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Jon Rahm is Spain’s fourth Masters champion

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I started with “first Basque” and then moved to “fourth Iberian,” before finally settling on the flag that most associate with Jon Rahm, supremely accurate or not. Now that geo-political elements are out of the way, it’s time to talk about the winner of the 2023 Masters tournament. You remember him: the guy who began Thursday with a double-bogey six, the way all champions like to begin a tournament.

Thursday was a normal round of golf, beyond everyone’s expectations. Rahm overcame the aforementioned, four-putt first green immediately, with birdies at the second and third holes. It reminded long-time followers of the manner in which Tiger Woods redeemed a first-nine holes of 40 with a second-nine of 30 in 1997, on the way to his first title. Rahm continued to play marvelous golf to the final hole, adding five birdies, and an eagle at the eighth. His 65 was tied with two other golfers for the top spot on the board. Even with him was the fellow who would spend an extraordinary amount of time at his side for the weekend, Brooks Koepka.

Friday saw the arrival of the rains, and the extraordinary fortune gifted to the PM/AM wave  of golfers. Those who played early on day two, were able to complete the majority, if not all, of their round of golf. The AM/PM half of the field was extended to noon on Saturday, when the cut was established at three-over par. Koepka was one of the fortunate ones, and his second-round 67 brought him to twelve under par, and what appeared to be a massive lead. Masters winners will admit that if a halfway leader can add rounds of 70-70 to his total, he will earn a championship.

Rahm completed his second round on Saturday morning, and was able to overcome two bogies with five birdies. His 69 kept him within sight of Koepka, who was physically healthy for the first time in five years, and prepared to challenge for a fifth major title. Gone for the weekend were familiar names like Rory McIlroy, Justin Thomas, Bryson DeChambeau, and former champions Danny Willett, Sergio Garcia, and Mike Weir. Tiger Woods made the cut on the number, but the hills, rain, and cool temperatures proved to be too much for the five-time champion, and he withdrew during the third round.

Saturday will forever be remembered for the toppling of three trees adjacent to the 17th tee at Augusta National. By grace, no one was injured, but the competition was again postponed. Golfers near the top of the leader board would play 25 holes on Sunday, and their endurance and mental fortitude would be examined to the greatest degree. Play was in threesomes for a third consecutive round, to guarantee that the leaders would be able to begin play a bit after two pm.

JON RAHM: I thought it was good. It’s not easy. Cold and windy, wet. Not the easiest. Obviously I started really good making those putts on 7, 8, 9 and the par putt on 10, and after that just couldn’t quite get it going. I wasn’t making bad swings, just a couple of bad wind gusts at the wrong time and ended up seeing myself in tough positions. But feeling good, playing good, swinging well, so hopefully can keep it going.
… with the wind we’re going to have today, the main thing is staying committed to whatever shot you pick. Have a clear picture and commit to it. It’s always going to be better to maybe have the lower percentage shot but commit to it than the higher percentage not and not committed. Should be a fun afternoon.

Koepka and Rahm each signed for a one-over round of 73, ensuring that they would again be paired in the final twosome. Birdies were at a premium during the third 18, with only three scores below 70 turned in among the 53 golfers who completed play. Viktor Hovland, the third golfer to shoot 65 on Thursday, remained in the chase until the final round, when a first-nine score of 39 pushed him away from the leaders. As Sunday drew to a close, a familiar name shot up the board, at the age of 52.

Phil Mickelson thrilled the golf world in 2021, when he defeated Koepka down the stretch to claim a second PGA Championship at Kiawah Island. Two years later, the lefthander turned in a round for the ages and the ageless, as he close with 65 at the Masters. Mickelson posted three birdies against one bogey on the first nine, but the three-time Masters winner turned electric on the second nine. Five birdies coming home brought him a 31 and moved him to eight-under par on the week. When he finished, Rahm and Koepka had just entered Amen Corner, where dreams may delight or dash in one swing. Phil Mickelson had to like his chances, knowing Augusta’s history.

JON RAHM: I thought 8 was a key birdie. I didn’t expect that bogey on 9. That was a couple of good swings I didn’t expect.
I had to get through Amen Corner even par. That’s what I was looking at. Obviously Phil and Jordan were making birdies and finishing strong, and they were finishing their round as we were finishing 10. Making sure I didn’t put myself in a difficult spot on 10, 11, 12 was the key, and then 13 with that right-to-left wind is when I could turn a little bit and get in the attack, and that’s what I did.

