
Shop the top 5 deals on golf games, organizers and more for summer 2025
Shop the top 5 deals on golf games, organizers and more for summer 2025 Wayfair has tons of golf deals ahead of the Way Day 2025 sale.
Following the buzz of the 2025 Masters Tournament, every golfer is feeling amped up to get outside and hit some balls. Whether you're looking for a little indoor putting practice, a handy golf ball dispenser for your outdoor shots or a fun golf-inspired game for your summer parties, there are deals to be had!
Ahead of Wayfair's just-announced Way Day 2025 sale coming up later this month, we've rounded up five of the best golf discounts on everything from golf games for summer to organizers for the perfect Father's Day gift.
Here are the top five early Way Day golf deals you won't want to miss.
1. Disc Golf Set
More: Check out the RIA golf sunglasses that up and coming pro Nico Echavarria is wearing
2. Plastic Golf with Carrying Case
Best golf rain gear: Stay dry on the course with our favorite pieces of rain gear
3. Suncast Golf Organizer
More: Look the part of a 'Caddyshack' character with HeyDude's new golf shoe collection
4. PutterBall Golf with Carrying Case
More: What is Justin Rose wearing at the Masters? Justin Rose's Peter Millar golf apparel
5. Automatic Golf Ball Dispenser Golf Practice
More: Find out if a Wayfair Rewards membership is right for your wallet
Shop more golf deals at Wayfair:
More: Wayfair already has a Henckels knife set on sale for $372 off ahead of Way Day 2025
When is Wayfair's April Way Day sale?
The April Way Day 2025 sale will be live from Saturday, April 26 through Monday, April 28.
Shop early Way Day deals
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Every Single Time Kate Middleton Princess Charlotte Twinned: Photos
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For the Christmas Day Church service in 2019, Kate wore a gray sweater coatdress, and, since Charlotte wore an emerald coatdress, she coordinated with accessories in the same shade. We see it on her hat, shoes, and clutch! For Trooping the Colour on June 09, 2018, both Kate and Charlotte looked so sweet together in their matching light blue dresses with poofy shoulders. Now, for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's wedding, the mother-daughter duo rocked bright white looks. While Charlotte opted for an ivory dress, Kate went with an off-white, almost cream-colored dress from Alexander McQueen. Yet again, Kate and Charlotte subtly matched their formalwear. When Princess Charlotte was a bridesmaid for Pippa Middleton and James Matthews' wedding, she wore a darling white teacup dress and blush sash that was the same color as her mom's Alexander McQueen dress. Blue looks so good on the Wales gals, and we adored these coordinating blue looks they wore together while visiting Poland. 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Father's Day 2025 food deals: Discounts at Shake Shack, Wendy's, Hooters, more
Father's Day is this Sunday, June 15, and restaurants across the country are celebrating by offering deals and discounts on the day. According to the United States Census Bureau, there are an estimated 72 million fathers in the U.S., with 29 million of those fathers also being grandfathers. According to the nation's first Father's Day was celebrated in the state of Washington on June 10, 1910. While President Woodrow Wilson made Mother's Day became a national holiday in 1914, it wasn't until 1972 when President Richard Nixon made Father's Day official on the third Sunday in June, according to If dining out is in your plans for Father's Day, here are some deals and specials. Remember to check local restaurants and businesses' social media accounts for other possible promotions. On Sunday, June 15, Hooters customers who purchase 10 wings any style will receive 10 boneless wings free, the company told USA TODAY. Additionally, from June 13-15, HootClub Rewards members can get one select appetizer for just $5. Appetizer options include mozzarella sticks, fried pickles, chips & queso and buffalo shrimp, among other options, limit one $5 appetizer per account. 'Difficult decision': Hooters closes over 30 restaurants suddenly Now through Monday, June 16, Shake Shack customers can get a BOGO Double Shackburger using promo code "DADMODE" on the Shack App, online at or in-Shack kiosks, according to the company. The Double Shackburger features two made-to-order quarter pound Angus beef patties, American cheese, lettuce, tomato, and ShackSauce on a toasted potato bun, according to the chain. On Sunday, June 15, Wendy's customers can celebrate Father's Day with a buy one, get one free premium sandwich, with the offer available exclusively through the Wendy's app. According to Wendy's, examples of premium sandwiches include a Dave's Single, Baconator, and the Classic and Spicy Chicken Sandwiches, among others. Red Robin customers can purchase a $50 Red Robin gift card and receive a $10 Red Robin Bonus Buck reward, according to the company. Additionally, customers who sign up or the Red Robin Royalty program can get a free appetizer upon sign up. 