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LPGA won't name new commissioner for 'a while'

LPGA won't name new commissioner for 'a while'

NBC Sports18-02-2025
Tom Abbott joins Golf Central to preview the Honda LPGA Thailand and explain where things stand with the Tour's commissioner search before discussing golf's larger pace of play debate and Lydia Ko's stardom.
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How to watch every stage of the 2025 Tour de France Femmes
How to watch every stage of the 2025 Tour de France Femmes

NBC Sports

time2 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

How to watch every stage of the 2025 Tour de France Femmes

All nine stages of the 2025 Tour de France Femmes air live on Peacock. The fourth edition of the Tour runs from July 26-Aug. 3, starting in Vannes in Brittany and ending in Les Porte des Soleil in the Alps. Peacock coverage starts at 9:35 a.m. ET on most days. CNBC joins for live coverage of the last two stages to determine the winner. The Tour increases from eight stages in 2024 to nine for the first time this year. The 723-mile race ends with two mountain stages, including a summit finish on the penultimate day at the Col de la Madeleine, an 11.5-mile climb with an average gradient of 8.1%. Poland's Katarzyna Niewiadoma Phinney won the 2024 Tour (by four seconds over Dutchwoman Demi Vollering) after Dutch riders Annemiek van Vleuten and Vollering won the first two editions. Niewiadoma Phinney defends her title against a field including American Kristen Faulkner, who won Paris Olympic gold in the road race and on the track with the team pursuit. Faulkner, who rides for EF Education–Oatly, was the lone American to finish last year's Tour, placing 38th. Another American, two-time world time trial champion Chloé Dygert, makes her Tour debut. She is teammates with Niewiadoma Phinney on CANYON//SRAM zondacrypto. France's Pauline Ferrand-Prevot, the 2024 Olympic mountain bike gold medalist, is slated to make her Tour debut. Also expected are the winners of the first two Grand Tours of 2025: Vollering (repeat Spanish Vuelta champion in May) and Italian Elisa Longo Borghini (repeat Giro d'Italia winner earlier in July). Olympic and world road race champion Anna van der Breggen of the Netherlands is also expected to race after ending a three-year retirement to compete this season. 2025 Tour de France Femmes Broadcast Schedule

Scottie Scheffler becomes 4th PGA Tour player with $90 million in career earnings
Scottie Scheffler becomes 4th PGA Tour player with $90 million in career earnings

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Scottie Scheffler becomes 4th PGA Tour player with $90 million in career earnings

No one has made more money playing on the PGA Tour than Tiger Woods. Scottie Scheffler is quickly closing in on Big Cat. After his fourth major championship victory Sunday in the 2025 British Open at Royal Portrush, Scheffler surpassed $90 million in career earnings on the PGA Tour. Only Woods, Rory McIlroy and Phil Mickelson have made more money than Scheffler in the history of the Tour. Just in 2025, Scheffler has made more than $19 million, which would put him 131st on the career list. That's in front of players like Cameron Young, David Duval, Maverick McNealy and plenty of other notables. Tiger is alone at the top, with $120,999,126 earned throughout his career, featuring 82 wins, tied with Sam Snead for the most all-time, and 15 major titles. McIlroy is second, sitting at $107,145,776. Then there's Mickelson, who has amassed $96,727,968. Scheffler's victory put him at $90,996,470, well within reach of surpassing Mickelson if he strings together strong finishes in the FedEx Cup Playoffs. And at his current pace, it's a matter of when, not if, he passes Woods for No. 1 on the list. The better competition may be between who gets there first: Scheffler or McIlroy, the latter who has just more than a $16 million advantage coming around the final corner.

Ryder Cup training camp is shaping up for the first fall PGA Tour event in Napa
Ryder Cup training camp is shaping up for the first fall PGA Tour event in Napa

Associated Press

time4 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Ryder Cup training camp is shaping up for the first fall PGA Tour event in Napa

PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (AP) — So much for all the PGA Tour fall events having weak fields. The Procore Championship in Napa, California, is shaping up to be training camp for the Ryder Cup for the American team to avoid getting rusty ahead of the Sept. 26-28 matches. 'I know I'll be there,' Scottie Scheffler said. Ditto for Xander Schauffele, who suggested the world's No. 1 player was a strong voice in urging whoever is on the U.S. team to be at Silverado Resort on Sept. 11-14. That was a big concern at the last Ryder Cup, held outside Rome in 2023. The PGA Tour season that year ended Aug. 27 with the Tour Championship at East Lake, and the majority of the team had a full month away from tournament golf before going to Marco Simone for the start of the Ryder Cup on Sept. 29. Justin Thomas and Max Homa were the only players in Napa, along with U.S. captain Zach Johnson. Europe had its players at the BMW PGA Championship in England. Team Europe got out to a fast start at Marco Simone and sailed to an easy victory to win back the cup. The Procore Championship is the only PGA Tour event on the schedule between the Tour Championship and the Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black in New York. It also is the same week as the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth. Odds are against having all 12 of the Americans there — one of them is Bryson DeChambeau, who is banned from the PGA Tour because he's with LIV Golf. U.S. captain Keegan Bradley told Sports Illustrated he would use one of his six picks on DeChambeau, who finished in the top 10 at three of the four majors this year. 'Bryson is going to be a very important piece to us winning the Ryder Cup,' Bradley said in a text message to SI. 'He brings so much. He brings energy, passion but most importantly, he's one of the best players on the planet.' The LIV Golf League season ends Aug. 24 with its team championship in Michigan. The only other competition for DeChambeau would be a YouTube match or European tour stops in Switzerland, Ireland, England or France. Justin Leonard on the rise Justin Leonard played four rounds of competition last week for the first time in eight years, making the cut at the British Open and finishing in a tie for 59th. Leonard, 53, stayed largely away from golf while working as a TV analyst, and this is only his third year playing a full PGA Tour Champions schedule. He had not played in the British Open since 2016 at Royal Troon — where he won The Open in 1997 — and he was pleased to be among three players 50 and older to make the weekend at Royal Portrush. Lee Westwood and Phil Mickelson were the others. 'It's a different kind of pressure coming over here and playing as a PGA Tour Champions guy,' Leonard said. 'There aren't many expectations. But still, it's nice to come over and play well and justify coming over.' And then Leonard with his dry sense of humor found a perk to his performance. 'Plus, think of all the world ranking points I got this week,' he said 'We've done a hard reset on the ranking. It's rough thinking there are more than 4,000 golfers out there better than I am. But I proved them all wrong this week.' His world ranking going into Royal Portrush was No. 4,689. Leonard's tie for 59th moved him all the way to No. 1,436. So now there are only 1,435 players better than him. But he has one thing going for him. Leonard has a better world ranking than Tiger Woods (No. 1,626) for the first time since the first week of 1997. Hard reset, indeed. Senior European vacation The PGA Tour Champions is taking its show out of the country next year with the Portugal Invitational set for July 31 to Aug. 2. It's part of a five-year partnership and will be the first time a PGA Tour-sanctioned event for stroke play is in Portugal. That will give the PGA Tour Champions players the chance of a three-week stay in Europe if they choose. The Senior British Open is the week before, and the Senior PGA Championship on the Legends Tour will be the week after. The 78-man field will have players from the PGA Tour Champions and the Legends Tour in Europe, with a total purse of $3 million at The Els Club Vilamoura. Ernie Els redesigned the course, which previously hosted the Portugal Masters from 2007 through 2022. The World Cup of Golf was held in Portugal in 2005. 'The players are going to love it, not just the golf course but this whole destination,' Els said. 'It's such a beautiful part of the world.' Major cuts Xander Schauffele made it through a third consecutive year making the cut in every major, taking his total to 15 in a row dating to a weekend off in the 2022 Masters. The opposite end of that was Cameron Smith, who missed the cut in all of them. He nearly had some distinguished company. Two other major champions, Brooks Koepka and Dustin Johnson, missed the cut in three out of four. Schauffele was among 17 players to make the cut in all four majors. That includes Corey Conners, who made the cut in the U.S. Open but had to withdraw in the final round with injury. Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton were the only players from LIV Golf to make the cut in all four majors. That's a smaller sample size considering the goal for so many LIV players is to simply qualify or otherwise get into a major. Calamity Corner Scottie Scheffler had no such concerns at 'Calamity Corner,' the notorious par-3 16th hole at Royal Portrush for the British Open. He made birdie in the opening round and again on Friday. He began to build his lead with a third straight birdie on Saturday. And in the final round, he drilled his tee shot to 15 feet. He missed. 'It's just a hard hole, I guess,' Scheffler said with a laugh. Calamity Corner does not have quite the same familiarity as the 12th hole at Augusta National, so one more birdie might not have been as noteworthy as the time Scott Verplank made birdie all four rounds in the 2003 Masters. Scheffler thought back to the first time he played it in a practice round. 'It was raining and blowing in out of the left, and I smoked a 3-wood to 30 feet, and I thought it was a pretty amazing shot,' Scheffler said. 'And then I was playing against Sam Burns in a practice round, and he hit 3-wood to about 25 feet and made it.' Divots Even though Nelly Korda hasn't won this year, her seven-win season in 2024 gave her such a big lead that she's still No. 1 in women's golf. Korda has been No. 1 for 70 consecutive weeks, the fifth-largest streak since the women's world ranking began in 2006. ... Scottie Scheffler registered his fourth victory of at least four shots at the British Open, the most PGA Tour titles by four shots or more since Tiger Woods did it five times in 2000. ... Xander Schauffele tied for seventh in the British Open and earned $451,834, moving him past $60 million in career PGA Tour earnings. Scheffler became the fourth player to surpass $90 in career tour money. Stat of the week Scottie Scheffler, Harris English and Chris Gotterup gave Americans a 1-2-3 finish in the British Open for the first time since 1998, when it was Mark O'Meara, Brian Watts and Tiger Woods. Final word 'I've gotten everything I wanted out of this week apart from a claret jug, and that's just because one person was just a little bit better than the rest of us.' — Rory McIlroy on his return home to Northern Ireland for the British Open. ___ AP golf:

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