Latest news with #ButterfieldBermudaChampionship


USA Today
2 days ago
- Sport
- USA Today
Golfweek to host first Division II tourney with exemption into PGA Tour event this fall
Golfweek to host first Division II tourney with exemption into PGA Tour event this fall A historic event is coming to Division II college golf this fall. Golfweek is set to host the 2025 Fripp Island to Bermuda Invite, Oct. 19-21, a 54-hole, stroke-play event featuring some of the top Division II men's golf teams in the country. The event will be contested at Fripp Island's Ocean Point Golf Course in Fripp Island, South Carolina. Even bigger, the medalist of the Fripp Island to Bermuda Invite will receive an exemption into the PGA Tour's event in Bermuda, the Butterfield Bermuda Championship, which takes place three weeks later. It's a historic exemption, as it's believed to be the first Division II tournament in college golf history to offer a direct exemption into a PGA Tour event. 'The Butterfield Bermuda Championship is thrilled to extend an exemption to the winner of this year's Fripp Island to Bermuda Invite," said Danielle Carrera, the tournament director at the Butterfield. "We pride ourselves on providing opportunities for the next generation of professional golfers. This collegiate event does just that, opening the door for more of the best amateurs in the world to compete on the PGA Tour stage. We look forward to welcoming the 2025 champion to Bermuda this fall." The 2025 Butterfield Bermuda Championship is the penultimate event on the PGA Tour's 2025 schedule and is set for Nov. 13-16 at Port Royal Golf Course in Southampton, Bermuda. The practice round at the Fripp Island to Bermuda Invite will take place Oct. 19. The first two rounds will be contested Oct. 20, with carts being allowed for contestants, while the final 18 holes will take place Oct. 21, and players will walk in the final round. "Very excited to see the Fripp Island Ocean Course," Golfweek tournament director Lance Ringler said. "I've heard nothing but great things about the renovation. And to have some of the best D-II programs participate with the individual winner getting a spot in a PGA Tour field is going to make for a great couple of days of college golf." The current field of 13 teams, with room for two more, is as follows (rankings from final 2024-25 ranking):


Newsweek
23-05-2025
- Sport
- Newsweek
Colonial Leader Having Breakthrough, Warns PGA Tour 'More to Come'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Ben Griffin, the 29-year-old from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, has had a breakthrough season on the PGA Tour. In addition to winning the Zurich Classic of New Orleans alongside Andrew Novak, Griffin has five top-10 finishes this year, which includes last week's PGA Championship, where he tied for eighth. His strong play has continued at this week's Charles Schwab Challenge, where Griffin found himself atop the leaderboard when he walked off the golf course. He shot a marvelous 7-under 63 on Friday and is 11-under at the midway point. Griffin's only bogey on Friday came on the par-4 5th, which is historically the toughest hole at Colonial. His 11-under total matches his career best in an individual stroke play event on the PGA Tour through 36 holes, per the tour's communications team. The other instance came at the 2022 Butterfield Bermuda Championship. Griffin tied for third that week. "Now that I've got that first win, I feel like it's really freeing me up… Not that I wasn't trying to win in the past, but just the monkey off the back where I've got a nothing to lose mentality. Like we're trying to attack pins and get up there with the boys at the top of the leaderboard," Griffin said after his second round on Friday. Ben Griffin plays his shot from the 18th tee during the second round of the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas. Ben Griffin plays his shot from the 18th tee during the second round of the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas. Photo by/Photo by"It's definitely been a breakthrough year, but I think there's more to come." Remarkably, Griffin has emerged as a dark-horse candidate for the U.S. Ryder Cup team. He is currently 18th in the U.S. standings and continues to trend in the right direction. More strong results will force captain Keegan Bradley to consider him. After all, his strokes gained numbers in 2025 show that he has no glaring weaknesses in his game. He does everything well, as evidenced by his strong showing so far this week in Ft. Worth. Through 36 holes at Colonial, Griffin is 19th in strokes gained off the tee, fifth in strokes gained approaching the green, seventh in strokes gained around the green, and ninth in putting. All of that adds up to him leading the field on both the leaderboard and on the stat sheet. "I feel like my game is really good right now. I feel very comfortable on this golf course, and I knew going into this round — sometimes you have those Friday rounds where you are, like, 'All right, I want to get to the weekend and give myself a chance,'" Griffin added on Friday. "I felt like for me this morning I woke up and was, like, 'I'm going to get it rolling because I felt like