logo
Chase for FedEx Cup top 50 is in on — and Jordan Spieth, Wyndham Clark have work to do

Chase for FedEx Cup top 50 is in on — and Jordan Spieth, Wyndham Clark have work to do

USA Today5 hours ago
Keegan Bradley had his bags packed in his Memphis hotel room and was resigned to the fact that his 2024 FedEx Cup run was over. But he had his TV tuned to the live tournament coverage, his phone on the PGA Tour app's live scoring and his iPad streaming a featured hole. Still, he couldn't believe how the stars aligned perfectly for him. Or rather, how things came crashing down for Tom Kim, who finished bogey, double bogey, double bogey at TPC Southwind, dropping from 46th to 51st in the FedEx Cup standings and allowing Bradley to sneak in at No. 50.
'At the last minute, I texted my caddie, 'Dude, I think we're going to finish in the top 50. I don't see how we don't,' ' recounted Bradley, who hitched a ride to the next event with fellow pro Billy Horschel. 'I went to Denver with this real big sense of relief.'
Bradley exhaled, and everything changed. He had guaranteed his entry into all eight signature events this season, while Kim was admitted into none. The following week? Bradley won the BMW, made his way to Atlanta for the Tour Championship, finishing T-21, and even parlayed his late-season success into a captain's pick for the U.S. Presidents Cup team. Such is the fine line that exists on the PGA Tour.
Spieth, Clark, Lee teetering on top 50
While 70 players qualified for the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis, everyone is hoping to pull a Keegan Bradley because the magic number this week is 50 – that's how many players will survive and advance to the BMW Championship, and, more importantly, secure all eight signature events in 2026.
Some notable pros are under the gun to produce this week, including three-time major winner Jordan Spieth at No. 48 in the FedEx Cup standings, 2023 U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark, who enters the week at No. 49, and the 'Bubble Boy,' Min Woo Lee at 50.
Spieth played last week in hopes of improving his position, but finished T-31 at the Wyndham Championship and only treaded water. He knows he's in for a stressful week and that he has work to do to avoid missing the BMW for a second straight year.
'I didn't like asking for exemptions this year at all. I was fortunate to receive a lot of them, but you just never know,' he said. 'And when you miss out on elevated events, the way it's structured, they've got the best players in the world at all of them and you don't want to miss any of them.'
Clark is in the same boat. Since missing the cut at the U.S. Open, he has climbed from No. 80 to No. 49. He's finished T-17 or better in four of his last five starts, and his T-4 at the British Open was his best result of his season. Clark also has positive vibes at TPC Southwind, where he finished T-7 last year. He'll need no worse than to finish 68th this week and still has positioning for East Lake on his mind plus Ryder Cup hopes to play for too.
Australia's Lee sits on the bubble at No. 50 and his game has been ice cold since his win at the Children's Hospital Houston Open in late March. He missed the cut at the last three majors and has failed to record a top 10 since his win.
Poston, Finau among those looking to climb
Among those on the outside looking in are J.T. Poston, who has qualified for the BMW in each of the last three years, starts the week at No. 51. He's only recorded one top-10 finish all season and his seven top 25s are his fewest since 2020-21. Tony Finau at No. 60 is looking to stretch his streak of eight straight trips to East Lake for the Tour Championship, but he has work to do, as does Rickie Fowler at No. 64, who needs no worse than a T-17 finish.
'Good golf solves a lot of things,' he said.
And that's what it takes to make it this far and beyond.
'It's becoming as challenging as ever to qualify for the playoffs and then BMW and Tour Championship, so, it's truly the best fields we can get in terms of who has played the best over the course of the whole season and I'm ready to get going,' said Justin Thomas, who enters the week at No. 5 in the standings.
By Sunday, some players will rise to the occasion, others will benefit from some Keegan Bradley-like luck, and inevitably, there will be a player who experiences a Tom Kim-like meltdown. Last week, that player was Keith Mitchell, who made a 4-putt double bogey and missed a 7-foot putt on his final hole during the second round of the Wyndham Championship to miss the cut. He failed to make it to Memphis, but he succeeded in summing up how it hurts to come up just short of a season-long goal. "Gave it my all this year, probably too much, loads of pressure on myself to make the playoffs and top 50,' he said. 'We fight and fight and grind to give it our all and to finish like that is really just heartbreaking."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Welcome to the WNBA in 2025: Most talked-about narrative isn't A'ja Wilson or Caitlin Clark, it's sex toys
Welcome to the WNBA in 2025: Most talked-about narrative isn't A'ja Wilson or Caitlin Clark, it's sex toys

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Welcome to the WNBA in 2025: Most talked-about narrative isn't A'ja Wilson or Caitlin Clark, it's sex toys

Welcome to the WNBA in 2025: Most talked-about narrative isn't A'ja Wilson or Caitlin Clark, it's sex toys originally appeared on The Sporting News We're three incidents in now, so it's officially a trend. The most talked about moments in the WNBA for a little over a week now aren't buzzer-beaters or triple-doubles. They're fans throwing dildos onto the court. Yes, again. This time, it happened during Tuesday night's game between the Los Angeles Sparks and the Indiana Fever at Arena. A green sex toy was thrown from the crowd and appeared to hit Fever guard Sophie Cunningham on the leg, per Ben Church of CNN. That would be wild enough on its own, but it gets more unhinged. Earlier this week, Cunningham posted on social media asking fans to stop throwing these things. So naturally, after getting hit, she quote-tweeted herself with: 'this did NOT age well.' She also posted to Instagram: 'No way that thing actually hit me. I knew I shouldn't have tweeted that.' Welcome to the WNBA, where the most consistent talk isn't Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark drama, it's copycat sex toy tossers. The timeline of rubber-fueled chaos is as follows: Tuesday in Los Angeles: Dildo hits Sophie Cunningham. Last Friday in Chicago: One lands near the basket during Sky vs. Valkyries. Three days before that in Atlanta: A toy thrown courtside leads to a fan's arrest and charges for public indecency, disorderly conduct, and criminal trespass, according to Reuters. Sparks head coach Lynne Roberts summed it up best after Tuesday's 100–91 win: 'I think it's ridiculous, it's dumb, it's stupid… It's also dangerous, and players' safety is No. 1.' After the Atlanta incident, the WNBA issued a statement warning fans that anyone who throws an object onto the court will be ejected, face a minimum one-year ban, and may also be prosecuted. 'The safety and well-being of everyone in our arenas is a top priority,' the league told CNN Sports. 'Objects of any kind thrown onto the court… can pose a safety risk for players, game officials, and fans.' And while safety is absolutely a concern, the league has to grapple with an uncomfortable truth. More people are talking about flying sex toys than anything happening in the actual games. In a summer where the WNBA should be capitalizing on stars like Clark, A'ja Wilson, and whatever Shaq can make out of Angel Reese, the headlines are rubber rockets interrupting play. Again. We'd say this is rock bottom, but let's be honest, there's probably another one headed for half court next week.

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