Category: PGA

  • PGA: Senate committee questioning PGA-LIV alliance

    PGA: Senate committee questioning PGA-LIV alliance


    A U.S. Senate subcommittee is asking the PGA Tour and others to submit records as it launches a probe into the proposed alliance between the PGA Tour, the DP World Tour and LIV Golf.

    Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) sent letters Monday to PGA commissioner Jay Monahan and LIV commissioner Greg Norman asking to see documents, emails and other records having to do with merger.

    Last week, the three golf tours and the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund (PIF), which bankrolls LIV Golf, said they intend to join under one umbrella organization. Monahan will serve as chief executive and Yasir al-Rumayyan from PIF will be the chairman, under the plans.

    LIV Golf began play last year when the Saudis promised guaranteed, multimillion contracts to lure big-name players from the PGA Tour. At the time, Monahan and others blasted the act of taking money from Saudi Arabia, citing its human-rights record and its involvement in the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

    “While few details about the agreement are known, PIF’s role as an arm of the Saudi government and PGA Tour’s sudden and drastic reversal of position concerning LIV Golf raise serious questions regarding the reasons for and terms behind the announced agreement,” Blumenthal, the chair of the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, wrote in the letter.

    When the announcement was made about the tours’ merger, Blumenthal showed his anger on Twitter.

    “We should focus outrage, & potential action, where it belongs — PGA betrayal, Saudi human rights abuses, threats to legal norms & national security,” he tweeted.

    The PGA Tour and LIV Golf were given until June 26 to turn over the documentation.

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Matt Fitzpatrick asked if PGA Tour loyalty should be compensated: ‘Pass’

    PGA: Matt Fitzpatrick asked if PGA Tour loyalty should be compensated: ‘Pass’


    Matt Fitzpatrick offered to answer the question, then paused a few moments, exhaled and said, “Yeah, pass.”

    It was one of the several burning questions almost every PGA Tour player who takes the podium ahead of this week’s U.S. Open will be asked. Does Fitzpatrick feel as though he should be compensated for staying loyal to the tour in the wake of the planned merger between the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund?

    Fitzpatrick is in a peculiar position as the reigning champion of the first major tournament following the June 6 announcement. While he’s trying to focus on becoming the first player to successfully defend a U.S. Open title since Brooks Koepka in 2018, the buzz around the Los Angeles Country Club this week is clearly focused on the great many unknowns of the framework agreement.

    “The whole thing is just confusing, yeah,” Fitzpatrick acknowledged Monday when asked what is most confusing about the current state of the professional game. “I think that I just don’t know what’s going on. I don’t think anyone knows what’s going on.

    “Are we signing with the PIF? Are we not signing with the PIF? I’ve no idea. Even though I guess it is confusing, it’s pretty clear that no one knows what’s going on apart from about four people in the world.”

    Fitzpatrick said he learned about the proposed merger the same time that everyone else did and doesn’t know anything more than he did last week.

    Asked about what the conversations have been like amongst his peers since the announcement, the moderator shut down further questions about the merger and turned the session back to the U.S. Open.

    Fitzpatrick returned the silver U.S. Open trophy, which he said took a few day trips while on a boat trip around Italy. Other than the great unknown regarding the future makeup of men’s professional golf, Fitzpatrick’s focus is on trying to reclaim that trophy this week.

    “I can’t believe it’s been a year already. It’s just gone so fast,” he said with a smile. “I didn’t feel like I spent enough time with it.”

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Golf Glance: Los Angeles Country Club opens doors for U.S. Open

    PGA: Golf Glance: Los Angeles Country Club opens doors for U.S. Open


    Field Level Media’s Golf Glance provides weekly news and storylines from each of the major North American golf tours.

