Trevor Immelman becomes the new face — and lead analyst voice — of CBS Sports golf

“I’m going to be myself, I’m going to be authentic and I’m going to be honest.”

SAN DIEGO – Trevor Immelman was out early on Thursday walking the South Course at Torrey Pines as the Santa Ana wind blew tumbleweed across greens and cardboard recycling bins tumbled down hills.

“It’s a perfect day if you’re a fan watching, but as a player you’re freaking out. I just watched Patrick Rodgers rinse his third in the water on 18,” Immelman said. “Kind of happy with just being in the tower this week.”

Immelman, who won twice on the PGA Tour, including the 2008 Masters, will be in the CBS Sports “super tower,” and beginning Friday becomes just the fifth person to serve as “The Eye’s” lead analyst, following in the footsteps of Ken Venturi, Lanny Wadkins and most recently Nick Faldo, who stepped down in August after 16 years in the big seat.

Faldo’s departure came as a bit of a surprise to Sean McManus, the chairman of CBS Sports, who said he had no intention of replacing Faldo until they had their annual breakfast during last year’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in February and Faldo broke the news that he planned to retire and build a ranch in Montana.

“The first name that popped into my head was Trevor’s,” McManus said during a recent Zoom interview with Golfweek. “And I thought, you know, who can go into that booth in a seamless way? You know, he’s done television, he’s proven how good he is at television. So it really for me, listen, we thought about other people and we discussed other, you know, other possible folks to go into that slot. But no one came up to the level of Trevor. Every time I listened to him, I thought, boy, full time role working with Jim Nantz on most of our tournaments and Andrew Catalon on the others, he’s my choice.”

Nantz, who is kicking off his 38th year with CBS, has broken in new partners before, but as put it, “we’re not having to put the training wheels on here.”

Added Nantz: “I am not bringing in a new partner, I’ve got a partner who has got a tremendous amount of experience. I’ve worked with him numerous times and he is very skilled at this. He is a naturally gifted communicator, who carries himself in a way that exudes class and integrity. And there’s a high warmth quotient to the man; I think he’s going to be just such a hit for people to have in their living room.”

Immelman didn’t give TV a thought until he began battling various injuries and his game hit the rocks. In 2017, a Golf Channel producer convinced him to do a try out at the Wyndham Championship, and a new door was opened.

“I love the sport of golf so much, I was trying to think of ways that I could still stay involved and stay a big part of it, and fortunately, that’s when I got the opportunities to dip my toe in the water for TV,” he said. “I thoroughly enjoyed it, I could feel the energy. At the tournament, I felt the excitement and the adrenaline rush of trying to find the right words to explain to the viewer what was going on with the action.”

Nantz remembers distinctly that once Immelman started working with CBS as a hole analyst, Immelman would call him seeking constructive criticism on how he could improve at his new craft.

“He was so anxious to be great at this, and I was flabbergasted how good he was right away,” Nantz said. “He would call all the time. I was completely at a loss for words. I didn’t know how to tell him to get better. He was already there. And I think there was a period where he thought maybe I was just passing it off, didn’t want to invest in the hard truth. This is what you need to do. I was being truthful with him. You’re doing really well. Just keep getting more reps…He’s going to be brilliant.” (Immelman noted that broadcaster Brian Anderson has been a mentor and that his wife, Carminita, is his toughest critic – “My wife is straight to the point, always has been,” he said.)

With Nantz in Kansas City to call the NFL’s AFC Championship game on Sunday, Immelman and Nantz will call their debut this week at the Farmers Insurance Open from many miles apart. But Immelman said he expects at some point next week at Pebble Beach when they are seat side by side, “I’ll be like, Whoa, this is, you know, he’s the voice of – I don’t want to sound negative – but he’s the voice of my youth.”

Immelman, a native of South Africa, recalled being six years old and staying up after midnight to watch his first Masters in 1986 and hearing Nantz call Jack Nicklaus’s heroics.

“That moment is like etched in my memory,” said Immelman, who 22 years later sat next to Nantz in Butler Cabin as the champion and received his green jacket.

Immelman served as captain of the International team at the 2022 Presidents Cup and is deeply entrenched among the current players he’ll now be covering. He got some additional reps as analyst for Golf Channel this fall. His preparation also included a trip to Cincinnati in December to see how Nantz and partner Tony Romo called a football game (Bengals vs Chiefs) and sit in their production meetings.