The gap between the leaders had evaporated, as Koepka played his first nine holes in plus-three figures. Rahm turned to the second nine in minus one, and for all the world, it looked like a two-man competition until Mickelson entered the picture. Brooks Koepka played through Amen Corner in even par figures, posting par at eleven, bogey at twelve, birdie at the newly-elongated thirteenth hole. He would not make another par until the 18th hole, recalling precisely what makes him an exciting golfer to follow.

It was Rahm who gave notice that he had what a Masters champion possesses. His two-putt par from forty feet distant at twelve advanced him three in front of Koepka, and his birdie at thirteen kept him there. At fourteen, the hole known as Chinese Fir, Rahm won the tournament. His drive was played up the right side, into the first cut. With a tree limb forcing a low play, Rahm hit a punch-cut to the perfect point on the putting surface, The ball turned right and eased its way within four feet of the hole. As close as his approach was, Rahm’s putt for birdie tried to say out. It moved right to left with enthusiasm, but caught enough open air to allow gravity to complete its work. The birdie moved Rahm to 12-under par. Koepka’s second bogey in three holes dropped him to third place, at seven-under par.

Brooks Koepka would not go quietly into the evening, however. He notched birdies at 15 and 16, regaining two lost shots and moving to within three strokes of Rahm, with two holes to play. At the 17th tee, Koepka’s patented fade did not materialize, and he found himself amid trees. He not only failed pick up a needed birdie, but lost another stroke to par, dropping back to minus eight. Rahm would start the 18th hole with a four-shot advantage and, for a moment, it seemed that he would need each of the quadrilateral. His tee shot went hard left, but was thrown rightward by the trees, leaving him a long way home, with a clear path.

Rahm punched a long iron up the fairway, leaving a pitch to the green. With the touch of a surgeon, he lofted a wedge over sand, to within five feet of the hole. His putt for par fell four inches down, and the 2021 US Open champion was now halfway to a career grand slam. As the green jacket was draped over his shoulders by 2022 champion Scottie Scheffler, Rahm’s thoughts were not on the menu for the 2024 Champions’ Dinner. Instead, he summoned an event that transpired in 1983, forty years back, before Rahm was born. He recalled the triumph of the first Spanish Masters champion, Seve Ballesteros, and waved to the heavens, thanking his predecessor for guiding him home, to victory.

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Ronald Montesano writes for GolfWRX.com from western New York. He dabbles in coaching golf and teaching Spanish, in addition to scribbling columns on all aspects of golf, from apparel to architecture, from equipment to travel. Follow Ronald on Twitter at @buffalogolfer.

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Tour Rundown: Surprise USWO winner | Sepp surges

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I know it’s not the tour, and I know it’s a shell of its 1912 US Open self, but a 59 in a legitimate tournament is a thing. The Erie County (NY) Amateur was played at the course where I learned the game, and a collegiate named Ryan Edholm posted 59 on Sunday, to win by eight shots. I was glued to the feed, and jumped up when I saw them finalize the score.

To the tours! The USGA celebrated its Women’s Open championship at storied Pebble Beach Golf Links this week, and the USA was treated to prime-time golf viewing for a second consecutive, national championship. Neither the competitors nor the golf course disappointed, and it is a pleasure to provide an extended look at the tournament. The PGA Tour visited TPC Deere Run in Illinois, while the DP World Tour found a home in Denmark. Let’s have a look at how each event concluded, with this week’s Tour Rundown.

USGA/LPGA: Corpuz arrives from nowhere to claim United States Open title

If you hurry up and check Allisen Corpuz’s wiki page, you’ll see the one professional win on her record is the Hawaii Women’s State Open. Venerable an event as it is, it’s not an LPGA-calibre title, nor even a Symetra Tour win. Even more important, she won that event when she was all of 16 years of age, so she wasn’t even a pro! After schooling at Southern Cal and a stint on the 2021 USA Curtis Cup side, Corpuz turned pro, and earned two top-three finishes in her first two years on tour.

Forgive us for a moment if we talk about that other wain who won her first tour event in her first tour start. Yup, Rose Zhang was at Pebble Beach, but she only finished one-over par and only tied for 9th position. What did Corpuz do? She won the whole thing, lock, stock and barrel. Corpuz began the week 69-70 to not only make the cut, but earn herself a final-pair spot with Bailey Tardy on Saturday. While Tardy struggled to a 75, AC held it together and posted a fine 71. Her reward was a second-consecutive day in the final duo, this time with the on-fire Nasa Hataoka. Hataoka delivered a 66, the only score below 70 on the day. That’s one hot round.

