
These 7 golfers are playing in the Tour Championship for the first time in 2025
There are 17 golfers making a repeat visit to East Lake Golf Club this week. In contrast, there are seven who are making their first trip.
Golfers playing in the Tour Championship for the first time
About 23 percent of the 2025 field will be playing East Lake Golf Club for the FedEx finale for the first time.
The U.S. Open champ finished third in the points. He played 22 events and posted six top-10s. He had two playoff defeats, both at premiere events: the Players Championship, where he lost to Rory McIlory, and the FedEx St. Jude Championship, where he was bested by Justin Rose.
He won for the first time on the PGA Tour this year at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans team event. He shortly thereafter won his first individual title. He's one of six golfers to have won at least twice in 2025.
A model of consistency all season, McNealy made 19 cuts in 23 events and posted seven top-10s with a season-best solo second at the Genesis Invitational.
His first PGA Tour came this year and it was alongside Griffin in New Orleans. The 30-year-old made 17 cuts in 25 events and had five top-10s, including a runner-up finish when he lost in a playoff at the RBC Heritage. He also has a solo third, a tie for third and a tie for sixth.
The Englishman was the lone golfer from outside the top 30 ahead of the BMW Championship to get on the right side of it and make it to Atlanta. In fact, he climbed 19 spots in all. He survived making bogeys at two of the last three holes during Sunday's final round at the BMW but helped himself with an amazing chip-in for birdie at 17.
Bridgeman made 19 cuts in 27 starts with a T-2, solo third, a T-4 and a T-5. He made $4 million in earnings this season after having won $1.3 million prior to 2025.
The former Rutgers and Oklahoma standout made the Genesis Scottish Open his second PGA Tour win and a week later, he contended again at the Open Championship, finishing for third. His breakout season came on the strength of a strong second half of 2025 and even sparked some Ryder Cup conversations. He flirted with the top-30 bubble at the BMW most of the week but did just enough to snag the 29th spot.
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CNET
35 minutes ago
- CNET
Tour Championship 2025: TV Schedule, How to Watch, Stream All the PGA Tour Golf From Anywhere
The 30 top ranked golfers battle it out in Atlanta this weekend for the pivotal Tour Championship, with Scottie Scheffler aiming to become the first player to defend their FedEx Cup crown. Keep reading to find out the best live TV streaming services you can use to watch each day of the tournament live wherever you are in the world, and how to use a VPN if they're not available where you are. Scheffler heads to East Lake Golf Club after a dramatic victory at the BMW PGA Championship last weekend, edging past Bob MacIntyre with a two-stroke win. While Scheffler holds a mammoth 3,769 point lead over second-placed Rory McIlroy in the FedEx Cup standings, there's been a significant change to the rules of this year's tournament. The controversial start-strokes format of previous years has been scrapped, effectively meaning all players are competing on zero par for this deciding tournament. Scottie Scheffler claimed his fifth PGA Tour win of season with his win at last weekend's BMW is the US TV schedule for the Tour Championship 2025? Linear TV coverage of the Tour Championship in the US is on The Golf Channel and NBC. You'll also be able to livestream NBC's coverage via online service Peacock. For more comprehensive coverage, streaming service ESPN Plus offers extended PGA Tour Live access, offering marquee groups, featured groups, featured holes and the main action feeds. Here's the full TV schedule (all times ET): Thursday and Friday Golf Channel: 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. ESPN Plus: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday Golf Channel: 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. ESPN Plus: 11:15 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday Golf Channel: 1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. NBC, Peacock: 2:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. ESPN Plus: 12 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday Golf Channel, Peacock: 12 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. NBC, Peacock: 1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. ESPN Plus: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. How to watch the Tour Championship 2025 online from anywhere using a VPN If you're traveling abroad and want to watch this tournament, a VPN can enhance your privacy and security while streaming. By encrypting your internet traffic, a VPN prevents your provider from throttling your connection and adds protection when using public Wi-Fi, keeping your devices and login credentials secure. VPNs are legal in many countries, including the US and Canada, and are commonly used for online privacy and security. However, some streaming platforms may restrict VPN usage for accessing region-specific content. Before using one, review the platform's terms of service to ensure compliance. If you choose to use a VPN, follow the provider's setup instructions carefully to maintain a secure connection. Be aware that some streaming services may detect and block VPN traffic, so confirming whether your subscription permits VPN use is advisable. James Martin/CNET ExpressVPN Best VPN for streaming Price $13 per month, $100 for the first 15 months (then $117 per year) or $140 for the first 28 months (then $150 per year) Latest Tests No DNS leaks detected, 18% speed loss in 2025 tests Network 3,000 plus servers in 105 countries Jurisdiction British Virgin Islands ExpressVPN is our current best VPN pick for people who want a reliable and safe VPN, and it works on a variety of devices. It's normally $13 a month, but if you sign up for an annual subscription for $100 you'll get three months free and save 49%. That's the equivalent of $6.67 a month. Note that ExpressVPN offers a 30-day money-back guarantee. 