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Lynch: Phil Mickelson says a muted farewell to a mixed U.S. Open legacy OAKMONT, Pa. — By the time Phil Mickelson signed his second-round scorecard at Oakmont Country Club, he had accounted for 8,704 strokes in his U.S. Open career. Most of those were routine, many of them sublime, a smattering excruciatingly painful, none moreso than the half-dozen he struck on the 72nd hole at Winged Foot in 2006. Friday's 74 — which included two double-bogeys down the stretch to miss the cut by a single shot — was his 120th round in his 34th tilt at the national title. It was also potentially his last, and if it proves so, then it draws to a close his tortured relationship with a tournament that has come to define both his career and his character. It may seem audacious to suggest that a man who owns three Masters, two PGA Championships and an Open is defined by the one major he didn't win, but the U.S. Open represents more than just an empty space in a Southern California trophy room, save for his six silver medals. It's the event that cemented the perception of Mickelson as a family man (Pinehurst, '99), as a putative rival to Tiger Woods (Bethpage, '02), as a hapless but gracious hero with no lay-up in him (Winged Foot, '06), as a populist entertainer gamely battling stringent course set-ups designed to punish his aggressive style (All of 'em, '90-'25). But it's also the event that exposed his antagonistic attitude toward golf's authorities and saw the early unraveling of his carefully cultivated 'Aw shucks' image. To be exact, that moment came with his 7,277th and most memorable stroke in the Open, when he hockeyed a moving ball on the 13th green at Shinnecock Hills in the third round seven years ago. It was more than just the frustration of a score going sideways or of another chance to complete the career grand slam ebbing away. It was an admission that the U.S. Open had finally broken him. That angry swipe — and his brazen defense of it — was a Foxtrot Uniform to the USGA. 'I've had multiple times when I've wanted to do that, and I finally did,' he told Curtis Strange afterward. The years since have cemented a new public perception of Mickelson that is wholly unflattering. His reputation among fans was sundered when he explicitly said he was willing to overlook murder and human rights abuses by his 'scary motherf'er' benefactors in Saudi Arabia if doing so gave him leverage over the PGA Tour to enrich himself. His standing in the locker room (never stellar) is positively fecal since he filed suit on behalf of LIV, claiming every entity in the game and some of his former colleagues were illegally conspiring against the Saudi enterprise. Now starved of the high-profile platform he used to enjoy, he satisfies himself with mild social media trolling, like his suggestion in March that Scottie Scheffler wouldn't win before the Ryder Cup (he has, three times). That was at least a break from his stream of far-right fever swamp posts about California taxes and how only citizens are entitled to due process (presumably when, just for example, they're caught up in insider trading investigations). Mickelson competed at Oakmont on the final year of an exemption earned by winning the '21 PGA Championship, but he has pathways to play future Opens. A strong finish in another major would earn an invitation — feasible at the Masters (where his institutional knowledge led to an improbable T-2 finish a couple years ago) or the British Open (which rewards two traits he has in abundance, imagination and guile). He could enter qualifying or win the U.S. Senior Open, which he's never entered. But his most likely avenue is a special exemption from the USGA. He actually received such an invitation in '21 but ultimately didn't need it when he won that PGA Championship. Much has changed in four years, however, and since these exemptions are goodwill gestures and most often reserved for former Open champions, savvy readers will immediately see two barriers to Mickelson obtaining one. His relationship with every non-Saudi entity in the sport is toxic, particularly the USGA. Only a couple years ago he said the organization was guilty of a 'dick move' for not admitting Talor Gooch to the Open, which is less insulting when one realizes that Mickelson accusing anyone of a dick move is akin to having Michelangelo praise your brushwork. The USGA's chief championships officer, John Bodenhamer, was asked about the possibility of a special pass. 'We would review things for Shinnecock ahead of next year and look at all of those possibilities and evaluate it from there,' he replied. "I think the way that we would also think of Phil is we hope he earns his way in, and I think he'd tell you the same thing.' For those conversant in the nomenclature of the USGA, that roughly translates as, 'Good luck, pal.' So it seems probable that we witnessed the end of Mickelson's long, tumultuous U.S. Open journey on this overcast Friday evening in front of muted spectators. Perhaps a Hall of Famer who has made many iconic contributions to this championship deserved a more fitting send-off, but decisions, actions and words have consequences. Like so many previous U.S. Opens, Phil Mickelson has only himself to blame for how disappointingly things ended.