The competitor in Sergio Garcia got the best of him in Saudi Arabia. Can he undo the damage to his reputation?
The Englishman stopped caring about how he played golf – and started playing better.
Dubbed The Content Committee, Fleetwood is back leading a fivesome of deadpanning golfers as they sit in a boardroom and attempt to come up with ideas for videos that will go viral.
In typical “what will I do next?” Mickelson fashion, the five-time Major champion opened 2019 with a bang on Thursday at the Desert Classic, carding a scintillating 12-under 60 at La Quinta Country Club.
The 14-time Major winner also committed to February’s Genesis Open.
The pack can be so consumed by righting a wrong that, at times, it fails to ask where the wrong really lies… or if a wrong has even been had.
At least in the short term it would seem, there’s a distinct possibility of almost weekly rules “incidents” on the European Tour.
Poulter said he wanted to give something back to ensure there were no hard feelings.
With her appearance in a newly released video from Apple on Twitter showcasing the company’s Apple Watch, might the 16-year-old, No.9 in the most recent World Amateur Golf Ranking, have compromised her amateur status?
Which players would be the best, and worst, mid-round interviews? Here is a highly arbitrary ranking of that premise, from least to most interesting
Justin Rose signs with Honma; multi-year, 10-club deal could include driver, irons, wedges
This list is not meant to discourage, rather to celebrate the Brandels and the Kesslers on another great year of online beefing. Can’t stop, won’t stop.
Tiger might capture the gallery attention and the TV ratings, but numerous other players and tournaments made 2018 compelling.
It won’t count as an official victory for the young Spaniard, but he will take home a trophy and the $US1 million first-place prize.
Leave it to Reed to shush that all away with a first-round 65, which puts him in a tie for the lead with Patrick Cantlay.
It is a curious paradox. Australian performances on the global golf scene are as strong as ever – and have been for several years now – while the strength of our domestic professional circuit is arguably at an all-time low.
Woods plans to disappear for a couple of months to mix rest with lower-intensity work on his body and game.
Sure, Phil Mickelson earned $US9 million for beating Tiger Woods in ‘The Match,’ but he walked off with something more.
Which players gained and lost the most from the start of 2018, as measured by metaphorical “stock” that encompasses results, expectations and reputation?