Colorado golf news and information | The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com Colorado breaking news, sports, business, weather, entertainment. Mon, 14 Apr 2025 00:22:50 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8 https://www.denverpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/cropped-DP_bug_denverpost.jpg?w=32 Colorado golf news and information | The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com 32 32 111738712 Rory McIlroy wins Masters playoff to complete the career Grand Slam https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/13/rory-mcilroy-wins-masters-tournament-career-grand-slam/ Mon, 14 Apr 2025 00:17:27 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7058538&preview=true&preview_id=7058538 AUGUSTA, Ga. — Rory McIlroy turned another major collapse into his grandest moment of all, hitting a wedge into 3 feet for birdie in a sudden-death playoff Sunday to finally win the Masters and take his place in golf history as the sixth player to claim the career Grand Slam.

What should have been a coronation for McIlroy along the back nine at Augusta National turned into a heart-racing, lead-changing jaw-dropping finish at golf’s greatest theater that ended with McIlroy on his knees sobbing with joy and disbelief.

“I started to wonder if it would ever be my time,” McIlroy said in Butler Cabin before Scottie Scheffler helped him into the green jacket.

It ended with more heartache for Justin Rose, who lost to Sergio Garcia in a playoff in 2017 and forced this one with a clutch 20-foot birdie on the 18th hole for a 6-under 66. He wound up joining Ben Hogan as the only players to lose twice in playoffs at Augusta National.

McIlroy lost a two-shot lead in two holes at the start. He lost a four-shot lead on the back nine in a matter of three holes with shocking misses, one of them a wedge into the tributary of Rae’s Creek on the par-5 13th.

And right when it looked as though he would blow another major, McIlroy delivered two majestic shots when nothing less would do, two birdies that sent him to the 18th hole with a one-shot lead. That still wasn’t enough. He missed a 5-foot par putt for a 1-over 73 and the first Masters playoff in eight years.

McIlroy’s wedge bounced onto the slope of the top shelf with enough spin to trickle down to 3 feet. And when Rose missed from 15 feet, McIlroy finally sealed it.

McIlroy went 11 long years without a major, knowing the Masters green jacket was all that kept him from joining Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Ben Hogan and Gene Sarazen as the only winners of golf’s four professional majors.

He raised both arms and let the putter fall behind him, and before long he was on his knees, then his forehead on the 18th green as his chest heaved with emotion.

So ended one of the wildest Sundays at a major that is known for them. U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau, who beat McIlroy at Pinehurst No. 2 last June, had the lead after two holes when McIlroy opened with a double bogey.

He crashed out with a pair of three-putts and two shots into the water on the back nine, closing with a 75.

Ludvig Aberg, a runner-up in his Masters debut a year ago, suddenly had a share of the lead when McIlroy fell apart on the middle of the back nine. He missed a birdie putt from the fringe to take the lead, then finished bogey-triple bogey.

Rose had every reason to believe he threw away his chances on Saturday with a 75 that put him seven shots behind, and then two bogeys on the front nine. Even as he steadied himself, he was four shots back and running out of time. He did his part in a 10-birdie round and that dynamic birdie putt to cap it off.

McIlroy helped in a big way.

Nothing was more shocking than the 13th. McIlroy played it safe, leaving himself a big target and a lob wedge. He missed his mark by some 20 yards, the ball disappearing into the tributary of Rae’s Creek and leading to double bogey.

Then came a tee shot into the pine straw that led to another bogey, and the lead was gone again. But he was resilient as ever — he’s been like that his entire career. Seemingly in trouble left of the 15th fairway, McIlroy hit 7-iron around the trees and onto the green to 6 feet.

He missed the eagle putt — the birdie still helped him regain a share of the lead. Two holes later, facing a semi-blind shot, he drilled 8-iron and chased after it, urging it to “Go! Go! Go! Go!” And it did, barely clearing the bunker and rolling out to 2 feet for birdie and a one-shot lead.

Turns out that wasn’t enough either. He hit into a bunker from the fairway. He missed the 5-foot putt for the win. There was more work to do. But the 35-year-old from Northern Ireland never wavered in what he came to Augusta National to do.

