Clayton Murphy, Olympic 800m medalist, retires from track
"I poured everything I had into this sport, and I'm walking away with pride, gratitude, and a heart full of memories," was posted on Murphy's social media. "A decade on the global stage is more than most pros will ever get to experience and I'm so grateful for what every year has taught me."
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Murphy earned bronze in the 2016 Olympic 800m, becoming the first American man to win a medal in the event since Johnny Gray's bronze in 1992.
Murphy also placed ninth at the Tokyo Olympics. He was seventh at the 2024 Olympic Trials.
Murphy is married to retired sprinter Ariana Washington, whom he met at the Rio Olympics. Their son, Cash, was born in October 2022.
Murphy grew up on a 37-acre farm in New Paris, Ohio, and showed pigs and sold them at agricultural fairs as a boy.
He won the 2016 NCAA 1500m title as an Akron junior, then turned professional before winning the Olympic Trials 800m a month later.
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NBC News
14 minutes ago
- NBC News
Summer McIntosh wins first gold medal at worlds in her quest for five
SINGAPORE — For Summer McIntosh of Canada, it's one gold medal won at the swimming world championships with four to go. McIntosh is aiming to win five gold medals in individual events at the worlds in Singapore, and the first one came Sunday in the 400-meter freestyle on the first of eight days in the pool. Only legendary American Michael Phelps has ever won five individual medals in the worlds. He also did it at the Olympics. McIntosh won but did not break her own world record, winning in 3 minutes, 56.26 seconds. Li Bingjie of China took silver (3:58.21) with a late charge to leave American Katie Ledecky (3:58.49) with bronze. A year ago in the Olympics, Ledecky also took bronze in the 400. McIntosh was the silver medalist with gold for Australian Ariarne Titmus of Australia. Titmus is taking a year off and did not swim and has since lost her world record in the event to McIntosh. For Ledecky, a nine-time Olympic gold medalist, it was her 27th medal in the world championships in an astonishing career. She won her first Olympic gold in 2012 in London, and then started adding world championship medals beginning in Barcelona in 2013. About 25 minutes after winning the 400, McIntosh came back and qualified first in the 200 individual medley, clocking 2:07.39. American Alex Walsh was second in 2:08.49. That final is Monday. "I've never done a double like that," McIntosh said. "I think the 400 free, at past world championships and Olympics, I haven't been at my best. And I haven't been where I wanted to be. So, to finally stand in the center of the podium is promising for the rest of the meet." The Canadian added: I think I'm at my best. I'm in the best shape of my life. So now I just have to act on that and put it into all my races." The shock of the first day might have been Chinese 12-year-old Yu Zidi, who was the seventh fastest in qualifying and will swim in the final. Asked her reaction, she replied: "Oh, I'm in," unaware she had advanced. "I will continue to work harder," she added. "I hope to find a breakthrough at these world championships and show my potential." Asked for her reaction to the competition, she added. "You can feel it's quite intense. I try not to think so much and just give it my all." The 200 IM might not even be her best event with the Chinese likely quicker in the 400 IM and the 200 butterfly. Meanwhile, the United States is swimming with what appears to be a weakened team after officials acknowledged Sunday that some members of the team had come down with "acute gastroenteritis" at a training camp in Thailand prior to arriving in Singapore. Nikki Warner, a spokeswoman for USA Swimming, would not say how many fell ill in Thailand. She cited health confidentiality rules. She said all American swimmers had traveled to Singapore. In the other early individual final Sunday, Lukas Martens of Germany won the men's 400 free in 3:42.35, edging Sam Short of Australia who was .02 behind. Bronze went to Kim Woomin of South Korea in 3:42.60. Martens is the defending Olympic champion and also holds the world record of 3:39.96. McIntosh, who won three gold medals a year ago at the Paris Olympics, holds the world record in the 400 free — 3:54.18. She will face off again with Ledecky in the 800 free later in the meet, probably the most anticipated race in Singapore. Though she holds the 400 free world record, McIntosh had failed to win gold in the event in the Olympics or previous world championships. McIntosh will also be after gold in the 200- and 400-individual medleys, and the 200 butterfly. The other two gold medals Sunday were in the relays. The United States was the favorite in both and failed to win either. The Australian women took gold just ahead of the United States in the 4x100 freestyle relay. The Aussies clocked 3:30.60 with 3:31.04 for the US. The Netherlands took bronze in 3:33.89. On the men's side in the 4x100, Australia also took gold in 3:08.97. Italy took silver in 3:09.58 with bronze for the United States in 3:09.64. There were three other semifinal results on Sunday. Qin Haiyang of China took the 200 breaststroke in 58.24 with Paris Olympic champion Nicolo Martinenghi second in 58.62. The Italian was initially disqualified for moving on the blocks, but was later reinstated on appeal. Gretchen Walsh of the United States and Roos Vanotterdijk of Belgium tied in the 100 butterfly in 56.07, and Maxime Grousset of France took the men's 50 fly in 22.61.