    PGA TOUR
    LAST TOURNAMENT: RBC Canadian Open (Nick Taylor)
    THIS WEEK: U.S. Open, Los Angeles, June 15-18
    Course: The Los Angeles Country Club, North Course (Par 70, 7,421 yards)
    Purse: TBA (Winner: TBA)
    Defending Champion: Matt Fitzpatrick
    FedEx Cup leader: Jon Rahm
    HOW TO FOLLOW
    TV: Thursday-Friday, 9:40 a.m.-1 p.m. (Peacock); 1-8 p.m. ET (USA), 8-11 p.m. (NBC); Saturday, 1-11 p.m. (NBC); Sunday, 12-1 p.m. (Peacock), 1-10 p.m. (NBC)
    Twitter: @USOpenGolf
    NOTES: The 156-player field will be cut to the low 60 players and ties following 36 holes. … This is the first major championship to be held at the Los Angeles Country Club, and it will be contested on the North Course. The first edition of the Los Angeles Open (now The Genesis Invitational) was played on the North Course in 1926 and was held there four additional times. … Jon Rahm will make another attempt to become the first player to win five times in a season since Justin Thomas in 2016-17. He’s also attempting to be the first winner of multiple majors in a year since Jordan Spieth in 2015. … Fitzpatrick is trying to become the first player to successfully defend a U.S. Open title since Brooks Koepka in 2018. … Rory McIlroy has 18 top-10s in majors since claiming the most recent of his four career majors at the 2014 PGA Championship. This will be his 33rd start in a major since that victory. … No. 4 Patrick Cantlay, a Los Angeles-area native, is the highest-ranked player in this week’s field who has yet to win a major title.
    BEST BETS: Scottie Scheffler (+700 at BetMGM) has 16 consecutive finishes of T12 or better, including a win at this year’s The Players and T2 at the Masters. He finished T2 to Fitzpatrick last year. … Rahm (+1000) won the 2021 U.S. Open and captured his second major at this year’s Masters. … Koepka (+1100) is already a two-time U.S. Champion. In this year’s first two majors, he finished T2 at the Masters and won his third PGA Championship. … Viktor Hovland (+1600) battled Koepka down the stretch on Sunday at the PGA and followed it up with a win at the Memorial. He’s the only player to finish in the top 10 in each of the past three majors. … Max Homa (+2800) set the course record at the Los Angeles Country Club with a 61 in the first round of the 2013 Pac-12 Championship.
    NEXT TOURNAMENT: Travelers Championship, Cromwell, Conn., June 22-25

    LPGA Tour
    LAST TOURNAMENT: ShopRite LPGA Classic (Ashleigh Buhai)
    THIS WEEK: Meijer LPGA Classic, Belmont, Mich., June 15-18
    Course: Blythefield Country Club (Par 72, 6,556 yards)
    Purse: $2.5M (Winner: $375,000)
    Defending Champion: Jennifer Kupcho
    Race to the CME Globe leader: Jin Young Ko
    HOW TO FOLLOW
    TV: Thursday-Saturday, 3-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); Sunday, 1-2 p.m. (Peacock), 2-4 p.m. (CBS/Paramount+)
    Streaming: (All times golfchannel.com, NBCSports.com, NBC Sports App and Peacock)
    Twitter: @MeijerLPGA
    NOTES: Kupcho defeated Nelly Korda and Leona Maguire in a playoff last year. … This is the final tune-up before the second major of the year next week at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. … Brooke Henderson is a two-time winner of the event. … Rachel Kuehn, the No. 5-ranked amateur in the world, is in the 144-player field on a sponsor’s invitation. So, too, is former Michigan State star Brooke Biermann, who will make her LPGA Tour debut, and The John Shippen National Invitational winner Paige Crawford.
    NEXT TOURNAMENT: KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, Springfield, N.J., June 22-25

    Champions Tour
    LAST TOURNAMENT: American Family Insurance Championship (Steve Stricker)
    THIS WEEK: OFF.
    Charles Schwab Cup leader: Steve Stricker
    HOW TO FOLLOW
    NEXT TOURNAMENT: Dick’s Sporting Goods Open, Endicott, N.Y., June 23-25

    LIV Golf League
    LAST TOURNAMENT: LIV Golf D.C. (Individual: Harold Varner III; Team: Torque GC)
    THIS WEEK: OFF.
    NEXT TOURNAMENT: LIV Golf Valderrama, Andalucia, Spain, June 30-July 2

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Emiliano Grillo among final 6 into U.S. Open field

    PGA: Emiliano Grillo among final 6 into U.S. Open field


    Emiliano Grillo was among the final six golfers to gain entry into this week’s U.S. Open.