He leaves with a green jacket.

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7058538 2025-04-13T18:17:27+00:00 2025-04-13T18:22:50+00:00
Olympic golf to get a mixed-team event for the 2028 Los Angeles Games https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/09/olympic-golf-to-get-a-mixed-team-event-for-the-2028-los-angeles-games/ Wed, 09 Apr 2025 19:17:21 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7046889&preview=true&preview_id=7046889 AUGUSTA, Ga. — Mixed teams are coming to golf at the Los Angeles Olympics.

The International Olympic Committee made it official Wednesday when it released the official program for the 2028 Games, in which female athletes are expected to have a slight majority for the first time.

Golf only returned to the Olympic program at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games after a 112-year absence, and it has awarded medals to only one competition — 72 holes of stroke play — for men and for women.

The International Golf Federation had been lobbying for a mixed-team competition for the last several years without taking away too much time from golfers’ schedules on various tours.

Still to be determined are how many teams will compete and the qualification process.

“The International Golf Federation is thrilled with the IOC Executive Board’s decision to approve the addition of a mixed-team event to the Olympic Golf program,” the IGF said in a statement. It said more details would be released next week.

The IOC had an online board meeting Wednesday that was co-chaired in Lausanne, Switzerland, for the first time by Kirsty Coventry since she was elected IOC president last month. She takes over in June for Thomas Bach and will be the first female IOC president in its 131-year history.

The men’s competition would start on Wednesday — one day earlier than before — and end on Saturday. The mixed teams would be held on Sunday and Monday, with foursomes (alternate shot) used for one round and fourballs (better ball) the other.

Tuesday would be a practice day for the women, and their competition would start Wednesday through Saturday, one day before the Summer Games come to a close.

The golf competition is scheduled for Riviera Country Club, a revered PGA Tour stop that has hosted major championships. Riviera is to host the U.S. Women’s Open for the first time in 2026, and the U.S. Open returns in 2031.

A mixed team event would require only two more days for the players who qualify for the Olympics. It’s unlikely any of the top players would be competing the following week at a regular PGA Tour or LPGA Tour event.

Scottie Scheffler won the men’s gold medal at the 2024 Paris Games by closing with a 62 at Le Golf National. Lydia Ko won the women’s gold in Paris — she won the silver in Rio and the bronze in Tokyo in 2021 — which also gave her points required for the LPGA Hall of Fame.

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7046889 2025-04-09T13:17:21+00:00 2025-04-09T14:18:29+00:00
Inspirato ending sponsorship of Colorado Open tournament https://www.denverpost.com/2025/04/09/inspirato-ending-colorado-open-sponsorship/ Wed, 09 Apr 2025 12:00:17 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=7043315 Inspirato is getting a WD for the Colorado Open.

The Denver-based luxury travel club will pull out of its title sponsorship of the tournament after this year’s event, according to Kevin Laura, the Open’s CEO.

The move comes a year earlier than expected for the men’s, women’s and senior competitions at Green Valley Ranch Golf Club.

“Under the new leadership, Inspirato is under some financial constraints and has just a different management style, so they asked us if we would consider that,” Laura said of the early release. “If it’s becoming so hard for title sponsors to afford this, then we really want to look at what our main purpose and vision is. … We were in an arms race with ourselves.”

In 2022, Inspirato signed a five-year contract worth $400,000 annually through 2026 for the branding, co-founder and then-CEO Brent Handler told Colorado AvidGolfer at the time.

Brent and his brother Brett Handler have since had a tumultuous exit from the company. A new CEO, California businessman Payam Zamani, took over last August and has been on a cost-cutting crusade, in part targeting lavish perks once extended to the Handlers.

Zamani told BusinessDen ending the sponsorship is a part of that mission and also stems from a desire to get a better return on the company’s marketing dollars.

“We’d like to primarily pursue opportunities that allow us to better correlate costs with results,” he said in a text.

Laura said Inspirato will pay less than the $400,000 “contracted amount” this year, though he did not disclose a specific figure. The tournament’s men’s and women’s purses will drop from $250,000 to $200,000, while the senior tournament will fall from $100,000 to $80,000.

