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Archives for June 2022

PGA Tour: John Deere Preview

June 30, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

SILVIS – John Deere Classic favorite, Steve Stricker, WD from the tournament after a runner-up outing in last week’s Senior U.S. Open. He shot (-9) 275 and fell one stroke behind tournament champion Padraig Harrington.

The John Deere Classic has a long history of successful outings by Sponsor Exemptions. Players competing on sponsor exemptions this year that have not yet been a PGA Tour member include:

  • Luke Gannon: 3rd career PGA TOUR start (MC at 2021 John Deere Classic and 2022 U.S. Open); PGA TOUR Canada member
  • Patrick Flavin: 8th PGA TOUR start this season (five as Open Qualifier); 76 non-member FedEx Cup points
  • Christopher Gotterup: 5th PGA TOUR start this season (best: T-7/Puerto Rico Open); 2022 Division I Player of the Year
  • Quinn Riley: PGA TOUR debut (MC at 2022 REX Hospital Open on Korn Ferry Tour); No. 1 in 2021-22 APGA Collegiate Ranking

Daniel Berger, the highest ranking PGA Tour pro entered this week, withdrew

John Deere Classic

from the John Deere Classic and stated via Twitter: “Gutted to have to withdrawal from the @JDCLASSIC this week. I am working on getting back to 100% but do not feel prepared to tee it up on Thursday. I want to wish all the players luck and thank @JohnDeere for their continued support.”

In his 3rd start at the John Deere Classic this week, Illinois native Nick Hardywill tee-it-up at TPC Deere Run on the heels of his career-best finish of T-8 at last week’s Travelers Championship.

Sperry, Iowa native Charles Jahn will make his PGA TOUR debut at the John Deere Classic this week. Jahn holed a 40-foot putt for birdie at the third extra hole to advance in a 6-for-1 playoff on Monday.

There are eight events over the next six weeks remaining until the start of the FedEx Cup Playoffs. With 76 of the top 125 in the FedExCup standings not competing this week, the John Deere Classic provides an opportunity for players outside the Top 125 to make a move before the end of the FedEx Cup Regular Season.

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | June 26

June 26, 2022 by Terry Lyons

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – It was a tumultuous week to say the least.

Starting with a wonderful, quiet and restful Father’s Day, finishing Sunday with a White Mountain Creamery mint chocolate chip ice cream treat after enjoying an entertaining U.S. Open golf tournament right up the block at The Country Club in Brookline, the week started off fine.

The week continued, we had three games of the NHL Stanley Cup Final, with Game 4 a series-swaying overtime win (3-2) by the Colorado Avalanche at Tampa to take a 3-games-to-1 series lead back to Denver where they hoped to close it out. But, the Tampa Bay Lightning did not go down, winning Friday’s Game 6, 3-2, to keep Lord Stanley’s Cup in its case and volley the series back to Tampa-St. Pete Sunday night (tonight).

The Golden State Warriors had a victory parade. The NBA held its annual Draft. Brooks Koepka and Abraham Ancer were the latest two PGA TOUR professionals to jump to the LIV Golf, accepting zillions for sure. … College Baseball is closing in on the winner of the 2022 College World Series with Oklahoma and Ole Miss squaring off on Sunday and Monday.

Thursday was the most important day of the week as the sporting industry celebrated the 50th Anniversary of Title IX, the landmark federal law that changed the world for women’s athletics and evened the playing field for girls in youth programs, elementary school, high school and college while building the foundation for women playing sports with a goal to become professionals.

June 23, 1972 was the date, and the sporting emphasis of Title IX was packed nicely into a larger list of educational reforms for any program seeking federal funding. It was monumental in many ways legally and ground-breaking for the pioneers of women’s sports. Professionals like tennis legend Billie Jean King, long distance runner Kathrine Switzer, tennis great Althea Gibson and basketballer Anne Meyers Drysdale led the way and the multitude would follow.

No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.

According to a study by the Women’s Sports Foundation reported in The New York Times, high school participation rose from 294,015 in the 1971-72 school year to 3.4 million in 2018-19. At the collegiate level, participation at N.C.A.A. schools rose from 29,977 athletes in women’s sports in 1971-72 to 215,486 in 2020-21. Men’s sports reportedly had 275,769 athletes competing in 2020-21. Talk about evening the playing field.