“That was his idea,” Nantz said of Immelman. “And it’s typical of Trevor trying to find every means possible to try to make himself better.”

Making his debut at Torrey Pines is fitting for Immelman, who first visited these sun-soaked shores to play in the 13-14 age group of the World Juniors and won the 1998 U.S. Amateur Public Links here. In the years that followed, Immelman experienced the highs and lows of professional golf, and he believes that will serve him well in his new role.

“I wasn’t an elite player, was nice player, I won the Masters, which is, you know, huge. But, so I know what it takes to get to there, I know what it takes to play at that level. And to mix it up with the best,” he said. “But then I also have all the experiences of being on the other side, where it’s not quite going your way, where you’re struggling to keep your card. And it’s two different worlds, I can promise you, it’s two different worlds. But when you’re in it, you don’t realize how fine the line is. And so that’s what I think I have to bring to the table is the understanding of both sides of the spectrum. And I have a real passion for the game and love for the game. So hopefully I can find a way to tell those stories with the appropriate energy and enthusiasm to where people at home enjoy it.”

In his role as Presidents Cup captain, Immelman was an outspoken and opinionated leader. Will he be that strong a voice in the 18th tower and able to criticize players for whom he’s developed deep ties?

“I’m going to be myself, I’m going to be authentic and I’m going to be honest. If there’s something that I see that a player or a caddie or a coach or anything that’s happening on our air takes place that I disagree with, or if I have an opinion on, I’m going to go ahead and say that, that is my job. That’s what I’ve been put in that seat to do,” he said. “And if I don’t do that, we’re going to have millions of fans sitting at home, who can see that call me out. So, it’s up to me to make sure that I go ahead and be honest and be authentic.”

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NBC Sports announces nearly 150 hours of college golf TV coverage on in spring 2023

College golf fans are going to be treated with plenty of live coverage this spring.

College golf fans are going to be treated with plenty of live coverage this spring.

NBC Sports announced Tuesday that Golf Channel and Peacock would air nearly 150 hours of live college golf this spring, with the main feature being the 2023 men’s and women’s NCAA Championships at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona. In addition, three of the top tournaments in the country will be also be televised.

Coverage begins Jan. 30-Feb. 1 in California with the Southwestern Invitational from North Ranch Country Club in Westlake Village. It will be broadcast from 4:30-7:30 p.m. ET.

Up next is the Darius Rucker Intercollegiate from Feb. 27-March 1 at Long Cove Club in Hilton Head, South Carolina. Last year, it became the first all-women’s regular season college event to be carried on Golf Channel. This year, it will be on from 2:30-5:30 p.m. ET.

The final regular season event is the Western Intercollegiate Pasatiempo Golf Club in Santa Cruz, California. It will broadcast April 10-12. The first two days will be live from 7-10 p.m. ET and the final day will be 4-7 p.m. ET.

The final three days of the women’s (May 22-24) and men’s (May 29-31) NCAA Championships will be broadcast as well, with nearly 70 hours of coverage being shown during those two weeks.

Vanderbilt is the top-ranked men’s team in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings heading into the spring, while defending national champion Stanford is on top of the women’s rankings.

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Collin Morikawa, Adam Scott added to TGL Monday league headed by Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy

We’re still a year away from the TGL debut, but already the news about future participants is trickling in.

We’re still a year away from the debut of TGL, the series announced last summer by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, but already the news about future participants is trickling in.

TGL will be comprised of six teams of three PGA Tour players competing in 15 regular-season matches on Monday nights starting January 2024. The contests will be on virtual courses where fans can watch every shot live on primetime television.

On Monday, another pair of stars were added to the circuit as Collin Morikawa and Adam Scott will join Woods, McIlroy, Jon Rahm and Justin Thomas in the series.

Morikawa said he sees where the events will hook younger viewers into the game.

“During my amateur and collegiate golf career, I loved team play and the added energy it brought to my game – especially in match play. That has only been elevated with the opportunities I have had to represent the U.S. in the Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup, and I am looking forward to being a part of a TGL team next year as well,” said Morikawa. “Beyond that, I think the design of TGL to provide sports fans the world’s best in a weekly, primetime golf competition, from start-to-end in only two hours, will appeal to a broader spectrum of casual golf fans and introduce our sport to younger fans.”

TMRW CEO Mike McCarley said via a release that Morikawa and Scott are strategic additions to the new series.

