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Seth Rollins has been among the focal points of WWE in 2025, from forming The Vision to faking an injury to cash-in and win the WWE World Heavyweight Championship, but recently things have started to go sideways. For one, Rollins and his wife, Becky Lynch, came up short against AJ Lee and CM Punk at Wrestlepalooza. Now, he’s set to battle Cody Rhodes at Crown Jewel, a risky proposition for Rollins given he has never beaten Rhodes in singles action.
On Monday’s “Busted Open Radio,” Bully Ray analyzed Rollins’ situation. Given Rollins’ current struggles while the rest of The Vision is finding success, Bully believes Rollins losing to Rhodes and having a bit of a breakdown may not be the worst thing in the world.
“I want to see Seth Rollins go crazy,” Bully said. “And when I say crazy, I want him to have a breakdown, because things are not going [well]. Because he loses to Cody. Because he and Paul are on different pages. His wife won’t shut up. The Bron’s are doing whatever they want to. Everything is falling apart at the seams for Seth Rollins.”
The problem with that scenario is that Bully has already labeled the upcoming Rhodes-Rollins match as a must win for Rollins, given his previous defeats. As such, it will require, in Bully’s eyes, WWE choosing what’s best for Rollins’ momentum, or what’s best for the storyline.
“There’s definitely a lot of layers with all of these characters,” Bully said. “It does make it interesting. We’ll see where they go with it. I think that, even though I’ve said I think it’s a must win match for Seth, it’s better for the Seth story if he loses again.”
If you use any of the quotes in this article, please credit “Busted Open Radio” and provide a h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription
Ellyse Perry is an Australian cricketer and former footballer. She debuted for both the national cricket and football teams at the age of 16, making her the youngest Australian to play international cricket and the first to appear in both ICC and FIFA World Cups.
Perry was the first player to score 1,000 runs and take 100 wickets in T20Is, holds the record for the highest Test score by an Australian woman with 213 not out, and is the third player to reach 150 wickets in womenâ€s ODIs. She has won eight world titles with Australia, eleven WNCL championships with New South Wales, two WBBL titles with the Sydney Sixers, and one WPL title with the Royal Challengers Bengaluru. Perry has also earned top honors, including the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Award and the Belinda Clark Award three times each, and was named among Wisdenâ€s Five Cricketers of the Decade for 2010–19.
What is Ellyse Perry Net Worth as of 2025
Ellyse Perryâ€s net worth is around $14 million, which is close to ₹1.17 billion. Most of her income comes from playing for Australia Women, the Womenâ€s Big Bash League (WBBL), and the Womenâ€s Premier League (WPL).
Her WPL salary is ₹1.70 crore. Perry is also part of Cricket Australiaâ€s central contract for 2024–25. She earns an annual salary of $200,000 (around ₹16.78 million) from the contract. In addition, she earns about $100,000 through her WBBL contract with Sydney Sixers Women.
What is Ellyse Perry’s Salary
Perry is part of Cricket Australiaâ€s central contract for 2024–25 and earns an annual salary of $200,000 (about ₹16.78 million). From the WBBL, Perry earns around $100,000 with the Sydney Sixers Women. In the WPL, Perry was bought by Royal Challengers Bengaluru Women for ₹1.70 crore in 2023. She has played for RCB in 2023, 2024, and 2025 for the same amount each season.
A detailed look at Ellyse Perryâ€s Career Earnings
Perry has career earnings around $14 million, equal to about ₹1.17 billion. She earns $200,000 (₹16.78 million) annually through her central contract with Cricket Australia for 2024–25. She also receives about $100,000 from her Womenâ€s Big Bash League contract with the Sydney Sixers Women. In the Womenâ€s Premier League, Perry plays for Royal Challengers Bengaluru Women, earning ₹1.70 crore.
Which brands does Ellyse Perry Endorse
Perry has been partnered with Adidas for over twelve years. Perry is one of Adidas†top-tier athletes in Australia and has featured in several campaigns, including the See Her Create campaign, which highlighted her cricket debut.
Since 2013, Perry has also worked with Fox Sports. She recently signed a new three-year deal to provide expert cricket analysis for Fox Sports TV and online platforms, while also appearing in their marketing and advertising.
She is in her eighth year of partnership with Commonwealth Bank (CommBank). CommBank has been a long-term supporter of Cricket Australia and womenâ€s cricket.