    The USGA on Monday announced the three final exemptions as well as three alternates who will compete in the 156-man field in Los Angeles.

    Grillo, Pablo Larrazabal and Adam Schenk made the field once the updated Official World Golf Rankings were released, with the trio in the top 60.

    Grillo will play in his fifth U.S. Open while Schenk and Larrazabal will each make their second appearance.

    The final three spots in the field went to Bastien Amat, Michael Kim and Maxwell Moldovan, who were first alternates coming out of qualifying.

    The 123rd U.S. Open will begin Thursday at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course.

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Scottie Scheffler begins U.S. Open week as favorite

    PGA: Scottie Scheffler begins U.S. Open week as favorite


    Scottie Scheffler arrived in Los Angeles this week with a firm grip on the No. 1 world ranking — and on the status as the favorite ahead of the 123rd U.S. Open at The Los Angeles Country Club.

    Scheffler hasn’t finished worse than a tie for 12th in his past 16 starts. That run began in Mexico in February and has included a pair of wins, most notably at The Players.

    Scheffler hasn’t won since then, but he does enter this week with four consecutive top-5 finishes, including a T2 at the PGA Championship.

    So it stands to reason that the 2022 Masters champion is the +700 favorite at DraftKings and BetMGM, where he has been backed by the second-most outright winner tickets (7.7 percent) and third-most money (10.7 percent) since opening at +1200.

    The next-shortest odds at both books belong to the man who has been jockeying with Scheffler for the No. 1 ranking for most of 2023. Jon Rahm, who won the Masters in April, is +1000 at both books this week, followed closely by Brooks Koepka at +1100.

    Koepka won the PGA Championship after a T2 at the Masters. The two-time U.S. Open champion is the second-biggest liability at BetMGM, having drawn the most money (13.0 percent) and third-most tickets (7.5 percent) since opening at +3300.

    The book’s biggest liability this week is Max Homa. Homa has yet to win a major, but the six-time winner on the PGA Tour is a Burbank, Calif., native who knows The Los Angeles Country Club well. As a senior at California in 2013, Homa set the course record at the North Course with a 9-under par 61.

    Since opening at +5000, Homa’s odds have shortened to +2800 as he leads BetMGM with 9.4 percent of the total tickets backing him to win and the second-most money at 11.7 percent.

    Another popular choice has been Viktor Hovland. After battling Koepka down the Sunday stretch at the PGA Championship, Hovland finished T16 at the Charles Schwab Challenge before winning the Memorial in a playoff.

    The young Norwegian star has seen his odds shift from +3000 to +1600, and Hovland is the book’s third-biggest liability this week. He is fourth with 6.1 percent of the total bets and fifth with 6.6 percent of the money backing him to claim his first major this week.

    Meanwhile, defending champion Matt Fitzpatrick has garnered very modest support, with only 1.4 and 1.7 percent of the action, respectively, at +4000 at BetMGM. He is being offered at +3500 at DraftKings — 13th in the field.

    Fitzpatrick, who enters this week ranked No. 8 in the world, won the RBC Heritage earlier this yearn but missed the cut at The Players and the PGA. He finished T10 at the Masters.

    Rory McIlroy, the third-ranked player in the world, is is attempting to snap a major drought that dates back to 2014. He is +1200 at BetMGM and +1400 at DraftKings. That’s fourth at both books.

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Canada Day: Nick Taylor eagles in playoff for historic Canadian Open win

    PGA: Canada Day: Nick Taylor eagles in playoff for historic Canadian Open win


    Nick Taylor hammered home a 72 1/2-foot eagle putt on the fourth playoff hole to beat Englishman Tommy Fleetwood and become the first Canadian winner of the RBC Canadian Open in 69 years on Sunday in Toronto.

    Fans stormed the 18th green at Oakdale Golf & Country Club to celebrate the first player from Canada to win the country’s national open since Pat Fletcher in 1954.

    Playing the par-5 18th hole for the third time of the playoff, Fleetwood hit a pitch shot to get on the green in three. Taylor’s drive found a divot just off the fairway but still reached the green in two shots, giving Taylor a long uphill putt from a lower tier of the green complex.