“As we fill out the TGL roster, the additions of champions like Collin Morikawa and Adam Scott continues to fuel our momentum towards the launch of TGL. The caliber of players Morikawa and Scott represent is indicative of the quality of competition we are striving to create within TGL,” said McCarley. “They both embrace what TGL can provide for fans, a short-form, elite competition in primetime where world-class players square off in team match play.”

“TGL is the next evolution within professional golf, and I am committed to helping lead it into the future,” Woods previously said. “Embracing technology to create this unique environment gives us the ability to move our sport into primetime on a consistent basis alongside so many of sports’ biggest events.”

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Where will Jim Nantz call the PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open from? Watch the NFL playoffs to find out

For the third year in a row, Nantz will call the Farmers Insurance Open remotely.

When CBS Sports kicks off its 66th consecutive year televising the PGA Tour next week, Jim Nantz will do so in a most unusual way.

Nantz, 63, will be in his 38th season at CBS and at the helm of The Eye’s golf coverage with a new sidekick as Trevor Immelman takes over for Nick Faldo beside him in the 18th-hole tower. But for their debut at the Farmers Insurance Open, they will start out as if in a long-distance relationship, with Immelman on site in San Diego and Nantz at a still-to-be-determined location depending on how things play out this weekend in the AFC Divisional Round of the NFL playoffs.

It’s less than ideal and makes one wonder why Nantz’s backup, Andrew Catalon, doesn’t pinch hit at Torrey Pines as he will do from time to time during the network’s coverage of 23 tournaments during the FedEx Cup season. Good thing that Nantz is the ultimate pro’s pro.

“You’d be surprised how easy it is,” Nantz said when asked the biggest challenge to announcing a game from a remote location.

Nantz noted that this will be the third year in a row that he has relied on modern technology and call the Farmers without being on site in San Diego. In 2021, during the height of the global pandemic, the tournament fell between the AFC Championship and the Super Bowl and network executives didn’t want to risk Nantz being exposed to COVID and having to miss the big game.

“So I did it from a studio in Monterey (California). Then last year I did it from the AFC Championship game (at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City),” Nantz said. “Sellers (Shy) and Steve Milton, our director, have this ability to set up a bubble for me. And I get lost and I get in trance. I feel like I’m there. It feels so similar to me. Unless I turn around and look and realize where I actually am, I feel like I’m sitting right behind the 18th green. So, it’s going to be fine.”

Ahead of the Masters in April, Nantz, who has called the NFL, NCAA men’s basketball and golf with equal aplomb, will call his final March Madness, and give himself as he put it, “a little bit of a chance to catch my breath.”

“I’ve been on the golden hamster wheel for a long time,” Nantz said. “There are very few people that are fortunate enough to have a major property that that they get to be a part of, two is rare, I’ve had three, as far as being the lead voice of three different properties. I can’t think of anybody else. But to have two is very, it’s rare. And it still means I’m working 40-something weeks a year. I’ve had people come up to me and say, ‘Hey, you know, I know you’re really cutting back,’ yeah, I’m cutting back to one of the most demanding schedules in the business. So, I know my kids are going to appreciate it. I’m very excited about it. Sean (McManus) and I had discussed it for years, when would be the right time to step away from college basketball? And as always, the stars were aligned, we knew years out that Houston would be the right place to do it with it being the gateway city to my career.”

CBS Sports’ schedule gets underway from Torrey Pines Golf Course with a special Saturday final-round conclusion. The third round on Friday, Jan. 27 (5-8 p.m. ET) and final round on Saturday, Jan. 28 (4:30-8 p.m. ET), will be broadcast on CBS and streamed live on Paramount+.

For now, where Nantz will call the game is as big of a mystery as Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego. All we know for sure is not in San Diego. But Nantz could be in Kansas City, Atlanta (a neutral site if Kansas City faces Buffalo), Buffalo, or, if there are two upsets, possibly Cincinnati.

“It still feels new,” he said of another season of calling golf. “And there’s always new wrinkles and challenges.”

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It’s official: LIV Golf and The CW Network agree on multi-year broadcast TV deal

“A league that has only existed for one year has secured a full broadcast deal,” Greg Norman said in a release.

Early this week, rumors began to swirl that LIV Golf was finally in agreement to come to a TV near you. David Feherty, who joined the Saudi-backed league last year, hinted at the upcoming deal during a show in Florida.

