Daily Mail

WHAT’S HOT / WHAT’S NOT

- By RIATH AL-SAMARRAI

MARCUS RASHFORD

PLENTY has been said about him already but when there is no obvious limit to the bile spouted about footballer­s by the politician­s and public, why put a cap on praise? Matt Hancock couldn’t get his name right — a line on the next honours list should spell it out.

BRYSON DECHAMBEAU

HE gained some bulk and about 20 yards off the tee and suddenly the conversati­on has resumed over how to nullify big hitters — fix the ball, tighten fairways etc. All good ideas that would put the onus back on shot-making and striking. And all a compliment to how much the California­n has improved.

DAVID LUIZ

HE is a liability. He hasn’t changed. And yet there he was, fronting up to the media after a blitz of calamities gifted Manchester City their win over Arsenal. All players make mistakes; precious few follow their blunders by publicly admitting them. Give him that credit.

CHRISTIAN COLEMAN

AMONG other gripes, he is peeved that those pesky drugs testers may have cost him ‘generation­al wealth’. Perhaps the world’s No 1 sprinter shouldn’t worry so much on that — if his ability to manage money is anything like his ability to follow testing protocol, it probably wouldn’t last long anyway.

NEVADA SAC

HERE we are, 14 months after blood was discovered in heavyweigh­t Jarrell Miller’s drugs stream, and he has a licence to return. Evidently the Nevada State Athletic Commission were happy to hand one over so boxing can crack on with its tried and tested business of not giving a damn.

RORY McILROY

THE Northern Irishman left himself open to criticism with his take on the world rankings debate. Ludicrousl­y, the US Tour is the only one that is open for ranking points, and Tommy Fleetwood was not alone in querying the fairness of that. To then be questionin­g Fleetwood’s ambition in staying away from America is a rare McIlroy misstep.

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