
PGA Tour Fans Want 'Media Training' for Collin Morikawa Amid Reporter Feud
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
The PGA Tour is in Detroit this week for the Rocket Classic. The weather is expected to be warm, but the course is not the only thing heated.
Collin Morikawa still has not recovered his cool from his heated exchange with a reporter during his pre-tournament press conference. After his first-round performance, a (different) member of the press covering the event asked him to expand on the topic, and the two-time major champion jumped at the chance.
Morikawa elaborated on the reasons that led him to speak the way he did during Wednesday's press conference.
"I have to stand up for myself because I'm not going to let someone throw little jabs at me and just make me into someone I'm not, because I know who I am and that's all that matters."
'I think I have to stand up for myself because I'm not going to let someone throw little jabs at me…'
Collin Morikawa follows up on the exchange he had with a reporter during his pre-tournament press conference. https://t.co/XXdJn5Foxj pic.twitter.com/qPhaKhDSC5 — GOLF.com (@GOLF_com) June 26, 2025
"I know my people, my team, my family know who I am, but this whole perception out there right now is just, it's a little ridiculous."
The 28-year-old player also revealed details about his relationship with this particular reporter.
"Look, this has happened twice between the same -- between me and Alan. It hasn't happened between anyone else. A lot of other reporters, media, I respect everyone."
Fans have shown no mercy to Morikawa for returning to this topic, leaving both criticism and advice on social media:
"Dude DEFINITELY needs to hire a PR consultant," @johnshewchuk said.
"The irony is if he hadn't have raised this issue, nobody would even be aware of it. He needs to defend himself from himself, first and foremost. Desperately needs a PR person to advise him," @thisguy290 posted.
"What the f**k is this dude doing, this is an elite level of owning yourself," @jonhawks317 wrote.
"He's trying to create drama bc he feels that golfers are treated unfairly. If you read the article, there are literally no jabs thrown. He should just worry about putting honestly," @tushpush4L posted.
Collin Morikawa of the United States looks on from the 16th green during the first round of the Rocket Classic 2025 at Detroit Golf Club on June 26, 2025 in Detroit, Michigan.
Collin Morikawa of the United States looks on from the 16th green during the first round of the Rocket Classic 2025 at Detroit Golf Club on June 26, 2025 in Detroit, Michigan.And it was precisely the putting that was the core issue in Morikawa's poor first round at the Rocket Classic, golf-wise. The six-time PGA Tour winner lost 4.7 strokes with his putting, the worst record of the 156 players in the field.
"I've been so focused on hitting my irons better that I haven't put enough honestly time into putting. The last couple weeks haven't been great, but they haven't felt as bad," he said.
Morikawa carded an eagle, four birdies and three bogeys on Thursday for a 3-under 69. That score keeps him tied for 66th place. He will tee off at 12:54 pm ET on Friday.
More Golf: Tiger Woods looks good as son Charlie kills it at Nicklaus Jr event

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USA Today
32 minutes ago
- USA Today
Two golfers set course record minutes apart at Rocket Classic at Detroit Golf Club
DETROIT — Nothing like a little history to kick off the 2025 Rocket Classic. Min Woo Lee, who had held the lead at 9 under for much of the first-round action on Thursday seemed secure in his position around 5 p.m. ET. His 63 was tied for the course record and with a weaker field playing in the afternoon, Lee felt confident that he would head the field to open Round 2 on Friday, June 27. But unknown to Lee, two players — one rookie and one veteran (albeit with few wins on the PGA Tour) — were having epic first rounds. Within half an hour, Lee was in third place, looking up at Kevin Roy and Aldrich Potgieter after each shot 10-under 62s to set the Detroit Golf Club record. Even for Detroit, which has become known for low scores over the first six iterations of its Tour event, it was more than expected. Particularly from two unlikely sources: Potgieter, a 20-year-old from South Africa, is a rookie on the Tour; Roy, a 35-year-old from New York (via Long Beach State), has only been on it since 2023. And yet ... the two started holes apart, with Roy beginning on No. 1 and Potgieter beginning on No. 10, but both went low on the back nine. Potgieter registered a 29 going out, with five birdies and an eagle on 17. Roy, coming in, matched the eagle on 17 and added four birdies on the back nine, for a 30. 'I was shocked my 5-wood went that far,' Roy said of his eagle. 