
A caddie at heart, Bones Mackay makes sure to get the 18th flag to Spaun's bagman
Mackay was with the final group of Sam Burns and Adam Scott. By the time they reached the final hole Sunday, the championship had been decided. J.J. Spaun made a 65-foot birdie putt to finish at 279. The last two players on the course were five shots or more behind. That's when Mackay identified a potential problem and solved it. When it was over, he removed the flag on the 18th hole, which traditionally is the trophy for the winner's caddie. That was Mark Carens, who had to leave the 18th with another group coming through.
'We were 200 yards away when J.J. made his putt,' Mackay said Tuesday. 'That scene… I realized J.J. won the tournament and I was super happy for both of those guys. But it just occurred to me Mark might not have access to the flag.'
Carens joined Spaun in the scoring area. Sam Burns and Adam Scott closed out their rough back nine with bogeys. Mackay waited for them to finish and grabbed the pin. 'There were so many people inside the ropes I just wanted to make sure Mark got it or to have the option,' Mackay said. 'As I got to scoring he was coming out with J.J. I handed it to him, said 'Congrats,' and left him alone.' Only a caddie would think to do that. Mackay is a caddie.
The Royal & Ancient Golf Club talks about a feasibility study for the British Open to return to Turnberry. Far more serious is whether to take golf's oldest championship outside the UK for the first time. The topic was Portmarnock in Ireland. The response from Mark Darbon, the R&A's new CEO, was that 'we're serious. We're having a proper look at it.'
Darbon said in a recent interview 'It's clearly a great course.' Darbon said he went to Portmarnock, located on a peninsula about 10 miles (16 kilometers) northwest of Dublin, for the first time last month. 'Wonderful links golf course,' he said. 'And clearly a links course that provides a challenge to the best golfers in the world is right in the heart of our thinking about where we take our prized Open Championship.'
Darbon pointed out the history with Portmarnock and the R&A, specifically the Walker Cup in 1991 and the British Amateur in 1949 and 2019, along with the Women's British Amateur last year and in 1931. 'We think if we're happy taking our Amateur Championships there, why not consider it for the Open, too?' he said. Work remains, particularly the logistics of a massive crowd – the Open is all about big these days – on and off the peninsula.
The PGA Championship a decade ago flirted with the idea of going around the world. For the British Open to leave the UK for the first time would not open more borders. 'I think the simple answer is no, it wouldn't open up our thinking more broadly,' Darbon said. 'If you go back in history, the home territory of the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews is the British Isles, basically. We think if we've got this great history with the Republic of Ireland and it's great golf course, then why not look at it?'
The KPMG Women's PGA is now on equal terms with the US Women's Open when it comes to prize money. KPMG announced Tuesday its total purse is now $12 million, up from $10.4 million a year ago. KPMG took over as title sponsor in 2015 when the PGA of America became partners with the LPGA in the major championship that dates to 1955.
More than money, the company has provided players with data to improve their games, called KPMG Performance Insights, which operates on a smaller scale of the ShotLink data on the PGA Tour. For the Women's PGA, which starts Thursday at the Fields Ranch East at PGA of America headquarters near Dallas, KPMG is adding AI-enhanced features like hole-by-hole analysis delivered to players after each round. Another feature is AI-generated scoring targets, particularly the cut, giving players an idea if they're safe or need to make a move.
'The high purse, top courses, comprehensive broadcast coverage and technology are all ways we are setting the standard,' said Paul Knopp, the US chairman and CEO of KPMG.
Another measure of how well Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy have played this year – McIlroy until the Masters, Scheffler ever since then – is that both already have locked up a spot on their Ryder Cup teams with at least two months left in the qualifying period. Scheffler locked up his spot among the leading six players two weeks ago. Team Europe disclosed Tuesday that McIlroy already has clinched a spot. The Ryder Cup is at Bethpage Black in Farmingdale, New York, at the end of September.
More interesting is who gets the other spots or even is in position for a captain's pick. US Open champion J.J. Spaun moved all the way up to No. 3 followed by Bryson DeChambeau, Justin Thomas, and Collin Morikawa. All have Ryder Cup experience. Of the next six in the US standings, only Harris English and Brian Harman have played in a Ryder Cup.
McIlroy is followed by Tyrrell Hatton, Shane Lowry, Robert MacIntyre, Sepp Straka, and Rasmus Højgaard. MacIntyre moved up seven spots to No. 4 as the US Open runner-up. Keegan Bradley, the US captain who has said he would play if he qualifies, is at No. 17 with three $20 million tournaments to play and the British Open.
The PGA Tour says 143 players have competed in a signature event since 2024. The Travelers Championship is the final one of 2025. The Korn Ferry Tour is adding a tournament in Amarillo, Texas, to its 2026 schedule. The OccuNet Classic will be played June 11–14 at Tascosa Golf Club. The two players picking up medals on the 18th green at Oakmont for the US Open were from San Diego State – J.J. Spaun, the US Open champion, and Justin Hastings of the Cayman Islands, the low amateur. Corey Conners, who had to withdraw from the final round of the US Open with a wrist injury, withdrew from the $20 million Travelers Championship. He was replaced in the field by Jhonattan Vegas. The field for the KPMG Women's PGA features all 100 players from the Race to CME Globe on the LPGA Tour.
Philip Barbaree Jr. finished in last place at the US Open and earned the largest paycheck of his career at $41,785.
'I feel like I've earned the right to do whatever I want to do.' – Rory McIlroy.