Hataoka had been here before. She finished runner-up in two other major championships, and was eager to shelve the mantel of almost and replace it with certain. Sunday was not her day, however, and she struggled to five bogeys and a birdie, a 76, and a tie for fourth with the aforementioned Bailey Tardy. Tardy came back from her 75 with a 73, earning a top-five major placement.

Back to Corpuz. The lass from Honolulu made six birdies on the day. She began with stroke-savers on holes one and three, then made bogeys at four and nine, along with another birdie at seven. She turned in one-under 35, and began to put distance between herself and the field. Then came Charley Hull, and things began to change.

Hull found the same flint that Hataoka encountered on day three. The English pro made birdie at four of her first five holes, and turned in 32. Three birdies against one bogey on the inward half gave her a 66, the low round of the day. Her reward was a tie for second spot with another Sunday Queen, Jiyai Shin of Korea. Shin signed for 68 and reached the same, 6-under par total as Hull. No one, on this day, would track Allisen down.

Corpuz put the doubters to bed with three birdies over the first seven holes on the vaunted, back nine at Pebble Beach. A meaningless bogey at 17 meant that her margin of victory was reduced to three strokes. After safely walking the final fairway, Corpuz was an LPGA tour winner, a major champion and, in all likelihood, a member of Team USA in Spain’s 2023 Solheim Cup matches.

PGA Tour: Straka survives double bogey at last for second tour title

Josef Straka (no intel on how he earned the nickname “Sepp”) had golf social media ablaze this afternoon. He turned for home in 28 shots, and still had more in the tank. His front-nine eagle and five birdies were followed by four consecutive chirps from 11 to 14. Folks were talking 60, 59, 58. All that the boy from Austria had to do, was dock the boat. Well, he didn’t, finding water on 18 and a double bogey. He finished four days in Silvia at 21-under par, and didn’t think for a moment, that it would hold up.

Until it did. Neither Brendan Todd nor Alex Smalley could close with anything spicey, and Ludvig Aberg started too far back for his 63 to give him a shot. Todd and Smalley tied for second at 19-under par, with the precocious Aberg another stroke back, tied for 4th with Adam Schenk. It was Straka in the end, whose final-round 62 held up. Now, it’s off to Scotland for many, as preparations begin for the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool.

DP World Tour: Second Chance for Højgaard in home country

Rasmus Højgaard did nothing right down the stretch of the Made in HimmerLand stop on the DPWT. He finished well ahead of the leaders, and began to applaud his home-country fans for their presence. Then, Nacho Elvira and Richie Ramsey forgot how to finish the tournament, and just like that, Højgaard found himself in a playoff with Elvira for the title. We’ll get to the playoff (all six holes of it) in a moment. How did we get there?

Højgaard had himself a weekend, to the tune of 65-64. For a time, he thought that his 129 over the final two days would earn him a top-three finish, until tires started falling off. Elvira played his final six holes in plus-one, with three bogeys against two birdies. Robert MacIntyre stood three-under on the day, when his tee shot on 14 nearly went OOB. Six shots later, he posted a triple bogey on his card, added another bogey, and missed overtime by two shots. For Richie Ramsay, the knife cut the deepest. He had quietly worked his way to the top spot, only to see all his day’s efforts undone with a watery double at the 72nd hole. He finished solo third.

So it was left to the astonished Højgaard and the Spanish Elvira, to settle matters on the 18th hole … and the 18th hole … and the 18th hole again. Six times they returned to the final teeing ground, and five times, each man made par. On the sixth go-round, Elvira cracked and Rasmus claimed his fourth DPWT title. Three have come in playoffs — Luke Donald, you paying attention?

 

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Morning 9: Co-leaders at USWO | Blixt fires 62 | DQ at Pebble

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By Ben Alberstadt with Gianni Magliocco.

For comments: [email protected]

Good Friday morning, golf fans, as day two of the Women’s US Open and John Deere Classic get underway.

1. Joint leaders at Pebble

AP Report…”Pebble Beach was everything the best women golfers in the world imagined for the first U.S. Women’s Open with its raw beauty, marine layer and chill in the air.”

  • “For some of them, it was a sheer beast.”
  • Xiyu Janet Lin and Hyo Joo Kim could soak up the scenery, each of them with a 4-under 68 on Thursday to share the lead after one round of a historic week on one of the most famous golf courses in America.”
  • “We’re part of the history. It’s really cool,” Lin said. “I kind of told myself no matter what, this is going to be a memorable week.”
Full piece.

