The Advocates Professional Golf Association’s APGA Farmers golf tournament is expanding in more ways than one.
The Advocates Professional Golf Association’s APGA Farmers golf tournament is expanding in more ways than one.
The third rendition of this event is going from a one-day, 18-hole tournament to a two-day, 36-hole event. In addition, Sunday’s final round will be telecast live on Golf Channel for the first time.
“The first of many, that’s my hope for these players who love this game, who breathe this game, who live this game,” said Damon Hack, who will serve as the play-by-play announcer alongside analyst Notah Begay. Doug Smith and Jacques Slade will be the on-course reporters for the live coverage from 5-7:30 p.m. ET. (with streaming on the NBC Sports app).
Hack previously did play-by-play for the network during the Scottish Open when Terry Gannon was under the weather, and is excited to get back to his original love: calling sports.
“I did play-by-play in college. I love it. I love calling sports. Before I became a sportswriter it’s actually what I wanted to do, growing up in L.A. listening to Vin Scully and Chick Hearn, two of the greats,” said Hack. “It’s a great opportunity. I got great folks around me with Notah and Doug and Jacques, it’s gonna be quite a historic day and I’m looking forward to being a part of it.”
The Torrey Pines event is the first of 11 tournaments on the APGA’s 2022 slate. With the PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open playing a Wednesday to Saturday, the South Course opens up for the APGA final round.
Landon Lyons is the defending champion, with 2020 champion Tim O’Neal also in the field.
“They’ve got to get those first licks in, feeling the excitement, the emotions that maybe they haven’t felt very often, or maybe for the first time ever,” said Hack of the event’s significance. “I think these are important steps that hopefully they see is like part of the journey to getting to where they want to be.
“But it’s also about the businesses and the sponsors that will be watching and the folks that love golf. They may hear someone’s story about, ‘Oh, wow, that guy was sleeping in his car.’ Or, ‘that guy learned the game when he was 13 and this person has been chasing the dream for 20 years.’ That’s also part of it.
“It’s experience inside the ropes and its support outside the ropes.”
“Playing on Tour for eight years was just the thing that transferred me into being what I’m supposed to be doing and that’s being on TV.”
To borrow a phrase from his own vernacular, Colt Knost is about to “get amongst it” with CBS Sports. The 36-year-old former PGA Tour pro went from a part-time role last year to a full-time gig beginning this week at the Farmers Insurance Open. Knost, who also co-hosts the Sirius/XM Radio show “Gravy and The Sleaze,” with co-host Drew Stoltz, has become golf’s latest media darling.
“He has the perfect blend of humility with his self-deprecating humor combined with a true knowledge of the game, and his resume speaks to that being a U.S. Amateur champion and Walker Cupper,” Sellers Shy, lead producer at CBS, said of Knost. “Plus, he has an incredible relationship with today’s players.”
Perhaps no commentator has his pulse on the Tour better than Knost – check out his podcast Sub Par (also with Stoltz) if you haven’t already. He also continues a youth movement at CBS that began with the remaking of its broadcast team a few years. Expect him to become one of the faces of CBS’s golf coverage for years to come.
“I honestly feel like this is what I was meant to do,” Knost said. “Playing on Tour for eight years was just the thing that transferred me into being what I’m supposed to be and that’s being on TV.”
The former Palm Beach Post sportswriter, 67, was golf’s original insider.
Tim Rosaforte, who rose from a newspaper reporter to become one of the top American golf journalists, died Tuesday of Alzheimer’s Disease. The Jupiter resident was 66.
Rosaforte was only the second person in his family to go to college, using that determination to become a sports writer and eventually one of the most popular announcers on Golf Channel and NBC Sports as golf’s first true insider.
He didn’t have outrageous opinions or wasn’t a former player. Rosie, as he was known, simply told you what was happening behind the scenes, and he had the perspective to make sense of it. With his recognizable bald pate, he became almost as famous as the stars he covered.
Rosaforte rubbed shoulders with presidents, literally, and he had phone numbers to other heads of state. More importantly, he had access to the game’s superstars such as Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and anyone else who mattered. Rosaforte had so many contacts, he walked around with two phones. Legendary announcer Jim Nantz said Rosaforte once had Woods on one line and Palmer on the other.