    Taylor’s putt tracked straight toward the center of the cup, hit the flagstick and dropped in. Taylor flipped his putter in the air and embraced his caddie before fans made their way down from the grandstand. Per the CBS broadcast, it was the longest made putt of Taylor’s career.

    “I had a similar line on the second playoff hole,” Taylor said. “I knew it was going to be slow with how much rain we’ve had. I wanted to get it as close as I can because Tommy, I thought he was going to make (his putt).

    “It’s unbelievable. I don’t know what to say.”

    The 35-year-old from Abbotsford, British Columbia, led the tournament for a good portion of the fourth round, briefly slipped behind and then birdied the 17th and 18th holes to post a 6-under 66 and set the clubhouse lead at 17-under 271.

    Fleetwood shot a 67 to join him there, one shot better than Englishmen Tyrrell Hatton and Aaron Rai and Taiwan’s C.T. Pan.

    “I can’t even describe it. This is the most incredible feeling,” Taylor said. “The fans were unbelievable all day. Every green, every tee box I was getting ovations and to make those last two putts to give myself a chance to do that, I’m speechless.”

    Taylor recovered from an opening-round 75 by shooting 67 on Friday and 63 on Saturday to vault into contention.

    He stepped to the 18th tee Sunday needing a par to tie the group at 16 under, or a birdie or better for the outright lead. He went over the green in two and pitched to 11 1/2 feet for a birdie attempt.

    Taylor’s putt had a massive right-to-left curl and died right at the hole. He pumped his fist and took several steps backward in celebration as the fan base went wild in celebrating their countryman.

    A short time later, Fleetwood joined the tie at 16 under with a birdie at No. 16, and his approach at the par-4 17th spun back to a mere 3 feet to set up a birdie to tie Taylor.

    Fleetwood’s drive at No. 18 missed the fairway right, and his attempt to lay up also turned right and settled in the right rough again. He managed to get on the green with his third shot and two-putted for par to force the playoff.

    “I was playing so well and just got a bit fast,” Fleetwood said of his 18th hole. “I obviously had my chances starting with the par-5 with an iron off the tee and then in the playoff. But I’m not going to take anything away from Nick. I played with him the first two rounds and he obviously struggled on Day 1. So he’s played unbelievable from there on in and then amazing moment for him on the last hole.”

    Taylor and Fleetwood replayed the par-5 18th twice to begin the playoff. The first time through, Fleetwood knocked in a 20-foot birdie putt before Taylor cleaned up his birdie from 5 feet.

    They each parred the hole on the second playthrough, even after Fleetwood knocked his original second shot into the grandstand behind the green. A fan picked up his ball and was later seen taking selfies with it. Fleetwood got a free drop and managed to save par.

    Both players missed birdie looks from 13 to 14 feet away on the third playoff hole, the par-3 ninth.

    Fleetwood congratulated Taylor with a smile.

    “Nice moment for Nick and the fans here,” Fleetwood said. “So it’s great to be a part of that Sunday and that playoff. I had my chances, really. It wasn’t to be this time. But, yeah, congratulations to him.”

    Hatton fired a 64 and Rai carded a 67 to get to 16 under. Pan, who held a two-shot lead after 54 holes, could have joined the playoff by eagling the 72nd hole but had to settle for a birdie and a round of 70.

    Eric Cole made nine birdies — including each of his last four holes — to match the round of the week with a 9-under 63 and tie Mark Hubbard (70 on Sunday) for sixth at 14 under. Justin Rose of England (71) finished alone in eighth at 13 under.

    Two-time defending champion Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, the highest-ranked player in the field, entered the day two off the pace but flubbed his way to consecutive bogeys at the par-4 fifth and sixth holes. He didn’t notch his first birdie until the par-5 12th and shot a 72 to finish at 12 under, tied for ninth with Brandon Wu (69) and Andrew Novak (72).

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: C.T. Pan (66) takes 2-shot lead at Canadian Open

    PGA: C.T. Pan (66) takes 2-shot lead at Canadian Open


    C.T. Pan fired a second consecutive 66 to take a two-shot lead after 54 holes at the RBC Canadian Open in Toronto on Saturday.

