Golf.com https://golf.com en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.9.1 https://golf.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/cropped-favicon-512x512-1-32x32.png rory mcilroy – Golf https://golf.com 32 32 https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15494434 Fri, 30 Sep 2022 23:26:26 +0000 <![CDATA[Greg Norman opens up on Rory McIlroy, the R&A and his 'moral line']]> Greg Norman, on Piers Morgan Uncensored, opened up on Rory McIlroy, potential resolution between LIV and the PGA Tour, and his “moral line.”

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https://golf.com/news/greg-norman-rory-mcilroy-resolution-moral-line/ Greg Norman, on Piers Morgan Uncensored, opened up on Rory McIlroy, potential resolution between LIV and the PGA Tour, and his “moral line.”

The post Greg Norman opens up on Rory McIlroy, the R&A and his ‘moral line’ appeared first on Golf.

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Greg Norman, on Piers Morgan Uncensored, opened up on Rory McIlroy, potential resolution between LIV and the PGA Tour, and his “moral line.”

The post Greg Norman opens up on Rory McIlroy, the R&A and his ‘moral line’ appeared first on Golf.

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Greg Norman, when asked where professional golf will be in the next couple years, says “there will be some merging of the powers to be, just sitting down and having a conversation,” though he added his LIV Golf group does not want that right now. 

Liv golf celebration
LIV Golf unveiled its $50 million team championship. Here’s how it works
By: Sean Zak

In an interview this week with media personality Piers Morgan, Norman also said he would tell Rory McIlroy not to “begrudge the other players for making the decision” to join his upstart series. And the LIV Golf CEO said his “heat shield gets a little bit weak” when asked how he’s been handling criticism, then indirectly answered a question of what his “moral line” is. 

“My moral line is I believe in the product,” Norman said on Piers Morgan Uncensored. “My moral line is I’ve been a big, staunch proponent of growing the game of golf on a global basis. My moral line is golf is a force for good. So when you have this opportunity — and I’ve seen it; I’ve seen it beyond LIV, prior to LIV; I’ve seen what I’ve done in Vietnam; I’ve seen what I’ve done in Mexico, through my other businesses, through golf course design. It is so resonatingly powerful to see the strength of what the game of golf can do in different countries around the world to change the economy of things, to change the hospitality, to change tourism, all these little ingredients that actually golf is the benefactor of, but actually golf was the initial reason why you could change these deals. 

“I am so proud to be in this role, I really am, because my whole life — somebody asked me the question the other day, Greg, do you think this is going to affect your legacy? And I said, you know what, maybe my legacy on the golf course is not my legacy. Maybe my true legacy is what we’re doing with LIV for the game of golf and giving this opportunity to collegiate players, eventually to women, guys we have today to be a true competitor to show that you are additive to the system, and our product is speaking for itself.”

Jay monahan
PGA Tour countersues LIV Golf: Here’s where the lawsuit stands 
By: Sean Zak

The subject of morals is one of several surrounding LIV Golf; they are backed by the Saudi Arabian government, which has been accused of wide-ranging human-rights abuses. The financing, which Norman said in the interview was $2 billion, has been another topic. Offers of guaranteed money and record purses have helped lure players away from the PGA Tour, and there are lawsuits now on both sides, along with questions of how the four major championships will proceed. 

With that in mind, and LIV playing its sixth event next week in Bangkok, and the PGA Tour in the middle of its fall schedule, Morgan asked Norman where pro golf will be in a year or two. 

In short, he foresaw the sides meeting, the majors continuing to invite LIV’s players, and the Official World Golf Ranking remaining neutral.  

“Look, I ultimately believe there will be some merging of the powers to be, just sitting down and having a conversation,” Norman said on the show. “We don’t want it right now. We’ve tried. And going back to what you’re saying before, we didn’t create this turmoil. We just came in with another opportunity within the ecosystem for the players, for the fans. … We didn’t really start this big fight. We didn’t create this animosity. 

“And with the majors, quite honestly, they should be Switzerland, right. If I’m a major, I want the best of the best in my field. They’re the four Super Bowls, four FA Cups, they’re the four whatever you want to call them that should always remain up there — Switzerland — and away from anybody. For them to be dragged into this quagmire, yeah, there’s going to be a lot of questions that need to be asked about that, but they should be apart from them. If you’re a broadcaster of any of the four majors, you should be saying to them, we want the LIV players in there, because 26 of the top 100 players, right now, today, are LIV players. OWGR, they’ve got to be, again, Switzerland, because they’re an independent organization. There’s 22 other tour events in this world that get OWGR points. And I can tell you this: 21 of those 22 are inferior to what the LIV tour is all about. So why are we being targeted?”

Rory McIlroy speaks in a press conference at 2022 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship
‘Golf is ripping itself apart’: Rory McIlroy gets brutally honest about LIV-PGA Tour feud
By: Kevin Cunningham

On the subject of McIlroy, Norman was asked what his “message” would be to him, considering McIlroy’s defense of the PGA Tour and DP World Tour. In his most recent comments, ahead of this week’s Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, McIlroy said this of the conflict: “I’ve always said I think there is a time and a place where everyone that’s involved here should sit down and try to work together. It’s very hard for that to happen right now when there’s two lawsuits going on.”

“Well, my message is, Rory, you’re an independent contractor; you have the right to make your decision,” Norman said on the show. “Remember, Rory started on the European Tour. Then Rory decided to leave the European Tour to go play where all the money is, where I went to play, to the PGA Tour. Why do we do that? We do that because that was the only option we had as players. We had to go sign on to their rules and regulations; we couldn’t even negotiate their rules and regulations. We had to do the only thing we could possibly do, is play the Tour. What we’ve done now is give them options. Hey, Rory, happy days, do what you want to do. If he’s comfortable over there doing that, an independent contractor, he can. If Rory wants to go to the Middle East and get appearance money to play in tournaments, happy days, go play in those, Rory; that’s your choice. 

“Don’t begrudge the other players for making the decision that is a rightful decision under their independent contract or right to go do it. It’s just a shame that people have taken this stance when if you look back over a period of time, they’ve pretty much done the same things themselves.”

Later in the show, Morgan asked Norman how he was handling the back-and-forth between LIV Golf and the PGA Tour personally. 

Here is the complete exchange:

“You yourself have gone under unbelievable fire,” Morgan began. “You’ve been snubbed up at the Open; they wouldn’t let you go to the Champions Dinner, which I thought was actually very churlish. As a great golfing champion, a great sporting champion, how are you dealing with that kind of vitriol, the kind of disenfranchisement, from the sport and the official bodies that you were once so welcomed by? How are you on a personal level dealing with that?”

branden grace swings
‘I think it’s just fair’: Why this pro believes LIV events deserve World Ranking points
By: Zephyr Melton

“Look, to be honest with you, at times, my heat shield gets a little bit weak because I am a human being,” Norman said. “I’ve done a lot for the game of golf — I was the No. 1 player in the world for six years; I’ve done things in the game of golf; I’ve promoted the game of golf; I’ve grown the game of golf globally; I took a mission on myself as an individual player to fly all around the world; I was the first guy to do an exhibition match in mainland China; I was one of the first guys to go into the Middle East and do that. And through my golf business at the same time, continue to do that. So when they do these — what happened in the R&A was a petty, cheap, childish shot, to be honest with you. If you can’t rise above it all, shame on you. Because if you’re under pressure from other people exerting pressure on you, shame on you. For you not to sit down and have a discussion and understand what the LIV business model is and to see how it sits within the ecosystem, shame on you. 