Rosaforte has been recently honored in several ways: The PGA of America made him its 12th – and first journalist — honorary member. He received last year’s Memorial Golf Journalism Award. The University of Rhode Island, where he graduated in 1977, endowed a scholarship in his name in the neuroscience department. And his hometown Honda Classic named its media room after Rosaforte and created the Tim Rosaforte Distinguished Writers’ Award.
The son of a sanitation company owner in Brewster, N.Y., Rosaforte used his hard-as-tungsten work ethic and can-do personality to attend the University of Bridgeport, where he played as an undersized linebacker and on special teams. There, Rosaforte’s tenacity caught the eye of future Dallas Cowboys head coach Dave Campo, at the time an assistant.
“Tim was a good player who studied film, took angles, understood limitations, and played hard,” Campo told longtime golf writer Jaime Diaz before Rosaforte won the 2014 PGA of America Lifetime Achievement Award. “He was one of those rare athletes who almost got all of it out of himself.”
Diaz said Rosaforte read that quote and nodded. “That’s me. I took that football formula and that’s my life.”
And what a life it was. Rosaforte’s work took him to places golf fans can only dream about. He covered 147 major championships and 17 Ryder Cups at iconic golf venues such as Augusta National, Pebble Beach, St. Andrews and Oakmont. He didn’t just attend these events, he covered them like the morning dew.
Rosaforte was golf’s original “insider,” one of the first print journalists since Will McDonough to make the transition to network TV. Rosaforte worked at The Palm Beach Post from 1987-94, after stints at the Clearwater Times, Tampa Times and Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel, and before moving on to Sports Illustrated and Golf World/Golf Digest.
His first TV gig was alongside veteran Jay Randolph on the old Sunshine Network in the 1990s. Rosaforte moved on to PGA Tour Sunday on USA Network in 2003 before he started appearing regularly on Golf Channel in 2007.
And we do mean regularly. If a story broke, Rosaforte would soon have the inside info.
“I’d receive a call from Tim when nobody else would call me,” said Nicklaus, who first met Rosaforte at the 1980 PGA. “He’ll say, ‘Jack, I need your opinion on something.’ Not many guys would do that.”
“I think one of the reasons Tim was so good is because he knew the game,” World Golf Hall of Famer Nick Price of Jupiter Island said. “He was very passionate about playing the game. Tim would always ask very specific questions. He always wanted to get the answers correct, and that meant a lot to me.”
In a sense, Rosaforte was like Ben Hogan; their success was based on digging – for scoops or the ball out of the dirt. Rosaforte would always make the extra call. Or four. It was in his DNA.
“There’s a lot of insiders in sports today, people like Adam Schefter, Peter Gammons and Tim Kurkjian,” said Geoff Russell, who was Rosaforte’s boss at Golf World and later at Golf Channel. “If you go back 30 years, Tim was doing that before most of them.”
Just not in the same manner.
“He was clearly the trailblazer in this role,” said Tommy Roy, NBC golf’s executive producer. “It seems like there’s so many people out there who are ‘gotcha’ writers. They find a way to rip people and attack them. Tim wasn’t like that. He was so well respected.”
Tim Rosaforte was always comfortable in a golf tournament media room.
Rosaforte gradually built trust with the players – and a list of contacts that his colleagues would dream of having. It wasn’t the number of phones; it was the phone numbers he had that was so impressive.
“I used to kid Timmy, ‘How many U.S. Presidents do you have in there?’ ” said Golf Channel host Rich Lerner. “The question should have been, ‘Who don’t you have?’ The answer was ‘nobody.’
“And he was the last person to let you know about it. He wouldn’t brag like some journalists. There is not an ounce of conceit in him.”
Getting a phone number from the world’s top golfers in the 1980s and 1990s wasn’t easy – you had to build years of credibility — and it’s more difficult these days. Rosaforte kept himself relative with today’s stars through his hard work, perspective and knowledge of the game.
“You have to know when to toe the line between knowledge that you can divulge and you can’t,” Woods said. “I think Tim has done a fantastic job of that.”
In 2013, Rosaforte actually scooped the White House press corps when he broke the story that President Barack Obama was playing golf with Woods at the Floridian in Palm City.
