logo
LIV Golf Chicago: Dean Burmester Leading After Round 2, Team Leaderboard Is Tight

LIV Golf Chicago: Dean Burmester Leading After Round 2, Team Leaderboard Is Tight

Fox Sports3 days ago
LIV Golf LIV Golf Chicago: Dean Burmester Leading After Round 2, Team Leaderboard Is Tight
Published
Aug. 9, 2025 7:07 p.m. ET
share
facebook
x
reddit
link
BOLINGBROOK, Ill.– On Saturday, Dean Burmester of Stinger GC took control of LIV Golf Chicago by shooting a spectacular 6-under 65 on a windy day at Bolingbrook Golf Club to improve to 9-under for the tournament and give himself a two-shot lead leading into Championship Sunday. Burmester is seeking his first victory of the 2025 season.
On the team side, Crushers GC, Fireballs GC and Stinger GC are tied atop the team leaderboard at 10-under.
While it's Burmester in the individual lead, Josele Ballester may have been the player to steal the spotlight on Friday. The Fireballs GC rookie and former U.S. Amateur champion shot a 5-under 66 while making only his seventh professional start. Ballester finished tied for seventh in his most recent start at LIV Golf UK by JCB and is now in a tie for second alongside Legion XIII Captain Jon Rahm (4-under 67) through two rounds. Ballester, 21, made five birdies and an eagle while only making one bogey to get into the clubhouse at 7-under par.
The youngest Fireballs GC player surged his team to a tie at the top of the leaderboard heading into the final round, as the Fireballs seek a fourth team victory of the season. Crushers GC is also seeking a fourth team victory in 2025.
Rahm is chasing his first victory of the 2025 season while also targeting the season-long individual points title. With a strong chance to secure both honors, Rahm is well positioned to close the gap on Torque GC Captain Joaquin Niemann, who is faltering this week with rounds of 74-70, leaving him tied for 35th. Should Rahm claim the tournament title and Niemann finish 19th or lower, Rahm will seize the lead in the season-long race with one event remaining in Indianapolis.
ADVERTISEMENT
On the relegation front, Torque GC's Mito Pereira shot a 1-over 72, dropping him to tied for 18th on the leaderboard, which is well short of what he'd hoped for after starting the tournament hot with a 2-under 69 on Friday. Andy Ogletree of HyFlyers GC, who's battling a wrist injury, struggled as well, shooting a 2-over 73 to slip to tied for 25th on the leaderboard as he attempts to secure his place for the 2026 season.
Anthony Kim struggled on Friday with an 11-over 82, the day's lowest score, but staged a remarkable comeback on Saturday, carding a 3-under 68 — a stunning 14-shot improvement.
The round of the day belonged Burmester as well as Torque GC's Carlos Ortiz, who also shot a 6-under 65.
For the round, Bolingbrook GC produced a field scoring average of –0.22 compared to +0.41 in Round 1.
TEAM SCORES
LIV Golf's new scoring format this season now involves all four scores now counting in every round in the team competition. Here are the results and scores for each team after Saturday's Round 2 of LIV Golf Chicago.
This piece is courtesy of Mike McAllister in partnership with LIV Golf.
Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!
FOLLOW
Follow your favorites to personalize your FOX Sports experience
LIV Golf
share
recommended 2025 LIV Golf prize money payouts: Money list leaders after UK
Item 1 of 1
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What If An All-Time Great New York Mets Core Isn't A Championship Core?
What If An All-Time Great New York Mets Core Isn't A Championship Core?

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

What If An All-Time Great New York Mets Core Isn't A Championship Core?