The landmark legal proclamation was a major step for education and women’s sports but for those experiencing Title IX while in high school, the law was less important than the statement it was making: That being “it’s cool for the girls to play sports” – all sports – and “it’s just as cool” for the boys to support their classmates, attend home games, travel to away games and root hard for the girls’ teams.

At Holy Trinity, it was about Debbie Basel grabbing an offensive rebound with a quick put-back or Clare Krummenacker knocking down a shot with a stroke as silky as Jamaal Wilkes’ jumper.

At St. John’s, it was watching Trinity grad Laura Edney swim through the water like a Chris-Craft cruising the Long Island Sound.

There might’ve been some pushback from old-school coaches and athletic administrators who didn’t want to give-up their sacred gymnasium time, but the student body spoke. Let them play! Game On!

Olympian Summer Sanders (file)

As time passed by and Title IX paved the way in many different sports, the competition brought forth serious competitors like Summer Sanders-Schlopy, the most decorated Olympic swimmer at the 1992 Summer Games. Sanders-Schlopy, once an anchor for NBA Inside Stuff and a regular TV commentator and show host, took home two gold, a silver and a bronze for a USA Women’s swim team that just ROCKED the ‘92 Barcelona Olympics.

Around the hoop, the results of Title IX became quite apparent on the USA Basketball Women’s World Championship and Olympics front, especially between 1996 (See the new ESPN 30-for-30 “Dream On” currently streaming) and 2020 when the “Supreme Team” won seven consecutive gold medals, and five of the last six World Cups of Basketball behind a team full of Title Niners.

The women’s basketball team of ‘96 led the way, along with the gold-medal winning women’s gymnastics team at the 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympics that the women dominated in terms of awareness, event attendance and fan affinity.

There were Title IX benefits off the playing field as well, as women took their rightful places in sports administration on the community, high school, collegiate and professional levels as the Boomers of 1972 grew-up with sports and the sports industry grew-up with them.

Yet in 2022, there is still more to accomplish to balance the playing field, the job opportunities, coaching and administrative salaries and pay in sports where women generate revenue to great lengths, like the USA women’s national team in soccer, grand slam tennis and LPGA golf. Basketball and ice hockey are well on their way, the WNBA in its 25th year of existence.

“Across the board, we’ve all won,” said Dr. Courtney Flowers to The New York Times. “But sometimes, we have to recalibrate and make sure that in the next 50 years we’re not saying the same thing and advocating for the same thing and figure out what does equity look like now?”

“Title IX — in many ways — has defined my life,” said Teri Schindler, a former colleague at the NBA. “As a member of the University of Notre Dame women’s swim team that took the program to varsity status and earned All-America honors for me and my teammates to stints setting up the Big East Conference television network, covering the University of Connecticut undefeated women’s basketball teams and with the National Basketball Association and nascent WNBA — it offered me ways to compete and opportunities to learn and work that were unprecedented.

“My mother started this effort with me when she set up our community’s first softball league for girls – I hope I have furthered it. I am certainly richer for it and it has infused everything I’ve done since … here’s to this Title IX anniversary and all the women who compete, on and off the field,” said Schindler.


DISTURBANCE IN THE FORCE: While Title IX was being celebrated across the land, the Supreme Court of the United States came down with two rulings that crashed the Title IX party like an unwelcome drunk at an outdoor wedding. First, on Thursday, the SCOTUS struck down a New York handgun-licensing law that required New Yorkers who want to carry a handgun in public to show a special need to defend themselves. The 6-3 ruling, written by Supreme Court Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, is the court’s first significant decision on gun rights in over a decade. In a far-reaching ruling, the court made clear that the Second Amendment’s guarantee of the right “to keep and bear arms” protects a broad right to carry a handgun outside the home for self-defense. Going forward, Thomas explained, courts should uphold gun restrictions only if there is a tradition of such regulation in U.S. history.

The landmark SCOTUS decision came six weeks after a gunman killed 10 Black people at a Buffalo supermarket, and a couple weeks after 21 people – 19 children and two teachers – were shot to death at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas. Under intense pressure, the Senate Republicans relented and reached an agreement on bipartisan gun-safety legislation that is the first federal gun-control legislation in nearly 30 years. The 80-page bill requires tougher background checks for gun buyers under the age of 21 and provides more funding for mental-health resources. President Joe Biden signed the bill into law upon it arriving on his desk, Saturday, June 25.