61% off with 2yr plan (+4 free months) See at ExpressVPN Looking for other options? Be sure to check out some of the other great VPN deals taking place right now. Livestream the Tour Championship 2025 in the US The key linear TV coverage in the US is with NBC, which will be showing the tournament's final stages. That coverage will also be available to watch via streaming service Peacock. Five of the major live TV streaming services offer NBC. For more comprehensive coverage, PGA Tour Live streaming coverage takes place Thursday through Sunday on ESPN Plus, offering main action feeds, marquee groups, featured groups and featured hole coverage. Livestream the Tour Championship 2025 in the UK Golf fans in the UK can watch the tournament live on Sky Sports. The tournament will be broadcast across its Sky Sports Golf and Main Events channels, with further coverage on its Red Button service. Now TV Now Watch the Tour Championship 2025 in the UK for £35 Viewers in the UK will be able to watch the Tour Championship 2025 on Sky Sports Golf, with extensive coverage of each day's play. Subscribers can also stream the action via the Sky Go app. Sky subsidiary Now (formerly Now TV) offers streaming access to Sky Sports channels with a Now Sports membership. You can get a day of access for £15 (perhaps just for the final round) or sign up for a monthly plan from £35 a month to watch all four days of the tournament. See at Now Livestream the Tour Championship 2025 in Australia The Tour Championship can be watched Down Under on Fox Sports via Foxtel. If you're not a Fox subscriber, your best option is to sign up for streaming service Kayo Sports. Kayo Sports Kayo Sports Watch the Tour Championship 2025 in Australia for AU$25 A Kayo Sports subscription starts at AU$25 a month and lets you stream on one screen, while its Premium tier costs AU$40 a month for simultaneous viewing on up to three devices. The service gives you access to a wide range of sports, including F1, NRL, NFL, NHL and MLB, and there are no lock-in contracts. Better still, if you're a new customer, you can take advantage of a one-week Kayo Sports free trial. See at Kayo Sports Stream the Tour Championship 2025 in Canada Live coverage of Saturday and Sunday's action at the 2025 Tour Championship will be available to watch in Canada via TSN and free-to-air broadcaster CTV2. Cord-cutters can also watch TSN's coverage via the network's streaming service TSN Plus. Coverage of the third round on Saturday at 2:30 p.m. ET, while the fourth round broadcast begins on Sunday starts at 1:30 p.m. ET. Quick tips for streaming the Tour Championship 2025 using a VPN


Newsweek
36 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Tiger Woods Takes On New Role For PGA Tour Ahead Of Tour Championship
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 culmination of the 2025 PGA Tour season is upon us, as the world's best golfers descend upon East Lake for the Tour Championship. On the eve of the tournament teeing off, the PGA Tour's newly crowned CEO Brian Rolapp met with the media, discussing a wide variety of topics including a new role for Tiger Woods. Woods will serve as chairman of a new committee that will look to improve the competitiveness of the Tour. The committee will consist of nine members, including six players and three business advisors. The other players include Patrick Cantlay, Adam Scott, Camilo Villegas, Maverick McNealy and Keith Mitchell. "The PGA TOUR is certainly fortunate to benefit from his experience and his time and his dedication. That will be important to this effort, and I'm personally grateful for Tiger for offering to take this on," Rolapp said on Wednesday. DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 22: Tiger Woods walks the course during the second round of the U.S. Junior Amateur at Trinity Forest Golf Club on July 22, 2025 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Tim Heitman/Getty... DALLAS, TEXAS - JULY 22: Tiger Woods walks the course during the second round of the U.S. Junior Amateur at Trinity Forest Golf Club on July 22, 2025 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by) MoreThe business advisors are names well known throughout the sports world. John Henry, principal of Fenway Sports Group and enterprise board member, and Theo Epstein, are two of the members. Epstein famously helped lead the Boston Red Sox to their first World Series title in 86 years in 2004. A little over a decade later, he helped the Chicago Cubs break a 108-year World Series drought as their president of baseball operations. "The purpose of this committee is pretty simple," Rolapp said. "We're going to design the