Latest news with #Homa
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Max Homa and Sahith Theegala played in the Presidents Cup. Now both might miss PGA Tour postseason
The Wyndham Championship is the last chance for players to qualify for the PGA Tour's postseason. It's also a reminder that so much in golf still must be earned. Sahith Theegala and Max Homa are two examples, both of them part of the winning American team at the Presidents Cup last year in Montreal. Theegala, who finished at No. 3 in the FedEx Cup last year and picked up a $7.5 million bonus, had not finished in the top 10 until running into neck trouble in May. He withdrew from three tournaments, including the PGA Championship, to rest it. He returned at the British Open and missed two straight cuts. Now he is No. 144 and needs nothing short of a victory at the Wyndham Championship to qualifying for the postseason. Homa has been in a slump for 15 months, and he started this year with a new coach and new equipment. He feels progress in his swing, but not his results. Now he's at No. 106, and likely needs a runner-up finish to have any hope of extending his season. Adding to the stress for Homa is his wife is due with their second child next week. He was not eligible for the U.S. Open or British Open. He is still grinding. 'My wife is very, very pregnant right now so really like to win one of the next two so I could skip an event coming up just so I could keep the stress level low in our household,' he said at the Barracuda Championship, held opposite the British Open. He tied for 45th at the Barracuda, and he tied for 39th in Minnesota. Three players from the International team in the Presidents Cup are outside the top 70 going into the final regular-season event — Adam Scott, Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Tom Kim. The FedEx Cup standings going into the Wyndham Championship show some 20 players who were in the playoffs a year ago now outside the top 70. That includes Billy Horschel and Will Zalatoris, both out with injuries. Among the players in the top 70 who missed the postseason last year are U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun, two-time winner Brian Campbell and Chris Gotterup. They are among nine players who have won on the PGA Tour this year and are inside the top 70. Winning always helps. Scottie Scheffler, meanwhile, will pick up $18 million without playing this week. The PGA Tour has redistributed the FedEx Cup bonus money so the leader of the FedEx Cup after the regular season gets $10 million, along with $8 million from the Comcast Business Top 10. He is assured of both. LIV to South Africa The Saudi-backed LIV Golf League is making it increasingly clear it is going to markets around the world. Its biggest draw is in Adelaide, Australia. Now it is adding South Africa. LIV has announced LIV Golf South Africa has part of its 2026 schedule in a multi-year commitment. It will be the first time the fledgling league goes to South Africa, the fifth continent on which it has been played since LIV launched in 2022. Steyn City in Johannesburg will host the new event on March 20-22, one week after The Players Championship. Steyn City most recently held the Jonsson Workwear Open in 2023, which was co-sanctioned by the European Tour and Sunshine Tour. Meanwhile, Sports Business Journal reported this week the total prize fund for LIV events will be increasing by $5 million to $30 million, with $10 million devoted to team competition. There would still be a $20 million purse ($4 million to the winner) for the individuals. Hall of Fame to St. Andrews St. Andrews will be hosting the British Open for the 31st time in 2027, a week that will include another World Golf Hall of Fame induction. The shrine is now located at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina, where the USGA has a second headquarters. Padraig Harrington led the induction class at Pinehurst in 2024. The next induction will be at St. Andrews, which previously held a Hall of Fame ceremony in 2015 when Mark O'Meara, Laura Davies and David Graham were among those inducted. Davies missed out when her flight from the U.S. Women's Open was delayed. She at least arrived in time for the reception. 'There is no better connection to golf's rich history and the origins of the game than at St. Andrews,' said Mike Trostel, director of the World Golf Hall of Fame. 