For the former, only the winner’s pot will be affected, going from $100,000 to $50,000. For the latter, which includes anyone 50 and older, payouts are cut 20% across the board.

The women’s Open will be held May 28-30, the men’s from July 24-27 and the senior’s from Aug. 27-29.

“We’re still the only tournament in the world that pays equal purses for men’s and women’s, and those are still the largest purses in the country as far as state opens are concerned,” Laura said. “The changes we made are just going to make it a lower price point for a replacement sponsor.”

Laura said future tournament branding could be around one company, like Inspirato, or have multiple presenting sponsors.

He noted that the structure will change as well.

Most of the future money will be funneled into a scholarship fund for kids in Green Valley Ranch’s First Tee Program, an initiative that teaches golf to kids. The fund has yet to be set up, though, so Laura doesn’t have an idea how much the sponsorship will cost.

He thinks the tournament will be able to raise more money for scholarships from the general public. With the added cash, he hopes to be less reliant on corporate sponsors to foot the $400,000 bill it takes to run First Tee.

“The focus in the future for our board is gonna be focused on raising money and awarding scholarships for kids, as opposed to raising purses and working against ourselves on the high price,” Laura said. “It’s so much easier for us to raise money from general donors for kids’ scholarships than prize money for golfers.”

Since Zamani took over in August, Inspirato has cut about $40 million in annual operating costs, he told BusinessDen in February. In an earnings call that same month, Zamani reported positive EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) of $1.9 million in the fourth quarter of last year — the first time the business has shown profitability since a 2021 IPO.

“The Colorado Open sought to rethink the way they want to do sponsorships in the future, and we have sponsored the event for four years and felt like it was the right time to move on,” Zamani said in a text.

This story was originally published by BusinessDen.

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7043315 2025-04-09T06:00:17+00:00 2025-04-08T13:07:38+00:00
Min Woo Lee and Akshay Bhatia share lead at The Players as Justin Thomas ties course mark with 62 https://www.denverpost.com/2025/03/14/min-woo-lee-and-akshay-bhatia-share-lead-at-the-players-as-justin-thomas-ties-course-mark-with-62/ Fri, 14 Mar 2025 20:11:38 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6954300&preview=true&preview_id=6954300 By DOUG FERGUSON

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Min Woo Lee and Akshay Bhatia shared the lead at The Players Championship going into a weekend with strong wind in the forecast and the potential for a wide-open chase. That includes Justin Thomas, the biggest surprise Friday.

Thomas opened with a 78 and was tied for 134th when he set the tournament record with 11 birdies. A bogey from the water on the 18th hole forced him to settle for a 10-under 62 to tie The Players record with Tom Hoge.

“Everything seems to happen in mysterious and weird ways,” Thomas said, unclear if he was speaking to his round or the very game of golf.

Lee made a sloppy bogey on his final hole at the par-5 ninth. Bhatia got creative with a wedge to make birdie on the ninth. Both had a 66 and were tied for the lead at 11-under 133.

Thomas was seven shots behind and not the least bit bothered by the deficit.

“I’m happy I have a tee time tomorrow,” Thomas said. “I was losing to everyone playing golf at one point.”

Thomas witnessed the only other 62 at the TPC Sawgrass because he was playing with Hoge that day in 2023. He forgot about that until he saw an image posted on the video board behind the 17th green of him and Hoge hugging.

From the right rough on the 18th, the plan was to punch it low under the trees to about 20 yards short of the green. But the thick grass grabbed his club and turned it left, and the ball raced through the fairway into the water.

Thomas took a penalty drop, hit a lob wedge to 2 feet for bogey and at least shared the mark.

He has had some wild swings in scores on consecutive days, recalling the 67-80 he had at Royal Birkdale in the 2017 British Open.

“This one is a lot cooler,” he said.

Now comes the hard part. The TPC Sawgrass can be daunting in any conditions, but the 25 mph gusts expected Saturday — and the possibility of wind and rain Sunday — can make the Stadium Course a real thrill ride.

J.J. Spaun had a 68 and was one shot behind.