Rosaforte’s only error came when he met President Obama on the range. “I patted him on the shoulder when he walked over,” Rosaforte said. “I didn’t know you weren’t supposed to touch a President.”
Rosaforte wrote four books and served as the president of the Golf Writers Association of America. He was a 12-handicapper whose low-piercing shots were as direct as his opinions.
“You could always trust Timmy,” Ernie Els said. “He would ask the tough question, but he would always treat you fairly.”
Rosaforte started having memory-loss issues at the 2019 U.S. Open. He was taken off the air as doctors originally thought he was having anxiety issues. He was later diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s and retired at the end of 2019.
Nantz, whose father died of Alzheimer’s, reached out to Rosaforte in 2020 to have him visit the Nantz National Alzheimer Center in Houston. Doctors determined the Alzheimer’s had advanced and decided against trying experimental treatment because of the potential side effects.
“Tim’s mind was razor sharp for so long and then, all of a sudden he was lost,” Nantz told the University of Rhode Island magazine. “Sadly, due to my own father’s own battle with this insidious disease, I know the heartache it has caused for all who love Tim. (Wife) Genevieve and the girls (Genna and Molly) have handled the caregiving side of this with beautiful grace.
“It’s the untold story of Alzheimer’s. There are more people whose lives are changed almost overnight than just the one who is suffering from the disease.”
Survivors include wife Genevieve, daughters Genna (Nick) Bezek, Molly (Mason) Colling, nephew Grayson, and grandchildren Graham, Finn and Saylor.
Tiger Woods and son Charlie are back for what is sure to be more can’t-miss TV.
The dynamic duo took the golf world by storm one year ago. This week, Tiger Woods and son Charlie are back for what is sure to be more can’t-miss TV.
The Big Cat and his son are among the 20 teams in the PNC Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club at Grande Lakes in Orlando. The fun starts with pro-am rounds on Thursday and Friday and then the 36-hole tournament will be Saturday and Sunday. Tiger is scheduled to play the Friday pro-am.
Originally called the Father-Son Challenge, the event has expanded to include pro golfers and a parent or child. One prerequisite is that each group have a major championship winner.
Justin Thomas teamed up with his dad Mike to win the 2020 tournament. Tiger and Charlie finished seventh. Tiger was last seen playing golf in this event one year ago. In February, he suffered major injuries from a single-car crash in Los Angeles.
Golf Channel and NBC will have the TV coverage this week, while Peacock will have streaming coverage. Silly season or not, this should be fun.
How to watch
Note: All times listed are ET. All TV coverage will also be streamed/simulcast at NBCSports.com and on the NBC Sports app.
Thursday
Golf Central, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m., Golf Channel
Friday
Golf Today, 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Golf Channel
Golf Central, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Golf Channel
Pro-am, 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m., Golf Channel
Golf Central, 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., Golf Channel
Saturday
Golf Central, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Golf Channel
First-round, 12:30 to 1:30 p.m., Peacock
First-round, 1:30 to 2:30 p.m., Golf Channel
First-round, 2:30 to 6 p.m., NBC and Peacock
Golf Central, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., Golf Channel
Sunday
Golf Central, 10 a.m. to noon, Golf Channel
Second-round, 11 a.m. to noon, Peacock
Second-round, noon to 1 p.m., Golf Channel
Second-round, 1 to 4:30, NBC and Peacock
Golf Central, 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., Golf Channel
The PGA Tour and ESPN have announced details for the inaugural season of PGA Tour Live on ESPN+.
Talk about a mighty two ball.
The PGA Tour will ring in the new year by pairing with ESPN+ to give sports fans extended and expanded coverage of the Tour.
Think PGA Tour Live on steroids.
The PGA Tour and ESPN+ announced details Monday for the inaugural season of PGA Tour Live on ESPN+, which will more than triple total coverage of PGA Tour play during the year. This is part of the PGA Tour’s nine-year domestic media rights portfolio that was announced in March 2020 and begins in 2022.
More than 3,200 hours of new live streaming will be added, bringing the total to more than 4,300 exclusive hours of action throughout the year. The live coverage of between 35-40 events begins with the Sentry Tournament of Champions and the Sony Open in Hawaii, with at least 28 events having four full days of coverage and four simultaneous live feeds each day.
All coverage will be available to ESPN+’s more than 17.1 million subscribers.