'We are thrilled to celebrate the next class of golf's greatest figures at the home of golf and are grateful for the collaboration with our partners at The R&A.' The Hall of Fame induction is now every two years. It will return to Pinehurst in 2029, when the USGA has the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open in consecutive weeks. Magic number Golf's magic number is starting to lose some of its magic. Brett White became the latest player with to shoot 59, doing so in dramatic fashion by making a 50-foot eagle putt on the last hole. That got him into a three-way playoff that he won in the Commissionaires Ottawa Open on the PGA Tour Americas. This was one day after Philip Barbaree Jr. shot 59 in Ottawa. It was the second time two players shot 59 or lower in the same tournament. Cristobal Del Solar (57) and Aldrich Potgieter (59) did it at the Astara Golf Championship in Colombia on the Korn Ferry Tour last year. Yes, it's still a big deal to have any sub-60 score in tournament golf. But it's happening with greater frequency. White had the fifth sub-60 round this year on tours around the world. There were nine such scores a year ago. The last time no score of 59 or lower was recorded on any tour was 2012. On The Move The Constellation Furyk & Friends tournament on the PGA Tour Champions was quickly established as a popular spot being held at Timuquana in Jacksonville, Florida, a Donald Ross design along the St. Johns River. That ends this year, and the tournament is moving in 2026 some 60 miles south to Ocean Course at Hammock Beach in Palm Coast, a Jack Nicklaus signature design where Michelle Wie in 2003 won the Women's Amateur Public Links at age 13. It also hosted PGA Tour Champions events in 2007 and 2008. 'We are incredibly grateful to Timuquana Country Club and the entire Jacksonville community for an unforgettable five years,' said Jim Furyk, host of a tournament that has raised more than $5 million for charity since 2021. 'We're proud of what we've built and excited for the opportunity to continue growing at Hammock Beach Golf Resort & Spa.' Divots The Senior British Open will return to Gleneagles next year for the second time. Darren Clarke won in 2022 when it was last held at course that hosted the 2014 Ryder Cup. ... Rio Takeda and Ayaka Furue have played 18 of the 19 tournaments on the LPGA schedule this year. Both missed only the LPGA Match Play at Shadow Creek. ... Three players who won opposite-field events this year are not among the top 70 in the FedEx Cup — Karl Vilips, William Mouw and Garrick Higgo. Stat of the week Joaquin Niemann has five wins in the LIV Golf League this year. He has not finished in the top 10 in his other six LIV events. Final word 'It's the first time I think I've ever cried happy tears on the golf course." — Mia Hammond, the 17-year-old from Ohio after winning the Greater Toledo Classic. She is the second-youngest winner on the Epson Tour. ___ AP golf:


Fox Sports
10 hours ago
- Sport
- Fox Sports
Max Homa and Sahith Theegala played in the Presidents Cup. Now both might miss PGA Tour postseason
Associated Press The Wyndham Championship is the last chance for players to qualify for the PGA Tour's postseason. It's also a reminder that so much in golf still must be earned. Sahith Theegala and Max Homa are two examples, both of them part of the winning American team at the Presidents Cup last year in Montreal. Theegala, who finished at No. 3 in the FedEx Cup last year and picked up a $7.5 million bonus, had not finished in the top 10 until running into neck trouble in May. He withdrew from three tournaments, including the PGA Championship, to rest it. He returned at the British Open and missed two straight cuts. Now he is No. 144 and needs nothing short of a victory at the Wyndham Championship to qualifying for the postseason. Homa has been in a slump for 15 months, and he started this year with a new coach and new equipment. He feels progress in his swing, but not his results. Now he's at No. 106, and likely needs a runner-up finish to have any hope of extending his season. Adding to the stress for Homa is his wife is due with their second child next week. He was not eligible for the U.S. Open or British Open. He is still grinding. 