logo
PGA Tour to hire NFL executive Brian Rolapp as CEO of business enterprise

PGA Tour to hire NFL executive Brian Rolapp as CEO of business enterprise

Fox Sports20 hours ago

The PGA Tour is hiring longtime NFL executive Brian Rolapp as the first CEO of its new commercial division, created two years ago when the it reached a tentative agreement with the Saudi backers of LIV Golf, The Associated Press confirmed Thursday.
Jay Monahan, who announced the framework agreement in June 2023, will stay on as commissioner of the PGA Tour. Monahan announced in December the search for a CEO of PGA Tour Enterprises, now backed by a $1.5 billion investment from Strategic Sports Group.
The tour declined comment on the hiring, first reported by Sports Business Journal.
A person with direct knowledge of the tour's plans confirmed the hiring, speaking on condition of anonymity because nothing has been announced. Such developments typically are not publicized during major championships.
Rolapp has been with the NFL since 2003 and has been executive vice president and chief media and business officer since 2017, working closely with Commissioner Roger Goodell.
Sports Business Journal obtained a memo Goodell sent to staff Thursday announcing Rolapp would be leaving to pursue other opportunities.
Monahan announced an agreement with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, which was never finalized. From that framework agreement came a for-profit arm, PGA Tour Enterprises, which Rolapp would oversee.
The tour brought on SSG in January 2024, and soon announced a first-of-its-kind equity plan for players.
Monahan said in December of the CEO search, "We're bringing new perspectives on to our team to help us realize the incredible opportunities ahead for our sport."
Meanwhile, negotiations with PIF to bring the world's best players together stalled in the spring, even with the involvement of President Donald Trump, as LIV Golf wants to keep its team concept in place. LIV Golf has since hired Scott O'Neil as its new CEO.
Rolapp brings strong media connections to the PGA Tour, which is starting to plan for new broadcast deals that run through 2030. The PGA Tour has seen a strong uptick this year through extensive feedback from its fans, including a recent decision to revamp the Tour Championship to crown its FedEx Cup champion.
Arthur Blank, the Atlanta Falcons owner who is part of SSG, was part of the search committee that included Tiger Woods and Adam Scott, Monahan, PGA Tour board chairman Joe Gorder and Sam Kennedy from SSG.
Reporting by The Associated Press.
Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily ! FOLLOW Follow your favorites to personalize your FOX Sports experience PGA Tour National Football League
recommended
Get more from PGA Tour Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more in this topic

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Putt free and try hard: Why Sam Burns, the world's best on the greens, is rolling at Oakmont
Putt free and try hard: Why Sam Burns, the world's best on the greens, is rolling at Oakmont

NBC Sports

time41 minutes ago

  • NBC Sports

Putt free and try hard: Why Sam Burns, the world's best on the greens, is rolling at Oakmont

OAKMONT, Pa. – Sam Burns has a simple answer to why he's, statistically, the world's best putter. 'I practice it a lot,' he says. Louisiana Tech head coach Matt Terry can confirm. The Bulldogs share a home club with Burns, Squire Creek Country Club in Choudrant, Louisiana, and when Burns isn't on the road, he can often be found on Squire's practice green perfecting his stroke – template work, chalk lines, speed drills, you name it. These days, Burns will sometimes plop his 1-year-old son, Bear, down on the grass, hand him a wedge and get in a few extra putts while the toddler sits there, gnawing on the grip. 'That stuff is why he's so good; it's just constant,' Terry said. 'I tell my guys all the time to just go watch him putt and mirror what he does. 'The dude's the best I've ever seen on the greens.' The USGA usually gets creative with a handful of its U.S. Open groupings. For example, this week's trio of Burns, Denny McCarthy and Nico Echavarria combined the best three putters in the field, according to the PGA Tour's strokes-gained metric. Burns is unequivocally the best of the bunch. He's the only U.S. Open competitor, per Data Golf, who is gaining more than a shot per round on the greens in the past six months – and he's 0.2 strokes per round better than the next best player, Cameron Smith. 'If you look at putting,' Burns explains, 'the ball is rolling on the ground. There's a lot of imperfections on grass. There's a lot of different lines the ball can go in, depending on the speed, so if you try to be too perfect with putting, it can drive you crazy, so I just try to really read it, put a good roll on it, focus on the speed and hope for the best.' Added Burns' close friend, Scottie Scheffler: 'He's got good fundamentals, good instinct, and he putts very reactionary. That's really all there is to it.' The ninth green at Oakmont Country Club is a long way from Squire Creek, both literally and figuratively. Measuring at over 22,000 square feet, the putting surface, which sits in the shadows of Oakmont's farmhouse-style clubhouse, is the largest on property and doubles as the club's practice green. It features a wide variety of challenges, sloping back to front with a large swale through the middle and a mound on the right portion. Friday's hole location was tucked front right, just right of the swale and behind a deep bunker. At 5 under through 17 holes and on his way to easily the best round so far this week, Burns had no business saving par after tugging his drive into the left penalty area. But he took his medicine, dropped and hit his third shot pin high, 23 feet left of the flag to avoid any chance of dumping one in the sand. You see, the thing about putting is no one makes everything. Even Burns whiffed on a 5-footer last Sunday in Canada that would've won him his sixth PGA Tour title. He three-putted to lose, too. And on Thursday at Oakmont, he unusually finished in the negative in strokes gained putting, ranking just outside the top 100 of 156 players. But Burns bounced back with a vengeance on Friday, pouring in over 102 feet of putts, including that clutch par save on the par-4 ninth to solidify a second-round 65 and two-day total of 3-under 137, which left he and Viktor Hovland (1 under) as the only two players in their wave at even par or better. 'That putt was, I don't know, 6 feet of break,' Burns guessed of the putt, which gained him about a stroke on the field alone. 'Yeah, it was a nice one to make for sure.' Despite his elite skill with the flatstick – his trusty Odyssey Ai-One 7S – Burns finds himself in unfamiliar territory. This is his 21st career major start. Until his T-9 at last year's U.S. Open at Pinehurst, he'd never cracked the top 10 in a major. The physical explanation, at least in recent years, is Burns' iron play hasn't been good enough. He entered this week ranked No. 149 in strokes gained approach, so the fact that he missed just four greens Friday and ranks inside the top 10 in that category through two days probably explains his breakout performance. But Burns added that he learned something 12 months ago at Pinehurst. 'I just feel like I've tried to play too perfect and tried to force it a little bit at times … around major championship golf courses,' Burns explained, 'and I think especially around here, honestly it kind of forces you to take your medicine because a lot of times that's the only option you have. … You really just have to free it up. It's too hard to try to guide it around here. You're going to hit some in the rough, you're going to hit some in some bad spots, you might as well do it with authority.' Burns' patience was tested late Thursday afternoon when he quickly went from 3 under to 2 over with a bogey-double-bogey-bogey finish over his last four holes, Nos 15-18. 'It was unfortunate,' Burns said, 'but there was too much good to focus on the little bit of bad.' A day later, Burns was heading toward his television interview when he walked past Jon Rahm, who was speaking to reporters following a disappointing 75 that dropped him to 4 over. 'I'm too annoyed and too mad right now to think about any perspective,' Rahm said. 'Very frustrated. Very few rounds of golf I played in my life where I think I hit good putts and they didn't sniff the hole.' Rahm lost about three strokes with the putter on Friday, a performance that ranked him ahead of fewer than 10 players in this second round. Shortly after wrapping his thoughts, Rahm was off to the practice area to figure something out. As Burns knows, that's the simplest way to holing more putts.