“Because in business, and remember we’re a commercial entity, in business, you understand what you’re up here what your opponent’s got; you understand what your competitor’s got. Unpack it all and see if you can actually work together within the system to make both entities better for each other, not try and destroy us. And we haven’t tried to destroy the PGA Tour. We have worked very, very closely to work with them. 

“Have you lost personal friends in the golf world as a result of all this?” Morgan asked.

“One-hundred percent I have, yup,” Norman said, “Look, if they want to judge me on lack of information and a lack of what’s out there, they’re the ones with the small mind. When you know the facts, you understand the facts, you understand the delivery mechanism and the business model — let me say this, my C-suite are the best of the best in the world of business. The economists, lawyers, marketing, they came from a diverse section of sport and business, not golf. Why do I have over 100 of the best of the best in the business? Because of the business model, and the business model is showing through; the product is showing through. I’m lucky to have these magnificent people behind me. I’m lucky to have an investor willing to invest in the game of golf like they are investing. Golf is lucky to have this.”     

The complete interview is below:

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15494158 Mon, 26 Sep 2022 22:28:31 +0000 <![CDATA[30 Presidents Cup observations: Is Tom Kim … the next Rory McIlroy? And more]]> The Presidents Cup is over, and here are 30 observations, including a thought on whether Tom Kim … is the next Rory McIlroy.

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https://golf.com/news/30-presidents-cup-observations-tom-kim-rory-mcilroy/ The Presidents Cup is over, and here are 30 observations, including a thought on whether Tom Kim … is the next Rory McIlroy.

The post 30 Presidents Cup observations: Is Tom Kim … the next Rory McIlroy? And more appeared first on Golf.

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The Presidents Cup is over, and here are 30 observations, including a thought on whether Tom Kim … is the next Rory McIlroy.

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Every pro knows Sam Reeves. And Sam Reeves knows every pro. 

Jordan Spieth smiles in his direction. Billy Horschel shouts his way as he walks across the Quail Hollow range. 

“Heyyyy, Sam-bo!” 

On and on from the Americans at the Presidents Cup. Of course, had he been closer to the International gang, it would have been much the same; Adam Scott, in an earlier profile of Reeves by Michael Bamberger for GOLF.com, said he “learned how to be a human being from Sam.” Think about whom you can say that about in your life. 

sam.jpg
Sam Reeves is a retired cotton merchant, bodysurfer, pro-am partner and one of golf’s trusted old souls

Fred Couples, an assistant U.S. captain, now walks by, he spots GOLF’s Dylan Dethier, says, “You have to talk to this guy,” and he and Reeves walk over to us. It’s at this point, where you should take a minute and read the Bamberger piece; Reeves has lived a life. Now in his mid-80s, he made his money in the cotton business, according to the story; his house guests, at his home alongside Cypress Point, have included Peyton Manning and Tom Brady; and he was the best man in Butch Harmon’s wedding. So, yes, Freddie, please bring your friend over. 

For a half-hour, as Spieth, Patrick Cantlay and Justin Thomas hit, we talked. Brady came up; Reeves had pictures and video of him in his phone. The conversation then turned to Tom Kim. It was Sunday, and about 18 hours earlier, Kim had given us a moment with his winning putt/fist-pump/hat flip on the 18th. Reeves added this, twice:

He’s Rory McIlroy revisited. 

Scott had told Reeves the charisma is no act; Kim’s just like that. The swing is right, too. Reeves pointed out that McIlroy’s American-soil tournament breakthrough also came at Quail Hollow, at the Quail Hollow Championship in 2010. Maybe the hyperbole is getting lost in the moment. Maybe it isn’t. But this week, we may have just seen the birth of a global golf superstar. 

With that, here are 29 other observations from the week that was in Charlotte, which ended in a Team USA 17.5-12.5 win. (They played for 30 points, so that seems right.) We’re doing our business today at Suffolk Punch, a wonderful restaurant and brewery that opened at 7:30 a.m. (!), and we’re feeling good. 

2. Let’s stay with Kim, and why observers like Reeves are speaking so reverently of him. We’ll start with how he’s making his money, his golf. But not the putt on 18 on Saturday; the short before it. This is a take, but you can maybe nerve in a 10-footer — and it’s harder to hit to 10 feet, from 233 yards out, where the heart is really moving. I’ll remember that shot. But I think more daggers are on the way. 

Presidents Cup
Those LIV absentees? Turns out this Presidents Cup thrived without them
By: Nick Piastowski

3. Then there’s just Tom, the 20-year-old. There are the fist-pumps and the shouts and the waves to the crowd and his caddie picking up his ball and his caddie picking up his putter. (This week, the bagman was Joe Skovron, Rickie Fowler’s old looper.) And we love it all. Here’s my hope: It never dies. It stays authentic. That’s almost as hard as hitting the shots described in observation No. 2. To have some fun with words, golfers can be like diet sodas, and Tom Kim is a shot of whiskey. And we don’t want the bartender to cut us off.      

4. One more Kim note. On 18 on Sunday, after his singles loss to Max Homa, another hero this week, several folks got in his ear. Horschel, who didn’t play Kim in any match, was one of the first to greet him on 18 green, and he leaned in for a good minute. Trevor Immelman, the International captain and another hero, told him this, which was captured by the PGA Tour’s social media team: “You’re a freaking champion. You’re a champion. You believe in yourself. You’re good. We’re getting there.” It’s very telling that other pros want him to succeed.   

5. Speaking of Horschel, I followed him Friday, in his first-ever round in a team event, after being passed over multiple times in a 13-year career. I’ll remember this most. On 14, after his tee shot on the par-3 went short and right, he one-handed his follow-through and was laboring, before Davis Love III, the U.S. captain, left-hand slapped him on the rear. Two shots later, he made a 17-footer to halve the hole, and four holes later, he and partner Homa won their match.   

6. Speaking of Homa, he’s ascending. Four wins since last February, including last week, at the Fortinet Championship. A 4-0 mark this week, which included his own moment, or moments — a putt and a fist-pump on the 17th green on Friday, and the same combo a hole later. Where does he go from here? What’s the ceiling? Is this a heater? Or is the start of a five-, 10-year run? For him, the Masters can’t come soon enough.  

7. Speaking of Masters champs, Immelman lost, but won the week. He was invested. This quote, from his press conference on Sunday night, will stick with me. 

preidents cup stock prices
Presidents Cup stock report: Whose prices rose (and sank!) at Quail Hollow
By: James Colgan

Though you are obviously reading this and not listening, imagine each syllable being emphasized, and all of it coming to a crescendo at “joke.” 

“This week, you know, we were in a tough spot on Friday,” Immelman said. “We showed a lot of guts to fight back. At some point, I don’t know about you guys, but at some point this afternoon, I thought there was still a chance.

“And when you consider that we were 8-2 down on Friday evening, this team is no joke, and I’m sick and tired of it being spoken of as a joke.

“We love this event, and we love our team, and we cannot wait to run this back and have another shot.”

8. A note on Immelman and the mood he created. Late Sunday afternoon, Jim “Bones” Mackay told me while walking to the cup presentation on 15 green that the U.S. team could hear the International’s music and celebration from their team room on Saturday night, after the INT’s won three afternoon points. The groups were about 75 yards away from each other. 