'My wife is very, very pregnant right now so really like to win one of the next two so I could skip an event coming up just so I could keep the stress level low in our household,' he said at the Barracuda Championship, held opposite the British Open. He tied for 45th at the Barracuda, and he tied for 39th in Minnesota. Three players from the International team in the Presidents Cup are outside the top 70 going into the final regular-season event — Adam Scott, Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Tom Kim. The FedEx Cup standings going into the Wyndham Championship show some 20 players who were in the playoffs a year ago now outside the top 70. That includes Billy Horschel and Will Zalatoris, both out with injuries. Among the players in the top 70 who missed the postseason last year are U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun, two-time winner Brian Campbell and Chris Gotterup. They are among nine players who have won on the PGA Tour this year and are inside the top 70. Winning always helps. Scottie Scheffler, meanwhile, will pick up $18 million without playing this week. The PGA Tour has redistributed the FedEx Cup bonus money so the leader of the FedEx Cup after the regular season gets $10 million, along with $8 million from the Comcast Business Top 10. He is assured of both. LIV to South Africa The Saudi-backed LIV Golf League is making it increasingly clear it is going to markets around the world. Its biggest draw is in Adelaide, Australia. Now it is adding South Africa. LIV has announced LIV Golf South Africa has part of its 2026 schedule in a multi-year commitment. It will be the first time the fledgling league goes to South Africa, the fifth continent on which it has been played since LIV launched in 2022. Steyn City in Johannesburg will host the new event on March 20-22, one week after The Players Championship. Steyn City most recently held the Jonsson Workwear Open in 2023, which was co-sanctioned by the European Tour and Sunshine Tour. Meanwhile, Sports Business Journal reported this week the total prize fund for LIV events will be increasing by $5 million to $30 million, with $10 million devoted to team competition. There would still be a $20 million purse ($4 million to the winner) for the individuals. Hall of Fame to St. Andrews St. Andrews will be hosting the British Open for the 31st time in 2027, a week that will include another World Golf Hall of Fame induction. The shrine is now located at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina, where the USGA has a second headquarters. Padraig Harrington led the induction class at Pinehurst in 2024. The next induction will be at St. Andrews, which previously held a Hall of Fame ceremony in 2015 when Mark O'Meara, Laura Davies and David Graham were among those inducted. Davies missed out when her flight from the U.S. Women's Open was delayed. She at least arrived in time for the reception. 'There is no better connection to golf's rich history and the origins of the game than at St. Andrews,' said Mike Trostel, director of the World Golf Hall of Fame. 'We are thrilled to celebrate the next class of golf's greatest figures at the home of golf and are grateful for the collaboration with our partners at The R&A.' The Hall of Fame induction is now every two years. It will return to Pinehurst in 2029, when the USGA has the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open in consecutive weeks. Magic number Golf's magic number is starting to lose some of its magic. Brett White became the latest player with to shoot 59, doing so in dramatic fashion by making a 50-foot eagle putt on the last hole. That got him into a three-way playoff that he won in the Commissionaires Ottawa Open on the PGA Tour Americas. This was one day after Philip Barbaree Jr. shot 59 in Ottawa. It was the second time two players shot 59 or lower in the same tournament. Cristobal Del Solar (57) and Aldrich Potgieter (59) did it at the Astara Golf Championship in Colombia on the Korn Ferry Tour last year. Yes, it's still a big deal to have any sub-60 score in tournament golf. But it's happening with greater frequency. White had the fifth sub-60 round this year on tours around the world. There were nine such scores a year ago. The last time no score of 59 or lower was recorded on any tour was 2012. On The Move The Constellation Furyk & Friends tournament on the PGA Tour Champions was quickly established as a popular spot being held at Timuquana in Jacksonville, Florida, a Donald Ross design along the St. Johns River. That ends this year, and the tournament is moving in 2026 some 60 miles south to Ocean Course at Hammock Beach in Palm Coast, a Jack Nicklaus signature design where Michelle Wie in 2003 won the Women's Amateur Public Links at age 13. It also hosted PGA Tour Champions events in 2007 and 2008. 'We are incredibly grateful to Timuquana Country Club and the entire Jacksonville community for an unforgettable five years,' said Jim Furyk, host of a tournament that has raised more than $5 million for charity since 2021. 