I played really well yesterday.' Yesterday, too, I just didn't quite make as many birdies. Otherwise, I think I was probably the lowest score in the afternoon wave or close to it. There might have been one lower. Yeah, just playing really well. Trying to stay in my zone and keep plugging along." All Griffin does is plug along. Last year, he played in 35 PGA Tour events and finished the season ranked 57th in the FedEx Cup Fall. That allowed him to make starts at The Sentry and the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the first two Signature Events of the season, which helped jump start his year. He has been trending nicely ever since. "I've done a lot of the right things this season to kind of get myself from where I was over the last couple of years from being a really good PGA Tour player but finishing in the 50s, not as well known of a name," Griffin said. "I feel like this year I'm trying to do everything I can to help myself be more of an elite player out here and get in contention more." He has found himself on the front page of the leaderboard quite often, which explains why he is currently 21st in the FedEx Cup rankings. But a win this week would shoot him up even higher. It would also give him a healthy dose of confidence and indicate to the rest of the golf world that yes, there is more to come. More Golf: Collin Morikawa's Axed Caddie Lands on Ryder Cup Hopeful's Bag at Colonial


USA Today
06-03-2025
- Entertainment
- USA Today
Rafael Campos and the art of the letter that netted an Arnold Palmer Invitational exemption
Rafael Campos and the art of the letter that netted an Arnold Palmer Invitational exemption Show Caption Hide Caption Rory McIlroy doesn't believe the PGA Tour needs a deal with PIF Rory McIlroy said he doesn't believe the PGA Tour needs a deal right now because of momentum the Tour has garnered in recent weeks. Rafael Campos earned a sponsor exemption into the Arnold Palmer Invitational after writing a heartfelt letter to the tournament organizers. Campos, a PGA Tour winner, highlighted his desire to inspire young golfers in Puerto Rico and the Latin community. Sam Saunders, Arnold Palmer's son, praised Campos' letter and said he "embodies the spirit of Arnold Palmer quite well." ORLANDO, Fla. — The pen is mightier than the sword – and the putter, too, apparently. Rafael Campos was chosen for one of four sponsor exemptions into this week's Arnold Palmer Invitational along with Justin Rose, Mackenzie Hughes and Min Woo Lee and over box-office favorites Rickie Fowler and Jordan Spieth. Sponsor invites are at the prerogative of the tournament and anyone who has an issue with the choices can pony up in the neighborhood of $25 million to sponsor an event. But at No. 186 in the world and having missed five of his last six cuts, Campos' selection was not so much for what he's done on the golf course – though he did win the PGA Tour's Butterfield Bermuda Championship in November to join Chi Chi Rodriguez as the only Puerto Ricans to win at golf's highest level – but for what he represents for golf on a Caribbean island and an entire cultural region. In December, Campos typed up a note on his phone to Palmer's daughter, Amy, and son, Sam Saunders, and tournament director Drew Donovan. When the 36-year-old journeyman pro finished he had goosebumps that he was writing to a family of an icon he long admired. After handwriting those words on to three pages of paper, he had another feeling. 'My (right) hand was in such pain. I didn't realize I'd written so much,' he said. But his words just came tumbling out. 'It has been a lifelong goal of mine to be able to inspire the younger generations of golfers in our island. Having won recently really motivated me to keep working harder for them as I finally was able to give the Puerto Rican and Latin community real evidence that through hard work and perseverance, anything is achievable. Even when I thought I couldn't take it anymore and the endless phone calls to my wife crying, the simple fact that there were hundreds and maybe thousands of kids in our region looking up to me and cheering me on was good enough to help me keep fighting and crawling through this endless struggle to achieve a win.' Campos claims to have written upwards of 70 letters seeking sponsor invites but his prayers were answered only once before by a Tour event, the 2021 Valero Texas Open. But Campos has been moved by the written word before. He's a religious man or, as he put it, 'I'm a big believer.' One of the moments that shaped the man he is happened several years ago before he made his PGA Tour debut in 2019. Growing up, he'd visit family members in West Virginia. On one such visit when he was 13, his aunt gave him paper and pencil and told him to write a letter listing everything he was thankful for and his wishes for his future. More than a decade later, when he earned his Tour card for the first time, he played in the Greenbrier Classic, about 40 minutes from his Aunt's home. Campos rented a house and invited his West Virginia relatives to stay with him. Before dinner that first night, his aunt asked him to join her on the porch. She handed him an envelope. It was the letter he'd written to himself at age 13 when he wished for his cousin Hector to come back from the Gulf War and to make golf his profession. Perhaps his biggest wish of all had been to play on the PGA Tour. He began crying as he realized that everything he asked for and worked for had come true. 