all sex is rape, or all men rapists. But because, Goldberg argued, Dworkin has relevance for a new generation “engaged, in a pitched cultural battle over whose experiences and assumptions define our common reality”.
I hear Dworkian echoes in the wave of “affirmative consent” reforms to sexual assault laws. Such legislation was introduced into Victoria’s parliament last week; Queensland is likely to follow, and NSW passed similar laws last year.
Under the Victorian bill, a man – the actual wording is gender neutral, but the overwhelming reality of sexual assault is not – can only reasonably believe a woman was consenting throughout an encounter if he took active steps to find out, such as asking her, or looking for signs of reciprocity like removing clothes. Radical? Well, it sounds radical. Like I said, I hear echoes of Dworkin who talked about “presumptive rape”.
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You could read into the bill an assumption that the sex act in question was non-consensual unless the accused has evidence to the contrary. And that is a significant philosophical flip; the “no means no” mantra of the 1970s has become “only ‘yes’ means yes”. Rape laws have traditionally favored men who managed to breach women’s boundaries, which were considered rubbery to start with. Affirmative consent, says Victoria’s Attorney-General Jaclyn Symes, shifts the scrutiny from the victim – what she did, what she wore – to the accused; what did I have do to ascertain her state of mind?
The defense barristers argue, as they’re professionally obliged to do, that the laws could criminalize cases in the “grey zone,” ensnaring hapless, emotionally unintelligent teenage boys – who don’t fit the traditional profile of a predator – after a night of drunken misadventure. To which the feminist campaigners say, yes that’s the point of the exercise: to eradicate the gray zone because the woman who is feeling degraded in the aftermath of an encounter doesn’t think the zone’s gray anyway.
If I was convinced of the accuracy of the underlying premise – namely that the proposed laws have the serious potential to criminalize cases that don’t presently make the cut for rape – then I’d be more sympathetic to the defense barristers’ warnings about unintended consequences. But I’m not convinced, for what my opinion’s worth. Largely because I don’t think this new articulation of what constitutes “reasonable belief” in another’s consent is a significant departure from the current law. Unless I’m misreading the text, an accused doesn’t have to ask if the other party’s consenting: they just need to actively seek out positive cues, and be on alert for negative ones.
The Internal Revenue Service must hand over former President Trump’s tax returns to a House committee, a federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday, dismissing a long-running legal challenge to block tax officials from complying with a request for the records from Democratic lawmakers.
A three-judge panel for the DC Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously sided with the Biden administration and the House Ways and Means Committee, ruling against Trump’s arguments against the committee’s authority, his privacy concerns and his claim that complying with the request would be unconstitutional.
“The 2021 Request seeks information that may inform the United States House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means as to the efficacy of the Presidential Audit Program, and therefore, was made in furtherance of a subject upon which legislation could be had,” Judge David Sentelle wrote in the panel’s opinion.
“Further, the Request did not violate separation of powers principles under any of the potentially applicable tests primarily because the burden on the Executive Branch and the Trump Parties is relatively minor.”
Sentelle was appointed by former President Reagan. The two other judges on the panel, Karen Henderson and Robert Wilkins, were appointed by former Presidents George HW Bush and Obama, respectively.
Attorneys representing Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Rep. Richard Neal (D-Mass.), the chairman of the Ways and Means committee, applauded the decision on Tuesday.
“With great patience, we followed the judicial process, and yet again, our position has been affirmed by the Courts,” Neal said in a statement. “I’m pleased that this long-anticipated opinion makes clear the law is on our side. When we receive the returns, we will begin our oversight of the IRS’s mandatory presidential audit program.”
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) also described the order as a victory.
“Access to the former president’s tax returns is crucial to upholding the public interest, our national security and our Democracy. We look forward to the IRS complying with this ruling and delivering the requested documents so that Ways and Means can begin its oversight responsibilities of the mandatory presidential audit program,” she said in a statement.
Neal first requested the tax returns from the Treasury Department in 2019. The Trump administration refused to comply with the request and the House committee sued in federal court later that year.
After the Biden administration took over last year, the Justice Department reversed its legal position in the case and tax officials were ordered to comply with the request, prompting Trump to file a motion in his personal capacity to try to prevent the documents from being turned over. .
Federal tax law requires Treasury officials to hand over individual tax returns upon receiving a written request from the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee.
Trump’s lawyers had argued that the law is unconstitutional and that compliance with the request would pose First Amendment and separation of powers concerns.
But the three-judge panel on Tuesday rejected those arguments as well as the former president’s allegations that the request, and the willingness to comply, is improper because of the political motivations of the two branches.
“While it is possible that Congress may attempt to threaten the sitting President with an invasive request after leaving office, every President takes office knowing that he will be subject to the same laws as all other citizens upon leaving office,” the decision reads. “This is a feature of our democratic republic, not a bug.”
Former international cricket umpire Rudi Koertzen has died in a car crash in South Africa.
Key points:
Rudi Koertzen made his debut as an international umpire in 1992
He was on the International Cricket Council’s elite panel of umpires
Koertzen still umpired occasionally in amateur cricket in his hometown
Koertzen, 73, was on his way back home from Cape Town after a weekend of golf when the fatal accident happened on Tuesday morning (local time).
Three others were also killed in the crash at Riversdale, around 300km east of Cape Town.
Koertzen became an umpire in 1981 and made his debut as an international umpire in 1992 during India’s historic tour of South Africa.
He was on the International Cricket Council’s elite panel of umpires for eight years and officiated in 331 matches, a record at the time of his retirement in 2010 that has since been surpassed by Pakistan’s Aleem Dar.
“It is a very big loss, foremost for his family and then for South Africa and cricket,” Dar said.
“I stood in so many games with him. He was not only very good as an umpire but also an excellent colleague, always very cooperative on the field and also always willing to help off the field.
“Because of the way he was, he was also well-respected by players.”
Koertzen’s time as an umpire was best remembered for the entertainingly slow raising of his finger to dismiss a batter.
A number of professional cricketers around the world expressed their condolences at the news of Koertzen’s death.
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Koertzen still occasionally umpired in amateur cricket in his hometown of Despatch in South Africa’s Eastern Cape.