Rory McIlroy was at the top of the leaderboard during his morning round that featured six birdies in 11 holes, only for his momentum to stall. He had a pair of bogeys over the closing stretch, the last one on the par-5 ninth, for a 68 to finish two shots back.

“I think I hit more fairways in six holes today than I did in 18 yesterday,” McIlroy said. “Got it in play much better and then from there was able to give myself some opportunities and obviously make some birdies early. Couldn’t quite continue that on to the back nine, but it was much better off the tee.”

Collin Morikawa, the runner-up last week at Bay Hill who chipped in twice among his nine birdies in a round of 65, also was shots behind with Alex Smalley, who birdied two of his last three holes for a 67.

“I can’t say I drove it great and hit the ball amazing, but I really just took advantage of when I did hit good shots,” Morikawa said. “I putted really nicely. Also I didn’t try fighting it too much. I knew it wasn’t quite exactly how I was hitting it, and you just make due.”

Two-time defending champion Scottie Scheffler had to settle for a 70 and was six shots behind, still very much in the mix considering he rallied from five behind on the final day last year.

The 36-hole cut fluctuated throughout the afternoon with some wild shifts and plenty of emotion. The cut was 1-under 143.

Xander Schauffele made it on the number, extending his cut streak to 59 on the PGA Tour, the longest active streak since Tiger Woods (142) from 1998 to 2005.

That required the PGA and British Open champion hammering a hybrid onto the green at the ninth on his final hole and two-putting for birdie and a 71. That sounded like small consolation for Schauffele, who only returned last week from two months of letting a rib injury heal.

“Not hitting it close enough, to duffing chips, to missing every fairway, to hitting fairways, to missing greens. It’s pretty gross, to be completely honest,” he said. “So if I can eke out this cut, that would be nice. But the game feels pretty bad.”

Danny Walker also gets a weekend tee time after starting the week wondering if he would play at all. He didn’t get into the field until Thursday morning when Jason Day withdrew with an illness. One of 26 newcomers in the field, Walker three-putted the final hole to finish at 1 under and had to wait an hour to see if he would make it.

Among those missing the cut were Ludvig Aberg, who won the Genesis Invitational at Torrey Pines last month and is No. 5 in the world. He had five double bogeys over two rounds, three of them Friday.

Jordan Spieth had another wild ride, which included hitting one shot left-handed out of the pine straw well left of the fifth fairway. Spieth was on the cut line late in the day when he hit the island green at No. 17 and then drilled a drive down the 18th fairway, leading to birdie and a 71 that put him eight shots back.

Divots: Wyndham Clark withdrew after nine holes with a neck injury. … Six PGA Tour winners this year failed to make the cut, including Hideki Matsuyama.

___

AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

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6954300 2025-03-14T14:11:38+00:00 2025-03-14T18:30:10+00:00
Rory McIlroy says PGA Tour deal with Saudis isn’t close and an agreement might not be necessary https://www.denverpost.com/2025/03/05/rory-mcilroy-pga-tour-liv-golf-deal-not-close/ Wed, 05 Mar 2025 20:20:22 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6943337 ORLANDO, Fla. — Rory McIlroy believes the PGA Tour completing a deal with the Saudi backers of LIV Golf would be the ideal scenario because it would bring back together all the best players in the world.

“But I don’t think the PGA Tour needs a deal. I think the momentum is pretty strong,” McIlroy said Wednesday ahead of the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and player director Adam Scott twice met last month with President Donald Trump at the White House to see if they can reach an agreement. Tiger Woods and Yasir Al-Rumayyan, governor of the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, joined the second meeting.

Monahan said the priority was reunification and it was a “huge step,” though he did not indicate when they would meet again and did not anticipate an announcement next week at The Players Championship.

At issue is how to integrate players while keeping LIV’s concept of team golf. Al-Rumayyan is bullish on team golf. LIV has 12 teams that have investors and sponsors. Each LIV event awards prize money to individual scores and team scores, and the season ends with a team championship.

McIlroy suggested that has led to the stall in negotiations.

“It takes two to tango,” McIlroy said. “So if one party is willing and ready and the other isn’t, it sort of makes it tough.”

