Tim O’Neal finally breaks through, wins Dominion Energy Charity Classic in 50th start on PGA Tour Champions

O’Neal earned his first professional victory in more than eight years.

He has three wins on the PGA Tour Latinoamerica circuit, but his last was eight years ago. He never broke through on the Korn Ferry Tour nor the PGA Tour.

On Sunday, Tim O’Neal, 52, earned the biggest victory of his career, winning the 2024 Dominion Energy Charity Classic on the PGA Tour Champions in his 50th start on the circuit.

It’s the first leg of the three-event Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs and his timing was clutch. He was sitting at 55th in the points, but only the top 54 advance to Round 2. O’Neal’s win catapulted him well inside that cut line after topping the field at The Country Club of Virginia.

O’Neal opened his week with a 1-under 71 and followed that up with a 5-under 67. He closed Sunday with a 7-under 65, a round that featured a front-nine 32. He then birdied the 10th before reeling off five straight pars. On the par-5 16th, O’Neal hit his tee shot into a bunker, but no biggie. He stuffed his third to about 10 feet and made the birdie putt to keep Gonzalez a shot back.

On 18, also a par 5, he drove it again into a fairway bunker but again got his third close and made another birdie to get to 13 under. He walked off the course with a two-shot lead over Gonzalez, who just missed making birdie putts on 16 and 17. That left Gonzalez needing to hole out from a bunker for an eagle at the last to force a playoff. Alas, he could not and O’Neal could then celebrate his signature victory.

2024 Dominion Energy Charity Classic
Tim O’Neal celebrates with his caddie after making a putt on the first hole during the final round of the 2024 Dominion Energy Charity Classic at The Country Club of Virginia. (Scott Taetsch/Getty Images)

“I don’t know, it was just how it was supposed to happen, I guess,” he said. “I’ve been playing well in the past few weeks, just giving too many shots back. The last two days was really solid. It only takes one week, right? I guess this is my week.”

David Bransdon shot a 5-under 67 to snag solo third at 9 under with vaulted him from 56th to 35 in the points race. Tim Petrovic was solo fourth at 8 under. Ernie Els, who leads the points race, finished tied for 20th.

The top 54 now advance to the Simmons Bank Championship in Little Rock, Arkansas, Oct. 25-27.

Retief Goosen leads Dominion Energy Charity Classic, where three golfers have improved their playoff hopes

After 18 holes in Virginia, three golfers have moved inside the top 54, while three others have slipped back.

The 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs started at this week’s Dominion Energy Charity Classic at The Country Club of Virginia.

Retief Goosen shot a 6-under 66 on Thursday and leads five others by a shot at the 54-hole event. Goosen won the Galleri Classic in Rancho Mirage, California, earlier this season and is seeking his fourth PGA Tour Champions win. Among those shooting a 5-under 67 on Friday was Paul Goydos, who hit all 18 greens in regulation.

Only the top 72 golfers from the regular season are in the field. The tournament within the tournament this week is that only the top 54 after Sunday’s final round will advance to the second event of the postseason, the Simmons Bank Championship in Little Rock, Arkansas, Oct. 25-27.

2024 Dominion Energy Charity Classic
The Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs logo and scoreboard during the first round of the 2024 Dominion Energy Charity Classic 2024 at The Country Club of Virginia. (Greg Fiume/Getty Images)

After 18 holes in Virginia, three golfers have moved inside the top 54, while three others have slipped back.

The three moving up:

  • Paul Goydos, up from 59 to 38
  • Heath Slocum, up from 62 to 40
  • David Bransdon, up from 56 to 53

The three moving back:

  • Chris DiMarco, down from 51 to 56
  • Angel Cabrera, down from 54 to 57
  • Kirk Triplett, down from 53 to 58

Cabrera was the “bubble boy” in the 54th spot. With 36 holes left to go this weekend, that Kenny Perry now assumes that role.

This story has been updated because an earlier version included an inaccuracy.

This PGA Tour Champions event with former NFL stars is putting together a Hall of Fame roster

The inaugural event will bring together pro football players and professional golfers in a unique format.

BOCA RATON, Fla. — Offense, defense and special teams win NFL championships.

This is exemplified by former NFL stars Anthony Muñoz, DeMarcus Ware and Morten Andersen, who each have committed to play in next year’s inaugural James Hardie Pro Football Hall of Fame Invitational at Broken Sound Club. The trio excelled at each of the three major aspects of the game.