Now, the news becomes official.

The CW Network and LIV have agreed on a multi-year broadcast deal. The CW will air all 14 events throughout next season as well as offer a streaming option through its app.

This is a momentous day for LIV Golf as this partnership is about more than just media rights. The CW will provide accessibility for our fans and maximum exposure for our athletes and partners as their reach includes more than 120 million households across the United States,” said Greg Norman, CEO of LIV Golf, in a release. “We’re very proud to note how consequential it is that a league that has only existed for one year has secured a full broadcast deal in its debut full league season.”

Events are 54 holes with no cut. Saturday and Sunday coverage will be available on The CW and CW app while Friday’s action will be exclusively on the app.

“Our new partnership between The CW and LIV Golf will deliver a whole new audience and add to the growing worldwide excitement for the league. With CW’s broadcasts and streams, more fans across the country and around the globe can partake in the LIV Golf energy and view its innovative competition that has reimagined the sport for players, fans and the game of golf,” said Dennis Miller, President, The CW Network, in a release.

“For The CW, our partnership with LIV Golf marks a significant milestone in our goal to re-engineer the network with quality, diversified programming for our viewers, advertisers and CW affiliates. This also marks the first time in The CW’s 17-year history that the network is the exclusive broadcast home for live mainstream sports.”

According to ESPN, the agreement is a revenue-sharing one in which CW will not pay the league for rights fees and LIV will not pay the network for airtime. ESPN also reported that LIV Golf will continue to pay for production costs, which it also did in 2022.

Broadcast features and on-air talent LIV Golf debuted in 2022 will remain the same in ’23.

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Harry Higgs is worried about the PGA Tour as a TV product, partly because LIV Golf ‘took all the a–holes … the villains’

I think it’s part of the kind of Tiger Woods hangover … where really no one had to be any good at their jobs. 

Is there a topic Harry Higgs is afraid of? If so, we’ve yet to uncover it.

While chatting with Higgs, who lost his PGA Tour card last year but has played in a number of events already during the season on sponsor exemptions, we pitched the idea of him taking over a new TV station devoted solely to golf. All Harry, all the time. He wasn’t averse to the concept.

Higgs will appear on Golf Channel during the second Tito’s Shorties Classic at Butler Pitch and Putt in downtown Austin, Texas, on Jan. 11. Close buddy Keith Mitchell was also part of the fun, along with Joel Dahmen and Beau Hossler.

And while the former SMU star and current Dallas-area resident was happy with the content the hit-and-giggle provided, he’s got grander plans for the game’s broadcast side, and some worries that understandably are bubbling as the game’s most marketable personality (Tiger Woods) continues to drift off slowly into the sunset.

Good news for golf fans: Last hour of final-round coverage of Sentry Tournament of Champions on Golf Channel will be commercial free

This is good news for golf fans grumbling about too many ads on TV.

It’s a common refrain for golf fans watching their favorite sport on TV: too many commercials during critical times of the weekend coverage.

Well, thanks to a deal with Callaway, the final hour of Sunday’s coverage of the Sentry Tournament of Champions on Golf Channel will be commercial free.

Sports Business Journal was the first to report the news; Golfweek has since confirmed the report.

The Sentry Tournament of Champions can be seen on streaming services ESPN+ and Peacock and on TV on Golf Channel all four days and on NBC on Saturday and Sunday.

The typical handoff from cable to network TV is in reverse this week though. Usually it’s Golf Channel with the first chunk of coverage before turning things over to the over-the-air coverage on NBC or CBS.

For the Sentry, NBC has the first two hours of the weekend TV coverage from 4 to 6 p.m. ET while Golf Channel brings it home from 6 to 8 p.m. The final hour will be commercial free on TV and on the Peacock stream.

Sports Business Journal reports there may be more commercial-free coverage of the PGA Tour on Sundays down the line, with lead NBC producer Tommy Roy telling the publication: “Whenever we can have commercial-free golf, we do it. To get it here on the first designated event, to get it on Sunday, we’re really happy.”

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Will a revolving door of voices make golf’s TV broadcasts better or worse? And why so much turnover?

It will be different watching golf in 2023 and not hearing Faldo, Maltbie or Koch.

Each PGA Tour season starts with new faces and new names for fans to learn and embrace. Whether it is a raw rookie fresh off the Korn Ferry Tour, a college star getting a handful of starts and making some waves or a European player taking a shot at the U.S.-based tour, there is always something new.