One branch of government was easing the ability to carry concealed weapons in New York, while other branches were taking baby steps to curtail access to guns. None, mind you, addressed the main issue of assault rifles, such as the AR-15 and its 30-Plus capacity ammunition magazines, which gunned down the 19 children in Uvalde, Texas on May 24th nor the mass murder at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida in 2018 which took the lives of 17 students while injuring 17 others nor the December 12, 2012 mass murder at Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut when 20 of 26 victims were children aged six and seven. Of course there were many others, in night clubs at concerts in Las Vegas, movie theaters, shopping malls and churches. The list goes on and on.

While the New York gun law reversal was a stunner, mainly since it dated back to 1913, the SCOTUS wasn’t done.

On Friday, as they often do when trying to bury an unpopular decision, the SCOTUS went against some 66% of USA voters’ opinions when they reversed the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that the Constitution of the United States generally protects a pregnant woman’s liberty to choose to have an abortion. The decision sent shock waves across the United States, as the 5-4 vote to overturn the 50-year law was largely due to three recent SCOTUS appointees by President Donald Trump. The confirmation of those associate justices was largely done by men.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver and WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert issued a statement regarding the decision (Mississippi: Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization):

“The NBA and WNBA believe that women should be able to make their own decisions concerning their health and future, and we believe that freedom should be protected. We will continue to advocate for gender and health equity, including ensuring our employees have access to reproductive health care, regardless of their location.”

The three Democratic-appointed justices — Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan — dissented while Chief Justice John Roberts joined the justices to uphold a restrictive Mississippi law, but Roberts criticized his conservative colleagues for taking the additional step of overturning Roe v. Wade. They were Republican-appointed justices — Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett — who all supported Justice Samuel Alito’s 5-4 majority opinion to reverse the standing law, and toss the decision-making to the elected officials in each State.

The tumult of protestors began immediately as the ruling was tipped when a draft of Alito’s opinion was leaked to the world weeks ago. The hypocrisy of celebrating women’s rights one day and turning them upside down the next is not lost by women who will head to the voting machines this November, nor will the SCOTUS ruling to ease gun laws while mass murders are taking place by the week. The Senate took a baby-step, largely to say they did so come campaign time.

The end-game will be decided in New York where 8-in-10 Democratic voters believe the gun laws should be more strict as opposed to the SCOTUS ruling. That comes in a largely Democratic-leaning State. Add the 50+ percent of women to the anti-Supreme Court trend, and there could be major issues in the 2022 mid-term elections this Fall.

One thing is for sure, the Title IX girls of voting age, women, mothers – both urban and suburban – are pissed.


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: Both the men’s and women’s USA Basketball 3×3 teams took losses this week. The women to Canada in the quarterfinals and the men lost to host Belgium in the qualifying round and then were eliminated by Lithuania in the quarters. … USA Basketball added center Will Davis II (College Park Skyhawks) will join the July 2022 USA Men’s World Cup Qualifying Team in Miami, as the team prepares for a pair of World Cup Qualifying Games this week in Puerto Rico and Cuba.

Davis was a member of the November 2021 USA Basketball Men’s World Cup Qualifying Team. In one game vs. Cuba, he recorded four points, four rebounds and two assists in 12 minutes. Davis also played in one game in the FIBA AmeriCup Qualifying February 2021 games, helping the USA to a win over Mexico (95-76) with 10 points, five rebounds and one block in 20 minutes. … To close the 2021-22 season, Davis played 19 total games in the NBA G League with the South Bay Lakers, Raptors 905 and the College Park Skyhawks. He averaged 2.9 points and 2.4 rebounds in 10.0 minutes.

The USA squad, coached by Jim Boylen, opened training camp Friday night in preparation for the third competition window of 2021-23 FIBA World Cup Qualifying games that will see the USA (3-1) face Puerto Rico (2-2) in San Juan, Puerto Rico on July 1, and Cuba (0-4) in Havana on July 4.

For additional information on the USA World Cup of Basketball qualifying, visit HERE.

Filed Under: Opinion, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: TL Sunday Sports Notes, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

Schauffele vs Cantlay | Final at Travelers

June 26, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

CROMWELL – Xander Schauffele is seeking his sixth career PGA Tour title today and his first individual stroke-play victory since the 2019 Sentry Tournament of Champions. Patrick Cantlay, who partnered with Schauffele to win this season’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans, is in pursuit of his eighth career Tour victory and seventh Top-5 finish of the season after carding the low score of the day on Saturday with a (63).

