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When is the British Open 2025? Dates, schedule for final major of PGA Tour season

When is the British Open 2025? Dates, schedule for final major of PGA Tour season

Yahoo10-06-2025
The British Open will be held from July 13-20 from the Royal Portrush Golf Club in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
The iconic course has been the backdrop to some of golf's most magical moments.
After Xander Schauffele won the event last year, who will come out on top in 2025?
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Here are key things to know about the tournament.
When is The 2025 British Open?
Xander Schauffele reacts after making a birdie putt on the No. 16th green during his final round at the British Open at Royal Troon in Scotland on July 21, 2024.
The British Open will be held from July 13-20.
PGA Tour money leaders: Scottie Scheffler vaults to the top with victory at The Memorial
Where is The 2025 British Open?
The British Open will be held at the Royal Portrush Golf Club in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
Who won The British Open last year?
Xander Schauffele won the British Open last year.
Most British Open victories
Harry Vardon, 6 (1896, 1898, 1899, 1903, 1911, 1914)
James Braid, 5 (1901, 1905, 1906, 1908, 1910)
John Henry Taylor, 5 (1895, 1895, 1900, 1909, 1913)
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Peter Thomson, 5 (1954, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1965)
Tom Watson, 5 (1975, 1977, 1980, 1982, 1983)
This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: 2025 British Open: Dates, schedule of major golf tournament
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PGA Tour golfer Ben Griffin says he 'overdosed' on creatine amid bad start to BMW Championship final round
PGA Tour golfer Ben Griffin says he 'overdosed' on creatine amid bad start to BMW Championship final round

Fox News

time2 hours ago

  • Fox News

PGA Tour golfer Ben Griffin says he 'overdosed' on creatine amid bad start to BMW Championship final round

PGA Tour golfer Ben Griffin may have had an outside shot at winning the BMW Championship on Sunday if he put together a round similar to how he did on Thursday. But Griffin's Sunday started out less than ideal. He carded at least a bogey on the first three holes. He scored a seven on the par-4 first hole and a six on the par-4 second. He then salvaged a bogey on the third hole. He was able to lock in and record seven birdies on the final 15 holes to put together a final round 69. Griffin was 3-under par for the tournament and finished tied for 12th with Rory McIlroy and Harris English in the tournament. Scottie Scheffler won the BMW Championship with a 15-under – two strokes better than Robert Macintyre and four better than Maverick McNealy. He explained after his round that an issue with creatine caused his chances on the first three holes to slip away. He said that he filled up his water bottle with a "snowball" of creatine and when he took a sip from the bottle he swallowed a massive chunk. "I've never overdosed on creatine before, but I think I did in the moment because I didn't really drink any water after that," Griffin said, via "I basically just inhaled a snowball. So I started getting super shaky. I've never felt like that before and I felt like I had tremors. "I four-putted 1 and on 2 I like was freaking out and didn't know what to do. Like I hit it so far out of bounds." Griffin credited his caddie, Adam Ritthamel, with helping him get through the intense problem." The North Carolina native has two PGA Tour wins in his career – both coming this season. He won the Zurch Classic of New Orleans with Andrew Novak and the Charles Schwab Challenge.

Schupak: PGA Tour considers taking Tour Championship on the road, a home run of an idea
Schupak: PGA Tour considers taking Tour Championship on the road, a home run of an idea

USA Today

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  • USA Today

Schupak: PGA Tour considers taking Tour Championship on the road, a home run of an idea

When PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said last year during a State of the PGA Tour press conference that everything's on the table, the idea of moving the Tour Championship – and the FedEx Cup Playoffs sites in general – is one that caught the fancy of several Tour players. 'It's been discussed,' Adam Scott, a player director on the PGA Tour policy board, said. 'We've questioned everything at some point. I couldn't tell you contractually how long we're tied to there, but East Lake is where it's at.' But that doesn't mean it needs to stay there – though there apparently is the prickly issue of former PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem granting East Lake as the permanent site in perpetuity, according to someone in the know. East Lake ties for No. 4 on Golfweek's Best list of the top private courses in Georgia and ties for No. 85 among all classic courses in the U.S. It has been the permanent site of the Tour Championship since 2005. The investors at SSG, who have poured $1.5 billion into the Tour, know that the Tour Championship has untapped potential. While the USGA has played amateur championships at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort and The Olympic Club and has Cypress Point Club on deck for the Walker Cup – where primetime TV, cool climes and nary a thunderstorm are concerns – the Tour's three legs of the playoffs have visited Memphis, Baltimore and Atlanta, all three first-team All-Swamp sites and at courses that lose at least 5 and 4 to the USGA's rota. The Tour can do better, and as part of its much-vaunted Fan Forward surveys, they have heard it from the people they say matter most. Peter Malnati, another Tour policy board player director, has never qualified for the Tour Championship, but he understands the argument for moving the Tour Championship from a fan perspective. 'I don't hear fans say it is an exciting golf course to watch golf. I know it does a lot for the community and that's very important, but I think it would be cool for our biggest trophy to be given away at a course that really excites fans,' Malnati said. 'But there is a lot of things that have to be done in the right way to make that happen. I think East Lake works really hard to be an amazing host. I'd love to see our fans be excited about where we play the Tour Championship in addition to the tournament itself.' But moving the season finale is proving trickier than at first blush. 'It's been a slog,' one Tour insider said. The reason is quite simple: too many chefs in the kitchen, too many constituencies to please. Scott said the 16-member Player Advisory Council had multiple meetings over multiple months, and the only thing on which they could agree was to scrap the staggered-scoring start. That was rubber-stamped back in late May, so all 30 competitors will start at even par this week. But to pull up the anchors in Atlanta, broadcast partners will need to be on board and presenting sponsors who foot the bill — Coca Cola Co. and Southern Co., who enjoy entertaining their guests on the home front — must sign off. Jordan Spieth, a former policy board member, agrees that where the Tour plays matters and can be important to enticing players to compete. East Lake has flipped nines, undergone a massive renovation, turned par 4s into par 5s and back to 4s again, and yet it still doesn't capture the imagination of the sports fan. No one is tuning in to to see East Lake the way they would if the 30-man finale was held at Cypress Point or Pine Valley or Pinehurst (though a 30-man field may be a tough sell for a resort course). This doesn't preclude East Lake being part of a rotation. Selfishly, Spieth said he's good with the Tour Championship staying right where it is. 'Because I've played it so well. I think it's a great golf course,' he said. 'I would have to see what other options were available in order to have a reason for it not to be there every year.' Cypress Point surely would get Spieth's attention. Former Golfweek colleague Jeff Rude years ago suggested playing at Cypress Point, site of The Match between Byron Nelson and Ben Hogan against Ken Venturi and Harvie Ward, and starting the tournament on Wednesday with the winner of the Tour Championship crowned Saturday. Then, send out the top four in points for a trophy dash on Sunday for the FedEx Cup. Airing in primetime, it would be must-see TV and a ratings bonanza. But let's not stop there. Jason Day would be in favor of seeing the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis, the first leg of the playoffs, rotate too, because he doesn't play well at TPC Southwind. 'I'm like, when can we leave?' he said. 'But I definitely think we should move around a bit, yeah, for sure.' The Western Golf Association, which runs the BMW Championship, has been the trailblazer and has perfected the model. It broke with tradition of playing annually in Chicago and now rotates to golf-starved metropolitan cites – St. Louis is on tap for 2026 – and set records for its fundraising last year at Denver's Castle Pines. Scott joined the Tour's board of directors because he wanted to elevate the Tour Championship to a legacy event on par with the Lombardi and Stanley Cup trophies. The FedEx Cup is in its 19th year and it's still very much a work in progress. As Scott put it, it was 'impossible to change everything this year.' They ran out of time so this is a bridge to the end result, he said, and he promised, 'Next year you'll see the full picture.' It may take even longer to move the Tour Championship because as Scott said, 'we need everyone comfortable,' but discussions persist. One can only hope that new CEO Brian Rolapp can breathe some new life into the Tour Championship by simply taking it on the road to some of golf's great American cathedrals.

2025 Tour Championship odds, picks and PGA Tour predictions
2025 Tour Championship odds, picks and PGA Tour predictions

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

2025 Tour Championship odds, picks and PGA Tour predictions

The PGA Tour season wraps up this week with the 2025 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. The FedExCup champion will be crowned, taking home a $10 million payout. With only 30 players in the field, the stakes are high this week. Below, we look at Tour Championship odds from BetMGM Sportsbook's odds and make our PGA Tour picks and predictions. The FedExCup Playoffs field was trimmed from 50 to 30 players at the BMW Championship, which Scottie Scheffler won. Unlike in years past, the Tour Championship will not have starting strokes for players based on their position in the FedExCup standings. Therefore, the winner of this week's tournament will also be the FedExCup champion. Scheffler is the heavy favorite at +165, followed by Rory McIlroy (+800), Tommy Fleetwood (+1200) and Ludvig Aberg (+1400). It's a loaded field with only 30 players, heightening the level of competition in Atlanta. East Lake (par 71, 7,490 yards) underwent a major restoration project after the 2023 Tour Championship, completely changing the layout and look of the course. Holes were changed significantly, grass types were swapped out in the fairways and greens, making it feel like a vastly different track. Tour Championship – Expert picks Odds provided by BetMGM Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 9:33 a.m. ET. McIlroy won here in 2022 and has finished no worse than 16th in his career at this event. East Lake is a long course and McIlroy is one of the longest hitters on tour, giving him an edge over most players in the field. And with there being no starting strokes anymore, he won't be chasing down Scheffler. Hovland is a former winner here, taking home the title in 2023. He also finished fifth in 2021, 12th last year and 15th in 2022, showing good form at East Lake. His game seems to be rounding into form after finishing seventh last week at the BMW, making him a real contender at the Tour Championship this week. Burns tied for fourth at the BMW Championship last week, 5 shots off the pace set by Scheffler. That performance got him back on track after some subpar performances, but he's another player who tends to succeed at East Lake. He finished 12th last year, eighth in 2023 and 18th in 2021, with his worst finish being 24th in 2022. Tour Championship picks – Contenders Hall is making some noise leading into the Ryder Cup selection deadline and though he hasn't garnered much interest from the European team, that could change with a win this week. He's finished 28th or better in 11 straight starts this season, including a solo sixth last week. Bradley isn't turning his full attention to the Ryder Cup just yet, putting his focus on this week's Tour Championship where he finished ninth last year after the course's redesign. He's a great driver of the ball and keeps it in the fairway, making him a perfect fit for East Lake where hitting fairways is critical. WATCH: PGA Tour is live on ESPN+! Get ESPN+ Tour Championship picks – Long shots Im is a perennial contender at East Lake, finishing between second and 24th in each of the last 5 years. He may not be in the best form but he's played well enough lately to earn his spot in the Tour Championship. Play our free daily Pick'em Challenge and win! Play now! For more sports betting picks and tips, check out and BetFTW. Golfweek: Follow @camdasilva on Twitter/X. Follow SportsbookWire on Twitter/X and like us on Facebook.

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