'We're proud of what we've built and excited for the opportunity to continue growing at Hammock Beach Golf Resort & Spa.' Divots The Senior British Open will return to Gleneagles next year for the second time. Darren Clarke won in 2022 when it was last held at course that hosted the 2014 Ryder Cup. ... Rio Takeda and Ayaka Furue have played 18 of the 19 tournaments on the LPGA schedule this year. Both missed only the LPGA Match Play at Shadow Creek. ... Three players who won opposite-field events this year are not among the top 70 in the FedEx Cup — Karl Vilips, William Mouw and Garrick Higgo. Stat of the week Joaquin Niemann has five wins in the LIV Golf League this year. He has not finished in the top 10 in his other six LIV events. Final word 'It's the first time I think I've ever cried happy tears on the golf course." — Mia Hammond, the 17-year-old from Ohio after winning the Greater Toledo Classic. She is the second-youngest winner on the Epson Tour. ___ AP golf:

Associated Press
10 hours ago
- Sport
- Associated Press
Max Homa and Sahith Theegala played in the Presidents Cup. Now both might miss PGA Tour postseason
The Wyndham Championship is the last chance for players to qualify for the PGA Tour's postseason. It's also a reminder that so much in golf still must be earned. Sahith Theegala and Max Homa are two examples, both of them part of the winning American team at the Presidents Cup last year in Montreal. Theegala, who finished at No. 3 in the FedEx Cup last year and picked up a $7.5 million bonus, had not finished in the top 10 until running into neck trouble in May. He withdrew from three tournaments, including the PGA Championship, to rest it. He returned at the British Open and missed two straight cuts. Now he is No. 144 and needs nothing short of a victory at the Wyndham Championship to qualifying for the postseason. Homa has been in a slump for 15 months, and he started this year with a new coach and new equipment. He feels progress in his swing, but not his results. Now he's at No. 106, and likely needs a runner-up finish to have any hope of extending his season. Adding to the stress for Homa is his wife is due with their second child next week. He was not eligible for the U.S. Open or British Open. He is still grinding. 'My wife is very, very pregnant right now so really like to win one of the next two so I could skip an event coming up just so I could keep the stress level low in our household,' he said at the Barracuda Championship, held opposite the British Open. He tied for 45th at the Barracuda, and he tied for 39th in Minnesota. Three players from the International team in the Presidents Cup are outside the top 70 going into the final regular-season event — Adam Scott, Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Tom Kim. The FedEx Cup standings going into the Wyndham Championship show some 20 players who were in the playoffs a year ago now outside the top 70. That includes Billy Horschel and Will Zalatoris, both out with injuries. Among the players in the top 70 who missed the postseason last year are U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun, two-time winner Brian Campbell and Chris Gotterup. They are among nine players who have won on the PGA Tour this year and are inside the top 70. Winning always helps. Scottie Scheffler, meanwhile, will pick up $18 million without playing this week. The PGA Tour has redistributed the FedEx Cup bonus money so the leader of the FedEx Cup after the regular season gets $10 million, along with $8 million from the Comcast Business Top 10. He is assured of both. LIV to South Africa The Saudi-backed LIV Golf League is making it increasingly clear it is going to markets around the world. Its biggest draw is in Adelaide, Australia. Now it is adding South Africa. LIV has announced LIV Golf South Africa has part of its 2026 schedule in a multi-year commitment. It will be the first time the fledgling league goes to South Africa, the fifth continent on which it has been played since LIV launched in 2022. Steyn City in Johannesburg will host the new event on March 20-22, one week after The Players Championship. Steyn City most recently held the Jonsson Workwear Open in 2023, which was co-sanctioned by the European Tour and Sunshine Tour. Meanwhile, Sports Business Journal reported this week the total prize fund for LIV events will be increasing by $5 million to $30 million, with $10 million devoted to team competition. There would still be a $20 million purse ($4 million to the winner) for the individuals. Hall of Fame to St. Andrews St. Andrews will be hosting the British Open for the 31st time in 2027, a week that will include another World Golf Hall of Fame induction. The shrine is now located at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina, where the USGA has a second headquarters. Padraig Harrington led the induction class at Pinehurst in 2024. The next induction will be at St. Andrews, which previously held a Hall of Fame ceremony in 2015 when Mark O'Meara, Laura Davies and David Graham were among those inducted. Davies missed out when her flight from the U.S. Women's Open was delayed. She at least arrived in time for the reception. 