2. Why it means so much

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols…”The 78th U.S. Women’s Open is, first and foremost, a celebration. Historians might look back on this championship a century from now and consider it the most consequential in Women’s Open in history.”

  • “For starters, it’s being staged on a course many consider a national treasure. The greatest to ever play the game have won here – Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Tom Watson. Even Babe Didrikson Zaharias and Patty Berg won the Weathervane Transcontinental Women’s Open at Pebble Beach in 1950 and ’51, not long after the LPGA was formed. They’d be shocked to learn it took this long to get invited back.”
  • “Players in this week’s field likely never dreamed of playing a U.S. Women’s Open at Pebble when they were McKayla’s age because it had never been done before.”
  • “In fact, most of the top players in the women’s game had never played Pebble, even in a casual setting, prior to their preparations for this week. Lydia Ko came earlier this spring with her husband for their first peek. Nelly Korda saw every hole for the first time Monday. Michelle Wie West played nine holes for the first time at media day in May and the rest last week.”
Full piece.

3. Blixt fires 62

AP Report…”Jonas Blixt got hot on the back nine at TPC Deere Run on Thursday, playing his last six holes in 6 under for a 9-under 62 and a 2-shot lead over Grayson Murray in the first round of the John Deere Classic.”

  • “Murray was 8 under through 13 holes but stalled from there. He bogeyed his final hole and shot 64. Cameron Young, the highest-ranked player in the field at No. 19, also closed with a bogey and was part of a big group 3 shots back.”
Full piece.

4. USWO pay bump

Kent Paisley for Golf Digest…”The USGA announced Wednesday that the 2023 U.S. Women’s Open purse is going up to $11 million, a $1 million raise from 2022. It’s now double the size of the purse of the 2021 championship and the largest prize money payout in women’s golf.”

  • “Talking about 12 hours of network TV and playing for $11 million, some things are better than what you dream of,” said USGA CEO Mike Whan. “When you go back 10 or 15 years ago, those are pretty big moments, and I hope that all of us aren’t both so callused and in a hurry and iPhone-driven that we’ve missed that kind of breakthrough moment.”
  • “This week’s winner at Pebble Beach will earn $2 million, up from the $1.8 million prize money payout Minjee Lee claimed a year ago at Pine Needles.”
Full piece.

5. Coming to an airport near you…

Golf Digest’s Joel Beall…”LIV Golf has found a home for its Friday broadcast coverage. Although fans can’t be at their home to see it.”

  • “LIV announced Thursday morning that it reached an agreement with ReachTV, a streaming service that caters to airports. LIV Golf’s Friday coverage had previously only been available through the CW’s streaming app. According to a press release, the agreement begins this week with LIV Golf’s London event.”
  • “This partnership with ReachTV provides additional opportunities for fans on the move to follow LIV Golf’s supercharged action, including live coverage of Friday competition in bars and restaurants throughout North America,” said Will Staeger, LIV Golf’s chief media officer. “Our league is continually looking for innovative ways to connect the sport that we love with new audiences, and this partnership will give travelers more chances to catch many of golf’s biggest stars in action.”
Full piece.

6. Caitlin Clark tees off in John Deere pro-am

Dargen Southard of the Des Moines Register…”If the last year has hammered home anything regarding Caitlin Clark’s current celebrity status, it’s that crowds will show wherever No. 22 goes. Hoops doesn’t even have to be on the agenda.”

  • “Non-basketball appearances, inside the ballpark, on the golf course — doesn’t matter. Clark fans will flock from every corner to catch a glimpse of the Hawkeyes’ homegrown superstar doing anything ordinary or extraordinary. That proved true once again Wednesday at the John Deere Classic Pro-Am at TPC Deere Run.”
  • “With a robust gallery resembling what the leader’s group produces on championship Sunday at this well-respected PGA Tour event, Clark weaved her way through 18 holes while linking up with Iowa’s favorite golfing son, Zach Johnson, on the back nine. Throngs of black and gold lined the ropes at every hole just as they do outside the Carver-Hawkeye Arena tunnel. Many of the fans were young girls in Clark apparel yearning for even a brief moment with arguably America’s most popular female athlete. Autographs and photos were abundant.”
Full Piece.