Newsweek
44 minutes ago
- Newsweek
How to Watch 3M Open Final Round: Live Stream PGA Tour Golf, TV Channel
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A thrilling final round at the 3M Open will take place on Sunday, with American golfer Akshay Bhatia tied at the top of the leaderboard with Thorbjørn Olesen at 18 under par. Thorbjorn Olesen of Denmark pulls a club from his caddie Nick pell Cavendish on the 14th hole during the third round of the 3M Open 2025 at TPC Twin Cities on July 26, 2025 in... Thorbjorn Olesen of Denmark pulls a club from his caddie Nick pell Cavendish on the 14th hole during the third round of the 3M Open 2025 at TPC Twin Cities on July 26, 2025 in Blaine, Minnesota. More Photo bySunday's final round at TPC Twin Cities for the 3M Open could truly go to anyone, because behind Bhatia and Olesen, another four golfers are one stroke behind, at 17 under par. They are Americans Samuel Stevens, Kurt Kitayama, and Jake Knapp, as well as Japanese golfer Takumi Kanaya. To just add to the drama, right behind them at 16 under par, two strokes from the lead, are another three golfers: Sweden's Alex Norén, as well as American golfers Chris Gotterup and Pierceson Coody. Sunday's final round at the 3M Open is truly up in the air. How to Watch the 3M Open Final Round Date: Sunday, July 13, 2025 Time: 1:00 p.m. ET Venue: TPC Twin Cities Channel: The Golf Channel Stream: Fubo (Start Watching) The 35-year-old Olesen has eight European Tour wins in his career, including the 2023 Thailand Classic. His best finish at a major came at the 2013 Masters when he finished sixth. Bhatia, meanwhile, is a 23-year-old with six professional wins in his career, including two on the PGA Tour: the 2023 Barracuda Championship and the 2024 Valero Texas Open. Bhatia has yet to finish ranked higher than 16th at any major. Will Olesen finish the job on Sunday and win the 3M Open Final and a big chunk of the $8.4 million prize purse? Or will Bhatia win his third PGA Tour event? Tune the channel to The Golf Channel at 1:00 p.m. ET on Sunday afternoon to catch the final round of the 3M Open Championship. Live stream the 3M Open final round on Fubo: Start your subscription now! Regional restrictions may apply. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Phenom Lottie Woad wins on the LPGA in pro debut at Scottish Open
Majestic. Sublime. Extraordinary. Flawless. The television announcers were running out of adjectives for the phenom Lottie Woad. KPMG Performance Insights gave Woad a 40 percent chance of winning heading into the final round of the ISPS Handa Women's Scottish Open. Heady stuff for a 21-year-old making her professional debut. Woad's magical July run continued at Dundonald Links, where the newly-minted pro became only the fourth player in LPGA history to win in her first start as an LPGA member, joining former world No. 1 Jin Young Ko (2018) and Beverly Hanson (1951). A Sunday 4-under 68 put Woad at 21 under for the tournament, capping off a maiden LPGA victory in her native U.K., with a three-stroke win over Hyo Joo Kim. Woad becomes the 20th different LPGA winner in a season in which no player has won twice. She heads next to the AIG Women's British Open in Wales, where she finished tied for 10th last year at St. Andrews. Woad began the final round of the Scottish with a two-shot lead in Ayrshire and, midway through, found herself knotted with major champion Hyo Joo Kim at 19 under. World No. 1 Nelly Korda, still looking for her first win of the season, made an early run with four birdies in the first six holes. A string of short misses, however, stalled the American and dropped her out of the mix. Known for her elite wedge play, Woad knocked one close on the 13th to make birdie and regain the solo lead. Another birdie on the 14th as Kim dropped a shot on the 15th stretched the steady Englishwoman's lead back to two with four to play. Woad becomes the first player since Rose Zhang to win on the LPGA in her first start as a pro. Zhang held a two-shot lead going into the final round of the 2023 Mizuho Americas Open and won in a playoff against Jennifer Kupcho to earn her LPGA card. Woad, of course, recently became the first player to graduate from the tour's new LEAP program, earning her card for the rest of 2025 and 2026. Immediately after winning the Irish Open on the LET, she missed out on a playoff at the Amundi Evian Championship by one shot. Woad turned pro last week, forgoing her final season at Florida State. She also accepted membership on the LET, which makes her eligible for the 2026 Solheim Cup. In her last three professional starts, Woad is 55 under par with a 67.4 scoring average. She notched only three bogeys for the week in Scotland.