But in recent years, the new faces aren’t just on the golf course. The faces have come with new voices to the broadcast booths of PGA Tour events. That carousel seems to be spinning faster and faster these days.

At NBC, Gary Koch and Roger Maltbie, two long-time golf announcers who are both in their 70s, are out as 2023 begins. They are replaced by Brad Faxon and Smylie Kaufman, two more former players.

At CBS, Nick Faldo left as lead analyst at the end of the network’s coverage in 2022. Faldo will be replaced by Trevor Immelman, a former Masters champion. Immelman, who was already on the CBS team, is 42. Faldo is 65, and he apparently wanted to work a more limited schedule. CBS decided that didn’t work for the network, so Faldo retired.

So the voices get younger as 2023 begins, and it seems like a lot of change for the two main networks that cover the PGA Tour (Golf Channel covers its own PGA Tour tournaments as well as sharing producing and voices at times with NBC and CBS). But have things really changed that fast this year, or is it just the world of social media that has pushed the idea that changes have come at a break-neck speed?

Remember Johnny Miller? It might seem like a long time ago when Miller stepped down as a straight-talking lead analyst for NBC. But it was only in 2019 that he ended a nearly three-decade career with the network. Former PGA champion and Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger stepped in for Miller.

That was about the same time, by the way, that CBS, in an effort to freshen its golf broadcasts, said goodbye to Gary McCord and Peter Kostis, a pair of voices who had been with CBS for three decades themselves.

And of course, David Feherty didn’t hold back when explaining reasons why he left NBC/Golf Channel to go to be LIV Golf’s biggest broadcaster.

“Money,” Feherty told the Toledo Blade. “People don’t talk about it. I hear, ‘Well, it’s to grow the game.’ Bull … they paid me a lot of money.”

The LIV Golf Invitational Series is still without a television partner, but Feherty’s move gave the Greg Norman-led, Saudi Arabia-funded upstart circuit a known name on its broadcast team. He made his debut at LIV Bedminster.

Dan Hicks, Johnny Miller, and Sir Nick Faldo of The Golf Channel discuss the action during the first round of the 2012 Hyundai Tournament of Champions. (Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

Changes happening all the time

And there have been other changes. Jim “Bones” MacKay, longtime caddie for Phil Mickelson, became a respected on-course commentator for NBC before returning to caddie duties for Justin Thomas. John Wood, another longtime tour caddie, is drawing raves for his work for NBC.

That might seem like a lot of changes in a short period of time. But remember, it was just 20 years ago, in the 2002 season, that Ken Venturi ended a run of 35 years as the lead analyst for CBS.

Networks understand that golf needs to appeal to a younger audience. It’s great that people 50 and over love and watch the sport, because that demographic tends to have more leisure time and more disposable income — things that advertisers crave in a viewer. But the sport needs younger viewers, too, fans who will embrace the sport now and follow the young stars for the next 15 or 20 years or even longer. So younger voices might seem like the right thing to do.

It’s not that Maltbie or Koch or McCord or Kostis did a bad job of reporting on PGA Tour events or were rapidly deteriorating as broadcasters. But inevitably, older voices get pushed aside by younger voices. That’s true in any part of media or entertainment.

Faxon has some experience in broadcasting and has shown he can hold his own. Kaufman, once a rising player on the tour whose game disappeared with a string of missed cuts in his last three years, proved to be a breakout star working for Golf Channel and NBC last year. Immelman has been a strong part of the CBS team for several years and should fit in fine at Augusta National, where he won in 2008.

But it will be different watching golf as 2023 begins not hearing Faldo or Maltbie or Koch. Some familiar voices, such as Mark Rolfing at NBC and Ian Baker-Finch at CBS, remain, as do the main anchors for their network, Dan Hicks at NBC and Jim Nantz at CBS.

Will it be better or worse? Chances are it will be about the same, with the networks throwing in some technical innovations but hanging on to the tried and true method of broadcasting a PGA Tour event. Sometimes it isn’t the voices that need to be freshened, it is the approach to the broadcast itself that gets stale.

Either way, golf will look familiar in 2023 on NBC, CBS and Golf Channel, even if it sounds a little different.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for The Desert Sun. You can contact him at (760) 778-4633 or at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @larry_bohannan. Golfweek’s Cameron Jourdan contributed to this report.