Perry is also the face of Weet-Bix, an iconic Australian brand. The multi-year deal includes TV, in-store, and outdoor advertising, as well as a digital game that allows fans to play backyard cricket against her.
Does Ellyse Perry own a House
Perry and her former husband, rugby player Matt Toâ€omua, sold their Chatswood home in Sydney for $2.7 million in 2021. The sale came after their split in 2020, following seven years of marriage.
The couple had bought the modernized 1920s Californian bungalow in 2014 for $1.737 million. The house featured four bedrooms, three bathrooms, a modern extension, an entertainerâ€s deck with a vergola, an outdoor kitchen, and a spa. After Toâ€omua moved to Melbourne in 2019 to play for the Melbourne Rebels, the property was turned into a rental before being sold off-market.
Does Ellyse Perry have a car
Perryâ€s first car was the Toyota Corolla, valued at about $27,053 (around ₹20.20 lakh). It includes features like touchscreen infotainment, smartphone integration, advanced airbags, and driver assistance technologies, making it both safe and practical.
Her latest addition is the Lexus CT 200H, a compact luxury hybrid hatchback valued at about $32,945 (around ₹24 lakh). She also owns a Toyota 86, valued at around $42,466 (about ₹31 lakh).
FAQs
Q. What is the salary of Ellyse Perry in WPL?
A. Perry was bought by Royal Challengers Bengaluru for ₹1.7 crore ($194,663 approx.) in the inaugural WPL 2023 auction.
Q. Is Ellyse Perry in a relationship?
A. No, Ellyse Perry is currently single. She was earlier linked with AFL star Nat Fyfe until 2022 and was married to rugby player Matt Toâ€omua from 2015 to 2020.
Q. Who is Ellyse Perry’s ex-husband?
A. Perryâ€s ex-husband is Matt Toâ€omua, an Australian rugby player.
Q. Who is Ellyse Perry’s brother?
A. Perryâ€s elder brother is Damien Perry, who is three years older than her.
Get the Latest Cricket Updates at IceCric.News. Also, Follow Our Social Media for live updates on Facebook and Instagram.
Trey Yesavage, Blue Jays ALDS Game 2 starter pitching breakdown
\n\n”,”providerName”:”Twitter”,”providerUrl”:” 6-foot-4, 225-pound righty simply rears back and fires straight downhill. That’s why Blue Jays coaches like to say that Yesavage’s splitter, his signature pitch, comes \”from the sky.\”\n\nYesavage releases his splitter, which produced a 57% swing-and-miss rate and 50% strikeout rate in the regular season, from the highest arm slot of any of his pitch types — 65 degrees, compared to 63 on his fastball and 62 on his slider.\n\nIf you want to get a sense of what \”a splitter that comes from the sky\” looks like, here’s how Yesavage’s splitter arm slot compares to other MLB offspeed pitch types in 2025:”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Image”,”caption”:null,”contextualCaption”:null,”contextualAspectRatio”:”1:1″,”credit”:null,”contentType”:null,”format”:”png”,”templateUrl”:” the sky, indeed.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Video”,”contentDate”:”2025-09-21T19:07:30.433Z”,”preferredPlaybackScenarioURL({\”preferredPlaybacks\”:\”mp4AvcPlayback\”})”:” Yesavage strikes out Jac Caglianone with a splitter in the bottom of the 3rd inning vs. the Royals”,”displayAsVideoGif”:false,”duration”:”00:00:07″,”slug”:”jac-caglianone-strikes-out-swinging-ikkjoe”,”tags”:[{“__typename”:”InternalTag”,”slug”:”season-2025″,”title”:”Season 2025″,”type”:”season”},{“__typename”:”GameTag”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”in-game-highlight”,”title”:”in-game highlight”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”highlight”,”title”:”highlight”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”game-action-tracking”,”title”:”game action tracking”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”PersonTag”,”slug”:”playerid-702056″,”title”:”Trey Yesavage”,”person”:{“__ref”:”Person:702056″},”type”:”player”},{“__typename”:”TeamTag”,”slug”:”teamid-141″,”title”:”Toronto Blue Jays”,”team”:{“__ref”:”Team:141″},”type”:”team”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”pitching”,”title”:”pitching”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”sporty-cc”,”title”:”Sporty CC”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”game-story-highlight”,”title”:”Game story highlight”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”eclat-feed”,”title”:”Eclat feed”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”fan-duel”,”title”:”Fan Duel”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”international-feed”,”title”:”International Partner feed”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”imagen-feed”,”title”:”Imagen feed”,”type”:”taxonomy”}],”thumbnail”:{“__typename”:”Thumbnail”,”templateUrl”:” Yesavage K’s Jac Caglianone”,”relativeSiteUrl”:”/video/jac-caglianone-strikes-out-swinging-ikkjoe”},{“__typename”:”Markdown”,”content”:”#### *He’s kind of like Justin Verlander, but he’s not exactly like Justin Verlander*\n\nIf you want an over-the-top starting pitcher comparison for Yesavage, the better one is Justin Verlander, not Tong.