Schauffele and Cantlay will play in the final round together for the second time in their careers on Tour.

After making his professional debut at the 2020 Travelers Championship (MC), Sahith Theegala seeks his first career Tour title in his 38th start. He can become the second rookie winner on Tour this season.

In only his third PGA Tour start, 20-year-old amateur Michael Thorbjornsen(T-7) is playing to become first amateur to win on Tour since Phil Mickelsonat 1991 Northern Telecom Open.

Travelers Championship | Leaderboard After 54 Holes

Xander Schauffele 63-63-67—193 (-17)

Patrick Cantlay 64-67-63—194 (-16)

Sahith Theegala 67-65-64—196 (-14)

Kevin Kisner 67-64-66—197 (-13)

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch, The Travelers, Travelers Championship

Schauffele Leads Going Into Hot Weekend at The Travelers

June 25, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

PGA Tour Stop at TPC River Highlands Stacked with Talent

CROMWELL – Coming off a T-14 at last week’s U.S. Open, Xander Schauffele made big strides towards his sixth career PGA Tour title and first individual stroke-play victory since the 2019 Sentry Tournament of Champions by shooting his second straight (63) at TPC River Highlands. He leads Patrick Cantlay by five strokes heading into the weekend.

Reigning FedEx Cup Champion Patrick Cantlay (T-2/-9) opened his eighth Travelers Championship in (64-67). In his first start at TPC River Highlands in 2011, Cantlay posted a second-round 10-under (60), which still stands as his career-low score. Cantlay, who partnered with Schauffele to win this season’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans, closes in on a seventh Top-5 finish of the season.

Harris English will attempt to become the second player to successfully defend a Travelers Championship title (Phil Mickelson/2002) and fifth player to successfully defend a title in the 2021-22 season.

Travelers Championship | Leaderboard After 36 Holes

Xander Schauffele 63-63—126 (-14)

Patrick Cantlay 64-67—131 (-9)

Harris English 66-65—131 (-9)

Nick Hardy 67-64—131 (-9)

Cam Davis 65-66—131 (-9)

Kevin Kisner 67-64—131 (-9)

Full Leaderboard: (link)

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA, PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

PGA Tour Swings Into Hartford

June 22, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

CROMWELL – World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler headlines a very strong field which includes six of the Top-15 players in the Official World Golf Ranking; Scottie Scheffler (1), Rory McIlroy (2), Patrick Cantlay (6), Sam Burns (9), Jordan Spieth (11) and Xander Schauffele (15).

Embed from Getty Images

A would-be seventh of that group, Justin Thomas (5), withdrew from the tourney.

Longtime Travelers favorite and former champion, Bubba Watson, is not in the field as he’s still recuperating from surgery.

With a win (RBC Canadian Open) and T-5 (U.S. Open) in his last two starts, McIlroy moved to No. 2 in the Official World Golf Ranking, his highest ranking since July 25, 2020.

Harris English returns to TPC Highlands as the defending champion as he defeated Kramer Hickok in an eight-hole playoff to win his fourth PGA Tour title at the 2021 Travelers Championship. After playing in the West Coast Hawaii swing earlier this year, English underwent right hip surgery in February but returned to action in June at the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday (MC). In his most recent start, he finished T-61 at the U.S. Open.

Remember this? After matching pars with Kramer Hickok on the first seven extra holes of the 2021 Travelers Championship, Harris English made birdie on the eighth hole of sudden death (No. 18) for the win. The 2021 playoff is tied for the second longest playoff in Tour history.

While the TPC River Highlands annually attracts an amazing field, no matter if it’s positioned before or after the U.S. Open, this year the tournament comes smack in the middle of a newfound controversy as both Abraham Ancer and Brooks Koepka announced this week that they will switch to the LIV Golf circuit. The two players were suspended by the Tour.

To counter the lure of the LIV, the PGA TOUR announced it will undergo significant changes, including staging and additional six tournaments with $20 million-plus purses.

“These changes will further strengthen the FedExCup and create a strong, coordinated global schedule,” Monahan wrote, detailing a condensed FedExCup season that will run from January to August, “offering a more compelling product for our players, fans and partners.

“While different than it’s been in the past, I think it’s going to be very exciting for fans and I think will create great energy in the fall,” said Monahan, who added that he expects the fall events to be “very consequential, very meaningful.”

