logo
Wyndham Championship leaderboard updates for Sunday's final round in Greensboro

Wyndham Championship leaderboard updates for Sunday's final round in Greensboro

USA Todaya day ago
There are just 18 holes left in the PGA Tour's regular season.
The final round of the 2025 Wyndham Championship is underway at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, where Cameron Young held on to a comfortable 5-shot lead after 54 holes.
Young is one of the most accomplished active players on Tour without a win to his name, having racked up seven runner-up finishes and 22 top-10s in his career thus far. But that first win has eluded him. He can change all that with a solid round Sunday.
That isn't the only intrigue here, though, as several players are fighting to crack the top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings and get into the playoffs, which begin next week in Memphis. The tournament within the tournament figures to provide some serious drama down the stretch.
Follow along below for live updates, scores, highlights and more from the final round of the 2025 Wyndham Championship.
Wyndham Championship leaderboard
Keep tabs on every score being carded at Sedgefield Country Club with our 2025 Wyndham Championship leaderboard. Here's what it looked like at the top to start Sunday's final round:
Who's in danger of missing out on the 2025 FedEx Cup Playoffs?
After 54 holes, here's the last five in and first five out of the top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings, along with where they are on the leaderboard at the Wyndham Championship. The top 70 after today will move on to the FedEx Cup playoffs, which begin next week in Memphis.
66. Kevin Yu (CUT)
67. Patrick Rodgers (T29)
68. Davis Thompson (T7)
69. Emiliano Grillo (T48)
70. Gary Woodland (T9)
—————
71. Erik van Rooyen (WD)
72. Cam Davis (T36)
73. Nicolai Hojgaard (T48)
74. Byeong Hun An (CUT)
75. Keith Mitchell (CUT)
How to watch, follow 2025 Wyndham Championship
This is the TV channel, streaming and radio schedule for Sunday's final round, with Golf Channel, CBS, ESPN+, Paramount+ and PGA Tour Radio on SiriusXM all teaming up for the coverage. All times listed are ET.
What's the prize money payouts at the 2025 Wyndham Championship?
The total purse for the 2025 Wyndham Championship is $8.2 million. The winner of the 2025 Wyndham Championship receives $1.476 million, or 18 percent of the total purse. See the complete money breakdown here.
Where is the Wyndham Championship played?
Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina, has hosted the tournament since 2008. The 7,131-yard, par-70 golf course is a Donald Ross design that opened in the 1920s and had a restoration in 2007.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What odds does ESPN's FPI give LSU football of making the College Football Playoff
What odds does ESPN's FPI give LSU football of making the College Football Playoff

USA Today

time16 minutes ago

  • USA Today

What odds does ESPN's FPI give LSU football of making the College Football Playoff

According to ESPN's 2025 College Football Power Index, LSU has a 30.3% of making the College Football Playoffs. The Tigers' chances rank No. 13 nationally and No. 7 among SEC teams. Teams from the conference take up seven of the top 13 spots, followed by three from the Big Ten and two from the ACC. With the top-ranked transfer portal class in 2025 and a bevy of critical returners, head coach Brian Kelly fully expects to make the cut and compete for championships in the conference and nationally. Those returners include quarterback Garrett Nussmeier, running back Caden Durham, as well as linebackers Whit Weeks and Harold Perkins. LSU opens the season on the road against Clemson. In what will likely be a top-10 matchup in week one, we'll get a feel for where the Tigers stand against one of the nation's top teams. Fellow Heisman contender quarterback Cade Klubnik will lead an offense stacked with talent at wide receiver against a retooled LSU defense.