\n\nWhy? Because Yesavage doesn’t just have an extreme over-the-top arm angle, he also has an extremely *high* release point. That’s a big part of his pitches \”from the sky,\” too.\n\nIn that sense, Yesavage pitches in the mold of Verlander, a classic over-the-top power pitcher who still has the highest vertical release point of any starter … but by only a fraction of an inch over Yesavage.\n\n**Highest release points, SP, 2025** \n*Min. 200 total pitches*\n\n1\\. Justin Verlander: 7.10 feet \n**2\\. Trey Yesavage: 7.09 feet** \n3\\. Tyler Wells: 7.02 feet \n4\\. Nick Pivetta: 6.78 feet \n5\\. Austin Gomber: 6.61 feet”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Image”,”caption”:null,”contextualCaption”:null,”contextualAspectRatio”:null,”credit”:null,”contentType”:null,”format”:”png”,”templateUrl”:” gets to that release point with an even higher arm angle than Verlander (55 degrees). His high release and true over-the-top delivery create a ton of rise on his fastball. And the rising fastball is, of course, the pitch Verlander is famous for.\n\nYesavage’s four-seamer rises about an inch more than Verlander’s these days. But they’re the same style of fastball.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”OEmbed”,”html”:”
Trey Yesavage vs. Justin Verlander, Mechanics. pic.twitter.com/knQZMZ6Qd0
— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) September 16, 2025
\n\n\n”,”providerName”:”Twitter”,”providerUrl”:” generates 19.5 inches of induced vertical break on his fastball. That’s how much it \”rises\” based the way he releases and spins the baseball, removing the effects of gravity, which naturally drags all pitches down. Verlander was at 18.6 inches of induced rise in 2025.\n\nMore \”rise\” means the pitch drops less than the hitter expects, making them more likely to swing and miss, particularly up in the zone. And Yesavage has a top-five rising fastball among starting pitchers.\n\n**Most induced \”rise\” on four-seamers, SP, 2025** \n*Min. 100 four-seamers thrown*\n\n1-T. Jonah Tong: 19.8 inches \n1-T. Connor Gillispie: 19.8 inches \n3\\. Nick Pivetta: 19.7 inches \n**4-T. Trey Yesavage: 19.5 inches** \n4-T. Tobias Myers: 19.5 inches \n4-T. Tyler Anderson: 19.5 inches\n\nYesavage’s fastball might profile like Verlander’s, but the way he uses it is different. Yesavage wants his rising heater to set up his wipeout splitter for the K. The four-seamer comes from the sky and stays in the sky; the splitter comes from the sky and plummets to earth.\n\nFor Yesavage, the splitter is his No. 1 strikeout pitch by far. For Verlander at his peak, the rising fastball is what he used most to blow hitters away, and then he spun his slider and curve off of it.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Markdown”,”content”:”#### *He’s kind of like Kevin Gausman, but he’s not exactly like Kevin Gausman*\n\nIf you look at Yesavage’s pitch arsenal — four-seamer, splitter, slider — and the way he dominates with the split, you might think you’re seeing double in Toronto between him and Blue Jays ace Kevin Gausman.\n\nGausman’s pitch types are the same. And he’s one of baseball’s preeminent splitter strikeout artists.\n\nA full season of Yesavage, ideally, would mirror a full season of Gausman at his most dominant.\n\nSo is Yesavage just the new Gausman? Not exactly. He has the same pitches, but they’re different versions of those pitches.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”OEmbed”,”html”:”
Trey Yesavage, Savage 84mph Splitter. âœŒï¸ pic.twitter.com/MZx7IcRBBp
— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) September 21, 2025