“There is more work to be done and details to confirm,” Monahan said in a lengthy press conference at TPC River Highlands, “but implementing substantial changes to our schedule gives us the best opportunity to not only drive earnings to our players, but also improve our product and create a platform for continued growth in the future.”

In his pre-tournament press conference at the Travelers Championship, two-time FedExCup champion Rory McIlroy reflected on the impact that the PGA TOUR has on the communities it plays in while also reflecting on the organization’s future.

“I think it’s not lost on me what PGA TOUR events … can do for the communities that they’re played in,” he said. “I think that’s not lost on the players that when they come and play PGA TOUR events they’re helping to do something really good in the community … and I think that’s important.”

 

Filed Under: PGA TOUR, Sports Business Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

TL’s Sunday Sports Notes | June 19

June 19, 2022 by Digital Sports Desk

@WhileYoungIdeas @DigSportsDesk Look at NBA, LIV, PGA

By TERRY LYONS

BOSTON – This week, the 2022 NBA Finals ended here in Boston with a thud, the hometown Celtics drubbed and scrubbed by the team they call the Dubs, as in “W,” as in “Warriors,” as in “Ws,” as in “Winners.”

The Boston Celtics fell victim to:

  • Steph Curry and a better team
  • Golden State’s very good team defense, often overlooked when examining a high octane team
  • Fatigue brought on by a tough playoff road via:
    • Brooklyn
    • Milwaukee (also a better team, but were short Kris Middleton).
    • Miami (also a better team, record-wise, but no Lowry-Herro, as point guard Kyle Lowry was terribly out of NBA game shape and timing and Tyler Herro was injured).

We still wonder? Were the Celtics one last second, wonderful, sweeping turn-around, spin and game winning lay-up away from being in a real, long series instead of a surprising sweep of the Brooklyn Nets?

Would the Celtics have advanced past the Milwaukee Bucks if the Great Place on a Great Lake had their all-star forward and an extra offensive and defensive weapon?

And in the case of the seven-game, knock down, drag-out NBA Eastern Conference Finals, the Celtics skillfully, painfully and willfully outlasted the Heat to rightfully earn their place in The NBA Finals.

Many of the Celtics players stepped-up big time to advance the cause and the team. Specifically:

  • Robert Williams III – Played with soreness in his knees, but excelled.
  • Al Horford – He was just incredible the whole way.
  • Jaylen Brown – Provided consistent, big game scoring and rebounding throughout the 2022 NBA Playoffs.
  • Jayson Tatum – Led the Celtics throughout the postseason but came to a screeching halt in The NBA Finals, final Game 6.

Going forward, the Celtics will need – at least one or two more pieces to be strong and talented enough to win a championship. Next season, advancing to The NBA Finals will not be enough. It’s either the rings or failure.

To do that, the Celtics will need to decrease Horford’s minutes played. Daniel Theis is a big part of that remedy but the Celtics will need another rim protector and rebounder that can play meaningful minutes from November through June.

Robert Williams III is the other piece of that puzzle. Can he take it up a notch, stay healthy and be in the discussion of becoming an NBA All-Star? If he does, the Celtics will have their third “Big 3,” with Williams, Tatum and Brown.

The key issue might be the role of “true point guard.” While Marcus Smartwon NBA Defensive Player of the Year and brought the Celtics right to the brink, the team is best served when he plays the “2” (shooting guard). Reserve guard Derrick White might be able to rise to the starting point guard role. White is two years into his $73m rookie extension and 2022-23 will be crunch time for the 27-year old, 6-4 guard. His presence after a Feb 10, 2022 (trading deadline) deal with San Antonio coincided with the departure of Dennis Schroder (traded with Enes “Freedom” Kanter and BrunoFernando to Houston for Theis). The team cleansing moves set the current Celtics roster on a course for success. Yet, when the playoffs rolled around, Celtics first-year head coach Ime Udoka went with a seven or eight-man rotation with the starters aided by White, three-year veteran Grant Williamsand second-year man Payton Pritchard who played well.

Certainly the 40+ minutes per game drag, the physical nature of the Celtics’ road to The NBA Finals and the outstanding two-way efforts of the Golden State Warriors placed the Larry O’Brien Trophy on a shelf in San Francisco. At the end, the Warriors were beating the Celtics to every 50-50 ball, first tips on most rebounds and even smacking the previously tougher Celts around. Udoka had no answer.