7. Bubba thinks Gooch should get RC pick

Paul Higham for Golf Monthly…”Talor Gooch’s prolific winning form in the LIV Golf League should be enough to “definitely” make the USA Ryder Cup team, according to Bubba Watson.”

  • “Two-time Masters champion Watson is Gooch’s team captain with the Range Goats in LIV Golf, and he believes his fellow American is playing well enough to get one of Zach Johnson’s six picks for Rome.”
  • “Gooch is the only three-time LIV Golf tournament winner after claiming the trophy at Valderrama last week, and is again among the favourites for this week’s event at Centurion.”
Full Piece.

8. DQ at Pebble Beach

Brentley Romine for Golf Channel…”Natthakritta Vongtaveelap’s first U.S. Women’s Open is over after just five holes.”

  • “The 20-year-old Thai was disqualified after her caddie was found to have used a distance-measuring device “at least a couple times,” according to USGA rules official Kathryn Belanger. While the penalty for using a rangefinder once is two shots, multiple infractions result in disqualification.”
  • “Vongtaveelap was even par through five holes.”
  • “Rangefinders have been allowed at most LPGA events since mid-2021, but they remain prohibited at the U.S. Women’s Open.”
Full Piece.

9. John Deere Classic photos

  • Check out all of our photos from this week’s event!
Full Piece.
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Morning 9: Wie West’s last hurrah | Garcia fails to qualify for Open | Block clarifies Rory comments

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By Ben Alberstadt with Gianni Magliocco.

For comments: [email protected]

Good Thursday morning, golf fans, as day one of the John Deere Classic gets underway.

1. Wie West officially retiring at  Pebble

Golf Channel’s Mercer Baggs…”This is it. The last one, according to the 33-year-old. “I’m going to put my clubs in the darkest corner of my garage,” she said.”

  • “She’s been eyeing this event for some time now. Pine Needles, site of last year’s championship, would have been the perfect place to go out, so near to Pinehurst where she won her lone major.”
  • “But a Pebble Beach Open is the ultimate. And, for Wie West, this will be her ultimate event…”
  • “I really, really wanted to play longer. I really wanted to – especially after having Makenna and her being a girl, I really wanted to play longer,” Wie West said. “In an ideal world I wish I was still out on Tour and playing.
  • “Unfortunately, it’s just I had to make a hard decision with my body. It is hard. It is hard to be a mom out here. You have to make a lot of sacrifices. I just had to make a hard, medical body decision and also a personal decision.”
Full piece.

2. Sergio misses out on Open qualifying

An ESPN report…”Sergio Garcia’s quest to play in his 25th straight Open Championship ended Tuesday when he failed to qualify for the season’s fourth major.”

  • “Playing in a qualifier at West Lancashire Golf Club, Garcia shot a 5-under 67 in the morning round of the 36-hole competition. But after taking the lead at 8 under following three birdies in the first six holes of the second round, Garcia couldn’t keep up the pace.”
  • “Garcia, 43, hit his drive into the rough on the par-4 seventh hole and he wound up with a bogey on his way to a 71 and a cumulative 6-under par.”
  • “He finished tied for sixth after 36 holes, with only the top five finishers qualifying for The Open, which begins July 20 at Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Merseyside, England.”
Full piece.

3. Cam Smith likes lighter schedule, says “team golf is here to say”

Cameron Jourdan for Golfweek…”Last year, LIV had eight events and moved to 14 this year. In addition to the reported signing-bonus money and boosted purses, a lighter schedule is why numerous pros said they left the Tour for LIV.”

  • “Smith agrees. He’s a fan of a lighter schedule.”
  • “Exactly like it is this year would be perfect for me, 14 and four majors, I’d take that for the rest of my career,” Smith said.
  • “Then Smith was asked about comments Nick Faldo made last week about whether LIV would survive in the future and remain part of the golf ecosystem. Safe to say he’s confident in the future of the league.”
  • “I really can’t see LIV Golf going away. I think team golf is here to stay, and if you asked every one of us out here, all the 48 guys, I think everyone has such a good time and everyone enjoys what they’re doing out here, they love the competition. That team element really brings three or four guys really close that perhaps weren’t before.
Full piece.

4. Block on McIlroy comments

Ben Fleming for Golf Monthly…”However, speaking exclusively to Golf Monthly at Dundonald Links this week ahead of Open Final Qualifying, Block was keen to clarify what he actually meant.”