Emma Raducanu hires ‘best coach in the world'
Emma Raducanu hires ‘best coach in the world'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Emma Raducanu hires ‘best coach in the world'

Emma Raducanu has scored a coaching coup by making an agreement with Francis Roig, a former top-60 player who was part of Rafael Nadal's coaching team for 17 years. Raducanu's long roster of previous coaches includes a number of highly respected names, but no one who has spent so much time working alongside a tennis legend. A 57-year-old from Barcelona, Roig has not coached on the WTA Tour before. After ending his time with Nadal in 2022 – because, in his own words, 'I felt like I needed a new challenge in my life' – he spent the best part of a year with former Wimbledon finalist Matteo Berrettini. The fact that Roig has signed up with Raducanu for the rest of 2025 speaks for the potential that he must see in her. According to sources, the pair began talking about a collaboration during this summer's Wimbledon, and then did a coaching trial before Raducanu entered the US hard-court swing. Raducanu is well known for being a keen student of the game, and for having a knack for picking up new skills quickly. As a result, she should benefit from working with a man who – according to Nadal's biographer Christopher Clarey – 'is an excellent swing doctor, adept at fixing glitches in strokes.' In the same recent book on Nadal – which is entitled The Master – Clarey quotes the former Spanish No 2 Feliciano Lopez, who describes Roig as a uniquely skilled observer. 'Technically I think he's the best coach in the world,' Lopez said. 'He doesn't use that much video analysis, but he sees things that the rest of the coaches don't see. He's able to see things in Rafa's forehand or movement that no other guys would notice, and it allowed them to be very specific and precise.' As Clarey's book goes on to explain, 'Roig provided Rafael with another voice on tactics and technique for nearly 20 years, helping him in particular with his volleys and slice backhand.' Roig is understood to have recently joined Raducanu in Cincinnati, where she is scheduled to play in the final build-up tournament before the US Open. The concluding grand-slam event of the tennis year – which she famously won in 2021 – is set to begin in three weeks' time. While Raducanu's path has been a bumpy one in recent seasons, she is showing signs of improving her consistency, both in terms of fitness and form. Since teaming up with long-time associate Mark Petchey in Miami in March, she has won 20 of 24 matches against opponents ranked outside the top 10, and generally avoided the sort of niggling injuries that have dogged her progress over the past four years. The problem has been her inability to defeat the elite, as demonstrated by her 0-6 record against those in the top 10 during that time. This is where Roig's input could be particularly useful. While consistent and disciplined from the back of the court, Raducanu is not as physically imposing as most of the leading players, and often lacks the weight of shot to trouble them. Nevertheless, her ranking now stands at No 33 in the world – the highest it has been since the points from her US Open triumph dropped off in September 2022 – and a strong campaign in Cincinnati could potentially earn her a seeding at Flushing Meadows this year. Her form across the Atlantic has been promising so far, with three wins in Washington and two in Montreal, although she was given a 6-2, 6-1 schooling by this year's Wimbledon runner-up Amanda Anisimova in her most-recent match. Raducanu had previously been working with Petchey for much of this season, but their arrangement had been constrained by his long-standing broadcasting arrangements. Petchey made it clear that would not sacrifice his commentary career in order to become her full-time coach. Before that, Raducanu had spent the 2024 season with Nick Cavaday – formerly the director of tennis at her childhood academy in Orpington – before he was forced to step down in February due to chronic health issues. The full roll-call of coaches from her professional career now features at least eight names, and includes Nigel Sears, Andrew Richardson, Torben Beltz, Dmitry Tursunov and Sebastian Sachs. There was also a brief interlude in Indian Wells this year where Vladimir Platenik sat in her player box while she lost a first-round match against Japan's Moyuka Uchijima. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

49ers practice report: Rookie Upton Stout, WR Ricky Pearsall continue to impress
49ers practice report: Rookie Upton Stout, WR Ricky Pearsall continue to impress