9. The Suffolk Punch SPB Breakfast Bowl — with two farm eggs my way (scrambled is my way), Anson Mills cream cheese grits, smoked bacon, sausage patties, shredded cheddar and grilled sourdough bread — is one of the better breakfasts I’ve maybe ever had. 

10. A half-hour before his singles match on Sunday, Cantlay 9-and-8’ed a Chipotle burrito on the range, then won. Incredible.  

11. Speaking of food, you could smell the barbecue, from local shop Noble Smoke, as far as a par-5 away. Heavenly. 

12. I consider myself somewhat of a K.H. Lee No. 1 sexiest golfer expert, so I had to ask the tough question earlier in the week. 

If you’re not familiar with the conversation of K.H. Lee No. 1 sexiest golfer, here’s a brief recap. In 2018, during the Korn Ferry Tour’s Portland Open, Lee said on a video that he had “several goals in my life.” One you’ve heard before: “The first is to become the No. 1 golfer in the world.” Fair enough. But the second was a bit more, shall we say, risque. 

“And the second is to become the No. 1 sexiest golfer in the world.”

OK then. There’s more. Like I said, I’ve been following this. About a year ago, the PGA Tour then helped their man, when, during the CJ Cup event, they labeled his placard on the range: “Sexiest Golfer,” had him nestle up next to it and shot a video that they shared on their social media channels. Good stuff all around, though Lee admitted in a story published by the Tour that he wasn’t sure he’d ever reach his goal. His reasoning was sound. 

Justin Thomas, Jordan Spieth
‘4-figure’ bets and rope jokes: Inside Spieth & JT’s ‘chill’ Presidents Cup round
By: Nick Piastowski

“Being sexy means to be a muscular guy,” he said. “It’s in my dream but not quite possible in reality. I want to be muscular, but I enjoy eating so much. For example, I try not to eat dinner if I have a big lunch, but when dinner time comes, I am usually hungry again. I will work out hard, but I will eat hard as well.”

But on Wednesday, during Lee’s media availability, I still had to ask. 

Me: “K.H., there was a moment a few years ago, brought up again, about a year ago, with you wanting to be the No. 1 sexy golfer. Who is the No. 1 sexy golfer on your team?”

Lee: “Should I say me? I hope so. Adam Scott. We’ll go there. Adam is very sexy. And then Camilo [Villegas] is sexy, too. So top 10, me?”

I was stunned. 

Me: “You’re top 10, not top 5?”

Lee: “Close.”

I’ll take it. 

13. The course was closed to fans last Monday, which helped amplify a practice round between friends Thomas and Spieth. With no one around — it really was just me, the players, caddies Mackay and Michael Greller — the vibe was carefree, and I wrote about our four-plus hours together here. But another takeaway was Zach Johnson and a scene on 15 green, which is actually 18 during other tournament play. (They moved up the hole to make sure most matches would get to the tricky, creek-on-the-right-side par-4.) Having carted over at this point, Johnson put together a game, with some cash on the line, where, from 40 feet away, you had to walk with your eyes closed and try to drop your ball in the hole. If you’re wondering about the atmosphere he’ll create in the team room next year when he takes the U.S. captain’s chair for the Ryder Cup, this is it. 

14. I followed Cameron Young on Thursday, his team-event debut. And on shot one on tee 1, before 2,500 sweaty fans, he bombed one over the trees on the right, and his tee was in his hand before his ball was on the ground. Killer. The internet tells me that he has that dog in him.         

15. On a 90-plus-degree day, Young also looked like he wasn’t sweating. No beads on his neck. Arms. Nothing. Wow. And how?

Jordan Spieth Justin Thomas
After dominant performance, next Team USA target is clear: winning in Europe
By: Sean Zak

16. Say what you will about the Saturday dramatics and some spirited back-and-forth on Sunday, but this was another American win, the 12th in 14 playings. Toss in that the Internationals have been gutted due to LIV Golf — players who have left the PGA Tour for the upstart, Saudi-backed series have been suspended, and the Presidents Cup is a Tour-backed venture — and the scene is tough. We’re now halfway through our story, so let’s look then to the future. First, here’s Immelman’s take: 

“We have a system that we like and a plan and a strategy, and it feels like to me, you know, this was an important week for us just to just lay a couple more bricks in this house that we’re trying to build,” he said. 

“We’re here for the long run in this event. We’re going to win this event. So we’ll keep building. We’ll keep fighting. At some point, we’re going to win.”

17. The odds are on staying the course; Friday, Saturday and Sunday were ticket sellouts, money was made and sponsors were likely happy, though we’d strongly argue moving singles away from King NFL. 

You won’t see a PGA Tour-LIV Golf team event, though I checked players’ temperatures on the subject early in the week. You also won’t see LIV players in the event, though Immelman at least inquired about one. The International team doesn’t require PGA Tour membership. So when Louis Oosthuizen resigned his and joined LIV, Immelman revealed that he did check to see whether he could pick the South African. 

His telling of the explanation he received was vague. And he understandably paused before doing so. 

“My understanding is that he made particular announcements and allowed himself to be used in different marketing campaigns and announcements once he was not given the release from the PGA Tour, and he did all of those things before he resigned his membership,” Immelman said Tuesday. “So there were still particular infractions there.”

Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas celebrate yet another Presidents Cup victory.
Tour Confidential: Presidents Cup surprises, second-guesses and MVPs from Quail Hollow
By: GOLF Editors

Then there’s adding women. 

Golf Digest wrote a nice piece making the case, and you can read it here. This weekend, I messaged LPGA pro Gemma Dryburgh for her thoughts, and she was very in. 

“I definitely think the girls would be interested in it,” she wrote back. “I think it would be great for the event, too. I’d love to see it happen.” 

Stay tuned. 

18. The Sycamore Brewing Haziness IPA is one of the best juice bombers I’ve maybe ever had. And Harris Teeter grocery store here has one of the best brew selections I’ve maybe ever seen. 

19. A word on the build-out on 1 at Quail Hollow. Good stuff. But this is about the volunteer on 1, about 100 yards from the tee, on the left side. On Tuesday, when the ropes were down, she asked every person with that look on their face and a phone in their hand if they wanted her to take a picture; she was doing the asking. Great stuff. She took mine, too.  

20. Another volunteer shout-out. On Friday on 4 tee, a caddie gave one a used piece of gum to toss into a trash bin. Gross. 

21. When I can, I watch and listen to the fans, and I easily laugh to most cracks, But the winners of the week was the group dressed in a Canadian flag spandex get-up that, shall we say, you shouldn’t look down at. Their mission, too, it seemed, was only to get the attention of Mike Weir, an assistant on the International side and, yes, a Canadian. It worked on Saturday, and he laughed.  

22. Horschel’s hair was also a shouting point among the galleries. Understandably so. It was locked into place and majestic. 

presidents cup celebration
At Presidents Cup, more affirmation we’re in good old days of American golf
By: James Colgan

23. At the Presidents and Ryder Cups, the wives and girlfriends also walk the fairways. What do they talk about? I overheard Katherine Zhu, the fiancee of Collin Morikawa, talking with International Team WAGs about their trip to what was described as “Canadian Sea World.”