Golden State was not the Vegas favorite in the West as the postseason rolled around. The Phoenix Suns and Memphis Grizzlies finished with better regular-season records and on April 1, a team that started the season 18-2 and enjoyed a nine-game winning streak lost 16 of 23 post trade deadline games and was 48-29.

The Dubs won their final five regular season games and hit full stride after that, defeating Denver in five games, the tough Grizz in six and Dallas in five before meeting the Celtics.

Team GM and former head coach Brad Stevens worked some serious magic at the trade deadline. This off-season, he needs to work two more acts before the curtain rises this Fall. The championship window is open but in the NBA, it shuts quickly and like a guillotine.

By the way, it’s important to note, the Milwaukee Bucks, Miami Heat and Brooklyn Nets will be awaiting the Celtics next season, too.

2022 Father’s Day Special (Biggest Discount for Today Only with a One-Year Sub)

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HERE NOW, THE NOTES: As promised a week ago, let’s delve into golf’s new, rival, upstart LIV, the Car 54 of Golf (for you Roman numeral fans out there). At this point of the LIV season, with only one event in the books – the controversial and inaugural 54-hole London broil, there are more answers but still many questions for the Saudi-based and funded rival to the PGA TOUR.

Using the Car 54 analogy (youngsters better google it), Officers Gunther Toody and Francis Muldoon must be played by Phil Mickelson and LIV Commissioner Greg Norman, rather than original cast members Joe E. Ross and Fred Gwynn.

The sitcom enjoyed two 30-episode seasons. From September 17, 1961 to April 22, 1962, season one aired 8:30pm (ET) to 9:00pm (ET), right smack in the middle of two all-time TV greats, Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color and Bonanza. That would be a little like LIV Golf airing after the Super Bowl.

The second and final season aired from September 16, 1962 to its completion, totaling 60 episodes, on April 14, 1963. Two seasons? Prime-time between Disney and Bonanza? How could it be cancelled?

You get where we’re going, right?

The business model of LIV is not sustainable, no matter how many Saudi dollars pour into the endeavor. Reports call for some $2 to $4 billion to be invested before they check the balance sheets.

The LIV, previously and throughly reported, paid upfront acquisition costs to attract Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Patrick Reed, Pat Perez, Bryson DeChambeau, Sergio Garcia and first event winner Charl Schwartzel.

Schwartzel pocketed a cool $4,475,000 for his efforts, banking the $4m first prize and sharing in the $1,900,000 team prize for first. Relatively unknown (in the USA), Hennie Du Plessis had to settle for second place leftovers of $2,125,000 and his $475,000 for being No. 2 on Schwartzel’s “Stinger GC” team.

By comparison, Rory McIlroy, an outspoken critic of the LIV and staunch backer of the legacy of the PGA Tour, made a hefty $1,566,000 for winning the RBC Canadian Open, one of the lower purse outings on the Tour. This week’s winner of the USGA’s U.S. Open will pocket $3,150,000 an all-time high purse of $17,500,000. In other words, the Price of Purses “JUST WENT UP!”

But can the LIV make it?

Worldwide TV syndication can provide significant dollars, but the USA TV market might be slow to pony-up major dollars. The PGA TOUR has the Golf Channel and the interested networks (CBS, NBC and ESPN) locked with multi-year deals, especially the new ESPN+ streaming pact a much-improved version over previous offerings via NBC Gold via the defunct cable NBC Sports Network.

Streaming on YouTube might attract a few eyeballs, but the European start times of the London event hurt American interest and viewership. The LIV will next tee-it-up at Pumpkin Ridge in Oregon on June 30th and then wait nearly a month before the July 29-31 third event at, get this, Trump’s Bedminster Golf Club in New Jersey.

The challenges are daunting and let’s count the ways:

  • The lack of week-to-week continuity will be troublesome.
  • Lack of a bigtime USA Network TV deal a drain on revenue and publicity
  • The strength of the PGA Tour is a hill too far to climb, especially come FedEx Cup playoff time which ends, appropriately, just before the NFL begins and college and pro football dominate the USA TV schedule, every day of the week.
  • The LIV will stage two events in September and three in October (Hello, Baseball?) One event, October 7-9, will be played in Bangkok, Thailand, while another, October 14-16, to be staged in … you guessed it … Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
  • The LIV 2022 season concludes October 27-30 at yet another Trump facility, the Trump National in Doral (Miami).
  • 48 golfers will be playing in a no-cut format, the low man pocketing $120,000 per event, as Andy Ogletree did in London for shooting 82-77-75 (+24).

