
Near-miss for Mackenzie Hughes in Myrtle Beach ... Harry Higgs and effin' hot mics
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'It's still a huge priority for me,' Hughes told me last summer. 'It's something I think I will be working on for the rest of my career and my life. You just never have that part mastered or figured out. For me it's always a work in progress and something I'm focused on everyday: personal and self development and growth. I've come a long, long way in the last three to five years, but I still have a long way to go.
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'I'm trying to have less of those moments where I beat myself up and give myself no slack. I've had lots of growth but I need to keep working hard at it because it's a game that beats you up a lot.'
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Some golfers externalize their emotions by yelling at caddies or blaming everyone but themselves for their mistakes. That's certainly the easier way to go. The player who internalizes everything like Hughes does might have a tougher road to travel, but I find it much easier to root for this type of player.
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Shane Lowry had another close call on Sunday at the Truist Championship, losing to Sepp Straka. The burly Irishman declined media interviews afterwards.
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A player's media obligations have been a topic of conversation in recent months, sparked by Collin Morikawa's doubling and tripling down on the fact that he owes nothing to media after a round.
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Much has been written on the subject since then with some of the older generation of players taking Morikawa to task. It appears to be a generational thing and it's not just sports.
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With the advent of social media, athletes, politicians, actors, companies and any other public figure have enjoyed the freedom of speaking directly (or through their PR team) to the public.
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Of course, it makes sense for them. Why would anyone want to risk criticism when you can portray a perfect 'reality' from the relative safety of your own account.
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It won't be long before the public sees through the sanitized messaging from these figures and yearns for a more objective view. Whether that comes from mass media, independent media or talented fanalysts, all of them can provide an important context that is often otherwise missing.
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Lowry is one of the most likeable charismatic figures on the PGA Tour and a similar circumstance occurred at the Masters. That time, he mentioned tennis players and how they are officially obligated to speak (golfers are not), but that they are given a cooling down period that he thinks would help golfers.
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National Post
12 hours ago
- National Post
Adam Hadwin finally seeing hope in 'hardest period' of golf career
CALEDON, Ont. — The thing with professional golf is that, unless you're Rory McIlroy or Scottie Scheffler, nobody pays much attention when you're not playing well. Article content With the golf world's eyes on the RBC Canadian Open this week, there is one native son quietly hoping that this trip home will be the turning point he has been searching for. Article content Article content 'This is the most comfortable I've felt with my golf swing in six months,' Adam Hadwin said after Friday's round. 'It's been a while. I feel like I'm finally able to kind of set up over the golf ball and have some sort of clue of where it's going.' Article content It's been nothing short of a dreadful season for Hadwin, who has seen his world ranking drop from 59th at the end of 2024, to 105th entering the Canadian Open. Article content 'It's been hard. I've struggled,' he said after his Friday round of 68. 'But I feel like every single week I have a good opportunity to play well, and it just never happens.' Article content Hadwin isn't particularly close to the top of the leaderboard after two rounds at TPC Toronto, but he's not near the bottom either. The 37-year-old Abbotsford, B.C. native is in the mix at five-under par, and for the first time in 2025 he is seeing results that have daylight in sight through the woods he has been lost in. Article content On the course, the camera hasn't been following him much these days. Although there was a somewhat embarrassing moment of frustration at the Valspar Championship — the site of his lone PGA Tour win in 2017 — when he slammed his club, broke a hidden sprinkler head, and set off a dazzling water display he would quickly apologize for. Article content Article content Admirably, Hadwin has never been one for making excuses. On Friday at TPC Toronto, after making the normal media rounds that follow one of Canada's most popular golfers, Hadwin spoke to the Toronto Sun away from the bright lights. Article content Article content 'This has by far been the hardest period that I've dealt with in my career,' he said. 'I've been through swing changes before but I've been able to put together results kind of working through it. With this one, for whatever reason, I haven't been able to do that.' Article content Speaking with him after disappointing rounds at big tournaments in the past you would rarely know anything was bothering him: the smile was always there, the sense of humour intact, the professionalism never wavered. Article content Article content For years, Hadwin's greatest strength on the golf course has been that he has no glaring faults. He won on the PGA Tour, he shot a 59, and he played in the Presidents Cup because he found a way to do a little bit of everything well and get the ball into the hole with whatever game he brought to the course. But recently, that last and most vital part has escaped him. Article content 'Doubt, lack of confidence in what I'm doing, probably all of the above,' he explained as reasons. 'Mixed in with the golf swing stuff.' Article content At home in Wichita, Kansas, Hadwin frequently takes a backseat to the popularity of his wife Jessica, whose often-hilarious insights into life on the PGA Tour have developed a cult following among golf nerds. Article content For the most part, Hadwin is fine with his private life gaffes often being made public. As the comedy straight-man in a social media life that he didn't exactly sign up for, he happily does his part most of the time.