best professional golf competitive model in the world for the benefit of PGA Tour fans, players and their partners. It is aimed at a holistic re-look of how we compete on the Tour. That is inclusive of regular season, postseason and offseason. "We're going to focus on the evolution of our competitive model and the corresponding media products and sponsorship elements and model of the entire sport. The goal is not incremental change. The goal is significant change." The golf world has been in turmoil since the emergence of LIV Golf. The Saudi-funded golf league has peeled some of the best players from the PGA Tour but has yet to make much headway with golf fans and media coverage. Meanwhile, the PGA Tour has thrived. Television ratings are up, new tournament sponsors have joined, and with Scottie Scheffler playing like prime Tiger Woods, the ceiling appears to be limitless. More Golf: PGA Tour 2026 Schedule Revealed With One Major Shake-Up
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
The future of golf isn't just players; creators (and their cameras) are here too
ATLANTA — I saw the future of golf Wednesday afternoon on the East Lake Golf Club putting green. There, 2019 Open champion Shane Lowry and Ryder Cup hero Tommy Fleetwood lined up their last putts before the Tour Championship begins on Thursday. Just a few feet away from them, a handful of YouTube creators, podcasters and influencers — each with their own camera crew — milled about, reading putts and pacing before their own tee times. Wednesday marked the fourth installment of the Creator Classic, a PGA Tour-developed, YouTube-sponsored event pitting 12 of the best-known golf creators against one another in a nine-hole made-for-YouTube event, on the exact same course the pros will play in their season-ending tournament this week. A few steps away from the putting green, three of the stars of the 'Good Good Golf' YouTube channel (1.93 million subscribers) walked toward the first tee for their 3:54 p.m. tee time. On the nearby 18th, another professional golfer measured out his last putts of the day. A group of kids standing along a fenceline couldn't quite figure out whom to watch — the Good Good guys or the pro … a guy by the name of Scottie Scheffler. If that sounds weird or strange or flat-out wrong to you, well … you're not the target demographic for this particular brand of golf. But a whole lot of people are, and the PGA Tour is trying its best to reach them. 'These creators all kind of speak to their own audiences with their own production crews and their own voices,' Chris Wandell, the PGA Tour's Senior Vice President for Media, told Yahoo Sports. 'The amount of content that has resulted from this, and each one of these, has been mind-blowing … content that we could never have scripted just organically happens.' For as long as there's been golf, the relationship between player and fan has been clear: the player plays in front of the fans, the fan watches the pros. But the rise of cheap video capabilities and easy distribution created a third class: fans who play for other fans. Golf 'influencers' and 'content creators' — purists may cringe at the terms, but they're the ones that fit — play some variant of the game in front of literal millions of fans, demythologizing and democratizing a game that's been defined by its gatekeeping rather than its inclusivity. Wednesday's Creator Classic is the fourth installment of the series that began last year at East Lake, a creation born after the Tour recognized just how much Tour-adjacent work that creators were already doing — player interviews, analysis, even tournaments of their own. East Lake makes for a perfect The Tour Championship provided an unconventional, but ideal opportunity — with only 30 players in the field, the course was largely clear by Wednesday afternoon. (Scheffler, Lowry and Fleetwood notwithstanding.) Fans were already on the course and ready to watch more golf … why not give them something a bit outside the norm? 'It was kind of a test — would the idea resonate with fans? Would it resonate with sponsors? Would it bring new people to a tournament that might not otherwise come on a Wednesday at 4:00?' Wandell said. 'We ran it as a test with no solid plans to do it again, and the creators had a great time. Sponsors said, How do I get involved with that? A lot of tournaments called us and said, Can we do this at our tournament?' And so, here we are. Draw a Venn diagram of golf creators, and all you'd have in the center is the word 'golf.' Creators run the gamut from analysts to comedians, precise shotmakers to pranksters. Each style draws in a different subset of fans — fans who might not otherwise get anywhere near a PGA Tour event. 'My fans like to see my friends and I just bantering, talking nonsense,' said Luke Kwon (379,000 subscribers), winner of the 2024 East Lake Creators Classic. 'I think we tend to act like how they act. There's so much comedy that golf sometimes gets pushed to the side.' Others seek to set an example and open doors for people traditionally excluded from the golf world. 'You don't have to be from the best area, the best circumstances to find a place in this game,' Roger Steele (232,000 Instagram followers) said. 