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Here’s what Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Justin Thomas and more had to say to Gary Koch, Roger Maltbie on their NBC farewell

“If I have to go out, I can’t think of anyone I’d rather go out with than Roger” — Gary Koch

Gary Koch and Roger Maltbie are signing off for the last time from NBC on Sunday at the PNC Championship in Orlando, ending two distinguished careers as broadcasters.

“If I have to go out, I can’t think of anyone I’d rather go out with than Roger,” said Koch, a six-time winner on the PGA Tour who joined NBC in 1997.

Maltbie, who won five times on Tour and joined NBC in 1992, has agreed to do several tournaments for Golf Channel in 2023.

“I wake up one day and say, ‘Why would I do that?’ ’” Maltbie told pgatour.com. “And the next day I wake up and say, ‘I still really like doing this. It’s fun.’ So I’m going to do a few.”

Koch, 70, turned down a similar offer.

“After being in the majors for 26 years, I don’t have much desire to work in the minors,” Koch told Golf Digest, referring to being relegated to lesser events. “I can only think it has to do with money. I really don’t know what the justification is. I was told that they wanted to refresh the team and that they were looking at 10-15 years down the road, but then they hired two 60-something guys [Brad Faxon and Curt Byrum], so it’s kind of confusing.”

After Saturday’s opening round of the PNC, NBC paid tribute to Koch and Maltbie, which included a video of several of their best calls – including Koch’s famous ‘Better than most’ call of Tiger draining a bomb at the 17th at TPC Sawgrass in the Players – and top players sharing what the announcers meant to them. It meant a great deal to them, too.

NBC Sports paid one final tribute to Roger Maltbie (left) and Gary Koch as the network signed off from the PNC Championship on December 18, 2022.

“It’s been a long, wonderful ride,” said Maltbie, 71. “Neither one of us want it to end, but that decision was made, and so be it. It’ll be a sad afternoon when it’s all done.”

Here’s what the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Lee Trevino and others had to say about Koch and Maltbie, who will be missed.

Tiger vs Messi and the World Cup — Padraig Harrington says Woods might win the TV ratings

“I think Tiger might win over on the TV ratings to the World Cup. That’s the difference he’s made to golf.”

ORLANDO – On Sunday, the World Cup final pitting Argentina against France will be the main event in the world of sports. Or will it? Padraig Harrington, for one, thinks Tiger Woods playing with son Charlie in the final round of the PNC Championship could steal its thunder.

“I’m so disappointed that the World Cup Final is on 9 o’clock on Sunday morning. I believe it’s 9 o’clock Eastern Time,” he said. Actually, the pre-game show starts at 9 and the game begins at 10 ET. “I really wanted it to be on mid-afternoon at 3 o’clock going up against the PNC Championship because I think Tiger might win over on the TV ratings to the World Cup. That’s the difference he’s made to golf.”

Tiger is the needle in golf and his very presence guarantees a strong TV rating for this week’s Silly Season event, which will be broadcast on NBC/Golf Channel/Peacock. Add in the fact that he’s played only nine competitive rounds and there’s pent-up demand to see Tiger, not to mention Charlie, who shot 67 in a junior tournament not long ago. Team Woods finished second last year behind John Daly and his son and could be a force to be reckoned with at this tournament for years to come. Harrington pointed out that Tiger’s various comeback tours have captivated golf fans like never before.

“It’s bigger than it was when he was in his heyday. So back in 2000s, 2005, whatever, big star, unbelievable, huge crowds, great vibe. But when he came back in like (2018), I’m trying to think when he came back to Valspar (in Tampa) that time, there was definitely a different feeling. There was people coming out, grandparents coming out because they’d seen Tiger. Their children. And then the young kids were being brought out for a once-in-a-lifetime, maybe you’ll never see him again,” Harrington explained.

“There really was a different atmosphere to a Tiger event. It is incredible that you think he could – he actually got – like you can tell now, like you can definitely tell where he is on the golf course. Everything about Tiger on the golf course, it is a different vibe than it was. It was big back then, but I don’t know, there’s an emotion to the crowd. They’re not just excited about the great shots, which is I think what they would have been 15 years ago, there’s a genuine emotion about they want to see him, they love him. They love the whole thing, the atmosphere.”

In other words, Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe are lucky they aren’t going head-to-head with Tiger and Charlie. They might not stand a chance.

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