England’s Fleetwood returns to golf after four months off

Tommy Fleetwood
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Updated 23 July 2020
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England’s Fleetwood returns to golf after four months off

  • This will be the first start since March for Fleetwood

WASHINGTON: Britain’s Tommy Fleetwood, a major runner-up in 2018 and 2019, makes his return to golf after a four-month coronavirus pandemic layoff on Thursday at the  PGA Tour’s 3M Open.

The 29-year-old Englishman, second to Ireland’s Shane Lowry by six strokes in the 2019 British Open at Portrush, tees off Thursday morning at TPC Twin Cities in Blaine, Minnesota.

Fleetwood, who will play alongside fourth-ranked American Dustin Johnson and rising US star Tony Finau in the first two rounds, also finished second at the 2018 US Open, one stroke behind Brooks Koepka at Shinnecock Hills.

This will be the first start since March for Fleetwood, a five-time European Tour winner who grabbed his first 54-hole lead on the PGA Tour at the Honda Classic four months ago.

Needing a birdie at the 72nd hole to force a playoff with South Kore’s Im Sung-jae, Fleetwood went for the green in two at the par-5 hole and found the water, closing with a bogey to finish third.

Since then, he has spent the tour hiatus at home in England with wife Clare and his 2-year-old son Frankie.

“It has been beautiful family time,” Fleetwood said. “It would have been nice if sort of the time we had would have come under different circumstances in the world at the moment, but for us, the time we had together has been something that probably we’ll never get again.”

Fleetwood left his family behind when he flew to New York two weeks ago and spent his mandatory 14-day quarantine in the Hamptons on eastern Long Island, returning to Shinnecock among other golf tuneup stops.

He built a schedule for a nine-week run of US events that included next month’s PGA Championship, the US Open in September and the now-postponed Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits.

Fleetwood’s new plan includes making a deep run in the US PGA playoffs and finishing with the US Open at Winged Foot on September 17-20.

“Really happy to be here,” Fleetwood said. “Nice to see so many familiar faces. That’s kind of one of the great things about the tour is that no matter how long you’ve kind of been away, you just kind of pick up where you left off and everybody just kind of says ‘Hey’ like they saw you yesterday.

“It’s nice getting out and seeing a tour setup again and preparing for that... Eventually it was always going to be my turn to come out.”

With golf courses shut down for months at home and a late return to US events, Fleetwood hopes to play his way back into form quickly.

“I’m going to work hard and play hard and see how well we can do,” he said.


From concrete walls to open skies: Meet Chile’s first rugby team created inside a prison

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From concrete walls to open skies: Meet Chile’s first rugby team created inside a prison