McIlroy has not been at the White House meetings, though he serves on the transaction subcommittee of PGA Tour Enterprises that has been negotiating with the Saudis.

He was the strongest critic of LIV when it began in 2022, only to soften his views when Jon Rahm defected to the rival league at the end of 2023. McIlroy said on a British soccer podcast that he encouraged PGA Tour board members to meet with Al-Rumayyan, which led to the surprise framework agreement in June 2023.

McIlroy pointed to signs of momentum on the PGA Tour, from improved television ratings to the TMRW Golf League at a high-tech indoor arena that is shown on ESPN channels in prime time early in the week.

“I think a deal would still be … the ideal scenario for golf as a whole,” he said. “But from a pure PGA Tour perspective, I don’t think it necessarily needs it.”

He said the landscape “might have looked a little different” when he spoke two weeks ago at Torrey Pines — one week after the first White House meeting and a week before the second meeting — and said players staunchly opposed to bringing back LIV players need to “get over it” and move forward.

Now he sensed talks at a standstill.

“I don’t think it’s ever felt that close,” McIlroy said. “But it doesn’t feel like it’s any closer.”

LIV Golf resumes its schedule with events in Hong Kong and Singapore over the next two weeks. It doesn’t play in the U.S. for the first time until the week before the Masters, when it plays at Trump Doral outside Miami.

LIV, which now has a television deal with Fox, has put together a more international schedule than the first three seasons. There also is the question of which LIV players would even be interested in returning to the PGA Tour.

“I continue to see LIV Golf growing,” U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau said Wednesday in Hong Kong. “It’s going to grow at an exponentiating pace for years to come, and we aren’t going anywhere.”

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6943337 2025-03-05T13:20:22+00:00 2025-03-05T13:20:22+00:00
Gary Woodland receives PGA Tour Courage Award as he returns from brain surgery https://www.denverpost.com/2025/02/27/gary-woodland-pga-tour-courage-award/ Thu, 27 Feb 2025 22:25:19 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6937073 PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — Former U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland was honored Wednesday with the PGA Tour Courage Award as he comes back from brain surgery to remove a lesion that was causing him to have unfounded thoughts that he was dying.

Woodland, who won the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach to go along with three other PGA Tour titles, had a hole the size of a baseball removed from his head so doctors could remove the lesion in a September 2023 surgery.

He returned last year and continues to make strides toward restoring his game and his life at home with wife Gabby and his three children.

“Receiving this is a testament to the people around me because there’s no way, one, I’d be back playing or no way I’d be sitting here today if it wasn’t for them,” Woodland said at PGA National, where he is playing the Cognizant Classic.

“It means everything for me to receive it, but it really belongs to the people around me.”

The Courage Award is presented to a person who overcomes extraordinary adversity, such as personal tragedy or debilitating injury or illness, to make a significant and meaningful contribution to golf.

Chris Kirk was honored last year for his battle with alcoholism. Previous winners include Jarrod Lyle of Australia, who died after a long battle with leukemia, and two-time heart transplant recipient Erik Compton.

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan presented Woodland with the award at PGA National.

“He’s overcome so many challenges, which is nothing short of miraculous,” Monahan said. “He continues to manage symptoms associated with his initial diagnosis while competing — and competing very well — at the highest level of professional golf. Gary Woodland is a constant inspiration to us all.”

The Courage Award includes a contribution of $25,000 from the tour to a charity of the recipient’s choice. Woodland selected Champion Charities — he and his wife are matching the donation — an organization dedicated to research and patient support in brain tumor, brain disease and brain trauma.

Woodland said he learned of the organization from former San Francisco 49ers offensive tackle Harris Barton, his partner in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am this year. Both of Barton’s parents died from brain tumors.

Woodland had one top 10 last year when he returned. This is the final year of his exemption from winning the U.S. Open.

“At the end of the day, I’m fighting,” he said. “The last thing I’m going to let this do is let this thing in my head stop my dreams, and that’s why I fight every day. I want to be there for my kids and my family, but I want to chase my dreams, too. I’ve got a lot of dreams out here.

