
Last chance to save on Amazon Prime Day golf shoe deals. Save on Under Armour, adidas
Happy Friday, golfers, but this Friday carries a ring of melancholy with it as it also brings the end of Amazon Prime Day 2025.
The epic sale ends tonight at midnight PT, but there's still time to capitalize on the massive savings available.
LAST CHANCE: The best Amazon Prime Day deals end tonight. Here are the most popular picks you can still buy
Need to stock up on top-level golf balls? We got you covered. Want a rangefinder but don't want to spend more than $200? We're here for you. Want to shave 10 shots off your score in the blink of an eye? Ok, we can't help you there, but with these golf apparel savings we can promise you'll look the part.
Golf shoes can be expensive, which is why you, like most people, have been putting off getting a new pair, even though you badly need one. Here are five Amazon Prime Day sales on golf shoes that will keep you on the golf course all year long.
Shop all Prime Day golf shoe sales
1) adidas Golf Men's S2G Spikeless Golf Shoes - Save 33%
2) Under Armour Men's Drive Fade Golf Shoes Sneaker - Save 15%
3) Cole Haan Men's Zerogrand Overtake 2 Golf Sneaker - Save 25%
4) Puma Men's Proadapt Alphacat Golf Shoe - Save 45%
5) SQAIRZ SPEED2 Men's Athletic Golf Shoes - Save 24%
Amazon Prime Day 2025 begins on Tuesday, July 8 and will end on Friday, July 11. Unlike past Prime Day sales, this is the first year the event has been extended from two days to four days.
USA TODAY Shopping will be monitoring all the savings throughout Prime Day 2025, so be sure to sign up for our newsletter and follow us on Instagram to stay updated!
In order to get access to the best Prime Day deals, you'll want to sign up for an Amazon Prime membership. Currently, new members can sign up for a one-week trial for less than $2 to access the top Prime deals.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
Wrigley Field All-Star Game Is A Tribute To Tom Ricketts' Vision
Given the flood of technicolor advertising displayed at baseball parks, including patches on jerseys and batting helmets, it was fitting Major League Baseball staged a game in the infield at Bristol Motor Speedway, where Richard Petty won 15 races. In its desire to capture all possible revenue streams, MLB has followed NASCAR's lead in almost every way. But it was less than 20 years ago when the Chicago Cubs caught grief for daring to place four words on the outfield gates at Wrigley Field. Before Opening Day in 2007, the Cubs' unpopular owners, the Tribune Company, agreed to sell sponsorship on the two dark green gates to Under Armour — 7-foot by 12-foot logos to appear between the ivy-covered outfield walls. For lifelong fans and baseball traditionalists, it was like painting a mustache onto the Mona Lisa. Never mind that ownership had just followed the splashy managerial hire of Lou Piniella by investing in big-ticket free agents Alfonso Soriano and Aramis Ramirez, along with eight-figure deals for Ted Lilly, Jason Marquis and Mark DeRosa. Also that Wrigley, which was then entering its 94th year, was showing its age. There was massive pushback in the media, which held the Cubs to a standard that didn't exist elsewhere. 'There is just something inherently wrong about ads being placed among the ivy at Wrigley Field as part of some lame marketing ploy,' wrote one blogger in one of the milder public critiques. Under Armour wasn't surprised by the outcry against the ads. 'The Cubs will tell you what happened when they played the first night games,' then-Under Armour Vice President Steve Battista told the Los Angeles Times. 'But it's all part of putting a winner on the field.' The Cubs didn't play night games at their home park until 1988, and a vocal segment of their fans seemed to like it that way. It's safe to say broadcasters weren't as happy, which is why the Cubs were threatened with losing home-field advantage had they advanced to the World Series in '84. Yellow 'No Lights' T-shirts were sold outside Wrigley throughout much of the 1980s before Tribune Company installed lights. As a reward for adding lights, then-commissioner Peter Ueberroth selected the Cubs to host the 1990 All-Star Game. They were unsuccessful in lobbying for another one until last Friday, when Rob Manfred formally announced that Wrigley will host the flagship event in 2027. It's recognition for how well owner Tom Ricketts — who bought the Cubs from then-Tribune Company owner Sam Zell in 2009 — brought the franchise and its ancient ballpark into the modern era of professional sports. If you work in baseball or baseball media, you're often asked about your favorite ballparks. There is no one right answer, as MLB currently has more delightful stadiums than blah ones, but if the safest answer is Fenway Park for a night game and Wrigley for a day game. Both have been massively renovated and updated by the current ownership groups, and both have seen the end of historic championship droughts. There's something magical about the energy of Fenway at night — it's hard to miss the lights on in the middle of the city — and so promising about strolling into Wrigley for a day game, with the anticipation of a good time at the ballpark and an evening in the city afterward. Given the presence of landmark commissions and hard-to-please neighbors (and city aldermen), common sense improvements at Wrigley Field have always been made despite kicking and screaming. The Cubs were sued by rooftop operators when they announced plans to install long-overdue video boards, which arrived just in time for the trip to the NLCS in 2015. Eight miles to the south, the White Sox annually updated their ballpark — which opened in 1991 — at taxpayer expense through the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority while Ricketts had to fight for approval to spend his own money for improvements to Wrigley. Ricketts said in a 2020 interview his ownership group had spent about $740 million on ballpark renovations, which had originally been projected at $500 million. 