ESPN+ is available through the ESPN App (mobile and connected devices), ESPN.com or ESPNplus.com for $6.99 per month or $69.99 per year. That’s lower than the $9.99 consumers were charged per month for PGA Tour Live through NBC Sports Gold. PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ is also part of the Disney Bundle, a streaming subscription that includes access to Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+ for $13.99 per month.
In other words, fans who previously paid $9.99 per month for PGA Tour Live can now pay $6.99 per month and tap into coverage of the PGA Tour and thousands of hours of other sports, including the NHL, MLB, FA Cup, college sports and the UFC, plus original programming. More than 21,000 live events will be aired in 2022.
“The start of the PGA Tour in 2022 will tee off a new and exciting opportunity for fans to watch the best golfers in the world,” said Burke Magnus, president of programming and original entertainment for ESPN.
Beginning with the American Express in January, PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will offer fans four live feeds:
The main feed. This will include primary tournament-coverage featuring the best action from across the course. Think NFL RedZone.
The marquee group. This will show every shot from each player in the group.
The featured groups. This is traditional coverage of two different featured groups.
The featured holes. This will be a combination of four par-3s and holes deemed as pivotal.
For instance, at the Players Championship, three of the par-3 holes will be on the broadcast and perhaps the drivable par-4 12th. Every shot of every player in the four holes will be shown on this feed.
When network television coverage begins, the four streams will become two featured groups and two featured holes.
Sixteen on-course cameras will capture play, which will provide more flexibility in what can be shown. The production crew will grow from roughly 85 people to 210, with 15 announcers calling the action on the four channels. And two majors will be aired: golf programming on ESPN+ also includes the Masters (115 hours of live coverage, plus 50 hours of the Masters Films from 1960-2020) and the PGA Championship (200 hours of live coverage, plus 30 hours of library and classic programming).
PGA Tour Live launched in 2015. It moved to NBC Sports Gold in 2019.
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For all the build-up, all the speculation, the man who had missed two cuts in a row on the PGA Tour put on a clinic.
Koepka took down DeChambeau, 4 and 3.
You could argue the best part of the telecast was actually the guys in the booth, as the conversations between Charles Barkley and Phil Mickelson were fantastic.
Throughout the short match, there were a few chirps that stood out among the rest — starting with the Lefty’s opinion about what happened to the Europeans at Whistling Straits a few months ago.
DeChambeau started things off by handing out cupcakes to the crowd and offering one to Koepka.
The fifth edition of The Match is underway with Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau teeing off at the Wynn Golf Club in Vegas.
But before the pair of rivals reached the first tee box, DeChambeau started things off by handing out cupcakes to the crowd and offered one to Koepka. Was it to talk trash? Sort of.
But I can’t figure out the message — is it that he’s Brooks “Cupcake” if you mispronounce his name? (See below.) Is he calling Koepka a cupcake?
Here’s the funny thing: What was on the cupcakes? It was Koepka’s annoyed face that became a meme after he rolled his eyes at DeChambeau months ago.
Live updates from The Match between Brooks and Bryson.
It all comes down to this.
For more than a year Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau have been at odds. On Friday, the pair of U.S. Open champions will put their beef on the line during the fifth playing of The Match, this time at Wynn Golf Club just off the Las Vegas strip.
The 12-hole match will feature a series of closest-to-the-pin and long drive challenges. Coverage begins at 4 p.m. ET on TNT, with a simulcast on TBS, truTV and HLN. Brian Andersen will call the action alongside Phil Mickelson and Charles Barkley, with Amanda Balionis as the on-course reporter.
If you can’t tune in, check out hole-by-hole updates from The Match below.
Never let it be said that a good rivalry isn’t good for television ratings.
Never let it be said that a good rivalry isn’t good for television ratings.
At least that’s the basic premise behind the fifth edition of Capital One’s The Match this week. For much of the last year, Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau and their fans have taken potshots at each other, and the back and forth became so silly at one point that PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan actually said fans could get kicked out of Tour events for adding to the vitriol by saying the wrong thing to the wrong player.
Remember, previously The Match was Tiger Woods vs. Phil Mickelson, a pretty good rivalry, and then there were amateur partners Tom Brady and Peyton Manning, also long-time rivals. Rivalry stokes the event.
