Two kings, one prince due to attend their national teams’ games on same day at Euro 2024
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Yueke
Tue, Jun 25, 2024
Two Kings, One Prince Due to Attend Their National Teams’ Games on Same Day at Euro 2024
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — Two kings and a prince are set to watch the soccer aristocrats playing on the field at European Championship games on Thursday.
King Frederik of Denmark and the first in line to the British throne, Prince William, will be together in the VVIP seats when their national teams meet in Frankfurt in the early evening game.
“It’s a big honor. I’m a big fan of the Danish royal family,” Denmark goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel said Wednesday.
Schmeichel previously met Prince William at the FA Cup final in May 2021, when the future king also presented him with the trophy as captain of the winning Leicester team against Chelsea at Wembley Stadium.
King Felipe of Spain is due to attend the later game on Thursday when his national team plays Italy in Gelsenkirchen.
UEFA confirmed the scheduled royal visits to the monthlong tournament in Germany.
Prince William is the longtime president of the English Football Association and a fan of Premier League team Aston Villa, which has two players in the England squad at Euro 2024.
King Frederik, who ascended to the throne in January following the abdication of his mother Queen Margrethe II, is a former member of the International Olympic Committee.
“Having the king support us is something we have been talking about in the team. I hope that we can win for him,” said Schmeichel, whose father Peter was the goalkeeper of the Denmark team that won the European title in 1992.
When Spain won the Euro 2012 title, King Felipe was then the crown prince who was at the stadium in Kyiv, Ukraine, and visited the team celebrations in the locker room.
Spain and Italy have faced each other in the past four editions of the tournament, and they meet again on Thursday for the fifth straight edition.
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AP Euro 2024:
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PGA Tour Commissioner Says Sides Are Making Progress on Deal with Saudi Backers of LIV Golf
CROMWELL, Conn. (AP) — PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said Wednesday that the difficulty in finalizing a deal with the Saudi backers of LIV Golf isn’t a reason for concern.
“With complexity comes opportunity,” he said before the start of the Travelers Championship at the TPC River Highlands. “There are a lot of different factors at play, but nobody who is having the conversation is unaware of the complexity. And everyone, I think, is embracing the fact that there are obstacles and things you’ve got to overcome in a complex situation.
“We have the right people around the table for us,” Monahan said, “and they do as well.”
It’s been more than a year since the PGA Tour and the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia — the financial backer of the rival LIV circuit — announced plans to form a partnership that would help mend the rift caused by the departures of dozens of top players lured away by Saudi riches.
A framework agreement was announced on June 6, 2023, with plans to finalize it by the end of the year.
The deadline passed without a finalized deal. Monahan said a June 11 meeting in New York, attended by Tiger Woods and Adam Scott, with Rory McIlroy phoning in from the Memorial, was “very productive.” He declined to give specifics.
Monahan said he is on the phone with the PIF multiple times a week, including just about an hour earlier on Wednesday morning. “My outlook for those discussions continues to be very positive,” he said.
Speaking from the last of the limited field, no-cut signature events on the tour’s calendar this year, Monahan declined to say what has been agreed to and what remains unsettled. The original framework has changed greatly, he acknowledged.
“The framework agreement is still relevant. There are aspects of it that certainly continue to be in play. But we’ve all stepped back, and we started anew,” he said, listing new committees and other opportunities for the players to participate and profit from a future tour. “The vast majority of what we’re talking about, we’re building from the ground up.”
One of the complexities the deal faces is a possible objection from the Justice Department on antitrust grounds. The rival tours would need to show that the deal enhances competition — by bringing all the best golfers to the same tournament, for example — instead of squelching competition by giving golf fans, sponsors, and players fewer options.
The sides already bowed to one suggestion from the Justice Department last summer, incorporating certain changes in the framework agreement.
Meanwhile, players continued to defect to LIV — including last year’s Masters champion, Jon Rahm.
Only seven players have been involved in the talks. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler said he didn’t know enough about the negotiations to worry about what will happen.
“I haven’t really heard too much, so I don’t know if they’re going great or if they’re going poorly, so your guess is as good as mine I think at this point,” he said. “Definitely no frustration or anything like that for me. It’s out of my control, so I’m not too worried about it.
“They have got a lot of big business decisions to make,” said Scheffler, who is a member of the Player Advisory Council. “But as far as input in the negotiations, I don’t really have much to say at all.”
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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
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