Like Car LIV, after some 60 episodes, it just won’t add up, and the decision to lose another $1 billion or two will be a difficult pill to swallow.

DIAMOND DUST-UPs: Going into Saturday night’s Game of the Week on FOX, the Boston Red Sox are 12-3 over 15 games in June, outscoring opponents 74-36 over that span. After a very rough start to the season, the Red Sox found themselves at 23-27 as May 31 passed with a loss to the Cincinnati Reds. After a win at Fenway Park Friday night, the Sox are 35-30 – five games over .500 – for the first time in 2022. Over the last 16 games, Red Sox starting pitchers posted a 1.87 ERA (19 ER/91.1 IP) with 81 strike-outs and only 17 Base-on-Balls. Starter Michael Wacha has allowed only two runs or fewer in nine of his 11 starts, with the Red Sox going 7-2 in those nine starts. Sox SP Nick Pivetta has won six of his last seven starts to increase his ‘22 record to (6-5) after an (0-4) start. The Red Sox lost all six of Pivetta’s first six outings before the turn-around. … Reports have ace Chris Saleupping his efforts in the rehabilitation process. He threw his first simulated game on June 16. … The Milwaukee Brewers designated veteran offensive threat Lorenzo Cain for assignment.

A Happy Father’s Day to all the fatherly figures out there and a meaningful Juneteenth for our nation and the African-American community.

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NBA, While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: 2022 NBA Finals, TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

Wet and Wild at the U.S. Open

June 19, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

BROOKLINE – Will Zalatoris and Matt Fitzpatrick, the two highest-ranked players in the Official World Golf Ranking without a win on the PGA Tour, share the lead at the U.S. Open entering today’s final round.

Last player to earn first PGA Tour win at a major championship was Danny Willett, at the 2016 Masters while the last player to earn first PGA Tour win at the U.S. Open was Graeme McDowell in 2010.

At the recent PGA Championship, Zalatoris and Fitzpatrick both entered the final round T-2. Fitzpatrick played in the final pairing and finished T-5 while Zalatoris went on to lose in a playoff.

Fitzpatrick won the 2013 U.S. Amateur at The Country Club.

Defending champion Jon Rahm made a double bogey at No. 18 and will enter the final round one stroke back. The last player to successfully defend title at a major championship was Brooks Koepka, 2019 PGA Championship.

Scottie Scheffler (T-4), Sam Burns (T-7) and Rory McIlroy (T-7), who have combined for nine TOUR wins this season, are within three strokes of the lead.

36-hole leader Collin Morikawa carded a 7-over (77), tying his highest score on the PGA Tour, his second score of (77) in his last four rounds on Tour.

U.S. Open Leaderboard | After 54 Holes

Will Zalatoris 69-70-67—206 (-4)

Matt Fitzpatrick 68-70-68—206 (-4)

Jon Rahm 69-67-71—207 (-3)

Keegan Bradley 70-69-69—208 (-2)

Adam Hadwin 66-72-70—208 (-2)

Scottie Scheffler 70-67-71—208 (-2)

Full Leaderboard: (link)

Final round Tee Times at The Country Club start at 8:49am (ET) and go to 2:45pm (ET) when 54-hole leaders Matt FItzpatrick and Will Zalatoris tee-off on No. 1.

Weather: Sunday morning rain and cloudy skies will greet the patrons and golfers for the final round of the 2022 U.S. Open at The Country Club. Chilly temperatures from 52-to-63 degrees. Showers diminish between 11am and 1:00pm while winds drop from 14 to 9 mph.

Filed Under: Boston Sports, PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch, U.S. Open Golf

A Challenging Moving Day at U.S. Open

June 18, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

BROOKLINE – Collin Morikawa, winner of the 2020 PGA Championship and 2021 Open Championship, holds a share of the lead as he attempts to win a major for the third consecutive season and would be well on his way for the career Slam.

The top three players in the Official World Golf Ranking are all within two strokes of the lead:

  • ‘22 Masters Tournament winner and FedEx Cup leader Scottie Scheffler (No. 1)
  • Defending U.S. Open champion Jon Rahm (No. 2)
  • Four-time major champion and winner last week Rory McIlroy (No. 3)

Joel Dahmen, playing in his ninth career major, is tied for the lead with Morikawa. Dahmen has his first 36-hole lead/co-lead on Tour.