“I’m starting to understand what I need to do every day to function in life, but the things I’m doing to help with my brain are also helping me play golf, and I’m knocking on the door. It’s coming, and I’m going to keep knocking on that door until I bust through.”

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6937073 2025-02-27T15:25:19+00:00 2025-02-27T16:25:02+00:00
Jake Knapp shoots a 59 at the Cognizant Classic, 15th sub-60 round in PGA Tour history https://www.denverpost.com/2025/02/27/jake-knapp-59-pga-tour/ Thu, 27 Feb 2025 19:12:15 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6936839 PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — Jake Knapp knew he was on the verge of something special early on Thursday, with a run of five straight birdies to open his round at the Cognizant Classic.

In the end, he joined one of golf’s most elite clubs.

Knapp — the No. 99 player in golf’s current world rankings — joined the PGA Tour’s sub-60 club on Thursday, shooting a bogey-free 59 in the opening round at PGA National. It was the 15th time that someone has broken 60 in a PGA Tour event.

“It’s just one of those days where everything was kind of clicking,” Knapp said.

Knapp finished one shot off the tour scoring record of 58, done by Jim Furyk in the final round of the 2016 Travelers Championship. Knapp became the 14th player to shoot a sub-60 round; it has been done 15 times, with Furyk the one who has carded such a round twice.

Knapp had a putt for eagle at the par-5 18th that would have tied Furyk’s mark of 58 — 18 feet, 8 inches was the measurement given by the PGA Tour. The eagle putt didn’t have the speed and he tapped in for 59.

And yes, he was thinking about 58 — especially after a long birdie putt at the 15th put him at 11 under for the round.

“I stepped up on the 16 tee and just kind of told my caddie, ‘Let’s play 2 under in the last three,’” Knapp said. “‘Let’s do what we’re supposed to do.’”

He had to settle for 59, if a 59 can ever actually be settled for.

“I thought I played well,” said Daniel Berger, who had a bogey-free round of 8-under 63, highlighted by a par on the par-5 10th — after his tee shot was lost in a tree and he played a provisional. “But then someone shot 59.”

Knapp’s 12-birdie round on the par-71 course also broke the previous Cognizant scoring record of 61, first done in 2012 by Brian Harman and matched in 2021 by Matt Jones. There are three rounds of 62 in tournament history — Tiger Woods in the final round in 2012 on his way to a tie for second, Brandon Hagy in the second round in 2021 and eventual winner Chris Kirk in the second round of the 2023 event.

There was barely any wind, which is rare for South Florida, and PGA National was largely defenseless in the morning session. The closest there was to any trouble was the seventh hole, where Billy Horschel — a Florida Gator from his college days — used a club to poke at an actual alligator that was catching some sun near the green and got it to retreat back to its watery home.

Even wildlife didn’t deter scoring in Round 1. Berger, Russell Henley and Sami Valimaki all shot 63s, Rickie Fowler was among those with opening-round 64s, Jordan Spieth — continuing his comeback after wrist surgery — shot 65, while Horschel, Zach Johnson and Camilo Villegas were some of the players who opened with a 66.

But nobody had an easier time than Knapp, who finished no better than a tie for 17th in any of his first seven starts of 2025 — and then played his way into golf history in Round 1 at PGA National, a course that players have said has been less punitive in recent years. He needed to make only 98 feet of putts, a tribute to a day of excellent ball-striking.

“You still have to hit shots. You have to make putts,” Fowler said. “Yeah, 59 anywhere is hard to do. I don’t care if you go play from 6,500 yards. You still have to make putts. You still have to hit it close enough to have those opportunities. With this place, we’ve seen some low scores, guys get after it when the conditions are right. But obviously no one has shot 59 before out here.”

Knapp has one PGA Tour win, that coming at last year’s Mexico Open. He’s played the Cognizant only once before and did well, tying for fourth last year after shooting three rounds of 68 or better and finishing at 13 under.

And this year, so far, he’s even better.

“You’ve got to tip your hat to him,” Horschel said. “He shot a 12-under par 59 at PGA National, which no one ever thought.”