'There is no better connection to golf's rich history and the origins of the game than at St. Andrews,' said Mike Trostel, director of the World Golf Hall of Fame. 'We are thrilled to celebrate the next class of golf's greatest figures at the home of golf and are grateful for the collaboration with our partners at The R&A.' The Hall of Fame induction is now every two years. It will return to Pinehurst in 2029, when the USGA has the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open in consecutive weeks. Magic number Golf's magic number is starting to lose some of its magic. Brett White became the latest player with to shoot 59, doing so in dramatic fashion by making a 50-foot eagle putt on the last hole. That got him into a three-way playoff that he won in the Commissionaires Ottawa Open on the PGA Tour Americas. This was one day after Philip Barbaree Jr. shot 59 in Ottawa. It was the second time two players shot 59 or lower in the same tournament. Cristobal Del Solar (57) and Aldrich Potgieter (59) did it at the Astara Golf Championship in Colombia on the Korn Ferry Tour last year. Yes, it's still a big deal to have any sub-60 score in tournament golf. But it's happening with greater frequency. White had the fifth sub-60 round this year on tours around the world. There were nine such scores a year ago. The last time no score of 59 or lower was recorded on any tour was 2012. On The Move The Constellation Furyk & Friends tournament on the PGA Tour Champions was quickly established as a popular spot being held at Timuquana in Jacksonville, Florida, a Donald Ross design along the St. Johns River. That ends this year, and the tournament is moving in 2026 some 60 miles south to Ocean Course at Hammock Beach in Palm Coast, a Jack Nicklaus signature design where Michelle Wie in 2003 won the Women's Amateur Public Links at age 13. It also hosted PGA Tour Champions events in 2007 and 2008. 'We are incredibly grateful to Timuquana Country Club and the entire Jacksonville community for an unforgettable five years,' said Jim Furyk, host of a tournament that has raised more than $5 million for charity since 2021. 'We're proud of what we've built and excited for the opportunity to continue growing at Hammock Beach Golf Resort & Spa.' Divots The Senior British Open will return to Gleneagles next year for the second time. Darren Clarke won in 2022 when it was last held at course that hosted the 2014 Ryder Cup. ... Rio Takeda and Ayaka Furue have played 18 of the 19 tournaments on the LPGA schedule this year. Both missed only the LPGA Match Play at Shadow Creek. ... Three players who won opposite-field events this year are not among the top 70 in the FedEx Cup — Karl Vilips, William Mouw and Garrick Higgo. Stat of the week Joaquin Niemann has five wins in the LIV Golf League this year. He has not finished in the top 10 in his other six LIV events. Final word 'It's the first time I think I've ever cried happy tears on the golf course.' — Mia Hammond, the 17-year-old from Ohio after winning the Greater Toledo Classic. She is the second-youngest winner on the Epson Tour. ___ AP golf:


Daily Mirror
11 hours ago
- Sport
- Daily Mirror
Big-name PGA Tour stars in danger of being shut out of £75million tournament
The 19th edition of the FedExCup gets underway next month, with the playoffs consisting of three events to determine the FedExCup champion and the winner of a hefty prize Several big-name PGA Tour stars are at risk of failing to make next month's FedExCup Playoffs. The PGA Tour 's regular season concludes this week at the Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, with the Wyndham Championship. The top 70-ranked players in the FedExCup regular season standings - contested between January and August this year - will make it to the FedExCup Playoffs, which get underway next week at the FedEx St. Jude Championship. The FedExCup Playoffs consist of three events, featuring a progressive cut with fields of 70 (FedEx St. Jude Championship), 50 (BMW Championship) and 30 (TOUR Championship). Points from the regular season carry over to the first two playoff events, while the latter is played as a 72-hole stroke-play event where all players start the tournament at even par. Up for grabs is a share of the $100million (£75m) total bonus money. The best performer over the course of four rounds at the TOUR Championship wins the FedExCup