CTV News
21 hours ago
- CTV News
McIlroy tumbles out of Canadian Open with a 78. Champ takes 2-shot lead into the weekend
Rory McIlroy approaches the green during the RBC Canadian Open Golf Pro Am in Alton, Ont., Wednesday, June 4, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Peter Power CALEDON, Ont. — Masters champion Rory McIlroy tumbled out of the RBC Canadian Open on Friday with his worst round in nearly a year, with Cameron Champ taking a two-stroke lead into the weekend in the final event before the U.S. Open. McIlroy shot an 8-over 78, making a mess of the fifth hole with a quadruple-bogey 8 in his highest score since also shooting 78 last year in the first round of the British Open. He had a double bogey on No. 11, four bogeys and two birdies. 'Of course it concerns me,' McIlroy said. 'You don't want to shoot high scores like the one I did today. Still, I felt like I came here obviously with a new driver thinking that that sort of was going to be good and solve some of the problems off the tee, but it didn't.' At 9 over, the two-time Canadian Open winner was 21 strokes behind Champ on the rain-softened North Course at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley. 'Obviously, going to Oakmont next week, what you need to do more than anything else there is hit fairways,' McIlroy said. 'Still sort of searching for the sort of missing piece off the tee.' Champ had four birdies in a 68 in the morning a day after opening with a 62. He was at 12 under, playing the first 36 holes without a bogey. 'It's firmed up a little bit, but fairly similar to yesterday,' Champ said. 'The fairways I feel like were firming up a little bit. The greens slightly, but pretty close to how they were yesterday.' The three-time PGA Tour winner got one of the last spots in the field after being the eighth alternate Friday when the commitments closed. 'I definitely didn't think I was getting in,' Champ said. Andrew Putnam was second after a bogey-free 62 on the course hosting the event for the first time. He won the 2018 Barracuda Championship for his lone tour title. 'I hit a lot of fairways, hit a lot of good iron shots, too, and my putter was on fire,' Putnam said. 'Pretty much did everything right. Didn't really make many mistakes.' Thorbjorn Olesen of Denmark, tied for the first-round lead with Cristobal Del Solar after a 61, had a 70 drop into a tie for third at 9 under with Canadians Richard Lee (64) and Nick Taylor (65) and France's Victor Perez (65). Taylor won the 2023 event at Oakdale. 'Hung in there,' Taylor said. 'Making a birdie on the last was important to end the day nicely.' Del Solar was 8 under after a 71. Shane Lowry (68) also was 8 under with Ryan Fox (66), Jake Knapp (69), Sam Burns (66) and Matteo Manassero (65). The Associated Press

Globe and Mail
a day ago
- Globe and Mail
Whether shooting for the fairway or Instagram, Mac Boucher always takes the creative approach
If you were to ask Mac Boucher how he's managed to become – by one metric, at least – the most popular Canadian golfer at PGA events without actually being a part of the PGA Tour, he'll demur and say something about just knowing how to shoot videos that look great on Instagram. 'Everyone and their mother's doing social media now. I think I just got in at the right time and then stayed consistent, and I think I just have a good eye for it,' he said earlier this week, sitting in the media tent during a rare moment of downtime before the Canadian Open kicked off and he had to go feed the Instagram beast some more. Surrounded by a crowd, Boucher, by nature an introvert, will mock his shot choices as 'real stupid,' insist he's incapable of hitting a draw – a shot with a gentle arc – and when someone suggests he's like the Babe Ruth of golf because he'll occasionally just point at an obstacle – say, a stand of trees that would scare away most pros – and then slice his ball clear over or right through it, he'll quip: 'Yes, minus the talent.' That collision of self-effacement and daring – and, to be sure, an understanding of how to shoot cinematic videos that pop off the screen – has brought Boucher (rhymes with 'voucher'), 35, almost 600,000 followers on Instagram, more than any other Canadian golfer, as well as tens of thousands more on YouTube and TikTok. His sponsors include TaylorMade, Primo Golf Apparel and Adidas, which set him up last month to give lessons on stance and swing to Super Bowl-winning quarterback Patrick Mahomes. This weekend, fans watching the Open on TSN will see Boucher show off his sense of humour in a fun spot for BMW. (In a nod to the shot for which he is best known, the car in the ad bears the vanity plate: SLING KNG). He recently struck a partnership with Tim Hortons. Boucher describes all of these as 'pinch me' moments, lifetime dreams come true, but they're tinged by the dark chapter in his life that first spurred him to pick up a club in his late teens. Golf is nothing if not a sport that teaches resilience in the face of constant (often self-inflicted) misfortune. Boucher has embraced that fact, making a virtue of his own imperfections as a player instead of fighting against them. He grew up in Uxbridge, Ont., a small town of rolling green just north of Toronto, in constant motion: playing hockey, swimming, competing in triathlons. At 17, swimming began to give him debilitating headaches; doctors found a benign cyst in his brain. An operation