Muñoz was an offensive tackle with the Cincinnati Bengals for 13 seasons who was elected to 11 consecutive Pro Bowls and named All-Pro 11 times from 1981 through 1991. In 2022, an ESPN panel named Muñoz as the greatest offensive tackle in NFL history.

Ware spent the majority of his 12 seasons in the NFL with the Dallas Cowboys before capping his career with the Denver Broncos. He was voted first-team All-Pro four times, second-team All-Pro three times and was selected to nine Pro Bowls.

Andersen, nicknamed “The Great Dane,” was a kicker in the NFL for 25 seasons – most notably with the New Orleans Saints and Atlanta Falcons – and is widely considered the most prolific scorer in league history. Andersen’s 40 field goals of 50 yards or longer were the most in NFL history at his retirement. He is one of the rare players to be named to two NFL All-Decade Teams (1980s and 1990s). Anderson (2,544 points) ranks second among all-time scorers in the NFL, trailing only Adam Vinatieri (2,673).

Former NFL player Ronde Barber looks on during a playoff in the final round of the Valspar Championship on the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Resort and Golf Club on March 20, 2022, in Palm Harbor, Florida. (Photo by Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images)

“The addition of Hall of Famers like Anthony Muñoz, DeMarcus Ware and Morten Andersen to the James Hardie Pro Football Hall of Fame Invitational brings even more excitement and anticipation for both fans and participants alike,” said Ken Kennerly, tournament Executive Director. “And there’s going to be even more NFL stars who will be added to this wonderful tournament to play alongside golf’s greatest.”

The inaugural event, which will be held from March 31 to April 6, will bring together pro football players and professional golfers in a unique format. The event will include 26 football legends and 78 PGA Tour Champions professionals. In the first two rounds of the 54-hole event on Broken Sound’s Old Course, which will be televised on Golf Channel, an NFL Hall of Famer will be paired with a Champions pro.

Munoz, Ware and Anderson join NFL greats Warren Sapp, Ronde Barber, Dwight Freeney, Jimbo Covert, Andre Reed and Calvin Johnson, who have also committed to play.

The tournament will support cornerstone charities, including the Boca Raton Regional Hospital, Habitat for Humanity of Greater Palm Beach County, and First Tee Foundation. Tickets go on sale in November, when volunteers can also apply by going to www.jameshardieinvitational.com.

What you need to know about the 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Championship

Only the top 72 golfers advance to the postseason.

The 2024 Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs, the three-event postseason on the PGA Tour Champions, are here.

Unlike the PGA Tour’s postseason, the senior ciruit’s playoffs can, and often does, produce one winner at the season finale who’s different from the season-long Charles Schwab Cup race.

A year ago, Steve Stricker enjoyed such a dominant regular season that he was able to skip all three playoff events and still claim the season-long title.

This year, Ernie Els will head into the postseason in the No. 1 spot.

Who qualifies for the Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs?

The top 72 in the season-long race advance to the postseason. Es is No.1 with Steve Alker second, Stephen Ames third, Richard Green fourth and Stricker fifth. Jerry Kelly, who won the regular-season finale, climbed two spots into the top 10. Angel Cabrera, solo fourth at the season finale, had the biggest move up, as he jumped 15 spots to 54th. Lee Janzen, meanwhile, finished in the No. 72 spot, making him final man in the playoffs.

Pos. Player
1 Ernie Els
2 Steven Alker
3 Stephen Ames
4 Richard Green
5 Steve Stricker
6 K.J. Choi
7 Y.E. Yang
8 Paul Broadhurst
9 Jerry Kelly
10 Padraig Harrington
11 Doug Barron
12 Ricardo Gonzalez
13 Darren Clarke
14 Stewart Cink
15 Ken Tanigawa
16 Rocco Mediate
17 Alex Cejka
18 Retief Goosen
19 Bernhard Langer
20 Joe Durant
21 Greg Chalmers
22 Bob Estes
23 Thongchai Jaidee
24 Mark Hensby
25 Mike Weir
26 Shane Bertsch
27 Stuart Appleby
28 Thomas Bjørn
29 Ken Duke
30 Miguel Angel Jimenez
31 Scott Dunlap
32 Vijay Singh
33 Charlie Wi
34 Steve Allan
35 David Toms
36 Tim Petrovic
37 Paul Stankowski
38 Rod Pampling
39 Cameron Percy
40 Brian Gay
41 Kevin Sutherland
42 Robert Karlsson
43 Billy Andrade
44 Steve Flesch
45 Hiroyuki Fujita
46 Mario Tiziani
47 Matt Gogel
48 Michael Wright
49 Jason Caron
50 Justin Leonard
51 Chris DiMarco
52 Kenny Perry
53 Kirk Triplett
54 Angel Cabrera
55 Tim O’Neal
56 David Bransdon
57 David Duval
58 Dicky Pride
59 Paul Goydos
60 Marco Dawson
61 Scott Parel
62 Heath Slocum
63 John Senden
64 Harrison Frazar
65 Glen Day
66 Boo Weekley
67 Gene Sauers
68 Scott McCarron
69 Brett Quigley
70 Billy Mayfair
71 Woody Austin
72 Lee Janzen