and a whopping $10m (£7.5m) prize - claimed last year by Scottie Scheffler. World No. 1 Scheffler banked a staggering $25m (£18.7m) last year, but the PGA have since revamped how the end-of-season prizes are distributed. The intention is to spread the rewards and make sure long-term efforts are recognised accordingly. Many of the Tour's biggest stars will therefore not play at the Wyndham Championship, instead taking the week off to relax and prepare for the FedExCup Playoffs. However, some well-known PGA Tour stars are still in need of a strong performance to make the cut. Among those are Rickie Fowler and Tony Finau who, despite being on the right side of the ledger, are not secure just yet. Yet, there are those who are in an even more desperate situation. Perhaps the biggest star on Tour that needs a huge performance is 2023 Ryder Cup Team USA member Max Homa. Homa has made just 11 of 19 cuts during the 2025 PGA Tour season, with only one top 10 finish across all of those coming at the John Deere Classic. Homa is currently 106th in the FedExCup standings with 351 points, meaning only a win or a second-place finish would put him into the playoffs. Australian Adam Scott is in a similar position, sitting in 85th on 445 points. Scott is tied for the most FedExCup Playoff appearances since it began in 2007 and has actually played well this season, though his failure to close out strong on Sundays means he doesn't have a single top 10 on his resume. Veteran golfer Gary Woodland is also hoping to make the PGA Tour's climax, having inspirationally returned to the field since getting a brain tumour removed in late 2023. The 41-year-old has 13 made cuts in 19 tournaments this season, including six top 25s, though he is in 75th place and 32 points behind Matti Schmid, who currently occupies the final spot on 594 points. The winner of next month's TOUR Championship will be the player with the lowest stroke total over 72 holes, receiving a five-year PGA Tour exemption along with their prize money.


Newsweek
4 days ago
- Sport
- Newsweek
Max Homa Reveals Wife-Related Reason to Desperately Need a Win
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. There are many reasons professional golfers have found themselves in need of a win, but few have encountered the dilemma Max Homa currently faces. The six-time PGA Tour winner is on the verge of finishing regular season well outside the top 70. A win would help get him in, but a far more pressing need at home puts a major emphasis on getting a trophy this week. "I need to win. I really need to win because my wife's pregnant and I need to go home," Homa said after the first round of the 3M Open, according to the transcripts of his post-round interview. "We have like two weeks left. It's a little extra stressful, but I think the only way that you can go out and win a golf tournament is by not exactly trying to win a golf tournament. So it's a weird headspace." A victory would give Homa the opportunity to keep his PGA Tour card for the next two years. If he doesn't win, and finish the regular season outside the top 70, he'll have to compete in the FedEx Cup Fall, aiming to finish inside the top 100, which would keep his membership until 2026. Max Homa of the United States Team and wife Lacey Croom leave the 18th green in a golf cart during Friday four-ball matches on day two of the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Country... Max Homa of the United States Team and wife Lacey Croom leave the 18th green in a golf cart during Friday four-ball matches on day two of the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Country Club on September 23, 2022 in Charlotte, North Carolina. MoreThat's why, despite his wife's upcoming due date, Homa is playing the 3M Open and is also committed to the Wyndham Championship next week. "My wife told me to play, so it's scheduled the Monday after the Wyndham," Homa said, according to the transcripts. "Yeah, just every day I finish a day of golf I look at my phone and see if I'm flying home so we'll see. It's a good problem to have." The 34-year-old got off to a strong start at the 3M Open, carding five birdies to finish a bogey-free first round tied for 18th at 5-under. However, he trails leader Adam Svensson by six strokes. He has had a rather poor season, with seven missed cuts in 18 tournaments played and only two top-25 finishes, including a top-10 he achieved just two weeks ago at the John Deere Classic (T5). Homa married his wife Lacey Croom in 2019, and they welcomed their first child, Cam Andrew, in October 2022. More Golf: Bryson DeChambeau Targets Rory McIlroy With Ryder Cup 'Chirping' Warning