The Mets spent the first four seasons of Steve Cohen's tenure making him look either way too optimistic or not optimistic enough for declaring on Nov. 10, 2020 — his first full day as the team's owner — that he '…would consider that slightly disappointing' if '…I don't win a World Series I the next three-to-five years.' But the 12 months bridging Cohen's fourth and fifth seasons seemed to establish the Mets had built an acceptable alternative to the championship-or-bust standard of measuring the success of his first half-decade at the helm. Winning a title this year would be great for the Mets, of course. But for 53 or so weeks from last June to this June, the Mets looked like something they'd never been in the previous six decades: A consistently good, mostly drama-free team that was redefining the Mets experience. The embarrassing episodes were gone, along with the excuses for coming up just short in pursuit of the best free agents. Home games were a communally happy experience instead of one in which 40,000 people were conditioned to expect the most cynical outcome possible. But the last six weeks have been an awfully familiar throwback to the old days. The Mets enter tonight's game against the Braves (oh dear) in the midst of a seven-game losing streak — their second seven-game skid since June 13, when they blew a five-run lead against the Rays to begin an 18-31 swoon. Only the Rockies and Nationals have a worse record in that span. The Mets, who led the NL East by 5 1/2 games following the games of June 12, are six games back of the Phillies entering today and just two games ahead of the Reds in the race for the final wild card spot. The collapse has been total for the Mets, who should take the field tonight to Lloyd Christmas bellowing about pets' heads falling off. The Mets have scored the fewest runs (194) and allowed the third-most runs (259) since June 13. The quintet of Pete Alonso, Francisco Lindor, Jeff McNeil, Brandon Nimmo and Juan Soto are batting a combined .230 with 39 homers and 126 RBIs over the past 49 games. The only starting pitcher to last six innings since June 7 is David Peterson. The only pitchers other than Peterson to even throw a pitch in the sixth inning since then are Clay Holmes, who has done it twice, and Griffin Canning, who did it once but is out for the season after suffering a torn Achilles on June 26. The rotation problems aren't unique to the Mets. David Stearns pivoted from the durable and unspectacular Jose Quintana and Luis Severino to Canning, Holmes and Frankie Montas, but his moves wouldn't look any better if he'd decided to ask Cohen to open up the checkbook for some combination of Corbin Burnes, Roki Sasaki and Blake Snell. The real concern for the Mets in the short- and long-term is their position player core — a core that, sans Soto, has been intact for the entire rollercoaster ride of the Cohen era. The Mets have rarely had a quartet as accomplished as Nimmo, Lindor, McNeil and Alonso — who rank 14th, 16th, 17th and 18th in franchise history per Baseball-Reference WAR — on the field at the same time over the last six-plus decades. Alonso, McNeil and Nimmo are triumphs of scouting and development. Alonso is one homer away from breaking a tie with Darryl Strawberry atop the all-time franchise list. The stories of McNeil, who battled injuries throughout his minor league career before winning the 2022 major league batting title, and Nimmo, a raw Wyoming product who played 564 games in the bushes before reaching the bigs for good in 2017, are particularly rewarding for an organization that previously struggled to graduate everyday players to the big leagues. Lindor's emergence from his mistake-filled first season into a captain candidate might be an even bigger long-term win for the franchise because he serves as a reminder the Cohens will be far more patient and supportive owners than the Wilpons ever were. The $765 million helped, for sure, but Soto didn't have to worry about getting thrown under the bus the first time he struggled or committed a public relations error. But is the Alonso-Lindor-McNeil-Nimmo the core that can lead the Mets into an era of sustained championship contention? They have been the constants over the last four-plus seasons, a stretch in which the Mets have gone 405-361 — the 12th-best record in the majors — while matching euphoric highs with excruciating lows. A 2021 season in which the Mets led the NL East into August but finished 77-85 was followed by a 101-win 2022 in which the Mets were knocked out of the wild card round by the Padres. The Mets went 75-87 and began retooling in 2023 before coming back from 11 games under .500 last season to reach the NLCS. The last 14 months have been especially extreme for the Mets, who led baseball with a 110-62 record from June 3, 2024 through this June 12. But that stretch of .640 baseball has been bookended by spans in which the Mets went 42-66 (.389), a 99-loss pace over a 162-game season. Was Jose Iglesias really that big an addition and subtraction? And if so, what does that say about the core? This stumble hasn't been as sudden as the 2007 and 2008 downturns, but the expanded playoff field would make missing the playoffs the greatest collapse in team history and erase any progress the Mets have made in reshaping their reputation as entertaining foils for their biggest and more successful rivals. Even the most token of efforts by Derek Jeter to make an 'appearance' at Yankees Old-Timers Day Saturday included a dig at the Mets. The Braves are in the midst of their worst season in almost a decade, but generations of Atlanta stars — some with Mets ties! — will nonetheless cackle with delight if the Braves continue their mastery of the Mets over the next two weeks. The Phillies making the World Series while the Mets don't even qualify for the tournament might inspire a third Chase Utley-themed episode of 'It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia.' Maybe, in an age of reboots and updates, this is the modern telling of the 1999 team, which suffered eight-game and seven-game losing streaks but made it to game six of the NLCS. Perhaps this drama really is embedded in the Mets' DNA and another deep playoff run is on the horizon. The Mets might not be any different than anyone else during an era in which there are no great teams. And all this fretting about the core will look really silly if the Mets take the long-awaited third parade down the Canyon of Heroes this year or next. And if none of this happens? Then the Mets will be much closer to coming to grips with the possibility that one of the great cores in team history may not be the one that gets the franchise to the next level.