Notables to miss the cut include Cameron Smith, Viktor Hovland, Tony Finau and Phil Mickelson.

Cameron Young made a hole-in-one at No. 6, his first career ace on Tour. Young, who began the round on No. 10, also made a quadruple-bogey-8 at No. 3 and was 9-over with five holes to play before finishing 4-over and missing the cut by one stroke (Nos. 5-9: birdie, ace, birdie, birdie, par).

ESPN dot com noted: As stat guru Justin Ray pointed out on Twitter on Friday, 25 of the past 26 U.S. Open winners have been tied for sixth or better after two rounds. That’s enough of a trend to make seventh place — or worse — the spot you don’t want to be headed into the weekend. That’s not good for Scheffler (T-7), Matt Fitzpatrick, Sam Burns (T-13) and more. The weekend could bring another exception to the rule.

U.S. Open Leaderboard | After 36 Holes

Collin Morikawa 69-66—135 (-5)

Joel Dahmen 67-68—135 (-5)

Hayden Buckley 68-68—136 (-4)

Jon Rahm 69-67—136 (-4)

Rory McIlroy 67-69—136 (-4)

Aaron Wise 68-68—136 (-4)

Beau Hossler 69-67—136 (-4)

Full Leaderboard: (link)

Filed Under: Boston Sports, PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch

Hadwin Leads at U.S. Open

June 17, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

BROOKLINE – Adam Hadwin recorded a 4-under (66), his lowest score in a major championship, and leads the U.S. Open by one stroke after 18 holes while Rory McIlroy, winner of last week’s RBC Canadian Open, stands T-2.

The last player to win on Tour and win a major the following week was, indeed, McIlroy, at the 2014 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and PGA Championship the next weekend.

Five of the six players at T-2 or better (all but McIlroy) earned spots in the U.S. Open via Final Qualifying.

Defending champion Jon Rahm, 2022 PGA Championship winner Justin Thomas enter the second round T14 (1-under 69s)

FedEx Cup leader and World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler opened with even-par 70 (T-26).

U.S. Open Leaderboard | After 18 Holes

Adam Hadwin 66 (-4)

Callum Tarren 67 (-3)

David Lingmerth 67 (-3)

Rory McIlroy 67 (-3)

Joel Dahmen 67 (-3)

M.J. Daffue 67 (-3)

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch, U.S. Open Golf, USGA

The Country Club is Ready

June 16, 2022 by PGA Tour Brunch

BROOKLINE – Early tee-times at 6:45am in the ‘burbs of Boston, and the beautiful golf course at The Country Club. From Newton to Chestnut Hill to Brookline, the traffic will be horrendous. More importantly, the golf will be great.

Theoretically, a connected sports fan could be watching the U.S. Open in the morning, zip over to Fenway Park for the 1:35pm afternoon start, then head over to the North End, grab a bite of pasta and catch the Boston Celtics vs Golden State Warriors in Game 6 of The NBA Finals. Rough day for a Boston sports fan, eh?

On the links, 2021 U.S. Open champion Jon Rahm will tee-off at 7:18am as he is the first player from Spain to be in title defense of any U.S. Open championship.

The last players to win on Tour, then win a Major was Rory McIlroy in 2014 when he won the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and then the PGA Championship. As winner of last week’s RBC Canadian, McIlroy can do it again at the U.S. Open.

Vermont-born, Massachusetts-reared and New York-schooled (St. John’s),Keegan Bradley threw out the first pitch at Fenway Park on Tuesday night before the Red Sox vs Oakland Athletics game. Bradley won the PGA Championship in 2011. When he stepped to the mound at historic Fenway, he threw a strike and was on the field for a $25,000 presentation to First Tee of Massachusetts by the USGA.

Filed Under: PGA TOUR Tagged With: PGA Tour, PGA Tour Brunch, U.S. Open Golf, USGA

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While We're Young (Ideas) and March Go Out Like a Lyons
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In each round-up, there are far too many questions and not nearly enough definitive answers to the woes facing the New England clubs, the Celtics included. It might be time for some major shake-ups at...
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KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar: KEY DATES IN 2025: Everyone needs to circle these dates on their sports calendar:
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