
Tommy Fleetwood optimistic he can end always-the-bridesmaid run in PGA Tour
's glass-half-full attitude after slipping up again in his quest for a first career win on the
PGA Tour
will see him move on to this week's BMW Championship at Caves Valley in Maryland for what will be his 163rd attempt to finally crack the winning code.
'You just have to keep (going), all these experiences and these close calls, there's no point in making or allowing them to have a negative effect on what happens next. What would be the point?' pondered Fleetwood after his latest effort.
Fleetwood has now had 29 top-five finishes on the PGA Tour, 11 more than any other player with a win over the last 40 years (with Brett Quigley, on 18, next on that list).
Tommy Fleetwood during the final round of the FedEx St Jude Championship. Photograph:Having let a lead slip in last month's Travelers, where Keegan Bradley usurped him, and now at the FedEx St Jude Championship – where his close friend Justin Rose defeated JJ Spaun in a three-hole playoff and Fleetwood was consigned to an onlooker's role – the Englishman said he would look to family and his team and fans to kick on.
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'As long as they stay with me and stay on my side, then we can all look for the positives ... I'm lucky with the support that I get. I did a ton of good stuff, and as disappointed as I am, I have to try to find the strength to make it all a positive experience and hopefully next time go again, put myself in that position again and we just go again,' said Fleetwood.
Lowry under pressure
After occupying an automatic place in the European team standings for next month's
Ryder Cup
at Bethpage since virtually the start of the qualifying process,
Shane Lowry
has slipped out of the top-six – to seventh – in the latest rankings.
Lowry, of course, still has his fate in his own hands as he is in the field for this week's BMW Championship. Currently 23rd in the FedEx Cup standings, Lowry will need to remain in the top-30 to then book a return visit to the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta.
Shane Lowry during the third round of the FedEx St Jude Championship. Photograph:The comings and goings on the Europe Ryder Cup standings after the dramatic St Jude Championship saw Justin Rose jump six places from eighth to second after his win while Tommy Fleetwood remained at number three and Robert MacIntyre drop two places to fourth.
Rory McIlroy
– who skipped the St Jude – remains atop the qualifying standings. The world number two is back in action at this week's BMW before moving on to the Tour Championship.
Word of mouth
'I haven't been back to East Lake since 2019, and that's been bugging me, and that's obviously been a huge goal, so that's obviously taken care of. I definitely played some good golf this year when it's mattered. I feel like my good has been good.
'My consistency hasn't been there, but I've been telling people that I feel like when I play my best golf, I'm able to compete with the best players in the world' –
Justin Rose
on ageing like a fine wine, as the 45-year-old's win in the St Jude Championship guaranteed his ticket to the Tour Championship at East Lake and also assured his Ryder Cup spot.
By the numbers:
6/8
Justin Rose birdied six of his last eight holes to win on the third hole of a playoff over JJS Spaun in the FedEx St Jude Championship in Memphis. According to golf statistician Justin Ray, Rose – at 45 – became the oldest player from Europe to win on the PGA Tour in modern times. Four of those birdies came on the 18th (at the 72nd hole and again three times in the playoff) where each of his approach shots finished inside 14 feet.
On this day: August 12th, 1990
Finally, Wayne Grady managed to emerge from the shadows of the Great White Shark to bask in some glory of his own when the Australian won the US PGA Championship at Shoal Creek Country Club in Birmingham, Alabama.
Much of the build-up to the championship had focused on the racial discrimination policy of the private club which then didn't allow African-American membership.
Wayne Grady with the PGA Championship trophy after winning the 1990 edition at Shoal Creek Country Club. Photograph: Bettmann/Corbis/Getty Images
However, Grady managed to keep his focus on the championship to grind his way to a three-shot winning margin over Fred Couples, compiling rounds of 72-67-72-71 for a six-under-par total of 282 for what would prove to be his only major win.
From the same club in Brisbane as Norman, Grady – who also shared the same coach, Charlie Earp – had worked his way through the Australasian and European Tours to get on to the PGA Tour and soaked in his accomplishment in claiming the famed Wannamaker Trophy.
'You look at that trophy and there are some great players who have won it, and it doesn't matter how hard you scratch that thing, they won't be able to get my name off it,' said Grady after the win.
Social swing
On hole 14 today, I hit a bad iron shot into the water. I took a drop and it rolled near the red hazard line. I thought it was clear of the red line but after the round a rules official showed me a video of my drop and it looked like the ball was on the line.