\n\n\n”,”providerName”:”Twitter”,”providerUrl”:” a pitch movement perspective, the standout quality of Gausman’s fastball and splitter is how much horizontal movement they get. Take his best season with the Blue Jays, for example — 2023, when he struck out 109 batters on four-seamers and 127 on splitters. That season, Gausman’s fastball averaged 10.6 inches of arm-side run, over three inches more than the average big league right-handed pitcher. His splitter averaged 16.3 inches of run, over five inches more than average.\n\nYesavage’s stuff stays a lot more true. He comes straight at the hitter with his fastball-splitter combo, whereas Gausman’s pitches fade away by five-plus inches more.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Image”,”caption”:null,”contextualCaption”:null,”contextualAspectRatio”:null,”credit”:null,”contentType”:null,”format”:”png”,”templateUrl”:” and Yesavage’s arm angles are 25 degrees different — Gausman throws out of a three-quarters slot at 38 degrees, much lower than Yesavage’s 63 degrees over-the-top delivery. That creates the big divergence in their movement profiles.\n\nFacing Yesavage and facing Gausman are two different looks, even though their pitch types and their styles resemble each other.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Video”,”contentDate”:”2025-09-16T01:12:02.996Z”,”preferredPlaybackScenarioURL({\”preferredPlaybacks\”:\”mp4AvcPlayback\”})”:” Yesavage was outstanding in his MLB debut, striking out nine batters to set the Blue Jays record and allowing just one run through five innings”,”displayAsVideoGif”:false,”duration”:”00:04:03″,”slug”:”trey-yesavage-sets-toronto-record-with-9-k-s-in-debut”,”tags”:[{“__typename”:”GameTag”},{“__typename”:”TeamTag”,”slug”:”teamid-141″,”title”:”Toronto Blue Jays”,”team”:{“__ref”:”Team:141″},”type”:”team”},{“__typename”:”PersonTag”,”slug”:”playerid-702056″,”title”:”Trey Yesavage”,”person”:{“__ref”:”Person:702056″},”type”:”player”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”vod”,”title”:”vod”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”highlight”,”title”:”highlight”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”in-game-highlight”,”title”:”in-game highlight”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”game-action-tracking”,”title”:”game action tracking”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”pitching”,”title”:”pitching”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”highlight-reel-pitching”,”title”:”highlight reel pitching”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”highlight-reel-starting-pitching”,”title”:”highlight reel starting pitching”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”mlb-debut”,”title”:”MLB debut”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”mlb-top-prospects”,”title”:”MLB Top Prospects”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”imagen-feed”,”title”:”Imagen feed”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”eclat-feed”,”title”:”Eclat feed”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”international-feed”,”title”:”International Partner feed”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”fan-duel”,”title”:”Fan Duel”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”roku-vod”,”title”:”Roku VOD”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”alexa”,”title”:”alexa”,”type”:”taxonomy”}],”thumbnail”:{“__typename”:”Thumbnail”,”templateUrl”:” Yesavage sets Toronto record with 9 K’s in debut”,”relativeSiteUrl”:”/video/trey-yesavage-sets-toronto-record-with-9-k-s-in-debut”},{“__typename”:”Markdown”,”content”:”#### *He’s kind of like Dauri Moreta, but he’s not exactly like Dauri Moreta*\n\nWe’ve been focusing a lot on Yesavage’s fastball and splitter, since that’s his chief pitch combo, but we’ve actually saved the weirdest thing about him for last: his slider.\n\nYesavage’s slider breaks the wrong way.\n\nAlmost every breaking pitch in the world breaks to the pitcher’s glove side. That goes for basically all the curveballs, sliders, sweepers and slurves you see pitchers spinning around Major League Baseball.\n\nBut not Yesavage’s slider. Yesavage’s slider breaks to his *arm* side — for him, that means left to right. In a way, that makes it more like a screwball than a slider. And it’s the opposite direction that a hitter would expect his slider to move.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”OEmbed”,”html”:”
Trey Yesavage, Wicked 89mph Slider. 🤢
9th K thru 5 pic.twitter.com/2ICaJILUnj
— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) September 16, 2025