2025 U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler appears frustrated on driving range after second round
2025 U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler appears frustrated on driving range after second round

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

2025 U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler appears frustrated on driving range after second round

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is going to make the cut at the 2025 U.S. Open, and while that's nothing to sneeze at, it isn't exactly up to snuff for arguably the most dominant golfer of the past decade. Scheffler shot 1-over 71 on Friday to follow up his 3-over 73 in the first round and he heads into the weekend 4 over, inside the projected cutline but well back of the lead. Advertisement After finishing his second round, Scheffler wasn't ready to go home (or the Airbnb). Instead, he hit the driving range, trying to tweak whatever it is that seems to be going wrong. Scheffler appeared to be visibly frustrated as he and his coach, Randy Smith, were shown exchanging ideas on the range during Friday's television broadcast. Scheffler entered Oakmont as a significant favorite to win the U.S. Open, having won three of his last four starts on the PGA Tour, including the PGA Championship and The Memorial Tournament. If we've learned anything from Scheffler's performance over the past three or four years, it's that he's never out of it. But he'll need that driving range session to pay off as he looks to go low Saturday in hopes of getting back in contention for his third major championship title. Advertisement If there are still any questions about whether Oakmont is hard enough, though, well, there's your answer. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: US Open 2025: Scottie Scheffler frustrated on range after second round

2025 U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler appears frustrated on driving range after second round
2025 U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler appears frustrated on driving range after second round

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

2025 U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler appears frustrated on driving range after second round

2025 U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler appears frustrated on driving range after second round World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is going to make the cut at the 2025 U.S. Open, and while that's nothing to sneeze at, it isn't exactly up to snuff for arguably the most dominant golfer of the past decade. Scheffler shot 1-over 71 on Friday to follow up his 3-over 73 in the first round and he heads into the weekend 4 over, inside the projected cutline but well back of the lead. After finishing his second round, Scheffler wasn't ready to go home (or the Airbnb). Instead, he hit the driving range, trying to tweak whatever it is that seems to be going wrong. Scottie hit just 7 greens but managed a 71 and is out at the range now trying to find it with coach Randy Smith @golfweek — Adam Schupak (@AdamSchupak) June 13, 2025 Scheffler appeared to be visibly frustrated as he and his coach, Randy Smith, were shown exchanging ideas on the range during Friday's television broadcast. Scheffler entered Oakmont as a significant favorite to win the U.S. Open, having won three of his last four starts on the PGA Tour, including the PGA Championship and The Memorial Tournament. Scottie grinding it out on the range with coach Randy Smith after a 71 on Friday. — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 13, 2025 If we've learned anything from Scheffler's performance over the past three or four years, it's that he's never out of it. But he'll need that driving range session to pay off as he looks to go low Saturday in hopes of getting back in contention for his third major championship title. If there are still any questions about whether Oakmont is hard enough, though, well, there's your answer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store