24. Baker Mayfield was out at Quail Hollow. On Friday, the Carolina Panthers quarterback was walking with Max Homa’s wife, Lacey. He obliged a boy for a selfie. Another fan asked him if he was going to beat the Saints. “That’s the plan,” he said. The Panthers won, 22-14.  

25. Seth Curry, he of the jump-shooting and golf-playing Curry family, was out at Quail Hollow. On Sunday morning, he was at the range. Webb Simpson, an assistant captain, talked basketball with him; he asked how his team, the Brooklyn Nets, were looking, and whether he “ever had any desire to play for the Hornets,” Charlotte’s team. Smylie Kaufman, a pro on hand to do broadcast work, asked for jump-shot tips, and he gave Curry golf tips. 

26. I was kinda shocked Michael Jordan wasn’t out at Quail Hollow. Love had introduced him to golf when both were at Chapel Hill back in the day.  

27. On Sunday night, I wrote about the funniest moments from the Americans’ press conference, which you can find here, but maybe the best came from the Internationals. Before any questions were asked, Sweet Caroline was playing over a speaker, and Sungjae Im was singing the “Bah, bah, bah” part. Si Woo Kim and I laughed. 

28. The Cookout big double burger tray, with cajun fries and chicken nuggets, is one of the best late-night, post-work meals I’ve maybe ever had.      

29. Kevin Kisner, though, as he did earlier in the week, was at home in front of the mics. Though he was asked just one question after the victory, the exchange was a winner. 

Billy Horschel, Justin Thomas
Kevin Kisner’s party plan and 6 other funny moments from the Presidents Cup presser
By: Nick Piastowski

“I saved the best for last,” the reporter started. “This one’s for Kis. Being one of the more experienced players on the team, you know, can bring its advantages on the course. But do you feel it brings an advantage or disadvantage for tonight’s festivities with these younger guys?”

“It’s hard to hear,” Kisner said. “Can you speak up, please?”

“Yes,” the reporter said. 

“I just need the last part,” Kisner said. 

“OK. Do you think it brings, your experience, do you think it brings an advantage or disadvantage for tonight’s festivities with these younger guys?” the reporter asked again. 

“My experience can ultimately win in this scenario,” Kisner said. “There is nothing that any of these can do that can hang with me tonight, I promise you.

“I have never seen a better display of golfers and a worse display of partiers, and I am the best partier on this board. Amen.

“That’s why they picked me. I got half a point, but I brought the fun.”

30. Here’s proof I was there. 

If you’re interested, I also compiled takeaways, thoughts and observations this year from the Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open and Open Championship, and they can be found below:

Masters
PGA Championship 
U.S. Open
Open Championship

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15493499 Sun, 18 Sep 2022 13:04:05 +0000 <![CDATA[Rory McIlroy to face off against LIV players at St. Andrews (again)]]> McIlroy will tee it up against LIV Golf players once again in two weeks at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at St. Andrews.

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https://golf.com/news/rory-mcilroy-face-off-liv-players-st-andrews/ McIlroy will tee it up against LIV Golf players once again in two weeks at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at St. Andrews.

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McIlroy will tee it up against LIV Golf players once again in two weeks at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at St. Andrews.

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Having finished off the 2021-22 PGA Tour season last month with a FedEx Cup win and its $18 million winner’s check, Rory McIlroy is spending this week at the DP World Tour’s Italian Open. In two weeks he plans on playing another event at the iconic Old Course at St. Andrews, but this time he’ll do so against some unlikely, and, perhaps, unwanted competition: LIV Golf players.

This summer, the DP World Tour (formerly the European Tour) tried to follow the PGA Tour’s path and suspend LIV Golf pros from its tournaments. A lawsuit followed, so while the English court system sorts the whole issue out, LIV players are still allowed to play DP World Tour events.

Rory McIlroy watches an approach at the BMW PGA Championship on Thursday.
Rory McIlroy jabs LIV Golf players (twice) at testy BMW PGA event
By: Josh Berhow

With the LIV Golf Chicago event happening this week too, players like McIlroy didn’t have to worry about running into their LIV counterparts at the Italian Open. Ironically, the Italian Open is being played at Marco Simone, which will host next year’s Ryder Cup. We know Rory will be there for that one, though we still don’t know if LIV players will be permitted to compete.

McIlroy plans to play the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship in two weeks’ time, the popular DP World Tour event contested at three Scottish links courses, including the Old Course at St. Andrews. But there is no LIV event happening that week, so LIV players are free to sign up. And sign up they have.

As of now, 10 LIV players are in the field, including Talor Gooch, Abraham Ancer, Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel, Shaun Norris, Branden Grace, Richard Bland, Laurie Canter, Peter Uihlein and Jed Morgan.

A whole lot of awkwardness and some choice words will likely be had, as was the case in the last iteration of LIV vs. PGA Tour. Two weeks ago at the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, over a dozen LIV players teed it up, and many pros on the PGA Tour side were not happy about it, including Rory.

“I hate what [LIV] is doing to the game of golf,” he said after his Tour Championship win. “I hate it. I really do. Like, it’s going to be hard for me to stomach going to Wentworth in a couple of weeks’ time and seeing 18 of them there. That just doesn’t sit right with me.”

He wasn’t alone. PGA Tour stalwart Billy Horschel, who will also play the Dunhill Links, was caught on Wentworth’s practice putting green having an animated argument with LIV pro Ian Poulter.

Further adding to what will likely be a charged atmosphere for McIlroy at the Dunhill Links is the host course, the Old Course at St. Andrews. It was the site of McIlroy’s latest major disappointment, where he surrendered the 54-hole lead to lose the 2022 Open in July, with plenty of LIV pros in the field. The player who beat him? LIV Golf’s newest signee, World No. 3 Cam Smith.

The Alfred Dunhill Links Championship begins September 29.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15493444 Fri, 16 Sep 2022 21:53:55 +0000 <![CDATA[WATCH: Rory McIlroy's full-swing flop shot is one of the most impressive you'll ever see]]> Rory McIlroy made one of the game's trickiest shots look easy as he took the lead at the Italian Open on Friday.

The post WATCH: Rory McIlroy’s full-swing flop shot is one of the most impressive you’ll ever see appeared first on Golf.

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https://golf.com/news/watch-rory-mcilroy-flop-shot-italian-open/ Rory McIlroy made one of the game's trickiest shots look easy as he took the lead at the Italian Open on Friday.

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Rory McIlroy made one of the game's trickiest shots look easy as he took the lead at the Italian Open on Friday.

The post WATCH: Rory McIlroy’s full-swing flop shot is one of the most impressive you’ll ever see appeared first on Golf.

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There are few cooler shots in golf than the full-swing flop. You know, the kind Phil Mickelson made famous. That short-game wizardry that entails a wide-open club face and acceleration through impact when your target is perhaps only a few feet away from you.

It’s a shot that’s easy to shank, easy to blade, easy to botch in myriad ways — especially for recreational players, who are often much better off using a bump-and-run.

Rare is the occasion when you’ll actually need a full-swing flop, but there’s no question that pulling it off immediately elevates you in the eyes of golf peers the world over.

rory mcilroy
Watch Rory McIlroy play next year’s Ryder Cup course … in person … for free(!?)
By: Sean Zak

Spectators at the Italian Open were treated to an impressive performance by Rory McIlroy on Friday, as he posted a second round of five-under 66 to take the tournament lead by one shot over Matt Fitzpatrick at the halfway point.

But the highlight of the day was McIlroy’s par save on the 183-yard par-3 4th hole.