Any part of the…
— Michael S. Kim (@Mike_kim714)
'On hole 14 today, I hit a bad iron shot into the water. I took a drop and it rolled near the red hazard line. I thought it was clear of the red line but after the round a rules official showed me a video of my drop and it looked like the ball was on the line. Any part of the ball can't be on the line, nor cross the vertical plane of the line like the first down or endzone.
'I was still annoyed after my tee shot, I didn't take my time to make sure I took the proper drop and was penalized two shots for it. Not my best moment and I will use it as a learning experience. Luckily it's not going to affect my standing for next week' –
Michael Kim
, using American football analogies, on his rules of golf error.
HE'S DONE IT!
Grant Forrest loves winning on home soil 🏆
— DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour)
'He's done it! Grant Forrest loves winning on home soil #NexoChampionship' –
DP World Tour
hailing Grant Forrest's second career win on the tour, both of which came on home turf in Scotland.
A decisive hometown win for
He trusted a setup that included his 2025 Pro V1 golf ball, GT3 driver, NEW T250 and T100 irons,
— Titleist (@Titleist)
'A decisive hometown win for @grantforrest93 He trusted a setup that included his 2025 Pro V1 golf ball, GT3 driver, NEW T250 and T100 irons, @vokeywedges and @scottycameron putter en route to the four-shot victory' –
Titleist
bigging up their man Grant Forrest.
In the bag
Justin Rose – FedEx St Jude Championship
Driver:
Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond (9 degrees)
Mini driver:
TaylorMade R7 Quad (13 degrees)
5-wood:
TaylorMade M6 (17 degrees)
Irons:
Titleist 620 CB (4-6), Miura MC-502 (7-PW)
Wedges:
Titleist Vokey Design SM10 (52 and 56 degrees), Titleist Vokey Design WedgeWorks (60 degrees)
Putter:
Scotty Cameron Phantom T-5 Tour Prototype
Ball:
2025 Titleist Pro V1x
Know the rules
Q:
Players A and B are to play C and D in a four-ball match, however A arrives just after B, C and D have teed off at the third hole. A is not allowed to play for the side until the fourth hole but A gives advice to B during the play of the third hole. What is the ruling?
A:
There is no penalty. Such a situation is covered by Rule 23.4: An arriving partner who is not allowed to play on a hole may still give advice or help to the other partner.
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Irish Examiner
4 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Golf is not like team sports. It was never meant to have a finish line to the season
Instead of outrage and grave concern that Rory McIlroy chose to sit out the first FedEx Cup playoff event — without dropping a single spot in the rankings — let it be a reminder that golf is not like other sports. These are not the 'playoffs.' That's for team sports. This is golf, which has never had a defining finish to its year and never will. The FedEx Cup attempted to create a finish line until the tour tried to promote it as so much more. What it did was create an incentive for the best players to compete after the majors were over. That part has worked beautifully, and it still does, with or without McIlroy. Perhaps one reason McIlroy's absence got so much attention was no one had skipped a postseason event (barring injury) since Webb Simpson five years ago. Simpson pulled out of the BMW Championship at No. 3 in the FedEx Cup, saying he wanted to be fresh for the FedEx Cup finale at East Lake. McIlroy had said in June he has earned the right to do whatever he wants, and that includes skipping a $20 million tournament (for the third time this year), and sitting out the first round of what the PGA Tour calls its 'playoffs.' He remains at No. 2. But he certainly wasn't the first to do that. Tiger Woods was a no-show for the first playoff event in 2007, and he still went on to win the FedEx Cup. Phil Mickelson skipped the BMW Championship that year when it was the third of four postseason events. Sergio Garcia? He missed seven postseason events when he was eligible (and presumably healthy), one year taking time off in Switzerland and Spain because he wanted a break. McIlroy finished up nine holes of practice at Caves Valley on Monday afternoon as some of the players who advanced to the second stage were still on their way to the BMW Championship after a steamy week in Memphis, Tennessee. Given the heat, he's probably fresher than most. He first raised the question last year when he was No. 3 in the FedEx Cup, finished next-to-last in Memphis and wondered what he was doing there. He only dropped to No. 5. It changed nothing. So it was no surprise McIlroy sat this one out. Scottie Scheffler could have easily done the same. The TPC Southwind is where he last missed a cut (in 2022, when the postseason opener had 125-man field and a 36-hole cut). The FedEx St. Jude Classic also gave him a sponsor exemption when he was 17, and he has never missed it as a PGA Tour member. His choice. But playoffs? Jim Mora and his infamous 'Playoffs?' interview comes to mind this time of the year. The FedEx Cup might be a lot easier to understand — and appreciate — if the PGA Tour had just stuck to the right language when this season-ending bonanza first was unveiled. It was at East Lake in 2006 during the Tour Championship — remember, that was the year Woods and Mickelson both decided to skip the PGA Tour's finale — when former Commissioner Tim Finchem laid out the details of the FedEx Cup. He said golf was the only major sport where the regular season was more compelling than the finish (he apparently didn't think much of tennis). And so Finchem introduced a concept referred to as a championship series of four tournaments. He used that phrase — 'championship series' — 20 times in a lengthy news conference. The eight times he mentioned 'playoffs' was comparison with other sports, and how the championship series would be 'our version of the playoff system.' And then some marketing genius leaned on 'playoffs,' the word was painted onto a grassy hill at Westchester Country Club, the term stuck and it still doesn't make sense. That especially was the case when it began with 144 players, leading Jim Furyk to do the math. 'In football, there's 32 teams in the NFL and if I'm correct, 12 teams go to the playoffs,' he said in 2007. 'This year, 125 guys also keep their tour card and 144 people are going to the Playoffs. So that's roughly 110% of the league.' Golf is not like other sports. The concept is fine. The PGA Tour's version of the playoffs is working because it provides three weeks of its best players competing for a trophy that is slowly gaining in stature. It's not one of the four majors. It's probably still a notch below The Players Championship. The PGA Tour has tweaked the format five times, seeking a solution that doesn't exist. The most recent format — 'starting strokes' — was the most controversial, with the No. 1 player starting at 10-under par before the Tour Championship began. Not even Scheffler liked that. But it at least rewarded the players who performed the best throughout the year. Now the 30 players who emerge from the BMW Championship this week will all start from scratch at East Lake, and the low score wins. The 'season-long champion' could be someone who wins for the first time all year. How is the FedEx Cup trophy any different from the old Tour Championship trophy? The money is better. And unlike the last Tour Championship before the FedEx Cup began, at least everyone will show up.


RTÉ News
4 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler face off at BMW Championship
The top two players in the world will play side by side in the first two rounds of the BMW Championship, as the PGA Tour paired Scottie Scheffler with Rory McIlroy to begin the penultimate tournament of the season. Scheffler and McIlroy will tee off 11:16 am (4:16pm Irish time) on Thursday at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, and they are not only one-two in the world rankings, but also in the FedEx Cup race as the season winds down. The duo combined to win three of the four major championships this year and Scheffler is the defending FedEx Cup champion, while McIlroy has won it three times. When Scheffler and McIlroy played together in the first two rounds of the PGA Championship, alongside Xander Schauffele, Scheffler shot five-under par on his way to capturing the major title, while McIlroy struggled to one over and eked into the weekend. This will also mark McIlroy's first PGA Tour tournament since he finished in a tie for seventh at the Open Championship, won by Scheffler. McIlroy skipped the FedEx St Jude Championship, the play-off opener. There is no 36-hole cut at the second play-off leg, but only the top 30 in the points standings following Sunday will move on to the Tour Championship next week. Shane Lowry starts the tournament in 23rd place in the FedEx rankings and will tee off at 3:27pm (Irish time) in the opening round alongside Canada's Nick Taylor Schauffele, 43rd in the standings after an injury-interrupted season, needs a stellar finish to crack the top 30. He'll play his first two rounds with Michael Kim. Other notable pairings include Rickie Fowler with Venezuela's Jhonattan Vegas, numbers 48 and 49 in the points standings entering the week, and England's Justin Rose with JJ Spaun. Rose and Spaun went to a playoff at the St. Jude, and Rose prevailed on the third playoff hole to beat the US Open champion. Spaun and Rose sit third and fourth in the season standings.


