
McIlroy second player to earn $100m on PGA Tour
In 2022 the PGA Tour responded to the emergence of LIV by increasing prize money at 12 events to match that of the breakaway tour.The PGA Tour and European-based DP World Tour have been in talks with the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), which runs LIV, about a merger since June 2023.The four majors - The Masters, US PGA Championship, The Open Championship and the US Open – are the only individual strokeplay events where players from the rival tours have an opportunity to play against each other.McIlroy has won three of the four majors but the last of those was the 2014 Open Championship.He will again attempt to become just the sixth player to complete a career Grand Slam of all four majors at next week's Masters at Augusta National, which begins on 10 April.
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The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
Rory McIlroy relishing ‘great opportunity' to lift FedEx Cup from level start
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The Guardian
42 minutes ago
- The Guardian
PGA Tour ends decade-long absence from Trump-owned courses with Doral return in 2026
The PGA Tour will return to Donald Trump's Blue Monster course in Miami next spring, ending a decade-long absence from Trump-owned venues. The Miami Championship, a $20m Signature Event scheduled for the first weekend in May 2026, will mark the 56th time the Tour has played at Trump National Doral but the first since 2016, the year Trump won his first US presidential election. That year, the WGC-Cadillac Championship was pulled from the resort and relocated to Mexico City after Cadillac ended its sponsorship. At the time, then-commissioner Tim Finchem stressed that the decision was 'fundamentally a sponsorship issue' and not political, despite Trump's incendiary remarks on immigration and his insistence the Tour was punishing him for his first US presidential run. 'We value dollars for our players,' Finchem said in 2016. 'We were not able to secure sponsorship for Doral. From a golf standpoint, we have no issues with Donald Trump. From a political standpoint, we are neutral.' Trump, who had spent $250m redeveloping the Doral property, publicly lashed out at the Tour and quipped that he hoped officials had 'kidnapping insurance' for the event's new Mexican host city. For the next decade, the Blue Monster fell off the PGA calendar and instead became a regular site for the upstart LIV Golf series, serving as a centerpiece in the Saudi-backed league's schedule. Now the course returns at a moment of transition for the PGA Tour. The Miami Championship expands the roster of Signature Events to nine and sits at the heart of a crowded spring. Beginning with the Masters in April, players will face four Signature Events and two majors in a seven-week stretch, with only the Zurich Classic in New Orleans breaking the run. Next season's PGA TOUR schedule is here!2026, we're ready for you 💪 'We're excited to showcase the game's greatest players competing at golf's most iconic venues,' said Brian Rolapp, the Tour's new chief executive. 'Inspired by our players and fans, we're accelerating the Tour's evolution and ushering in a new era of innovation on and off the course.' The Miami Championship is expected to secure a title sponsor before its debut. Its addition shifts the Mexico Open into the FedExCup Fall and removes the Barracuda Championship in California, which had been played opposite the British Open. Doral has been synonymous with PGA Tour golf since 1962, when it launched as the Doral Open. It became a World Golf Championship site in 2007 but struggled to sustain sponsorship after Trump's 2012 purchase of the property. The 2016 split was, in Finchem's words, pragmatic rather than political, though it coincided with Trump's polarizing rise.


The Guardian
44 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Tommy Fleetwood arrives at East Lake as relatable contender on brink of greatness
The widespread euphoria that surrounded Rory McIlroy's Masters triumph served as the finest example of a moment when golf observers want a player to win. This, after all, is supposed to be a non-tribal environment aside from the weekend every two years when Europe face USA and people on either side of the ropes take leave of their senses. Golf's next pursuit of the holy grail belongs to Tommy Fleetwood. Defeat from positions of strength at the Travelers and St Jude championships threw up an unwanted statistic. In 163 PGA Tour starts, Fleetwood is yet to emerge victorious. As striking as that raw number – Fleetwood's talent is such that one assumes he should have claimed a batch of trophies in the US – is the fact people are willing him to end his drought. Fleetwood is relatable, likable, popular. He also has no objection to the discussion presently whirling around him. 'I'm not going to feed you lies and say: 'Oh, in Memphis I thought I did everything great, or Travelers I didn't do anything wrong,'' Fleetwood said. 'Of course I got things wrong down the stretch and it didn't happen for me. 'You learn from those experiences. I would rather you be questioning me about not finishing tournaments off than not questioning me at all about anything. So I've obviously shown a lot of really good stuff and put myself in great positions. 'I just want to put myself there again. I want to give myself another chance. I'll finish it off at some point. I'll get it right and I'll get it right more than once. But being there is actually the hard part, in a way. 'I don't feel like I have to rattle off all the good stuff. I just need to be aware of it, know that I'm doing the right things and know that there's still things that I can get better. I use the disappointments as motivation and I use the good stuff as confidence boosting.' At East Lake this week, another PGA Tour season will conclude. Scottie Scheffler will look to press his dominance of the game by lifting the Tour Championship and FedEx Cup. Just as fate eventually smiled on McIlroy, a two-hour drive away in April, could it finally be Tommy's time? His reliability and close shave history is emphasised by six runner-up finishes on the PGA Tour, the same number of thirds, 30 top 50s and 44 top 10s. He is the 10th-ranked player in the world. 'Best case scenario coming down the stretch at East Lake with a chance to win,' Fleetwood said. 'Whether I get it right or not, whether it happens or not, whether someone plays better or not, I'll talk about that at the time. But I would love to get there and give myself that chance again.' In short, the 34-year-old has not been burned by falling short. 'It's funny really, you walk off the course on Sunday last week and I was happier with a fourth place finish than I was with a third in Memphis,' Fleetwood said. 'It's a strange game that way. I am very happy with the consistency of my golf and the level I've been playing at. Golf is a crazy game. You never know what you're going to turn up with week in and week out but this year has been a very good year.' Fleetwood knows how to get over the line. He has done it eight times elsewhere in the world. Fleetwood has also been successful when involved in tight scraps. The nature of recent events, as opposed to core results, is what has brought Fleetwood's situation into sharp focus. He missed out on a playoff in Memphis by a shot, having led by two with three holes to play. At the Travelers, Keegan Bradley usurped Fleetwood after the Southport man three-putted the 72nd hole. Fleetwood was clearly dejected during post-tournament media duties at both but there was no raw moment, no smashed club, no fist through a window. Yes, the smile had vanished but not for long. 'I get disappointed and I get angry,' Fleetwood said. 'I've thrown the odd club in the water when I'm out there and maybe feel a bit better for a while. But I'm not that great at being angry. It just doesn't suit me. I just kind of let it go. I work really hard on letting things go, moving on. Not that much great comes from those moments of anger. 'But like I say, like anybody, I get disappointed, I get frustrated, I get angry. I doubt myself. Of course I do. It's all part of being a professional athlete and part of trying to chase your dreams and accomplish great things against unbelievable golfers.'