Jameson Taillon fans Isaac Collins
Rich Eisen's Power Rankings: Players & Coaches Most in Need of a Title
Rich Eisen dusts off his Power Rankings to list the top 10 athletes and coaches who need to win a championship most, including Aaron Judge, Dak Prescott, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson, Kyle Shanahan and others.
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KPMG Women's PGA live updates: Leaderboard, scores from LPGA major at Fields Ranch East
The 2025 KPMG Women's PGA Championship started at Fields Ranch East in Frisco, Texas, the home course of the PGA of America. The Senior PGA was held at Fields Ranch East in 2023, the women are on tap this week and the men make their way to North Texas in 2027. The best players in the world are battling it out with a major title on the line, including world No. 1 and past champion Nelly Korda, who remains in search of her first victory this season. Advertisement Here's a look at the opening round of play from the KPMG Women's PGA: KPMG Women's PGA leaderboard Keep up with the latest scores on our USA TODAY Sports leaderboard. World's top 3 playing together It should be an interesting first two rounds as the world's top three players are paired together at Fields Ranch. How to watch KPMG Women's PGA Championship 2025 All times EDT Thursday, June 19 Golf Channel: 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Featured groups: 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday, June 20 Golf Channel: 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Featured groups: 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Saturday, June 21 Peacock: 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Advertisement Featured groups: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. ( PGA Champs App) NBC: 1:30-6 p.m. Sunday, June 22 Peacock: 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Featured groups: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. ( PGA Champs App) NBC: 3-6 p.m. This article originally appeared on Golfweek: KPMG Women's PGA live updates: Leaderboard, scores
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25 minutes ago
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Dom Amore: At the Travelers, No.1 Scottie Scheffler once again makes it look so easy
CROMWELL — The language is filled with quotes to suggest how difficult the game of golf has always been: Frustrating, humbling, unpredictable. Playing 18 holes, Mark Twain once opined in our own backyard, 'Is a good walk spoiled.' Advertisement It's not supposed to be as easy as Scottie Scheffler makes it look. Not even the No.1 player in the world is supposed to be as consistently good as Scheffler. But here he was Thursday, back at the TPC River Highlands, back on top of his game, making another round of golf look as easy and matter-of-fact as that stroll in the park. Three birdies on the first four holes, four on the first six, Scheffler made the turn at 30, then eagled 13, birdied 15. Austin Eckroat was in the clubhouse with a round of 62, the best round of his career before Scheffler teed off at 1:45 p.m. Travelers Championship notes: Davis Riley was last in the field, first to birdie in opening round By 5 p.m., Scheffler overtook him and got the lead without neither a bogey nor a bead of sweat in sight. Scheffler's playing partner, J.J. Spaun, who was coming off the week of a lifetime, winning the U.S. Open, came back to earth with a round of 3-over par 73. What some would call once in a lifetime, what some would consider a master class, was, for Scottie Scheffler, Thursday at the Travelers. Advertisement Not until the 17th hole, as the wind picked up, did Scheffler have to scramble, missing the fairway with his tee shot, putting from beyond the edge of the green to leave himself a 14 1/2-foot putt for par. He two-putted, and gave back a stroke to finish with a 62, matching Eckroat atop the leader board at 8-under.. 'Did a lot of good stuff,' Scheffler said, after signing his card. 'Felt like the conditions were challenging, especially late in the day, but I did some good things. I was able to hole some nice putts as well.' Aw, c'mon, Scottie. Really? Scheffler won the Travelers last year, one of nine wins in a season for the ages. At the River Highlands he shot 65-64-64-65 and took the playoff over Tom Kim. He shot a 63 in 2023, so this was his best round in Cromwell. Other than that bit of minutia, this was pretty routine for Scheffler and that, in and of itself, makes it so extraordinary. Advertisement 'I got hot pretty early in the round and got off to a nice start,' he said. 'And then I really kept the momentum through basically hole 15 and then I had one mess-up there on 17, but overall it was a pretty good day..' Travelers Championship first-round scores, second-round tee times This course each year generates discussion on its degree of difficulty. Keegan Bradley set the record in '23, winning it with 23 under par. On Thursday, Bradley, the U.S. Ryder Cup captain, finished his round 6-under, matching his partner Rory McIlroy, then took his children to watch Scheffler putt for par on the 18th green. Bradley had a smile on his face, a smile that might've been saying, 'We've got this guy, and they don't.' Scheffler, with his caddy Ted Scott, on the bag for three Bubba Watson wins at the Travelers, snuck in an occasional smile, but played the day with cool precision. As he intimated when he got to town, the course isn't really easy, it's just that the pros are so good. Advertisement Dom Amore: Scottie Scheffler, still No. 1, ready to run it back at Travelers On 13, he hit a dead-solid perfect shot off the tee to set himself up for the eagle that made his day. 'I mean, on 13, that 3-iron I hit in there was really nice.' he said. 