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


Al Arabiya
38 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Francisco Lindor homers, leading Mets past Giants 8-1 for fifth straight win
SAN FRANCISCO – Francisco Lindor homered in the third, Brandon Nimmo added a two-run single in the fourth, and Juan Soto drove in two runs as New York backed Clay Holmes, and the Mets beat the San Francisco Giants 8-1 on Friday night for their fifth straight win. Holmes (9-5) surrendered one run and six hits over five innings with two strikeouts and a walk for his first win in five starts since beating Atlanta on June 25. New York got on the board in a hurry against All-Star Logan Webb (9-8). Nimmo doubled leading off the game and scored on Soto's RBI groundout, while Lindor singled after Nimmo, and Pete Alonso drove him home on a sacrifice fly. Soto added an RBI single in the ninth. Webb has had back-to-back rough outings. He was tagged for a career-high tying 11 hits over six innings of a 6-3 loss at Toronto on Saturday, then gave up six runs and eight hits in four innings Friday. The Giants' lone run came on a groundout by Willy Adames in the first. New York kicked off a stretch of nine consecutive games against the NL West by extending its streak that has come on the heels of a three-game skid. The Mets are seeking their first series win in San Francisco since 2018. The Giants placed right-handed starter Landen Roupp on the 15-day injured list with inflammation in his pitching elbow, recalling righty Tristan Beck from Triple-A Sacramento. Beck relieved Webb to begin the fifth. Key play: With Adames at second with a two-out double in the third, Matt Chapman was originally ruled safe at first on a throwing error by third baseman Ronny Mauricio. But the Mets challenged the tag call, and Chapman was ruled out on replay review to end the inning. Key stat: Lindor wound up 3 for 5 with his 20th home run, a double, and three runs scored with a pair of strikeouts after snapping his 0-for-31 drought Wednesday against the Angels. Up next: LHP David Peterson (6-4, 2.90 ERA) pitches Saturday night's middle game for the Mets opposite Giants LHP Robbie Ray (9-4, 2.92) as he tries again for double-digit victories with a three-start winless stretch.


Al Arabiya
38 minutes ago
- Al Arabiya
Zach Neto delivers walk-off hit in Angels' 3-2 victory over Mariners
Zach Neto capped his bobblehead giveaway night with a two-out RBI single in the 10th inning to lift the Los Angeles Angels to a 3-2 win over the Seattle Mariners on Friday night. Jose Rodriguez hit two solo homers for the Mariners, but Angels reliever Ryan Zeferjahn (6-3) escaped a two-on no-out jam in the top of the 10th, and Neto grounded his winning hit off the glove of diving second baseman Cole Young for the first walk-off hit of his career. Neto had two hits and scored a run, and Jo Adell drove in two runs for the Angels, who snapped a four-game losing streak. Mariners right-hander Casey Legumina (4-5) took the loss. Seattle starter Bryan Woo gave up two runs and four hits in six innings, striking out six and walking two. Angels starter José Soriano allowed two runs and four hits in six innings, striking out five and walking one. Rodriguez lined a 98-mph sinker from Soriano over the right-center field wall in the first for his 16th homer of the season and a 1-0 Mariners lead. Adell, who was mired in a 1-for-20 slump, lined a two-out two-run double to left in the bottom of the inning for a 2-1 lead. Rodriguez opened the sixth with a 408-foot shot to left for his fifth career multihomer game and a 2-all tie. Key Moment: With two on, Zeferjahn struck out Cal Raleigh looking with a 99-mph fastball to preserve a 2-2 tie in the 10th. Key Stat: Woo has thrown six innings or more with two or fewer walks in all 20 starts this season, the fourth-longest streak of its kind in major league history behind San Francisco's Juan Marichal (23 games in 1968), Seattle/Texas's Cliff Lee (21 games in 2010), and Arizona's Curt Schilling (21 in 2002). Up Next: Mariners RHP George Kirby (4-5 4.65 ERA) opposes Angels LHP Tyler Anderson (2-6 4.43) on Saturday night.


Al Arabiya
an hour ago
- Al Arabiya
Quero has four hits, White Sox hit four hrs in 12-5 win over Cubs
Rookie Edgar Quero had his first four-hit game, rookie Chase Meidroth homered among his three hits, and the Chicago White Sox beat Shota Imanaga and the crosstown Cubs 12-5 on Friday night for their sixth win in seven games. Colson Montgomery, Austin Slater, and Mike Tauchman also went deep as the White Sox set season highs in runs and hits (18). Miguel Vargas also had three hits, and Lenyn Sosa drove in three runs. Adrian Houser (6-2) pitched 6 2/3 innings of five-hit ball as the White Sox handed the Cubs their fourth loss in five games. Reese McGuires's three-run homer off Houser with two outs in the seventh finally put the Cubs on the board after trailing 11-0. The last-place White Sox gained a measure of revenge against the contending Cubs, who swept a three-game series at Wrigley Field in May while outscoring them 26-8. The Cubs remained one game behind first-place Milwaukee in the NL Central. Imanaga (7-4) exited after the first two White Sox batters hit safely in the fourth to give the South Siders a 6-0 lead with 12 hits against him. The left-hander from Japan was charged with seven runs, and his outing matched his shortest in two years in the majors. Houser retired the first eight Cubs batters en route to winning his fourth straight decision. Key moment: The White Sox jumped ahead 3-0 in the first as five of their first six batters hit safely, including Meidroth's home run to lead off the inning. The White Sox added two in the second with Montgomery tagging a center-cut fastball followed by three singles. The South Siders upped it to 9-0 in the fourth on Tauchman's drive. Key stat: Imanaga has pitched fewer than four innings only once before in 43 games in the majors. He lasted three in an 11-1 loss to the Mets on June 21, 2024, when he allowed 10 runs and 11 hits. Up next: Cubs RHP Cade Horton (3-3, 4.04 ERA) faces White Sox RHP Aaron Civale (2-6, 4.76) on Saturday.