McIlroy’s tee shot traveled 191 yards but ended up left of the green, leaving him nine yards to the pin.

Though he was pin-high, it was a tough look for an up-and-down, requiring several yards of carry over thick rough and fringe, followed by a slick green running away from him. Time to try a full-swing flop? Yes, indeed. And as you probably guessed, McIlroy executed it flawlessly.

As you can see in the video above, McIlroy’s divot traveled as far as the ball! He left himself less than six feet for the par save, and poured it in.

Though the shot looks downright heroic on camera, McIlroy was nonchalant about it after his round.

“Yeah, I short-sided myself a couple of times and was able to play some good shots and get myself out of it and holed the putts,” he said. “A few areas to try and tidy up but overall, a few good par saves which you always need.”

Here’s hoping for more of those kind of par saves in our own games.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15493339 Thu, 15 Sep 2022 17:49:21 +0000 <![CDATA[Will LIV players play in Ryder Cup? We won’t know for months]]> The debate on if LIV golfers will play in next year's Ryder Cup will not be decided for months. Here's why.

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https://golf.com/news/will-liv-players-play-ryder-cup-we-wont-know-for-months/ The debate on if LIV golfers will play in next year's Ryder Cup will not be decided for months. Here's why.

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The debate on if LIV golfers will play in next year's Ryder Cup will not be decided for months. Here's why.

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There may be a full on civil war taking place in the world of men’s golf right now, but if they can agree on one thing, it’s this: players on both sides seem to think it’ll resolve itself … soon enough. 

There are exactly 203 days until the 2023 Masters, 112 days until the first elevated event of the ’23 Tour season, 42 days until LIV’s first team event. Sometime in the next two months, we’ll know how the two tours’ schedules will officially intersect next season. 

“It’s up to the powers that be,” Rory McIlroy said Wednesday in Italy, ”to try to come to some sort of —not resolution, I don’t think that’s the right word — but a strategy going forward so that the game can drive at the highest level.”

A lot of players have said exactly this, or some derivative of it. They show some patience with the question being asked again, and dish out an answer that clings to a little bit of hope. It’s just no one can agree on when a resolution might actually take hold. When exactly will another decision be made? When will the Official World Golf Rankings decide if 54-hole LIV events can issue world ranking points? When will major championships change their qualification standards, if at all? 

Xander Schauffele at the Tour Championship.
To better understand LIV vs. PGA Tour, I talked to a top player in the fray
By: Dylan Dethier

“It’s a weird time in golf,” McIlroy also said. Weird perhaps because the next major decision might not come down to those typical golf “powers that be,” and could instead just come from a United Kingdom court. That we actually have some details on. 

The DP World Tour currently has to make room for LIV golfers who want to compete in their events and are qualified to do so, thanks to a court-ruled stay of sanctions. Events like last week’s BMW PGA Championship could become the new norm, during which more than a dozen LIV golfers played at Wentworth. Despite commissioner Keith Pelley’s best wishes, that will be the case for weeks and months to come. 

Sometime in February, the sanctions handed down by Pelley — suspensions and fines, akin to those by the PGA Tour, and for similar reasons — will begin to be decided as fair or unjust. Until then, as we first learned at the Scottish Open, LIV golfers were granted the precedent of a stay of those sanctions. 

Unfortunately for the likes of McIlroy, who is in Rome this week playing next year’s Ryder Cup course, and even more so for his captain Luke Donald, the questions will not cease. Each event is another event closer to next year’s Cup, and another event where the same answers have to be trotted out. 

McIlroy: “But yeah, I have said it once I’ve said it a hundred times, I don’t think any of those guys should be on The Ryder Cup Team.”

Donald, this week: We’re still a little bit in limbo. We don’t know what’s going to happen with the lawsuit so I’m trying to not really put too much energy.

Donald, on Aug. 1: There are legal appeals ongoing, and until such time the players are entitled to play

Shane Lowry last week: With all due respect to a lot of those guys over at LIV, I think they know themselves and that’s why they went to LIV. Their Ryder Cup days are probably over.

Shane Lowry on Monday: Like I said it last week at Wentworth. With all due respect to the guys over at LIV that are European. I think for most of ‘em, their Ryder Cup years are behind them.”

If you’re exhausted by this song-and-dance, it’s not going away. It’s only at that February court hearing, the details of which have not been well-publicized, that we will understand the future of LIV golfers and the DP World Tour. 

Scenario A: Similar to the PGA Tour, LIV golfers are suspended and/or banned, and will not be able to compete, therefore dropping opportunities for world golf ranking points and entrance into the majors. 

Scenario B: The court sympathizes with LIV golfers, calling LIV another just another organization in the free marketplace of professional golf. LIV golfers are therefore allowed to earn qualification points in the Ryder Cup standings and earn their way onto Donald’s roster. 

In a wild, dystopian golf future, could one of those automatic qualifiers be Henrik Stenson, the ex-captain who lost the captainship by joining LIV? Crazier things have happened. 

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15493106 Mon, 12 Sep 2022 20:34:11 +0000 <![CDATA[Watch Rory McIlroy play next year's Ryder Cup course … in person … for free(!?)]]> Rory McIlroy and a bunch of Ryder Cup players are competing in the Italian Open this wee. It costs you exactly ZERO dollars to attend.

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https://golf.com/news/watch-rory-mcilroy-play-golf-for-free/ Rory McIlroy and a bunch of Ryder Cup players are competing in the Italian Open this wee. It costs you exactly ZERO dollars to attend.

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Rory McIlroy and a bunch of Ryder Cup players are competing in the Italian Open this wee. It costs you exactly ZERO dollars to attend.

The post Watch Rory McIlroy play next year’s Ryder Cup course … in person … for free(!?) appeared first on Golf.

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This week, golf is all over the place. The PGA Tour is back on in Napa, the LPGA Tour is just north of that in Portland, LIV Golf is stopped just outside Chicago, and the DP World Tour is nine time zones away, near Rome. Only one of those events will gladly have you for free, and it just so happens to be the event with Rory McIlroy, Viktor Hovland, Matthew Fitzpatrick and Tyrrell Hatton. 

The Italian Open kicks off Thursday just outside of Rome, and the cost for general admission is precisely zero euros. Free-ninety-nine, as the kids like to say. Zero dollars, if you’re struggling with the exchange rate. Better yet, the course hosting the event is the same course you’ll surely see those four players competing on 12 months from now at the 2023 Ryder Cup. 

Marco Simone Golf & Country Club is the host site, and one that McIlroy and many other pros haven’t played yet. One year from now, we’ll all want to know what to expect from this track, so how McIlroy and his future Ryder Cup teammates play seems extremely relevant. Almost as relevant as the price it’ll cost you to do it.

Sergio garcia ryder cup
Could LIV golfers qualify for Team Europe in the Ryder Cup? We found out more today
By: Sean Zak

You can count on one hand the number of events you can watch McIlroy for free at, and you might be able to do it on one finger. It’s just extremely rare that sort access is given away for nothing in return. Italy may not be a country brimming with golf fans, but those who are will be getting the full treat this week. All they have to do is register online at this site. 