'It was pretty much exactly what I was trying to do. It was kind of one where I had to hit it really solid in order to get it there with the water short, and I just did pretty much exactly what I wanted to and it felt nice. Hit it really solid and really straight, just barely right of the pin, and kept a nice flat flight, get it to go through the wind, and it was good. Well struck.' That, Scheffler said, was the only shot of the day that was exactly right. Everything else fell into the 'pretty good' category. When it's better than that, Scheffler does what he did at the Byron Nelson Classic, opening with a 61, finishing 31 under par. Advertisement 'To be fair, I won by a significant margin,' Scheffler said, 'so to call it 30-under I think would be a stretch. I could have won it at 23-under, and also the PGA, same thing. I maybe won at 10, but it was still a pretty sizable cushion.' On some level, Scheffler was more willing to express pride with his performance at the U.S. Open, where he finished 4-over par and tied for seventh at Pennsylvania's very difficult Oakmont CC. 'The way I swung it the first couple rounds was pretty poor,' he said. 'I mean, I was not getting the ball in play. I don't know if you saw much of it, but it wasn't very pretty. But I was very proud of the way I stayed in the tournament and I still gave myself a chance to win. That gives me a lot of confidence going forward that I could — especially on a golf course like Oakmont where you know you have to get the ball in play, and I wasn't able to do that in the beginning of the tournament, and to hang in there, flirt with the cut line on Friday, have a good finish to my round Friday. (Then) kind of bounce back, get myself back in the tournament to give myself an opportunity to win was pretty good. 'I gained some confidence from that. It's also just good reflection knowing that it's really important for me just to stay in it mentally, and I felt like last week was, oddly enough, as good as I've been mentally on the course throughout the season. As much as I want to win every tournament and play perfect golf, it's just not sustainable.' Advertisement If Scheffler's confidence is at a high point, who knows where he will finish the Travelers? It's not really this easy, no golfer is perfect; no golfer is great every day. But Scheffler, 28, is a close as it gets right now, and probably has another decade of peak performance in front of him. Maybe it's not perfection, but the excellence is historic — and the weekend is just beginning. Just savor it. The next Tiger or Jack? World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler has begun chasing down all-time great status .
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
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Sinking nearly 200 feet in putts, Jeeno Thitikul leads a 'home' major at PGA Frisco
FRISCO, Texas – It's not often that a player gets to sleep in her own bed at a major. For Jeeno Thitikul, that's especially important given that she has her blackout shades. 'Every time I got to Evian, it's so bright like early morning,' said Thitikul. 'Like in ShopRite, in U.S. Open, like 5 a.m. in the morning, it's so bright.' Advertisement But with her extra shades, Thitikul can sleep in til at least 7 a.m., which will come in handy as the week goes along, as she's likely going to have nothing but late tee times going forward after an opening 4-under 68 at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship at Fields Ranch East. After a shaky start that found her 2-over par through five holes, Thitikul, 22, birdied five of the next six holes. She needed just 25 putts in her opening round to take a one-stroke lead over Minjee Lee. The top three players in the world were paired together in the opening round. No. 1 Nelly Korda opened with an even-par 72 while No. 3 Lydia Ko finished at 3 over. 'I'm pretty happy with my first round in the conditions,' said Korda. 'It was pretty windy. It was hot. It definitely takes a toll on you, the Texas heat.' More: KPMG Women's PGA live updates: Leaderboard, scores from LPGA major at Fields Ranch East What's with Jeeno Thitikul's color-coded grips? Thitikul, who makes her home in the Castle Hills area when she's staying in the U.S., travels the world with her manager. Her parents likely won't come out to watch her play outside of Thailand this year. Advertisement To help her father follow along from home, Thitikul has a color-coded system with her grips. Her dad came up with the idea when she was around 10, and she's used the same bright color codes now for several years. Golf Channel highlighted the setup during the broadcast in Frisco, and Thitikul joked that she might have to change it now. Thitikul's putter was white-hot on Thursday One club that didn't need color coding was Thitikul's putter, and it was hot throughout the balmy day. The star seemed to drop everything she touched, including a 60-foot birdie putt. Incredibly, she lipped out a 76-footer on 18, but she finished making just under 200 feet of putts while playing partners Ko and Korda combined to make just over 108 feet. Advertisement The best player on tour without a major, Thitikul currently ranks first on tour in strokes gained total and first in putts per green in regulation. She ranks behind only Korda in scoring with a 69.09 average. A victory this week would move Thitikul into No. 1 in the world, should Korda finish 11th or worse. When asked how she's dealing with pressure to win her first major, Thitikul laughed as she said in every major, she's just trying to make the cut. 'I'm pretty happy with all I've achieved,' she said. 'If I can get it, it would be great, but if not, I don't have anything to regret about.' "It would be really great to win it, and definitely I can tell that it would be like everyone dreams to win a major." This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Jeeno Thitikul leads a home major at KPMG, explains color-coded grips