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

49ers practice report: Rookie Upton Stout, WR Ricky Pearsall continue to impress

Social media quickly likened Upton Stout to the name of a draft beer after the San Francisco 49ers selected him at No. 100 overall, handing the nickel back out of Western Kentucky a taste of rookie hazing well before he touched down in Santa Clara. Most major big boards were not nearly as high on Stout, often tagged with a fourth-to-sixth round grade. ESPN's DraftCast had him at No. 129. Pro Football Focus ranked him No. 197. And the Athletic's Dane Brugler slotted him at No. 204. Questions emerged. Did the 49ers reach? General manager John Lynch and head coach Kyle Shanahan stood their ground. They drafted Stout to take over the nickel spot. Such would allow Deommodore Lenoir to transition outside full-time and man CB1 responsibilities in lieu of Charvarius Ward. Anyone who's paid attention to 49ers training camp would know Stout has clearly separated himself as the frontrunner to start at nickel. Shanahan confirmed as much Monday. 'I thought he had a hell of a training camp,' Shanahan said. 'Knowing that nickel position was open, that was one of the reasons we invested that draft pick in him, hoping he could come in and do it right away. He looked that way in OTAs and he's looking that way so far now.' Pearsall appeared dominant in recent practices. Most of the reserve cornerbacks — with Lenoir (hip) and Renardo Green (hamstring) having missed time last week — could not go rep for rep across from the team's 2024 first-round pick, who showed no signs of slowing down Monday when he pulled in a deep ball from Mac Jones more than 30 yards downfield in the opening 11-on-11 period. But even after Stout lost one of his first reps against Pearsall on a tightly defended comeback route, he played through the whistle, ripped the ball away and made his case for a turnover. A referee on the far sideline ultimately ruled the play dead. Stout got his revenge soon enough. A pass from Brock Purdy to Pearsall near the boundary did not reach its intended target, thanks to Stout, who swiftly punched it into the grass. Stout celebrated. The defense rallied around him. Suffice it be said the third-round pick has won over a lot of people in the 49ers building. Give him time to show why on Sundays, and someone might just name an actual beer after him. Defensive backs coach Ray Brown: '(Stout) said, 'At the end of the day, I want to be a name that they forever talk about in this facility.'' Lenoir, who had missed four consecutive practices due to hip irritation, returned to practice Monday and reclaimed first-team reps in live 11-on-11 periods. Dallis Flowers — in the midst of a CB3 competition with Tre Brown and Darrell Luter Jr. — primarily repped opposite of Lenoir. Starting right tackle Colton McKivitz was also full go after his one-off absence Saturday. Defensive end Yetur Gross-Matos (knee) is expected to return during Raiders week, according to Shanahan, who last week said cornerback Renardo Green (hamstring) and Jacob Cowing (hamstring) could also be back at practice by then. Gross-Matos was seen working on a side field Monday for the first time since training camp began. Defensive end Nick Bosa, running back Christian McCaffrey and left tackle Trent Williams rested Monday. Shanahan said Bosa, who also did not practice Saturday, did not miss the most recent session due to injury. All three are expected back in some capacity Tuesday, in anticipation for the team's joint practice with the Broncos on Thursday. Spencer Burford filled in for Williams per usual. Safety Ji'Ayir Brown (ankle) and defensive tackle Evan Anderson (knee bruise) were among 13 players, not including those on PUP, who did not practice — a reflection of the depth concerns that led to the team's Monday morning release of kicker Greg Joseph, Jake Moody's camp rival. Brown is day-to-day, per Shanahan, who added that Anderson will likely be out for the week. Running back Jordan James (knee) returned but did not participate in team drills, easing back in following four missed practices. Shanahan said he does not anticipate needing to cancel the Broncos joint practice Thursday as camp injuries mount. Retired All-Pro cornerback Richard Sherman, who played for the 49ers from 2018-20, made an appearance at the SAP Performance Facility and briefly chatted with Shanahan. Amid speculation that wide receiver Jauan Jennings may be missing in action at 49ers training camp due to ongoing extension talks, Sherman recently said on his podcast, 'I think they're going to have to appease (Jennings), and I think once they do, there might be a chance that he's back in practice that day. I don't know. It kind of seems that way though.' Shanahan was specifically asked if the situation is 'definitely health related, not business related,' to which he said: 'You can ask him that. He tells me it's his calf. And calf shows, so got to be delicate with those calves.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store