Knapp started Thursday with five straight birdies, that stretch highlighted by a 60-foot chip-in at the par-4 second hole. The birdies kept coming in bunches; three in a row on holes 9 through 11, three more coming on holes 13 through 15 — the last of those a big breaking putt from 31 feet, going across the green before dropping dead center into the cup.

Mike Stephens, Knapp’s caddie, said they were not afraid to talk about the chances that awaited on the final three holes.

“I think if anything, maybe your playing competitors try to give you a little distance or whatnot, but he likes to talk,” Stephens said. “So, we’d kind of go over things on the last couple (holes), to try to fill the time. Just to keep it the same. … Just another day.”

Well, not quite. A 59 is not just another day.

“Whether I shot 89 or 59, I’m going to come back out and do my job tomorrow,” Knapp said.

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6936839 2025-02-27T12:12:15+00:00 2025-02-27T12:12:15+00:00
Tiger Woods to play at Torrey Pines, his first PGA Tour event since July https://www.denverpost.com/2025/02/07/tiger-woods-to-play-at-torrey-pines-his-first-pga-tour-event-since-july/ Fri, 07 Feb 2025 22:20:31 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6916977&preview=true&preview_id=6916977 SAN DIEGO — Tiger Woods committed Friday to playing the Genesis Invitational at Torrey Pines, returning to one of his favorite venues for his first PGA Tour start since the British Open last July.

Woods will be playing — and walking — 18 holes in competition for the first time since he had a microdiscectomy in September to alleviate pain down his legs, his sixth surgery on his lower back. He will compete just over a week after the loss of his mother, Kultida Woods, who died Tuesday at age 80.

Woods is the host of the Genesis Invitational, which was moved from Riviera Country Club because of wildfires that devastated the surrounding Los Angeles community of Pacific Palisades.

He has never won at Riviera, but his eight wins at Torrey Pines include the 2008 U.S. Open. The public course along the Pacific Ocean is also the site of his most recent top-10 finish on the PGA Tour, a tie for ninth at the Farmers Insurance Open in 2020.

The Genesis Invitational is a limited-field signature event with no cut. Woods hasn’t played four rounds in an event since last year’s Masters, when he broke the tournament record for consecutive cuts made with his 24th. He finished last among those who made the cut, shooting 82-77 over the weekend. He played the other three major championships last year, missing the cut each time.

A 15-time major champion, the 49-year-old Woods has 82 PGA Tour victories, tied with Sam Snead for the most ever. His last win was the Zozo Championship in 2019.

He missed all of 2021 after a rollover car crash in Los Angeles in February of that year that caused severe injuries to his lower right leg.

Woods skipped the unofficial event he hosts in December, the Hero World Challenge, but he played an exhibition with his son, Charlie, and has competed in the indoor TGL league.

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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

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6916977 2025-02-07T15:20:31+00:00 2025-02-07T18:46:53+00:00
Trump and Jay Monahan meet at White House as PGA Tour deal with Saudis gets closer https://www.denverpost.com/2025/02/06/trump-and-jay-monahan-meet-at-white-house-as-pga-tour-deal-with-saudis-gets-closer/ Thu, 06 Feb 2025 20:46:34 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6915380&preview=true&preview_id=6915380 PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said he met with President Donald Trump at the White House this week as the tour moves closer to finalizing a long-sought investment deal with the Saudi Arabian backers of rival LIV Golf.

Monahan said Thursday in a statement he and Adam Scott, one of the player directors on the PGA Tour board, met with Trump and asked him to get involved in the negotiations “for the good of the game, the good of the country, and for all the countries involved.”

“We are grateful that his leadership has brought us closer to a final deal, paving the way for reunification of men’s professional golf,” Monahan said.

The statement was signed by Monahan, Scott and Tiger Woods, who is vice chairman of the commercial PGA Tour Enterprises. It did not say Woods was at the meeting, nor was it clear who asked for the meeting.

The PGA Tour and the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia first agreed to a deal in June 2023, which ended the antitrust lawsuits between them. But that framework agreement drew the attention of the Justice Department, and the year ended without a deal in place.