The bad feelings melted away between Koepka and DeChambeau, we are told, during the Ryder Cup, when the golfers actually offered to play together for the good of the team. Then came the news that the two talented and major championship-winning golfers would be the featured attraction in The Match the Friday after Thanksgiving. It will be televised by TNT and TBS at 1 p.m. PT.
In a sense, The Match is just an extension of what golf has always tried to provide — some made-for-television competition between two (or four) players on golf courses that many people will never play or perhaps have never seen. No one will confuse The Match for Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf, but at least the idea and spirit are similar.
Team USA player Bryson DeChambeau looks over his yardage book on the sixth green during day three singles rounds for the 43rd Ryder Cup.
How much different will The Match V be than the previous matches that relied heavily on Mickelson as a competitor? And what will be the same?
After hitting pause on their social-media kerfuffle at the Ryder Cup, the gloves apparently are off again.
There’s a joke going around Las Vegas that The Match between Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau is being contested over 12 holes on Friday because DeChambeau wanted to play 24 holes and Koepka wanted to play none.
“That’s fair,” Koepka said. “Eighteen holes with him is a long time. I don’t want to be around him as much as anyone else.”
When asked to choose one word to describe the state of their relationship, Koepka said, “non-existent.”
DeChambeau described the two PGA Tour stars as having “kind of a disdain for each other.”
After hitting pause on their social-media kerfuffle for the good of Team USA at the Ryder Cup, the gloves apparently are off again.
“I don’t hit him up every day and my phone isn’t blowing up so you can do the math,” Koepka said.
“The thing I’m looking most forward to is kicking his butt,” DeChambeau said. “For some reason, he doesn’t like me and whatever. It is what it is. I’m here to showcase and spark kids to play a game in a unique way and apparently he doesn’t like that. I don’t know what’s up with that?”
“He can continue to try to bully me,” DeChambeau added. “He’s not doing a very good job of it as of right now. I think we’re winning, personally. He’s obviously gotten his fun little jabs and what not but he’s missed a couple of cuts so I don’t know what else to say about that. You can’t say much when you miss cuts.”
But the more DeChambeau tried to hype the match, the more he revealed his sensitive side and that Koepka’s bullying tactics have taken their toll.
“It’s disgusting the way the guy has tried to knock me down. There’s no need for it in the game of golf. He’s just tried to knock me down in every angle, every avenue and every way,” DeChambeau said. “For what reason? I don’t know. Maybe it’s because he’s jealous and he wants to get a part of that PIP money from the Tour. That’s probably a part of it because it was kind of squashed until this year when it was announced. It was like, ‘Woah. Why’s he trying to do it?’ That’s pretty much the best reason I have for it.”
Koepka said he’s explained too many times that his distaste for DeChambeau stems from the 2019 Northern Trust when DeChambeau approached Koepka’s caddie Ricky Elliot on the putting green before the final round rather than directly to him to express his anger at Koepka singling him out for slow play. The two reached some sort of détente, which DeChambeau violated when he poked fun at Koepka on social media.
If you’re not afraid of heights, or rivalries, you should check this out.
“He was the one (who agreed) we’re not going to say anything about each other and leave each others name out and then he opened his mouth with my name in it and I was like, ‘Looks like we’re back on.’ Don’t tell me you’re not going to open your mouth and then open it 2-3 months later. You’re going to get what you asked for, I can promise you.”
Their beef went mainstream when a video of Koepka rolling his eyes as DeChambeau walked behind him during a taped interview at the PGA Championship went viral. After the U.S. victory at the Ryder Cup, Keopka and DeChambeau hugged it out in front of their teammates, but both players agreed that it was forced.
“The team wanted us to do it,” DeChambeau said. “I was surprised he did it but I’m a guy who can put things behind me pretty quickly. It definitely felt forced. There wasn’t an apology or anything like that. Until I get an apology for what he said and what not, nothing will change.”
The golf world had been rooting for the two to be paired together in a final round with a trophy on the line, but the televised exhibition, which will air on TNT with Charles Barkley and Phil Mickelson among the broadcasters, will have to suffice for now.
“Obviously no one would put us together so we had to do it on our own,” Koepka said. “I think the whole world wants to see it. I’m giving the people what they want. I’m a man of the people.”