Irish Times
21 hours ago
- Irish Times
Europe's Ryder Cup class of 2025 shapes up with familiar feel for US showdown
If continuity is key to Ryder Cup success, even the phlegmatic Luke Donald must be doing cartwheels. This also applies to those who believe the occasional away win is necessary if the event is to remain within the realms of serious sporting contest. The European class of 2025 is now very close to replicating the one that won in Rome in 2023, but with one quirk; Rasmus Højgaard replacing his twin brother, Nicolai. What the United States would give for such a settled scenario. Should Donald be so minded, he can keep change to an absolute minimum. Recreating a winning environment becomes so much easier when the characters involved are the same. When Europe slumped to comprehensive defeat at Whistling Straits four years ago, seven of the 12-man team were sampling an American Ryder Cup for the first time. At Hazeltine, in 2016, half of Darren Clarke's European contingent were debutants. The US again won with ease. Tommy Fleetwood suffered heartache in Memphis on Sunday. There was the consolation of qualification for Bethpage at the end of September. Fleetwood has joined Rory McIlroy and Justin Rose – brilliant in his playoff victory last weekend – as guaranteed to be in the team. Robert MacIntyre and Tyrrell Hatton are sure to follow. Shane Lowry may knock Sepp Straka out of the six automatic berths – the Austrian has withdrawn from this week's PGA Tour stop in Maryland for family reasons – but both will be in New York. Below Straka and Lowry in the rankings come Rasmus Højgaard, Ludvig Åberg, Viktor Hovland, Matt Wallace and Matt Fitzpatrick. The rogue element for one of those inside the top dozen on the European points table is that Donald is sure to turn to Jon Rahm , whose move to the LIV Tour has distorted his place in the world rankings and automatic qualifying potential. Rahm posted two top-10 finishes in this year's Majors and earned three points for Europe in Rome. READ MORE There is a reason the legal challenge from Rahm and Hatton towards the European Tour Group for fines issued for playing on LIV has been kicked down the road until after the Ryder Cup; Donald wants both on his team. [ Team Europe ready to take sportswashing's poster boy on board for Ryder Cup Opens in new window ] Long before the Ryder Cup at Gleneagles in 2014, Paul McGinley sensed Victor Dubuisson would be in European colours. The Frenchman was a maverick, an outlier. McGinley quietly built a relationship between Dubuission and the man who would become his Ryder Cup partner, Graeme McDowell . The assimilation process was successful, but lengthy. Donald has no such problems. There is, however, scope for at least a modicum of late drama. It seems logical to assume that if European qualifying stopped now, Rahm would take the place of Wallace, who sits 11th. Wallace will have a final opportunity to give Donald food for thought at next week's British Masters. Should the Englishman, who has spoken candidly about the pain of missing out on the Ryder Cup in 2018, prevail or even go close at the Belfry it would make others vulnerable. Justin Rose reacts after making a birdie on the 18th hole during a playoff against JJ Spaun at the FedEx St Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee. Photograph:Wallace tied for third when the US PGA Championship stopped at Bethpage in 2019. As a rookie, Wallace would have to give Donald undeniable cause to pick him. Looking at the names in the frame, that appears a simple case of making himself a better option than Rasmus Højgaard. The big-hitting Dane enjoyed a wonderful end to 2024, but has not properly built on that position of strength. This week's DP World Tour event in Denmark feels big for the twin. Fitzpatrick, doubtless aware of Wallace's potential to surge, has the British Masters on his schedule, as has Rasmus Højgaard. Fitzpatrick, 12th in the standings, is a Major champion and previous top 10 in the world player who lost his way spectacularly in the early part of this year. His rebound has been impressive, recently involving a batch of high finishes on either side of the Atlantic, including a share of fourth at The Open . Fitzpatrick is still involved in the FedEx Cup playoffs and will tee up this week at Caves Valley. For Donald, these are all relatively trivial issues. Every player he needs in the Bethpage picture is already there. In McIlroy, he also has an on-course leader with a stated aim of assisting Europe to a win in the US long before he clinched a career Grand Slam. Such a hugely incentivised McIlroy is a dangerous McIlroy. Fevered discussion on the US side surrounds the possibility, indeed the likelihood, of Keegan Bradley operating as a playing captain. The dual role need not be anything close to the disaster some insist, but the lack of clarity around how precisely Bradley became the captain and his definitive plan if qualifying to play has been striking. Those outside the US top 12 include Patrick Cantlay, Brian Harman, Cameron Young, Sam Burns, Wyndham Clark and Jordan Spieth. Brooks Koepka , the US PGA champion in 2019, has regressed towards irrelevance since winning the same Major in 2023. Bradley has far bigger, far more profound decisions to make than his European counterpart. Bryson DeChambeau has matured as a player in six years, but as Koepka triumphed at Bethpage, his compatriot missed the cut. The US can call upon Scottie Scheffler , modern golf's immovable object. They also command the home advantage ordinarily so crucial when these teams joust. Europe have strength in other forms. The stability offered to Donald only increases already high European hope. − Guardian