For all the praise lavished on Tiger Woods, spoken and written, tweeted and typed, Thursday afternoon (AEDT) marked a first: a gathering dedicated solely to appreciating his immeasurable impact on golf.
LIV Golf investments CEO Greg Norman chastised PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan and warned “This is just the beginning” in a strongly worded letter distributed Friday.
While the transcripts from Tiger Woods’ last two CBS interviews at the Genesis Invitational would look similar devoid of context, the respective footage paints a stark contrast.
PGA Tour players and officials discussed a number of topics regarding the tour’s future in a mandatory players meeting on Wednesday (AEDT) ahead of the Honda Classic at PGA National.
Rory McIlroy harshly criticised Phil Mickelson’s controversial comments regarding the PGA Tour and the rumoured Saudi-backed golf league, calling them “naive, selfish, egotistical, arrogant.”
Changes to the early part of the season would allow top players to take an extended “offseason” break without falling behind in the world ranking or the FedEx Cup points race.
The irony hits you like a clubhead traveling at 135 miles per hour: While he is reportedly mulling a $135 million offer to front the Saudi-backed golf league, Bryson DeChambeau withdrew from the Saudi International with multiple injuries. The two clauses could well be related. DeChambeau’s bulk-up has keyed his emergence as perhaps the biggest Read more…
A host of golf’s top players have signed on to participate in Netflix’s upcoming golf documentary series, which will provide a behind-the-scenes look into the 2022 PGA Tour season and each of the four Major championships. There are, however, a few conspicuous absences.
The 28-year-old Queenslander scored better than any other PGA Tour player ever has during the course of a golf tournament. At least in relation to Old Man Par.
Tiger and Charlie put on one helluva show, dropping 11 straight birdies from Nos.7-17 at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club to briefly tie Team Daly for the lead.
A natural villain emerged on a balmy Sunday afternoon in Central Florida. Tiger and Charlie Woods were hard-charging towards the feel-goodest of feel-good victories at the PNC Championship. Their only obstacle: two large men with the same last name and the same preternatural speed. The Dalys.
The golf world so desperately wants Woods back, so any positive sign – that initial swing video, or his range sessions, or his PNC plans – can easily be mistaken for concrete evidence that the comeback train’s trundling towards glory.