The Ryder Cup vibes are sure to start in full. McIlroy doesn’t play a ton of events in Europe these days, but needs to meet a minimum to retain his membership. This is one of those weeks where he’s doing his part to lift the DP World Tour and ensure he’s on the team in 2023. Is it plausible he’ll play alongside Fitz, Hatton or Hovland? We’ll go further to say it’s rather likely. Team Europe began dishing out qualifying points last week at Wentworth, and who just happens to be in the field this week? Thomas Bjorn, Edoardo Molinari and Luke Donald — the current crop of European captains tasked with figuring out who will be paired with whom, who makes sense in four-balls vs. foursomes, etc. 

Next year’s Ryder Cup tickets lottery was just opened as well, and tickets for it are never cheap. But for exactly zero dollars, you could go analyze what the important holes are out at Marco Simone. You could go watch McIlroy as he tries to overpower a short par-4. You might see defending Nicolai Højgaard auditioning for a spot on next fall’s team. Same goes for the long-bombing Spaniard Adri Arnaus. And for Scotland’s Bob MacIntyre. For the Italian crowd, Francesco Molinari will be on hand, as will rising star Guido Migliozzi. 

Does this read as an advertisement for the Italian Open? Good! It should. Any company giving away Rory McIlroy lessons for free should be commended. Take them up on it. And if those high-profile names don’t quite do it for you, might I suggest Eddie Pepperell, who would love to see you out there in support.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15493013 Sun, 11 Sep 2022 21:25:45 +0000 <![CDATA[‘The media have painted me as this black hat’: Patrick Reed opens up on lawsuit, LIV]]> Patrick Reed, across a pair of interviews, opens up on his Brandel Chamblee lawsuit, LIV Golf and Rory McIlroy’s BMW PGA comments.

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https://golf.com/news/media-black-hat-patrick-reed-lawsuit-liv/ Patrick Reed, across a pair of interviews, opens up on his Brandel Chamblee lawsuit, LIV Golf and Rory McIlroy’s BMW PGA comments.

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Patrick Reed, across a pair of interviews, opens up on his Brandel Chamblee lawsuit, LIV Golf and Rory McIlroy’s BMW PGA comments.

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Patrick Reed, in addressing his defamation lawsuit against Golf Channel and analyst Brandel Chamblee, says the narrative against him is “he’s a horrendous person, he’s a cheater, a liar and a thief” and that “you have to fight back, fight for yourself, and fight for what you believe in.”

In the exclusive interview with the Sunday Times, Reed also says comments made by Rory McIlroy over LIV Golf player participation this week in the BMW PGA Championship are “insulting.” And after his final round on Sunday at Wentworth Golf Club, Reed told reporters that should a LIV golfer ever win a non-LIV event, “there would be some kind of media s*** storm.”

shane lowry smiles
‘One for the good guys’: Shane Lowry wins the BMW PGA to cap a wild week at Wentworth
By: Zephyr Melton

The lawsuit comments were his first known on the subject, and we’ll begin there. Last month, Reed filed a defamation suit in the Southern District of Texas against Chamblee and Golf Channel, alleging they “have conspired as joint tortfeasors for and with the PGA Tour, its executives and its Commissioner Jay Monahan, to engage in a pattern and practice of defaming Mr. Reed.” The lawsuit uses quotes from Chamblee from his time on the air for Golf Channel and Sky Sports as well as on podcasts to allege damages in excess of $750 million. 

In the interview with the Sunday Times — which you can read in full here — Reed said he needed to defend himself. 

“Everyone who knows the true me knows it’s not this narrative that the PGA Tour and the Golf Channel have built,” Reed told the Sunday Times. “It feels like the media have painted me as this black hat, and they’ve just allowed that to keep on driving their clicks as well as the amount of income they can bring in from attacking me. They run with everything they can find or try to spin it in a negative way. It’s hard to even talk about it because of how fictitious it is. The malice and deceit to say something like that about somebody is just ridiculous.”

Continuing his thoughts on the lawsuit, Reed admitted to the Sunday Times that he’s brought on some of the attention himself, noting comments he made on Jordan Spieth and Jim Furyk at the 2018 Ryder Cup, but he also said he’s never cheated. Notably, Reed was penalized for brushing away sand from behind his ball in a waste area during the 2019 Hero World Championship, though he has maintained that he did not mean to skirt the rules. 

Lee Westwood
Lee Westwood talks fan reception, LIV player court case — and ‘fantasy world’
By: Nick Piastowski

“I have never ever intentionally tried to break any rule of golf to gain an advantage on anyone,” Reed told the Sunday Times. “I take too much pride in the hard work I do each and every day to try and gain an advantage in such a petty and deceitful way.”

On the subject of LIV Golf player participation at the BMW PGA, McIlroy had said after his victory at the PGA Tour’s Tour Championship that it would be “hard to stomach” seeing LIV golfers at Wentworth, then reiterated that thought in his pre-tournament press conference. 

Reed, meanwhile, had played on the DP World Tour and the PGA Tour before joining the threat to both leagues, LIV Golf, and he and 17 other LIV golfers played the BMW PGA on the DP World Tour this week, ahead of a trial that should determine whether he and other LIV players can play more DP World Tour events in the future.

“I feel like [Rory] making those types of comments is insulting,” Reed told the Sunday Times. “Let’s be honest, I’ve [played the DP World Tour] more consistently than some of the Europeans on the PGA Tour, so for them to take shots at other guys, especially Billy [Horschel] and Rory taking shots at the LIV guys saying they shouldn’t be here — I’ve done more for this Tour than Billy has and I’ve played almost as much as Rory has for the past five years.

“I was able to talk to a bunch of DP World Tour players [on Tuesday] and not a single one of them had any issue with me being here because of the support I’ve shown this tour throughout my career, throughout Covid and at smaller events as well as big events.”

Ian Poulter, Billy Horschel
Ian Poulter, Billy Horschel confronted each other. Poulter shares his side.
By: Nick Piastowski

After Reed’s final round at the BMW PGA, where he shot a nine-under 63 to finish tied for fifth, he said again players were supportive throughout the week. Also during the press conference exchange, a reporter later asked: “Is it going to get to a point where people are too entrenched in their positions to change?” 

His answer also spoke to a comment he made in late June during his introductory LIV press conference, where he said the LIV schedule would allow him more family time. 

“I don’t know. To be honest with you, I have no idea,” Reed began. “Really at the end of the day, I feel like everyone has to come to terms with their decision. How I look at it especially a part of this tour, especially me being American and being, hey, guys, I’ve played on two tours my whole life, my whole career. I’ve played on the PGA Tour and European Tour at the same time. I don’t see any difference me playing on PGA Tour and here and playing on LIV and here at all.  

“If anything, with playing on LIV and them only having 14 events, that means I’ll be over here more. That means I play six or seven events. Guys are like, oh, you joined LIV to play a lesser schedule. Well, I’m a guy that’s played 31 to 34 events a year. So if I played 14 and say I play six here, that’s 20, so that’s 11 to 14 events left. That’s 11 to 14 extra weeks I can spend time with my family and that’s huge. 

“But at the end of the day, as a player, I hope they do the right thing and allow us to play, but at the end of the day, that’s not our decision.”

Rory McIlroy watches an approach at the BMW PGA Championship on Thursday.
Rory McIlroy jabs LIV Golf players (twice) at testy BMW PGA event
By: Josh Berhow

A reporter then asked: “How do you think the golfing world will react if a LIV player did win one of these?” 

At the BMW PGA, four LIV golfers finished in the top 20 — Reed tied for fifth, Talor Gooch was fourth, Lee Westwood tied for 13th, and Sam Horsfield and Abraham Ancer tied for 18th. 