Who climbed into playoffs, who dropped out?

Woody Austin was 73rd heading into the regular-season finale but climbed two spots to 71 and on the good side of the line. Arjun Atwal, on the other hand, was 72nd but dropped to 73rd. Austin tied for 17th at the SAS Championship while Atwal did not play the event. Those were the only ones to flip from one side of the line to other.

Where are the Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs tournaments?

The first two of the three playoff events use the Champions Tour’s typical 54-hole format. The finale is a 72-hole affair, the lone non-major on the Champions circuit to have 72 holes. The playoffs start with 72 players. The top 54 then advance with only the top 36 after two playoff events reaching the finale in Phoenix.

These are the tournaments:

Dominion Energy Charity Classic

The Country Club of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia

Oct. 18-20

Field size: 72

Defending champion: Harrison Frazar

Simmons Bank Championship

Pleasant Valley Country Club, Little Rock, Arkansas

Oct. 25-27

Field size: 54

Defending champion: Padraig Harrington

Charles Schwab Cup Championship

Phoenix Country Club, Phoenix

Nov. 12-15

Field size: 36

Defending champion: Steven Alker

Past Charles Schwab Cup champions

Year Winner
2023 Steve Stricker
2022 Steven Alker
2020-21
Bernhard Langer
2019 Scott McCarron
2018
Bernhard Langer
2017
Kevin Sutherland
2016
Bernhard Langer
2015
Bernhard Langer
2014
Bernhard Langer
2013 Kenny Perry
2012 Tom Lehman
2011 Tom Lehman
2010
Bernhard Langer
2009 Loren Roberts
2008 Jay Haas
2007 Loren Roberts
2006 Jay Haas
2005 Tom Watson
2004 Hale Irwin
2003 Tom Watson
2002 Hale Irwin
2001 Allen Doyle

 

Jerry Kelly survives bogey on 18th hole to win SAS Championship in PGA Tour Champions regular-season finale

Kelly now has 12 PGA Tour Champions wins.

Jerry Kelly led by two with two holes to go Sunday at the 2024 SAS Championship in Cary, North Carolina. And that’s when things got interesting.

Kelly three-putted for bogey on the 18th hole at Prestonwood Country Club, his only bogey of his final round, to shoot 5-under 67 and fall into a tie for the lead with overnight leader Padraig Harrington, who had moments before birdied the 17th.

With both golfers at 13 under, Harrington then flew his second on 18 from the right rough to the back left of the green. He chipped his third about eight feet past the hole, and with Kelly watching nearby, Harrington caught the edge of the cup but it lipped out for a closing bogey to give Kelly a one-shot victory.

It’s Kelly’s 12th PGA Tour Champions win and his first on the senior circuit since winning three times in 2022.

“I mean, it’s a long time coming,” he told Golf Channel a few minutes after clinching the win. “You wonder if you’re ever going to do it again when the injuries start piling up.”

Harrington, who closed in 71, was aiming for his third win in 2024. His runner-up finish was his sixth top 10 in 12 outings on the Champions tour.

Shane Bertsch was solo third at 10 under. Angel Cabrera was solo fourth, his best finish since returning to the Champions tour, at 9 under. Steven Alker tied for fifth at 8 under alongside Matt Gogel.

This was the final regular-season event on the senior circuit. Next up: the three-event Charles Schwab Cup Playoffs. Ernie Els shot 73-74 over the weekend to finish T-45 but he’ll head into the playoffs in the No. 1 spot in the points race.