\n\n\n”,”providerName”:”Twitter”,”providerUrl”:” slider movement is the oddity that put Moreta on the map with the Pirates a couple of years ago. But Yesavage’s slider moves even more to the arm side than Moreta’s does. It has more arm-side movement of any breaking pitch in the Majors.\n\n**Breaking pitches with most arm-side movement direction, 2025** \n*Min. 50 thrown*\n\n**1\\. Trey Yesavage’s slider: 3.4 inches** \n2\\. Chase Perry’s slider: 2.8 inches \n3\\. Dauri Moreta’s slider: 2.7 inches \n4\\. Brock Burke’s slider: 1.1 inches \n5-T. Elvis Alvarado’s slider: 0.9 inches \n5-T. Corbin Martin’s curveball: 0.9 inches\n\nYesavage’s slider moving the way it does has to create extra deception for batters who are used to every slider they face moving in the opposite direction.\n\nThat slider, coupled with Yesavage’s four-seamer and splitter, creates a pretty unique overall pitch profile. He throws three pitches in three different pitch groups: one fastball (his four-seamer), one breaking ball (his slider) and one offspeed pitch (his splitter). But they all reside in the same quadrant of pitch movement:”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Image”,”caption”:null,”contextualCaption”:null,”contextualAspectRatio”:”1:1″,”credit”:null,”contentType”:null,”format”:”png”,”templateUrl”:” it a winning profile in the postseason? We’ll see. But it’s a profile hitters *don’t* see, and that makes Yesavage a pitcher worth tuning in for.”,”type”:”text”}],”relativeSiteUrl”:”/news/trey-yesavage-statcast-breakdown”,”contentType”:”news”,”subHeadline”:null,”summary”:”Trey Yesavage has made all of three Major League starts, but he’s the one getting the ball for the Blue Jays in Game 2 of the American League Division Series. And he’s one of the most interesting pitchers you’ll see in these playoffs.”,”tagline({\”formatString\”:\”none\”})”:null,”tags”:[{“__typename”:”InternalTag”,”slug”:”storytype-article”,”title”:”Article”,”type”:”article”},{“__typename”:”ContributorTag”,”slug”:”david-adler”,”title”:”David Adler”,”type”:”contributor”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”apple-news”,”title”:”Apple News”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”savant”,”title”:”savant”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TeamTag”,”slug”:”teamid-141″,”type”:”team”,”title”:”Toronto Blue Jays”,”team”:{“__ref”:”Team:141″}},{“__typename”:”PersonTag”,”slug”:”playerid-702056″,”title”:”Trey Yesavage”,”person”:{“__ref”:”Person:702056″},”type”:”player”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”alds”,”title”:”ALDS”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”series-a”,”title”:”Series A”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”GameTag”,”gamePk”:813062,”slug”:”gamepk-813062″,”title”:”2025/10/05 t5529@tor”,”type”:”game”}],”type”:”story”,”thumbnail”:” Yesavage, Blue Jays ALDS Game 2 starter pitching breakdown”},”getHeaderFromForgePath({\”contentSource\”:\”MLB\”,\”headerPath\”:\”/_navs/header/mlb/global-nav\”,\”locale\”:\”en-US\”,\”paletteKey\”:\”mlb-base-palette\”,\”propertiesKey\”:\”mlb-global-properties\”})”:{“__typename”:”Header”,”navigation”:[{“__typename”:”NavItem”,”customPropertiesString”:”align:right;”,”icon”:null,”linkTarget”:null,”linkText”:”MLB.TV”,”linkUrl”:”https://www.mlb.com/tv?&affiliateId=mlbMENUtv”,”placement”:”right”,”visible”:”true”,”subNav”:[{“__typename”:”SubnavColumn”,”title”:null,”navigation”:[{“__typename”:”NavItem”,”placement”:null,”linkText”:”Buy MLB.TV”,”linkUrl”:”/live-stream-games/subscribe?&affiliateId=mlbMENUtv”,”linkTarget”:null,”visible”:”true”,”icon”:null,”tooltip”:null,”customPropertiesString”:null},{“__typename”:”NavItem”,”placement”:null,”linkText”:”Buy At Bat”,”linkUrl”:”/live-stream-games/subscribe/at-bat?&affiliateId=mlbMENUtv”,”linkTarget”:null,”visible”:null,”icon”:null,”tooltip”:null,”customPropertiesString”:null},{“__typename”:”NavItem”,”placement”:null,”linkText”:”All Packages”,”linkUrl”:”/live-stream-games/products?&affiliateId=mlbMENUtv”,”linkTarget”:null,”visible”:”false”,”icon”:null,”tooltip”:null,”customPropertiesString”:null},{“__typename”:”NavItem”,”placement”:null,”linkText”:”Watch & Listen”,”linkUrl”:”/live-stream-games?&affiliateID=mlbMENUtv”,”linkTarget”:null,”visible”:”true”,”icon”:null,”tooltip”:null,”customPropertiesString”:null},{“__typename”:”NavItem”,”placement”:null,”linkText”:”Help 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The 2025 Sanderson Farms Championship concludes today at the Country Club of Jackson of Jackson in Mississippi — the second of seven tournaments in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup Fall series. In addition to the valuable FedEx Cup points on the line, there’s also a million dollar check for the winner from a $6 million total purse.