“I don’t know,” Reed began. “At the end of the day, the guys that are on LIV are really, really good golfers. I’m sure there would be some kind of media s*** storm is the easiest way to put it, but that being said, it would be no difference if it was last year and guys were playing the PGA Tour, would it?

“I mean, at the end of the day, really, if you took everything away, all the hoopla of everything, it would be just another top player coming over and winning a golf tournament, whether it’s PGA Tour, LIV, European Tour. There’s no big media just frenzy when a European comes over and wins on the PGA Tour, and when Billy [Horschel] won here it felt like the same as if a normal player won from over here. I don’t think there should be anything different. It just shows that the guys are still ready to play and guys are hungry to win and really just hungry for competition.”

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15492991 Sat, 10 Sep 2022 23:32:42 +0000 <![CDATA[3 storylines heading into the BMW PGA Championship final round]]> The BMW PGA Championship will be only three rounds, but there's no shortage of storylines. Here's three we're watching in the final round.

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https://golf.com/news/bmw-pga-championship-three-storylines-watch-final-round/ The BMW PGA Championship will be only three rounds, but there's no shortage of storylines. Here's three we're watching in the final round.

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The BMW PGA Championship will be only three rounds, but there's no shortage of storylines. Here's three we're watching in the final round.

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After an eventful week featuring the continued bickering between the PGA Tour-DP World Tour and LIV Golf, and the death of a monarch, it’s a Scandinavian duo who find them themselves atop the leaderboard heading into the final round of the shortened BMW PGA Championship.

Denmark’s Soren Kjeldsen and Norway’s Viktor Hovland are tied at 12-under after Saturday’s second round of the DP World Tour’s flagship event and lead by one over three golfers, including Rory McIlroy.

The event was shortened to 54 holes after play was suspended Thursday and canceled Friday following the death of Queen Elizabeth II.

Here are three storylines we’re watching heading into the third and final round:

Scandinavian success

Hovland opened the tournament with a 64 Thursday, before play was suspended, and was tied for the lead when the second round began Saturday morning. A 68 has him tied with Kjeldsen, whose scores were flipped with Hovland, opening with 68 and then climbing up the leaderboard with a 64 Saturday.

His 8-under round was the second-best of the day, only bettered by Min Woo Lee’s 62, and he even bogeyed the first. He quickly made up ground, picking up four strokes in four holes, on four through seven, and then making five birdies on the inward nine.

“I made a few more putts today,” Kjeldsen said. “I putted decent on Thursday, but I putted well today, so there was the four shots.”

He nearly made one more putt, after leaving himself 10 feet for eagle at Wentworth’s par-5 finishing hole. But his putt just stayed high.

“It’s a game like that, isn’t it?” Kjeldsen asked. “If you only focus on the ones you miss, you’re going to have a pretty miserable time so it’s better to spend time thinking about the ones you make. I certainly try to do that.”

Hovland, meanwhile went 32 holes, this week before making his first bogey, which came on the 15th hole Saturday.

How did he rebound? Birdies at 16 and 18 to finish off his day and stay tied with Kjeldsen.

The world No. 9 credited his consistent play to his iron play, as he’s also ranked ninth this week in greens in regulation.

“My irons have been really good this week,” he said. “I think I’ve only missed a handful of greens in total for the two rounds, and that obviously alleviates a lot of pressure.”

While neither player is British, Kjeldsen has spent a lot of time over his life in the UK.

With no play taking place Friday and the tournament only being played over 54 holes following the Queen’s death, the Dane spoke to the uniqueness of the past two days.

“It was very special,” he said. “Obviously being a foreigner, but having lived here, it’s quite overwhelm to go actually feel what the queen has meant to the British people, so I was sort of taken back by that. She was obviously incredibly loved and did a great job. It was a special moment.”

LIV golfers lurking

Before the suspension of play Thursday, headlines this week were dominated by the drama that has come with the meeting of LIV Golfers and other pros. Several have held their own.

On the leaderboard, LIV golfers Talor Gooch and Adrian Otaegui find themselves firmly in the hunt, just two back of the leaders at 10-under-par.

Joining Gooch and Otaegui in contention is Justin Harding, two shots further back, at 8-under.

McIlroy one back

The PGA Tour’s biggest proponent, meanwhile, is just a shot back, at 11-under. McIlroy tied his lowest round at Wentworth on Saturday with a bogey-free 65 to vault into a share of third.

Should he come back to claim one of the DP World Tour’s biggest titles, he could set himself up to be just the second player to win both the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup and the DP World Tour’s Race to Dubai. Henrik Stenson pulled off the feat in 2013. McIlroy is on top of the Race to Dubai standings this season, but Viktor Hovland could overtake him with a win.

McIlroy has found himself at the forefront of the LIV vs. PGA Tour debate, and has been one of the most outspoken critic of the Saudi-backed league. He said winning at Wentworth would help make his season even more special then it already has been.

“We lose a lot more than we win, so every win is big,” McIlroy said. “But with everything that’s going on around our game, everything that’s happened in this country over the last couple days, it would certainly be up there as one of most memorable.  But it would be hard to put in context where it would sit alongside the other achievements that I’ve had.”

He also took the chance to point out the irony in circumstances of the shortened event. LIV Golf, you see, plays 54 holes.

“I’m excited about tomorrow,” McIlroy said. “I haven’t played one of these events, so it’s going to be interesting to see how it feels.

“54 holes?” a reporter asked what he was referring too.

“Yeah, exactly,” McIlroy responded.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15492995 Sat, 10 Sep 2022 22:45:29 +0000 <![CDATA[Rory McIlroy hooked his ball into the trees. Then the fun really began.]]> Rory McIlroy hooked his ball into the trees. Then the fun really began during the second round of the BMW PGA Championship.

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https://golf.com/news/rory-mcilroy-hooked-ball-trees-fun-began/ Rory McIlroy hooked his ball into the trees. Then the fun really began during the second round of the BMW PGA Championship.

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Rory McIlroy hooked his ball into the trees. Then the fun really began during the second round of the BMW PGA Championship.

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Tony Johnstone, the longtime player and venerable broadcaster, has seen his fair share of good breaks over the years. And he summed up rather well the feelings that typically arise after one pops up.  

Who doesn’t love a bit of luck?

“Isn’t that one of the great things about our game?” Johnstone said on Golf Channel. “Every guy knows how wonderful it is to have a break like that. When somebody else gets it, you never decry it; you’re happy for them.”

So it was on Saturday, among three of the bigger names in the game, at one of the more historic courses, during one of the more important events. Rory McIlroy hooked his ball left and into the trees on the par-5 17th at Wentworth Golf Club during the BMW PGA Championship second round. And the fun really began. 

We’ll start with McIlroy. The man who won the PGA Tour’s Tour Championship in his last start and may have helped save the Tour a few days before that is also human. He’ll miss left, and that he did with his tee ball on 17. He leaned to the right, his right ear eventually becoming almost parallel to the tee box.     

“Needs a break, he needs some luck,” Johnstone said on the broadcast. 

The setup above gives away that he got some, but maybe not how. For five seconds, the ball was lost. Then it was found. It dropped onto the fairway. 

The crowd in Surrey, England, murmured, then cheered. 

“That must have pin-balled its way around up there for a while,” analyst Allison Whittaker said.  