VALPARAISO: At first, the tackles, rucks and mauls were merely survival tactics within the harsh world of prison. But what began as a workshop behind barbed wire has transcended the walls of the Valparaíso Penitentiary Complex to become Chile’s first official rugby team formed behind bars.
The routine is intense. Three days of field training, two days in the gym, and matches every weekend. It mirrors the schedule of a professional league, but this is Rugby Unión Libertad — a sports club officially registered in mid-January with a mission that goes far beyond the pitch: preparing inmates for social reintegration after they serve their sentences.
“Rugby freed me; it healed my soul,” Alex Javier Silva, 48, who has been incarcerated since 1999, told The Associated Press. “Here you have no heart, no mind — you’re not at peace with anything. You’re like an animal.”
Rugby Unión Libertad began to take shape in 2016 as part of a workshop inside the prison walls. Led by the Addiction Treatment Center, the classes initially sparked the interest of around 50 inmates, who began to play with the “pill” — rugby’s oval ball — as a way to ease the weight of their time inside.
Over the years, the workshop evolved into Rugby Unión Libertad, a club that gained enough momentum to face the Chilean national team, Los Cóndores, in 2024.
Off the field, the team became the cornerstone of the Fundación Libertad, or Freedom Foundation. The nonprofit was established in November by a collective of former inmates, educators, psychologists and coaches, and it supports released prisoners through a mix of rugby, training, counseling and therapy.
Rugby as anger management
Three times a week, two coaches enter Valparaíso prison — about 120 kilometers (75 miles) from the capital Santiago — to lead training sessions for Unión Libertad. For two hours, the team’s 27 players practice the strategies, passes and kicks that characterize the sport.
This is precious time spent tasting freedom despite the barbed wire and watchful guards. It is here, on a tiny dirt field surrounded by guard towers, that the players release their anger and frustration that come with life behind bars.
“Violence is rampant here,” said Jorge Henríquez, 42. “There’s a lot of rage; sometimes you explode for no reason, and so (with rugby) you regulate that, you start to distance yourself from conflicts so that rage doesn’t resurface.”
Like many other correctional facilities in Chile, the one in Valparaíso is overcrowded. With 3,351 inmates crammed into a space built for 1,919, it operates at nearly double its capacity, leading to precarious hygiene and health conditions and ultimately fueling a surge in internal violence.
Coach Leopoldo Cerda, a teacher and volunteer who has spearheaded the project since its beginning, explained that playing rugby — a demanding sport by nature — is especially difficult in prison.
“People sleep poorly, eat poorly, and yet they have the physical and mental strength to overcome many obstacles that this sport presents,” he noted, adding that the changes in the players’ attitudes have been remarkable.
“The first thing is discipline, mastering self-control and anger management, since there’s a lot of physical contact in rugby,” said Cerda. “And they’ve managed to overcome that.”
The team has also become a role model for other inmates who hope to join Unión Libertad. “New guys keep arriving. They see from the cellblocks how they train and start preparing, even improving their behavior so they can train,” said Gonzalo Delgado, another coach.
In order to be part of the project, inmates need to have good behavior and cultivate teamwork.
“Many crimes are committed because people don’t know how to use their free time properly,” said the head of the Valparaíso Penitentiary Complex, Isaac Falcón Espinace. Thus, rugby gives inmates the opportunity to “not use it for actions that go against society once they’re free.”
Touching the sky
Guillermo Velásquez, 42, was one of the nearly 50 inmates who participated in the first rugby workshop a decade ago, quickly becoming a fan of this unfamiliar sport.
After a short period of freedom, poor choices landed him back in prison in 2019. To cope with drugs and constant fights, Velásquez began developing the idea of ​​founding a rugby team inside the prison.
The dream finally came true in 2022, when he and half a dozen fellow inmates obtained permission to use the prison’s gym after several unsuccessful attempts.
Rugby Unión Libertad was born.
The first practices were very basic, but the group gradually won the support of other inmates and the trust of the prison guards. Sessions moved outdoors, the players gained their own rugby field and volunteers embraced the project.
“Rugby saved my life,” said Velásquez, who left prison seven months ago. “If the Libertad team hadn’t existed inside the prison, society would have had one more criminal.”
The same year it was founded, Unión Libertad entered its first tournament, but in 2024, they truly touched the sky: The players left Valparaíso prison for the first time to face Los Cóndores, the very same Chilean national team that will compete in the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia.
“It was an epic battle,” recalled Silva. “Nobody has ever done that in Chile. And there we were, some mere prisoners, playing against them. Everyone was watching, we were on TV.”
The match — held at another prison in the north of Santiago — was a turning point. The project gained scope, visibility and more supporters.
Hope beyond the walls
Since its inception, Freedom Foundation has used rugby as the catalyst for social reintegration, providing support including therapy, professional training and partnering with potential employers to help with the process.
“They want to change,” said psychologist and former national rugby player Cynthia Canales, president of the foundation. “We also want to show that there is a lack of opportunities, that we have to address the stigma.”
Reintegration can be complex though, as it depends not only on personal will but on the availability of opportunities outside prison. Very often, the stigma of a criminal record undermines efforts to change.
“Often, many of these men have the desire to change, but all they find are closed doors,” said coach Cerda. “Society remains deeply prejudiced.”
Thanks to the work of the Freedom Foundation, former inmates can keep their intense training routine once out of prison. Now, instead of a tiny, dirt field under constant surveillance, the men train on the vast grass fields of Valparaíso. They no longer play behind bars but for “All Free” — the former inmates’ branch of Unión Libertad.