    Pan sits at 14-under-par 202, two shots ahead of a cadre of six players who are giving chase, including heavyweights Rory McIlroy and Justin Rose.

    England’s Aaron Rai (Saturday 69) and Canadian Nick Taylor are within striking distance in a tie for eighth, three shots back. Taylor fired a low-round 63 to vault 39 places up the leaderboard on moving day.

    Canadian Corey Conners (70) is in solo 10th at 10 under.

    Second-round leader and PGA Tour rookie Carl Yuan of China shot 74 on Saturday and dropped into a tie for 16th at 7 under.

    Pan started strong, carding birdies on his first two holes of the day en route to finishing with seven altogether against one bogey. The 31-year-old from Chinese Taipei has one career tour victory (2019 RBC Heritage).

    Then he finished strong, going birdie-birdie to end his round and hold the 54-hole lead/co-lead for the first time in his 168th start on tour.

    “It’s always cool to see my name on the top of the leaderboard. Not just leaderboards, just to be in contention,” Pan said. “That’s all I want to do before the tournament started. Finished birdie, birdie. That put me in a good spot. But I still got a lot of work to do.”

    Especially with a who’s who of the golfers chasing him.

    England’s Tommy Fleetwood fired a 64 to move up 21 spots, Northern Ireland’s McIlroy shot 66 to move up 10, and England’s Rose carded a 66 to move up 10 spots into a tie for second.

    “I got off to a great start,” McIlroy said. “Three-under through that first nine holes I felt was a really good effort. Kept it going through the first part of the back nine. Then the putter went a little cold on me over those last five holes. But, yeah, overall, it’s great to put myself in with a shot tomorrow. There’s a lot of people up there around the lead, so it’s going to be a fun day.”

    Harry Higgs (67), Mark Hubbard (66) and Andrew Novak (67) are also just two strokes back.

    Higgs is one of four players sitting at T2 who’s seeking his first win on Tour, joining Hubbard, Fleetwood and Novak.

    “I got to remind myself that a chance to win on Sunday, each shot is not life or death,” Higgs said. “Like, I cannot win it by hitting it in the fairway on the first hole. I cannot win it by hitting it close to the flag on first hole. I cannot win it by making a 6-footer on the first hole. Everything ends over there on 18.

    “I’ve got a nice little game plan, but tomorrow’s the hardest day to do it. But I am looking forward to the opportunity to do so.”

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Report: PGA Tour to offer equity to players who stayed loyal

    PGA: Report: PGA Tour to offer equity to players who stayed loyal


    Players who turned down big-money offers to defect to LIV Golf and stuck with the PGA Tour will be given equity shares in the new for-profit conglomerate being formed by the tour’s merger with the Saudi Public Investment Fund, PGA Tour policy board member Jimmy Dunne told ESPN Friday.

    Dunne is being credited with orchestrating the new deal between the PGA Tour, the DP World Tour and PIF announced Tuesday. Dunne reached out to PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan earlier this year to begin discussions of the agreement that surprised the sports world.

    PIF had previously been funding LIV Golf, leading to the schism in the golf world that saw star players like Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Brooks Koepka leave the PGA Tour behind.

    As for star players who declined LIV’s offers and stayed, like Jon Rahm of Spain and Hideki Matsuyama of Japan, they will now be compensated for their loyalty.

    “The new (company) would grow, and the (current PGA Tour) players would get a piece of equity that would enhance and increase in value as time went on,” Dunne told ESPN. “There would have to be some kind of formulaic decision on how to do that. It would be a process to determine what would be a fair mechanism that would be really beneficial to our players.”

    The players who joined LIV will not be eligible for that equity plan.

    In a separate interview, Dunne told Sports Illustrated on Friday that the newly formed, for-profit entity formed by the merger will retain the PGA Tour name and branding. Its current commissioner, Jay Monahan, who is set to become its CEO, will have the power to disband LIV Golf if he wants.

    Current LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman reportedly told staff earlier this week that the league is sticking around long-term despite the PGA-PIF agreement, but Norman might be out of a position once LIV is officially under the PGA’s purview. Monahan told reporters on a conference call Tuesday that “taking a competitor off the board” was one of the motives for the merger.