The final round will offer plenty of intrigue, as 26-year-old South African Garrick Higgo attempts to win the third PGA Tour title of his career. Higgo has a two-shot advantage over his closest competitor heading into the final round, but some familiar names will be doing their best to chase him down on Sunday.

1 pro faces potential career-changing round on Sanderson Farms Sunday
By:
Josh Schrock
Matt Kuchar is four shots back after firing rounds 68-69-65 (-14). The 47-year-old hasn’t won a PGA Tour tournament since the 2019 Sony Open.
Tom Kim and Max Homa are also within shouting distance, five shots behind Higgo’s lead. Both players haven’t posted wins since 2023. For Kim, it was the Shriner’s Children’s Open, and for Homa, the Farmers Insurance Open.
Of course, the aforementioned FedEx Cup points are also highly coveted during the Fall series, as players have a chance to move into top 60 on the points list to earn a spot in the first two Signature Events of 2026 after the Sentry.
In short: There’s a lot on the line in Mississippi on Sunday. You can view a full purse breakdown for the 2025 Sanderson Farms Championship below.
2025 Sanderson Farms Championship payout breakdown
Win: $1.08 million
2: $654,000
3: $414,000
4: $294,000
5: $246,000
6: $217,500
7: $202,500
8: $187,500
9: $175,500
10: $163,500
11: $151,500
12: $139,500
13: $127,500
14: $115,500
15: $109,500
16: $103,500
17: $97,500
18: $91,500
19: $85,500
20: $79,500
21: $73,500
22: $67,500
23: $62,700
24: $57,900
25: $53,100
26: $48,300
27: $46,500
28: $44,700
29: $42,900
30: $41,100
31: $39,300
32: $37,500
33: $35,700
34: $34,200
35: $32,700
36: $31,200
37: $29,700
38: $28,500
39: $27,300
40: $26,100
41: $24,900
42: $23,700
43: $22,500
44: $21,300
45: $20,100
46: $18,900
47: $17,700
48: $16,740
49: $15,900
50: $15,420
51: $15,060
52: $14,700
53: $14,460
54: $14,220
55: $14,100
56: $13,980
57: $13,860
58: $13,740
59: $13,620
60: $13,500
61: $13,380
62: $13,260
63: $13,140
64: $13,020
65: $12,900

Golf.com Editor
As a four-year member of Columbia’s inaugural class of female varsity golfers, Jessica can out-birdie everyone on the masthead. She can out-hustle them in the office, too, where she’s primarily responsible for producing both print and online features, and overseeing major special projects, such as GOLF’s inaugural Style IsÂsue, which debuted in February 2018. Her origiÂnal interview series, “A Round With,†debuted in November of 2015, and appeared in both in the magazine and in video form on GOLF.com.

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SUMMARY of #881 cover-dated October 1, 2005: The cover story features Wade Keller’s analysis of the pissing contest between WWE and Spike TV on the final edition of Raw on Spike TV, why things went bad between those two parties, how the stage is set for TNA, and more… Bruce Mitchell presents Vegas Odds on various things happening during the upcoming encore to the Monday Night War… Pat McNeill looks at the history of the WWE-MMA connection and rivalry… Also, James Caldwell chronicles Ring of Honor’s top storyline of the year with C.M. Punk and his ROH World Title win and title reign before heading to WWE… James Guttman examines what it would take for tag teams to take off again in WWE… Wade Keller’s End Notes with random thoughts on top stories of the week… Part two of the Torch Talk with Jeff Hardy… Also WWE Newswire, TNA Newswire, Top Five Stories of the Week, The Raw Big Story, The Smackdown Big Story, The OVW TV Big Story, and more…
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Kuldeep Yadav is a left-arm unorthodox spinner who represents the Indian Cricket team internationally in all three formats. He plays for Uttar Pradesh in domestic cricket and the Delhi Capitals in the IPL. He was part of Indiaâ€s title-winning squads in the 2024 T20 World Cup and the 2025 Champions Trophy. He was born in Kanpur; his father, Ram Singh, was a brick kiln owner, and his mother, Usha Devi, is a homemaker. Kuldeep also has three sisters—Anushka Singh Yadav, an advocate, along with Anita and Madhu—who remain close to him.