Back on the tee, McIlroy knew what he was gifted and reacted in kind. Playing partners Matt Fitzpatrick and Billy Horschel did. This is what Johnstone was referring to. For five minutes, this all looked more like a weekend buddies group.

McIlroy lowered his head onto the right shoulder of Fitzpatrick. Both players laughed hard. 

Rory McIlroy
Rory McIlroy’s full-swing shot went 1 foot. He was as shocked as you.
By: Nick Piastowski

McIlroy covered his face. Fitzpatrick laughed harder. 

As Horschel hit, McIlroy looked to someone in the background, mimicked a hook swing and laughed some more.  

“No matter how good you are, you still need a little luck,” Johnstone said on the broadcast. “That’s the break of the week.”

The threesome walked down the fairway, and Horschel got in his word. He put his right arm around McIlroy’s shoulder, said something quick, and he, McIlroy and Fitzpatrick all had one last laugh. 

What was so funny??

“He said, ‘Who did you pay to throw the ball out there? Where’s your wallet?’” McIlroy told reporters afterward. 

“I said, “It’s too heavy. I put it in the locker.” 

McIlroy with the quick wit. He had another, and we’ll get to that in a sec.

Rory McIlroy watches an approach at the BMW PGA Championship on Thursday.
Rory McIlroy jabs LIV Golf players (twice) at testy BMW PGA event
By: Josh Berhow

From 271 out on the par-5, McIlroy hit a low, hooking stinger around some trees on the dogleg left, he chipped on and two-putted for a birdie four. Who knows what would have happened had he have had to hit a second off the tee, but as it stands heading into Sunday’s final round, after tacking on a birdie on 18, he’s a shot behind leaders Soren Kjeldsen and Viktor Hovland.  

Overcome it, and the accomplishment is great. For one, play was postponed late Thursday and all of Friday after the death of Queen Elizabeth II, and the mood on Saturday was reflective. And two weeks ago, McIlroy won the Tour Championship, and back-to-back victories — at the PGA Tour’s biggest-money event and at the DP World Tour’s showcase tournament — is notable. But you know there’s more by now. This week, 18 LIV Golf players are playing the BMW PGA, and without rehashing every comment, we’ll say things are a little tense between that group from the upstart series, and the DP World Tour and PGA Tour golfers in the tournament.

So the value of a win is not lost on McIlroy, who has also turned himself into an established brand spokesman.  

“It would be — every win is big,” he said. “I’ve won 10 percent of the golf tournaments that I’ve entered as a professional and that’s as good a record as anyone, right.  We lose a lot more than we win, so every win is big.  

“But with everything that’s going on around our game, everything that’s happened in this country over the last couple days, it would certainly be up there as one of the most memorable.” 

Now for his other slight jab. 

Rory McIlroy at the 2022 Tour Championship.
Rory McIlroy’s wild 6 weeks ranged from heartbreak to heroism (and so much more)
By: Dylan Dethier

The postponements dropped the tournament from 72 holes to 54. That number, of course, is the amount of holes played on the LIV Golf series. And LIV is the Roman numeral for 54.

And all of that led to this exchange. 

“A word about your position in the tournament here because it’s a very, very healthy one, very solid finish?” 

“I’m excited about tomorrow,” McIlroy said. “I haven’t played one of these events, so it’s going to be interesting to see how it feels.”

54 holes?  

“Yeah, exactly,” he said.   

“Yeah, it’s going to be good. I’m right in the thick of things, only one behind. It’s going to be exciting. There’s so many guys up around the top of the leaderboard. So it will be a sprint to the finish, that’s for sure.”

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15492869 Fri, 09 Sep 2022 00:42:08 +0000 <![CDATA[Rory McIlroy’s full-swing shot went 1 foot. He was as shocked as you.]]> Rory McIlroy’s full-swing shot went 1 foot. He was as shocked as you during the first round of the BMW PGA Championship.

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https://golf.com/news/rory-mcilroys-shot-1-foot-shocked/ Rory McIlroy’s full-swing shot went 1 foot. He was as shocked as you during the first round of the BMW PGA Championship.

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Rory McIlroy’s full-swing shot went 1 foot. He was as shocked as you during the first round of the BMW PGA Championship.

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One announcer couldn’t tell if the ball even moved. 

“Didn’t move,” Nick Dougherty said. “Well, it moved, but it moved backwards.”

Another announcer noted the rarity. 

“Ooh, you don’t see that very often,” Ken Brown said. 

And the perpetrator? Rory McIlroy laughed. 

play suspended bmw pga championship
Play suspended at BMW PGA Championship after Queen Elizabeth II’s death
By: James Colgan

The last time we saw him, McIlroy was, in loose order, trying to save the PGA Tour, winning the Tour’s big-money event, the Tour Championship, and delivering subtle jabs to the Tour’s thorn. Hero stuff. But Thursday? Thursday, he was but one of us. 

At least for a shot. 

Two-under through seven holes during the BMW PGA Championship first round, McIlroy went right off the tee on 8 at Wentworth Golf Club, and the historic course started to play defense. McIlroy’s ball was in the cabbage. About 100 yards ahead of him was water, and a few yards past that was the pin. About 5 yards in front of him was a slight mound. Notably, he avoided all of the trouble. 

McIlroy swung violently. 

The ball knuckled up. 

The ball plopped back down. 

It went about a foot. 

The announcers were stunned. McIlroy, at first, looked down, then laughed. On his second go, he dropped his ball to 17 feet, then two-putted for a five, on his way to a four-under 68. 

But back to the one-footer. And you may be wondering what happened. 

A reporter phrased it delicately. 

“Talking about the highlight of your round, but I have to ask you about the second shot to 8, which has to be the shortest shot you’ve ever hit with a full swing. Tell us about it from your point of view.”

“I was very surprised,” McIlroy said. “I thought if I could get enough speed into it and get steep enough on it, I could at least get it over the water and somewhere around the green and maybe get up-and-down. [Caddie] Harry [Diamond] did say to me before, he said, are you not worried about this bank in front of you, and I said no, I can get over that. Managed to get away with a bogey and hit a really good shot. Had a good look at par.

“I haven’t played with rough — I played with rough this long recently but maybe not this juicy and this wet. It just shows the club so much when you go through impact.”

Rory McIlroy watches an approach at the BMW PGA Championship on Thursday.
Rory McIlroy jabs LIV Golf players (twice) at testy BMW PGA event
By: Josh Berhow

From there, he played bogey free, made three birdies, including one on 18, and was generally McIlroy again. Should play resume — the event was postponed Thursday after the death of Queen Elizabeth II — he’ll start just four back of the lead. 

Win again, after the victory at the Tour Championship, and that would be an accomplishment, one that a reporter also asked about. 

“Players say when they come off a big win, that it’s definitely to get back up again and the adrenaline really flowing. You seem to not suffer from that. What’s the secret to that?

“I think winning gives me motivation more than anything else,” McIlroy said. “You’ve proven that you can win and you can beat the best players in the world. If you can’t get energized by that, I don’t know what will energize you. I always have this sense of excitement after a win that I’m breaking through or got to where I want to be or I’m on the right path. 

“It’s good resetting goals, too. The PGA Tour season is over for me. Turn my attention to Europe. Try to win the Race to Dubai. So it’s all about — you have to enjoy your wins, too, but you have to keep resetting your goals to strive for other things.”

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