'I had 279 pin, I don't hit a 5-wood that far but maybe a little adrenaline or something going on. Luckily just trickled off the back, it was a fine lie and just had to kind of plop it up and it rolled in like a 2-footer. Certainly a bonus.' Roy opened his front nine with four birdies. Potgieter cooled off slightly, with only three birdies, but he still nearly took the outright lead on his last hole, as his ball just rimmed out on No. 9. Even he thought it was in. 'I did, I started walking after it,' Potgieter said. 'But it was a good putt, I'm happy with it. And it was on a crest so I didn't know if it was going to be left or right, so it was just a little unfortunate but I'll take the 62 still.' It's not the first time either has played the course. They both played it back in 2023. For Potgieter, it was his first professional event, as he got a sponsor's exemption to play as an 18-year-old. 'My parents weren't here, so it was kind of a first step from amateur golf, not even college,' Potgieter said. 'So that was a big step for me to come out here by myself with my caddie and play some of these events. It was a good learning curve. And I didn't make the cut, so there was definitely a chip on my shoulder that I needed to get that done this week.' After going in the afternoon on Thursday, they'll both get an early start in Round 2 on Friday, June 27: Roy tees off at 6:45 a.m. and Potgieter tees off at 6:56. A 20 year old South African rookie named Aldrich Potgieter just broke the course record at Detroit Golf Club. He's currently tied for the lead with Kevin Roy at -10 and was centimeters away from the all-out lead. Kevin Roy also broke it. Both shot 62 (record was 63). Despite the young duo's record round, Lee's 63 was still enough for third place, tied with Max Greyserman and Mark Hubbard. Lee, an Australia native, finished with 10 birdies, nine of which came after opened with birdie-bogey on 10 and 11. Heading into his final hole, Lee was tied with Andrew Putnam, who parred the hole. Lee surpassed him with a thirty-foot putt that broke twice before it finally went in. ¡Así se hace Chef! 👨🍳🔥@MinWoo27Lee empata el récord de campo en el @RocketClassic con 10 birdies para comenzar la semana con ronda de 63. 'Me and Bo, my caddie, read it left to right and a little straighter towards the end, but my tendency on left-to-righters is to miss 'em right,' Lee said, laughing. 'And I did miss it right and it ended up coming back, which was very nice. So it was a great bonus. We knew it was going to come back right to left, but not that much. Sometimes better to be lucky. Just needed the right speed and it went in dead center.' Lee's 63 also tied his career best. Since winning his first PGA Tour event at the Texas Children's Houston Open in March, Lee has been 'honestly very bad,' he said. He has struggled with putting and recently switched to a new putter, which he feels he's had more success with. Lee has also been working on improving his driving, attempting to hit more of a fade than the left shot he typically hits. His performance was also much improved by the friendly nature of Detroit Golf Club, which typically has low scores unlike the tough U.S. Open course in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, that he played two weeks ago. 'I have good vibes here,' Lee said. 'I played really well last year and had a good chance to win, so I actually really like this place, and make some birdies. Andrew Putnam got on a roll Putnam had one of his best rounds ever Thursday. The 36-year-old came out blazing on the back nine, with three straight birdies on Nos. 13, 14 and 15. But it was nothing compared to his performance on the front nine: Five straight birdies on Nos. 4-8 to tie Lee for the lead at -8. Lee, in the group behind Putnam, eventually passed him for the lead with a birdie on 9. Putnam had a 30-foot putt on 9 which came inches away from going in, but ultimately, he needed three shots to finish off the hole. Andrew Putnam just barely missed hitting six straight birdies. He'll have to settle for five and a tie for the lead at -8 with Min Woo Lee. 'Yeah, that's one of the harder holes, No. 9,' Putnam said. 'It's usually a par hole, but with the way my putter was feeling, I just thought, 'If I get this on the green, looks like it's going in.' … I only had a foot left, but it was like a 30-footer, so usually trying to two-putt those.' The five straight birdies also came immediately after he bogeyed No. 3 — an impressive recovery. 'Bogeys out here today feel especially awful just because of how many opportunities there are,' Putnam told a reporter from the Golf Channel. 'Glad I could stay in after that hole and finish off.'


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
LPGA: Megan Khang Literally Stops Traffic with Unreal Shot By the Road
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Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
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