'No one could have known in advance the level of the issues we were going to find,' Ricketts told the Athletic's Patrick Mooney and other beat writers. 'We were also very much in the mindset of: 'Let's measure twice, cut once. Let's do it right.' We intend to own the team for the next generation or two. We want to make sure that the person that follows me in this chair doesn't have to worry about the same problems that we had to deal with. So we spent all the money to make sure Wrigley Field was not only an improvement for the fans but something that's structurally viable for the next hundred years.' While fans were frustrated with a lull in spending for player payrolls after the run to the 2016 World Series, Ricketts denied stadium expenses impacted the baseball budget. 'We financed (renovations),' he said. 'One of the things we did was we sold pieces of the team. We paid for it by selling off assets, selling off equity in the team. That effectively covered the expenses that we didn't anticipate — that we could not have anticipated — early on.' While heavily investing in the rooftop buildings beyond the outfield walls at Wrigley, Ricketts made a point of getting improvements outside the ballpark. Initially that meant better lighting and sidewalks for security but will soon include the installation of security bollards along the streets that ring the stadium. A public-private funding measure passed in June that will allocate an estimated $32 million for security measures. That was the final hurdle the Cubs had to clear before MLB allowed them to host an All-Star Game. Because baseball's collective bargaining agreement ends in 2026, there's fear of an extended player lockout leading into the '27 season, however. Ricketts understands that as well as anyone, of course, but for the moment let him enjoy a feeling of accomplishment for not only preserving but improving Wrigley Field. He deserves it.


Business Insider
16 hours ago
- Business Insider
Top Analysts Raise Amazon Stock (AMZN) Price Target Despite Pullback on Q2 Earnings
Amazon (AMZN) stock declined more than 8% on Friday despite the e-commerce and cloud computing giant's better-than-expected revenue and earnings for the second quarter. The selloff is being blamed on the subdued outlook and lofty expectations from Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud division, which failed to impress to the extent rival Microsoft's (MSFT) Azure did with its June quarter performance. Ignoring the pullback, top Wall Street analysts remain bullish on Amazon stock, with many raising their price targets to reflect confidence in the company's prospects. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Top Analysts Remain Bullish on AMZN Stock Following the Q2 print, Bank of America Securities analyst Justin Post increased the price target for Amazon stock to $272 from $265 and reiterated a Buy rating. The 5-star analyst noted the Q2 revenue and earnings beat. He added that while AWS growth accelerated 60 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 17.5% and was slightly above Street, it lacked a 'capacity-aided top-line beat' similar to Azure and Alphabet's (GOOGL) Google Cloud Platform (GCP). Additionally, Post noted that AWS margins missed expectations, with over half of the 6.5 percent quarter-over-quarter decline attributed to stock-based compensation (SBC) and forex headwinds. It was also impacted by growing depreciation. On the positive side, Post highlighted that Q3 revenue guidance of $174 billion to $179.5 billion beat the Street's expectation of $173 billion, boosted by a solid Prime Day, with a profit outlook of $15.5 billion to $20.5 billion bracketing the consensus estimate of $19.4 billion. Likewise, Barclays analyst Ross Sandler raised the price target for AMZN stock to $275 from $240 and reaffirmed a Buy rating. The 5-star analyst stated that he suspected 'knives would come out on AWS,' given that rivals' June quarter revenue and backlogs accelerated on AI, and also due to the margin miss. That said, Sandler has not lost any faith and expects AI to add a couple of points by the fourth quarter on Anthropic and other applications built on Claude-4's API. Meanwhile, the analyst highlighted that Amazon's retail posted a strong quarter again, with efficiency reaching all-time highs. Finally, DA Davidson analyst Gil Luria increased the price target for Amazon stock to $265 from $230 and reiterated a Buy rating. The top-rated analyst stated that despite the accelerating revenue in Amazon's retail business and stabilizing growth in AWS, Q2 results were largely overshadowed by capex guidance that is expected to see infrastructure investments accelerate through the second half of the year. Nonetheless, Luria noted that management continues to reiterate that they're seeing an acceleration of customers' transition to the cloud, along with demand for compute still exceeding supply at AWS. Is Amazon Stock a Buy, Sell, or Hold? Overall, Wall Street has a Strong Buy consensus rating on Amazon stock based on 44 Buys versus one Hold recommendation. The average AMZN stock price target of $265.05 indicates 23.4% upside potential from current levels.
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
WATCH: Live updates from Ravens open training camp practice at M&T Bank Stadium
The Ravens are minutes away from taking the field for Day 10 of training camp practices, and they'll give the fans a treat during an open session at M&T Bank Stadium. It'll be a 2.5-hour session in front of a capacity-filled stadium, with the free ticket going out within minutes of the announcement last month. Down eight sessions from last summer, Baltimore has hosted nine of 16 open training camp sessions at the Under Armour Performance Center that have been free to the public. Follow along for live updates, highlights, and critical notes. This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire: Highlights from Ravens' training camp practice at M&T Bank Stadium