In his personal life, Kuldeep got engaged to his childhood friend Vanshika on June 4, 2025, at The Centrum, Lucknow. Vanshika currently works with LIC and hails from Shyam Nagar, Lucknow, and he currently resides in Melbourne. During their engagement ceremony, it was seen that Vanshika wore both a white gown and an orange lehenga, while Kuldeep wore a black suit and a cream bandhgala.
Kuldeep Yadav Net Worth as of 2025
Kuldeep Yadavâ€s net worth in 2025 is estimated to be around INR 32 crore. He earns from cricket contracts, the IPL, and endorsements.
In the IPL, Kuldeep earned a huge retention deal from the Delhi Capitals worth INR 13.25 crore for the 2025 season, the highest IPL contract of his career. Alongside his IPL contract, Kuldeep has also signed a Grade B contract with the BCCI, and as a result of this contract, he receives 3 crore rupees annually. In addition to the retainer, he earns INR 15 lakh for each Test, INR 6 lakh for each ODI, and INR 3 lakh for every T20I.
Kuldeep Yadav Salary: How Much He Earns From BCCI And From IPL?
As of 2024–25, Kuldeep is contracted with the BCCI as a Grade B player, receiving INR 3 crore annually. In addition to the retainer, he earns INR 15 lakh for each Test, INR 6 lakh for each ODI, and INR 3 lakh for every T20I. His contract has seen fluctuations: he was in Grade A with INR 5 crore in 2019–20, but later dropped to Grade C with INR 1 crore in 2020–22 before moving back to Grade B in 2023–25.
In the IPL, Kuldeep began his career with the Kolkata Knight Riders in 2014 for INR 40 lakh. He stayed with KKR for seven years before Delhi Capitals signed him in 2022 for INR 2 crore. His performances in the 2022 and 2024 seasons earned him a massive retention deal worth INR 13.25 crore for the 2025 season, the highest IPL contract of his career.
A Detailed Look at Kuldeep Yadavâ€s Career Earnings
Kuldeepâ€s career earnings are estimated to be around INR 32 crore. In the IPL, he started with KKR for INR 40 lakh in 2014, later earning INR 5.8 crore, and now gets INR 13.25 crore with Delhi Capitals in 2025, his highest deal. From BCCI, he currently holds a Grade B contract worth INR 3 crore annually, along with match fees.
Which Brands Does Kuldeep Yadav Endorse
Kuldeep has been associated with Adidas, Real11, Birla Opus Paints, Uttar Pradesh Election Commission, GoodGamer Fantasy App, Zebronics, Sanspareils Greenlands, Ace Money Transfer, Fan Craze, Oppo, and Rizz.
Does Kuldeep Yadav own a House
Kuldeep owns a luxurious house in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, where he lives with his family. He also has a residence in Delhi, which he uses during the cricket season and IPL.
Kuldeep Yadav Cars: A Look at His Luxury Vehicles
Kuldeep owns a collection of cars, including a Ford EcoSport, an Audi A6, and a Mercedes-Benz GLE.
FAQs
Q. Who was the 2025 Asia Cup winner?
A. On September 28, 2025, India defeated Pakistan by five wickets to win the Asia Cup 2025.
Q. Who scored the most runs for India in the final?
A. India successfully chased 147 thanks to an unbeaten 69 off 53 balls from Tilak Varma.
Q. Who took the most wickets in the 2025 Asia Cup?
A. With 17 wickets in 7 games, Kuldeep was the leading wicket-taker.
Q. What was Kuldeep Yadav’s performance in the championship match?
A. Kuldeep claimed four wickets for thirty runs, after Pakistan collapsed, losing nine wickets for thirty-three runs.
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