'I think that there's opportunities for everybody. You meet good people, and good people will do good things for you.' The twelve creators invited to play on Thursday represent a diverse group of interests and demographics. (Well, not age-wise. Most appeared to fit comfortably in the millennial/elder-Gen Z demo. There were no 65-year-old Boomers or precocious Gen Alphas in the mix. Maybe next year.) Some were here for the competition, some for the fashion, some for the laughs. But all brought massive audiences to the table. The live stream on YouTube easily topped 20,000 viewers — perhaps not massive numbers when compared to a seven-figure PGA Tour broadcast, but better than other golf YouTube streams we could name. 'We've tried our best to balance size of audience, diversity of audience and golf skill,' Wandell says. 'We would love to host 25 handicaps, but this golf course is so hard. Most of these guys are scratch, and even putting them on a course like this, they're going to have trouble breaking par.' The Creator Classic is the live embodiment of an internet truism: where vast viewership numbers gather, money and brands follow. Virtually all of the players in Wednesday's event have their own sponsorship deals, and many have their own merch lines. Akshay Bhatia, who would tee off in the Tour Championship Thursday, mingled with several creators around the putting green. No Laying Up's Soly even managed to wrangle Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan as a caddie. Oh, and there was $100,000 on the line for the winner. Not a bad paycheck for nine holes' work. It's always strange to see social media influencers in the wild. They locate, and mug for, the camera after virtually every significant moment. Their voices, their movements, their entire demeanor are exaggerated when the camera's on them, which works on a phone screen but is juuuuust a bit too much for real life. And oh, the cameras are everywhere. They're the reason these 12 are here, after all. Every moment — every drive, every putt, every chip, every expression — is potential fodder for content, so those cameras have to be rolling. Producers will be hard at work starting Wednesday evening, chopping and carving hours of footage into easily digestible social media content. 'We're trying to build all types of fans, and we want to create products and data and content for fans, no matter how much they want to consume,' Wandell says. 'A lot of the new fans may not have cable, or don't have ESPN Plus. So let's give them some snackable video content, develop the love of golf.' As for the golf itself … well, let's just say the spotters and fore-right paddle holders got more of a workout Wednesday than they're likely to get the rest of the week. Several players dunked their tee shots on the wicked 15th, and most got a chance to visit East Lake's lush rough. Most finished their eight holes over par — in some cases, well over par. But we have all weekend to watch exceptional players at East Lake; this was about watching men and women not all that different from us — better golf games, sure, but otherwise relatable — handling a challenge that most only get to watch on TV. 'My main goal?' said Peter Finch (753,000 subscribers) shortly before teeing off. 'To not be crap.' Haven't we all felt that way, every single round? (For the record, Finch would go on to finish at +6, two strokes out of last place.) In a very real way, the creators are the viewer's avatar, and that's what makes them compelling viewing — it's not hard to imagine ourselves in that spot, and not hard to wonder how we'd do trying to clear the waters of East Lake. (Answer: probably not well.) 'They're getting to play the course inside the ropes, and the full broadcast and all the production, but they're just as excited to see these guys play the course [Thursday] and all through the weekend,' said Chad Mumm, one of the creators of Netflix's 'Full Swing' and president of Pro Shop, a studio that develops original content like the Creator Classic. 'It's just so important for cultivating a healthy future for the fan base of the tour … The internet seems to be in love with what we're doing, and the engagement's been really good.' The Creator Classic ended up being one of the most dramatic finishes of the year on Tour, with four players competing on a single sudden-death playoff hole, in an absolute frog-strangler of a downpour, for $100,000. In the end, Good Good's Brad Dalke took home the title, soaked to the bone as he bro-hugged his way off the course. Golf is uniquely positioned to take advantage of the creator economy; no other sport combines the diversity of locales with the relatively low cost of entry. One tennis court looks pretty much like another, and racing is far too expensive for a casual creator, to cite two other individual-friendly sports. Baseball, basketball, football — none of those lend themselves to the combination of banter, skill and camera-friendly settings that golf does. This isn't the golf of Jack Nicklaus or Tiger Woods, true … but each one of those legends advanced the game far beyond where they found it, too. There's room for both creators and players in the game of golf, both metaphorically and literally. As several of the creators left the driving range, working their way through both a thicket of cameras and pros like Justin Thomas, one security guard nudged another and pointed at one of the creators, crowing loudly, 'He's internet famous!' A few years ago, that would have been a dismissive insult. Now, though, it sounds a whole lot like admiration.