'I should start writing letters more often because good things keep happening when I do,' he said with a smile when he finished recounting this story on Tuesday. 'I know I might not be a household name, a name many people know, but that is not something that will stop me from doing my best to promote the game of golf to the younger generations. I truly love how Mr. Palmer inspired us since we were little (either through his unbelievable talent in golf or through his loving character on and off it as well) and plan to emulate and use that character as motivation for me to show the younger generation that anything is achievable and possible if you really desire it and work hard.' The dream to play on the Tour came true for Campos but not exactly as he imagined. He envisioned competing with Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson and Rory McIlroy, but as the Tour has become segmented into the Haves and Have Mores, Campos has been left on the outside looking in of signature events. He has had to play whenever he can get into an event and last year as a Korn Ferry Tour graduate he made just one start in the months of January and February. 'It really separates the rank and file by a lot,' Campos said of the difference in points, money and the luxury of competing in no-cut events. 'I have the same card and if I get to see the top guys once a year that's a lot. You have class A, class B, class C. I thought we're all supposed to be on one Tour.' Campos nearly didn't even go to Bermuda. That Monday, Campos' wife Stephanie gave birth to the couple's first child, daughter Paola. She all but had to kick him out of the house. He arrived at the course 90 minutes before his first-round tee time. He had missed 13 of his last 14 cuts and was in danger of losing his card before shooting a third-round 62 en route to his first Tour title. Life-changing stuff, and just in the nick of time. While the Arnold Palmer Invitational grabs headlines with its star-studded field and $20-million purse, Campos is being missed back home where the Puerto Rico Open, a $4-million opposite event is being contested without its main attraction. [He did send a personalized video for tournament organizers to share on the video scoreboard.] 'The week of The Arnold Palmer Invitational is very important to me. That same week for the past 15 years we have had a co-sanctioned event on the PGA Tour, the PR Open, one which I have been fortunate to play each year. An event held in the island I live in and an event that has helped me become the man I am today. It has allowed me to show the Puerto Ricans that even though we are a small island, we can produce talented golfers and compete with the best in the world. It has also allowed the younger kids to see myself play and visualize themselves being in the same shoes as me in that prestigious event in the near future.' Sam Saunders read the passionate letter from Campos and dubbed him 'someone who embodies the spirit of Arnold Palmer quite well.' 'I don't know that anybody's written a more thoughtful letter and put more effort into requesting an exemption than Rafa Campos did,' Saunders said. 'He's genuine, he's kind. He's a steward of the game and that's something that mattered a lot to my grandfather.' When Campos received the good news via phone, he broke into tears. 'My wife sees that I have tears, and she's like, 'Are you OK?' And I tell her, 'Yeah, honey, I just have to tell you that I'm sorry, but we're not going to go play the Puerto Rico Open,'' Campos said. 'She said, 'What, are you injured or something?' I'm like, 'No, we're going to Orlando.' ' The family arrived on Wednesday to the nine-bedroom McMansion he rented to house 12 family members, including Campos' father, who has cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy. But he wouldn't think of missing the chance to see his son play against an elite 72-man field. Another of Campos' biggest supporters has been Sidney Wolf, the president of the Puerto Rico Golf Association. For years, Wolf has been attending golf's majors and other top events and he'd sit and have breakfast or lunch with the fellow leaders of golf federation's around the world. One by one, they'd bid him adieu as they went off to watch their player at his tee time. Wolf had no player to follow. 'I always was left sitting by myself,' he said. But he always believed that Campos had the tools to be a champion — and any time Campos needed a new putter he had that, too. Ever since, Campos turned pro, he told Wolf that one of these days he would make it to Augusta National. And so when Campos won in Bermuda, Wolf was the first person outside of his immediate family that Campos called. 'You won't be alone anymore,' Campos told him. 'We're going to Augusta.' And to the Players Championship and PGA Championship, too. But first Campos has a tee time at 1:50 p.m. ET at the Arnold Palmer Invitational because it turns out the pen is mightier than the putter.