The tour and PIF have been meeting for nearly a year. Trump, just 10 days after he was elected, invited Monahan to play golf at Trump International in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Nov. 15.

Trump said on the “Let’s Go!” podcast on the eve of the election that “it would take me the better part of 15 minutes to get that deal done.”

“I’m really going to work on other things, to be honest with you,” Trump said on the podcast. “I think we have much bigger problems than that. But I do think we should have one tour and they should have the best players in that tour.”

The tour has been keeping the Justice Department informed of its negotiations for the last several months as it makes progress on an investment deal with PIF.

After the deadline for the original framework agreement with PIF expired at the end of 2023, the tour signed with Strategic Sports Group, a consortium of North American sports owners spearheaded by Fenway Sports Group, for a $1.5 billion investment in PGA Tour Enterprises with the potential for that to double.

PGA Tour Enterprises is separate from the tax-exempt PGA Tour that deals with competition.

The latest negotiations are for PIF to become a minority investor in the commercial arm. Still unclear is how that would patch up the fractured golf landscape.

PIF and its governor, Yasir Al-Rumayyan, are the financial muscle behind LIV Golf. The breakaway spent some $2 billion to recruit top players, who then were suspended by the PGA Tour. That group included Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson, Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm. They have combined to win 17 majors, and three have been No. 1 in the world.

They only time all the world’s best compete together now are the four majors.

Rory McIlroy, who serves on a transaction subcommittee for tour negotiations, said last week at Pebble Beach he felt a new administration was “going to be a bit more deal friendly.”

“I think from an investment standpoint, that deal should and will be done,” McIlroy said. “But it doesn’t solve the problem of what the landscape of golf looks like going forward. I’d say the biggest impediment is maybe the differing visions of what golf should look like in the future.”

Trump’s involvement in golf goes back more than two decades when he began building a portfolio of high-end golf courses, and buying the renowned Turnberry Golf Club in Scotland.

He also bought Doral Resort outside Miami, a venerable PGA Tour stop that had hosted a World Golf Championship until moving it in 2016 to Mexico City when it became difficult to find a title sponsor with Trump and his ubiquitous presence.

Three of Trump’s courses have hosted LIV events, including one this year at Doral.

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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

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6915380 2025-02-06T13:46:34+00:00 2025-02-06T14:35:55+00:00
Denver Golf fee hike would hit weekday golfers more https://www.denverpost.com/2025/02/06/denver-golf-greens-fees-price-hike/ Thu, 06 Feb 2025 13:00:33 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=6914632 Denver Golf is teeing up a fee hike — and weekday golfers would feel it more.

The entity, which runs the city’s eight public golf courses and driving ranges, wants to raise the cost to play an 18-hole round by an average of $2 on weekends and $7 on weekdays.

While playing on the weekend will remain more expensive, the hike would shrink the gap. Denver Golf Director Scott Rethlake told a Denver City Council committee Tuesday that more golfers have been playing during the week because of the flexibility of remote work.

He said other courses across the state also have increased weekday rates.

Rethlake said the increase is meant to keep up with rising operating expenses, which doubled from $9 million in 2018 to about $18 million in 2024.

The increase would generate an additional $2.5 million in annual revenue for the program, Rethlake said. Denver Golf would continue to provide discounts to seniors and youths.

Denver’s golf program is expected to pay for itself and not take funding from elsewhere in the city.

“We are not subsidized by tax dollars, so we rely on revenue to pay our bills,” Rethlake said.

Rethlake said $10 million in upgrades to turf equipment and golf carts is needed in the next three to five years. He also mentioned a new clubhouse for southeast Denver’s Kennedy Golf Course and minor greens renovations as future projects.

City Council will vote on the proposed increase later this month. The increases would take effect April 1.

The maximum proposed fees for Denver's public golf facilities. The number represents the amount a player would pay during peak playing time. Off-hours rates are typically lower. (City of Denver)
The maximum proposed fees for Denver’s public golf facilities. The number represents the amount a player would pay during peak playing time. Off-hours rates are typically lower. (City of Denver)

Story via BusinessDen

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6914632 2025-02-06T06:00:33+00:00 2025-02-05T18:26:15+00:00