What Greg Norman – and all of us – can learn from his stunning failure at the 1996 Masters.
Rory McIlroy, Henrik Stenson, Tyrrell Hatton and Ian Poulter gathered for lunch in the clubhouse after their rough first rounds and Poulter (of course) took the opportunity to document their collective struggles.
Fowler still has a lot of golf left to play. He and his legions of fans and corporate sponsors can only hope The Moment he has pursued for a long while now, will arrive sooner rather than later.
We asked more than 60 people who’ve spent time with the 15-time major champion to share their favourite memory. The best of those stories compiled here exemplify what makes tiger so great and fascinatingly complex.
Rescheduled because of the coronavirus pandemic, the US Open returns to Winged Foot from September 17-20, for the sixth time since 1929.
While watching Danielle Kang go back-to-back was exciting, seeing Lydia Ko lose had a gut-wrenching quality to it.
Though Kang has to ultimately convert the shots on-course alone, as every golfer does, she gains great strength from this golf community she’s built around her.
If Brandel Chamblee was looking for an outlet to relieve some of his virus-induced social isolation this week, he found it.
Winning the US Open was just one of many life-changing moments for Gary Woodland, his family and a special friend.
The Waste Management Phoenix Open boiled down to two golfers with contrasting styles of play.
Kang took to heart (and put in action) advice she’d received from those closest to her.
In his prime, Woods didn’t so much beat his opponents as live rent-free in their heads. Evidenced in this story from Adam Scott.
This isn’t to say Tiger would’ve hired Navarro over Williams. But the possibility exists that some of Tiger’s biggest career victories could’ve came with another looper at his side.