    As for Saudi Arabia’s involvement in the PGA Tour going forward, Dunne claimed the Saudis haven’t promised any monetary investment and the agreement was more about the “right of first refusal” to be the tour’s investment partner in the future. The PGA Tour will be the controlling partner of any investment, according to the agreement.

    Al-Rumayyan, though, will be the chairman of the PGA Tour following the merger.

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Tour rookie Carl Yuan ekes ahead at RBC Canadian Open

    PGA: Tour rookie Carl Yuan ekes ahead at RBC Canadian Open


    PGA Tour rookie Carl Yuan of China sits atop the leaderboard after two rounds of the RBC Canadian Open in Toronto.

    Yuan shot a 5-under 67 on Friday at Oakdale Golf & Country Club to move to 9-under 135, which was enough for a one-stroke lead by the end of the day.

    On his tail are the likes of Corey Conners, trying to be the first Canadian to win the country’s national open since 1954, and Englishman Tyrrell Hatton, who fired an 8-under 64. They’re tied with Aaron Rai of England and C.T. Pan of Taiwan at 8 under.

    Yuan, 26, has won events on the PGA Tour China and the Korn Ferry Tour but had struggled to begin his PGA Tour career. He had made just five of 16 cuts this season entering the week, and his best finish was a tie for 21st.

    That could change this weekend after Yuan’s 68-67 start in Toronto. He started his Friday by making a 14-foot birdie putt and went on to roll in six more birdies, including three of his final four holes.

    “I’ve been like playing like way too technical in the past events on tour this year,” Yuan said. “Which didn’t really get me the good results. So I figure, why not just play freely? Yeah, and then glad it works out good so far.”

    Conners has said he views the Canadian Open like a major. After four birdies and just one bogey Friday for a 69, he’ll enter the weekend primed to make a run at a trophy he badly wants.

    Conners is the highest-ranked Canadian player in the world at No. 29. He won the Valero Texas Open last April — both of his PGA Tour victories came there — and he spent most of Friday and Saturday at the PGA Championship atop the leaderboard before a poor finish.

    “I would say this week I’ve been a lot more relaxed than even I was there, and I felt like I was quite relaxed at the PGA Championship,” Conners said. “So I’m feeling good about my game and able to play with freedom and confidence. So just having a lot of fun.”

    Hatton’s round was anchored by a run of five straight birdies at Nos. 7-11. His approach game carried him through that stretch: His approach at the par-4 eighth landed 3 1/2 feet from the cup, his second shot at the par-4 10th left him 6 1/2 feet and his tee shot at the par-3 11th gave him a 7-footer for the fifth and final birdie of the spree.

    He finished the day with nine birdies and a lone bogey while carding the low round of the tournament.

    “It’s a nice place to be after 36 holes, but there’s still another 36 to go,” Hatton said. “I imagine if the weather’s kind of the same as it was this afternoon, scoring’s going to be fairly low. It’s tricky out there at times. You can easily get yourself in the wrong position. But, yeah, you still need to make a lot of birdies this weekend. I’m going to try my best to do that.”

    Rai, one of four co-leaders after the first round, shot a 69, while Pan fired a 66. Pan recovered from an early double bogey by eagling the par-5 18th after he stuck his second shot inside 5 feet.

    Tied for sixth at 7 under were Harry Higgs (66), Andrew Novak (68), Brendon Todd (69), Jonathan Byrd (69), Justin Lower (70) and Chesson Hadley (70).

    Two-time defending champion Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland improved on an opening 71 with a bogey-free round of 67 to get to 6 under. He’s tied for 12th with England’s Justin Rose (69), Nate Lashley (68), Mark Hubbard (70) and S.H. Kim of South Korea (70).

    “Three back going into the weekend, that’s — I’m pretty pleased with that,” McIlroy said. “Finished strongly out there this afternoon. Yeah, I feel pretty good with where I’m at. Would have been nice to be one or two closer to the lead, but I thought today went well.”

    Adam Hadwin (68) and Roger Sloan (70) are the next-lowest Canadians after Conners, both at 5 under.

    –Field Level Media