could have left him with balance and vision problems, so he opted against surgical intervention and pivoted to a sport that, as he said, 'wasn't so hard on the noggin,' and would still allow him to indulge his competitive nature. In January, 2021, while in Dubai avoiding the COVID lockdowns back home, Boucher began posting to Instagram. In one 14-second video, his drive leaps out of the left side of the frame and then eventually lopes back in and skitters toward the flag in the middle of the frame, just missing it. The clip was shared tens of thousands of times, including by some big accounts, and his follower count began to climb. Since then, Boucher said, he's posted two to three videos each day without fail, fuelling a steady (albeit exhausting) increase of followers who watch him jetting around the world from one gorgeous course to another, filming improbable shots against jaw-dropping backgrounds. 'The creativity in the shots – it's kind of the new age of golf, right?' said Jamie Miller, the president of the New York State Golf Association, who was part of Boucher's fivesome at the Championship Pro Am on Wednesday. 'It's different than the traditional stuff, which is great for the growth of the game.' When he spoke, Miller had just broken his driver, a Callaway, on the first tee, and Boucher had offered to hook him up with a TaylorMade club. Boucher called his on-site TaylorMade rep and the new driver arrived in time for the fourth hole. His videographer, a friend who trails Boucher whenever he hits the course, filmed him handing the club to Miller: If a marketing moment falls in a forest and no one is around to record it and post it to social media, would anybody hear? Lately, Boucher and his videographer and another friend have been working on a series of longer-form videos for YouTube, inspired by the constant requests he gets from guys to recommend places for them to go on trips with their buddies. Rob LeClair, an executive with Staples Canada who was finishing up a round at the Pro Am with Ryo Hisatsune, approached Boucher for a selfie. 'I watch his YouTube, I watch his Instagram videos, I watch all of it. It's so fun,' he said. But Boucher's appeal runs deeper than that, LeClair explained. 'The way he thinks and sees things that other people don't, like: 'I can hit it through those trees.' And then he swings it around 100 yards! It's just mind-blowing to see.' 'He has a different approach to being successful. If you relate that to real life – you don't have to hit it straight down the middle, you can hit anything and still be successful.' A little while later, Boucher's caddie opened an app to demonstrate that philosophy in concrete terms. On the fourth hole, a 158-yard par 3, the pro in the group, Patrick Fishburn, had shot an elegant draw off the tee that curved 18 feet left to right. Boucher's drive off the same tee went 197 feet left to right – and ended up in almost the same spot. 'For me, it's understanding what my body's capable of,' Boucher explained, back at the media tent. 'It's just cause and effect,' and knowing how to incorporate his natural tendency to shoot sling shots. 'I think most people could probably benefit from that, instead of trying to be something they're not on the golf course.' Though he doesn't play a traditional style of golf, Boucher insists he's a traditionalist 'in the sense that I'm very much a golf nerd. I love to learn things, and the numbers – I geek out about that type of stuff, which is what allows me to hit the shots I'm hitting. Taylor Pendrith rises above soggy morning course at RBC Canadian Open 'I do appreciate that the new generation is YouTube golf and that's what's getting eyes on golf, but I still think the PGA Tour is what I am interested in.' Even so, he acknowledges that golf as it is being played on the tour is too slow. 'Who has the attention span – not to mention the time – to sit on a couch and watch a six-hour round of golf,' he said. 'Unless it's the Masters and it's happening one time a year and you just don't want it to end? 'I'm someone who loves going out at 7 p.m. with a buddy and ripping around in an hour and a half, 18 holes.' He'd tried to qualify for this year's Canadian Open but he's been dealing with an injured right thumb which, he said, he's 'torn all the tendons on – there's nothing really holding any more.' Opinion: Love them or loathe them, sports media keep athletes like Rory McIlroy relevant If he has surgery to repair it, he'll be out for 10 months: Not really an option at the moment, given his commitments and the need to build up his content on YouTube. And since blowing up on Instagram, he's had to steel himself against the inevitable haters. 'It's arguably more pressure now to play tournaments, because there are all these people that are just watching and waiting to pounce on you if you don't play well,' he said. By the time the Open draws to a close on Sunday, Boucher will be gone, off to P.E.I. for a couple of appearances. Earlier this year, he was back and forth between North America and Australia and New Zealand three times in two weeks. It's a lot, he acknowledges. 'I'd like to kind of settle down and not have the consistent suitcase life,' he said. 'I've created a decent-sized brand for myself where I can say no, which is nice.' Still, he admits, 'I don't really think much in the future. It's the way I've always been. I probably should, but it's worked this far.'