  • “It was totally misconstrued, misconceived, the whole thing. I really feel like if you’re a real golfer, you kind of understood what I had meant,” he said.
  • “That was an incomprehensible thing where yeah, if I gained 60 yards, if I had a gap wedge into every green rather than a four iron into every green, would I be better? I’d be a whole hell of a lot better.
  • “Would I be better than Roy McIlroy? Absolutely not. Rory is an absolute stud and at no point, in any shape or form, was I ever trying to say anything about Rory or the tour professionals.
  • “I was just one hundred per cent saying, if I had an extra 60 yards off of every tee, every day of my life, would I be on tour? Probably. Guaranteed? Absolutely not.
  • “I know I can’t say I don’t care what people say or think – of course I do – but, at the same time, I understand what I meant, and I know for a fact, I didn’t mean to hurt anybody or say anything that would.
  • “It was taken completely out of context but is also my fault, I guess. I said it the wrong way. I did a couple of thousand interviews [after the tournament] but I guess I did say one thing wrong but it’s okay.”
Full piece.

5. Butch: Rickie’s win means the most

Our Matt Vincenzi…”Legendary swing coach Butch Harmon has coached Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson during the peaks of their careers, but none of their wins have meant more to him than Rickie Fowler’s win at the Rocket Mortgage Classic last week.”

  • “While appearing on PGA Tour Radio’s “Gravy and the Sleeze,” hosted by Colt Knost and Drew Stoltz, on Monday, Harmon reflected on the moment.”
  • “It was spectacular. I think my anxiety was probably the same level as his was when he was playing, just because I wanted it for him so bad,” Harmon said. “To come from 185th in the world all the way to 23rd in eight months is an incredible journey that he’s taken.”
  • “And guys I’ll be honest with ya,” Harmon continued. “I think this one meant more to me personally than a lot of the majors that I’ve won with different guys, just ’cause I know how far down Rickie was, and to watch him come back, it was a joy to watch.”
Full piece.

6. Migliaccio reporter-player at USWO

Golf Channel’s Mercer Baggs…”Migliaccio is not only competing this week, she’s working as an on-course reporter.”

  • “Tuesday, Lexi Thompson was part of her practice foursome. Thursday, she’ll be part of Migliaccio’s featured group coverage on Peacock.”
  • “Migliaccio will be on the course for Thompson, Nelly Korda and Jin Young Ko for their 8:50 a.m. PT start on the 10th hole.”
  • “She won’t be able to wrap up the group, however, as she tees off alongside Alice Hewson and Kana Mikashima at 1:18 p.m. off the first.”
  • “They’ll let me leave when I feel comfortable doing so and I’ll have a cart, so hopefully won’t have to walk too much. But it should be great,” she said. “I’m really excited to get to see, you know, three of the best players in the world play golf and just seeing how it’s playing for them, then getting to go out in the afternoon and getting to try to replicate that.”
Full Piece.

7. Tim Tucker back on Bryson’s bag for the week

Cameron Jourdan for Golfweek…”Two years ago this week, Tim Tucker quit working for his boss, Bryson DeChambeau, the night before the 2021 Rocket Mortgage Classic, a tournament where DeChambeau was the defending champion.”

  • However, the tandem is back together this week.
  • Tucker is back on the bag for DeChambeau at this week’s LIV Golf event in London at Centurion Club, DeChambeau’s agent, Brett Falkoff, confirmed to Golfweek. Tucker caddied for DeChambeau in all eight of his PGA Tour victories and was on the bag for Kurt Kitayama’s first Tour win this spring at the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational.
  • DeChambeau’s caddie, Greg Bodine, is attending to a personal matter this week, which is why Tucker and DeChambeau are back together. No Laying Up first reported the pair joining up in London.
Full Piece.

8. Zach hints at Ryder Cup inclusion for LIV pros

John Turnbull for Bunkered…”US Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson has hinted that he will select LIV golfers for his team this September.”

  • “Before the PGA Championship, the 47-year-old admitted that the prospect of those players featuring in Rome was “not even a discussion item.””
  • “But Johnson has now acknowledged that LIV golfers are eligible to make his team of 12 for the biennial battle with Europe.”
  • “He said: “These guys that left the PGA TOUR that had status and left to play on that other tour, the LIV Tour, they’re still members of the PGA of America, so they are still able to garner points.”
  • “They’re able to play in the PGA Championship as a result, because that’s what the PGA of America runs.”
  • “(They) obviously, technically, can still be a part of Team USA.”
Full Piece.

9. John Deere Classic photos

  • Check out all of our photos from this week’s event!
Full Piece.
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