UFC's Deal With Paramount Is Winning Move In Fight For Audiences
UFC's Deal With Paramount Is Winning Move In Fight For Audiences

Forbes

time3 hours ago

  • Forbes

UFC's Deal With Paramount Is Winning Move In Fight For Audiences

Ultimate Fighting Championship events will begin airing on Paramount starting in 2026, according to an announcement on Monday. With an average annual value of about $1.1 billion, the deal makes UFC one of the richest sports-related properties in the U.S. – behind the NFL, NBA and MLB in terms of media rights, but ahead of the NHL, Big Ten and SEC. And by eschewing its traditional pay-per-view approach, UFC may now finally capitalize on its enormous audience reach. Leaving Pay-Per-View Behind In a media environment where consumers are already paying hundreds of dollars per month to stream sports and entertainment content, paying for pay-per-view has become a tougher sell. Recent research from Global Event Management shows major boxing events have seen major pay-per-view event audiences dip 25% over the last decade. And TKO Group, which owns both UFC and WWE, has clearly been paying attention to those market dynamics. Just last week, WWE announced that traditional pay-per-view events like Royal Rumble and WrestleMania would move to ESPN platforms. Effectively, TKO has opted for broader exposure over exclusivity; something that could ultimately be a boon for both properties as the battle for attention and hours of sports programming gets progressively tougher. UFC, to its credit, already has a significant audience footprint despite the pay-per-view hurdle. YouTube data provided by Tubular Labs shows that as a creator property, UFC-owned pages had a combined 1.2 billion global minutes watched on YouTube in June 2025 – making it the No. 20 most-watched U.S. media and entertainment property for the month. It also reached 40.4 million global viewers, which was up 30% month-over-month and ranked No. 33 among U.S. media and entertainment properties. So the demand is clearly there. One could even argue the market has been largely under-served to-date given the barrier to entry pay-per-view creates. Streaming's Continued Evolution Paramount is also embarking on a bold move here to not just stand pat while Disney switches its approach to make ESPN one of the more essential subscriptions available. Between library entertainment content, plus premium sports like the NFL, college sports, golf and now UFC, Paramount is securing its own corner of the streaming landscape in a way that lets it legitimately compete with Disney and Netflix offerings. These recent media rights deals centering around TKO Group holdings, however, illuminate the latest evolution for all of these entertainment companies' streaming offerings. After years of streaming chasing exclusive programming, award wins and subscriber growth, these services are leaning more heavily on ads and popular content to simply look more like… TV again. Leaning into advertising and content that works for the general population has helped fuel profitability for these services where it once eluded them – see Sara Fischer's recent write-up in Axios Media Trends there. And recent announcements leaning on bundles are a greater focus on just getting these services in front of as many viewers as possible. The TKO Group deals, for both WWE and UFC, are yet another play toward that general population audience in a way that's unique compared to most of the other content offerings these services have. Without painting with too broad of a brush, both possess some appeal for audiences that streamers may have missed with prestige dramas, reality TV or franchise intellectual property. Streaming services are individually turning themselves into mini cable bundles, and consumers have to determine which one checks enough boxes for them to sign up as an add-on or substitute for traditional TV. The influx of bundles helps reduce that decision-making somewhat. But the bundles still need marquee programming that possesses either strong niche appeal or general-market focus. WWE and UFC rights help services like ESPN, Paramount+, Netflix and Peacock round out their audience graph in similar ways to recent team sports rights shifts, too. The NBA now airing in part on Amazon Prime Video makes the latter more essential, while games airing on Peacock as well this fall helps that service make its own case. ESPN's WWE addition is a major win for that service's launch. Adding regional MLB action next season could make for an even bigger splash; because it makes the service a crucial part of audiences' daily and weekly rituals for months on end. WWE and UFC come with built-in advantages much in the same way. Along with unique and possibly untapped audiences, they also bring ritualized behaviors as well. Dependable tune-in for major events and specific weekly bouts. It's almost as if viewers just want to know when and where to tune in to what they like watching, right? After years of losing the plot on that front, it appears TV's figuring it out once again.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store