The top 72 players in the Charles Schwab Cup standings have advanced for a chance to play for the season-long title. Up first is the Dominion Energy Charity Classic in Richmond, Virginia, next week. Kelly told Golf Channel that despite moving up to ninth in the points after his win, he’s planning to skip the event.

Rocco Mediate tops Bob Estes in playoff at 2024 Constellation Furyk & Friends for first victory since 2019

“I am onto something and I am staying with it and I’m trusting it out there.”

It’s been 99 starts since Rocco Mediate’s last win on the PGA Tour Champions.

That drought is now over.

Mediate parred the par-4 18th hole on the second playoff hole while Bob Estes bogeyed it win the 2024 Constellation Furyk & Friends, Mediate’s first victory on the senior circuit since 2019.

Mediate, 61, has won a combination of 10 PGA Tour and PGA Tour Champions titles in his 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s and now his 60s.

Greg Chalmers came in solo third. Retief Goosen, whose 5-under 67 tied for low round of the day, finished fourth alongside five others.

Series points leader Ernie Els tied for 34th.

The PGA Tour Champions heads to the SAS Championship next week, which is the regular-season finale before the three-event Charles Schwab Cup playoffs.

Eric Axley makes an albatross in Monday qualifying to earn spot in Furyk & Friends

Axley holed out from the fairway on the 17th hole at TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley.

Eric Axley, among the 50 golfers entered in the Monday qualifier for the PGA Tour Champions event this week, is moving into the main field after one of golf’s rarest shots.

He’s one of three moving on after he shot a 66 to finish a shot behind Kris Blanks. Garrett Willis shot 67 to be the third golfer to get into the field at the 2024 Constellation Furyk & Friends at Timuquana Country Club in Jacksonville, Florida.

Axley, though, has the best story to tell. He was 3 under with just two holes left and on the outside looking in before he made some magic happen, holing out from the fairway for a 2 on the par-5 17th hole, a 499-yard par 5 on the Dye’s Valley course at TPC Sawgrass.

That’s right, he made an albatross to jump a handful of golfers and secure a spot this week.

Having just turned 50 in April, Axley has only played in four senior circuit events this summer. He has one PGA Tour victory, the 2006 Valero Texas Open, making him one of 16 left-handers to win on the PGA Tour. He also has two Korn Ferry Tour wins.

The odds of making what’s also known as a double eagle are about 6-million-to-1 for the average golfer and about a million-to-one for a professional.

Axley competed in Q School last November but came up short in his bid for full status on the Champions tour in 2024.

Steve Stricker wins 2024 Sanford International in a playoff, makes it a double three-peat

No one has ever three-peated on the PGA Tour and the PGA Tour Champions. Until now.

No one has ever three-peated on both the PGA Tour and the PGA Tour Champions. Until now.

Steve Stricker became a notable first Sunday with his third straight victory in the 2024 Sanford International. Coupled with his three straight wins at the John Deere Classic from 2009 to 2011, and he now holds a unique place in the PGA Tour history books.

Stricker started the final round at at Minnehaha Country Club in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, three shots back of the lead of Michael Wright.

Stricker was up two shots late but he bogeyed the par-4 closing hole and then watched Richard Green birdie the last and so off to a playoff they went.

On the fourth extra hole, Stricker’s approach rolled up and hit the flagstick.

Stricker shot 67-68-67 for the week. The victory was his fourth in the seven-year history of the tournament and his 18th Champions win. He won 12 times on the PGA Tour.

Making a Sunday charge but coming up just short was Bernhard Langer. He shot a Sunday 67 to finish at 7 under. Just a week ago, he lost in a playoff, so this gives him consecutive runner-up finishes. Langer tied for second along with Green. Ernie Els, the leader in the Charles Schwab Cup points, also tied for third at 7 under.

Steven Alker and Wright tied for fifth at 6 under. Wright, 50 and a PGA Tour Champions rookie, was one of five to earn his  way on tour this season via Q school last November, was the 36-hole leader but after rounds of 67 and 65.

Bernhard Langer shoots age or better twice but falls to Y.E. Yang in Ascension Charity Classic

Langer comes up just short of winning for 47th time on PGA Tour Champions.

There was a lot to unpack from the final round of the 2024 Ascension Charity Classic.

The tournament went to a playoff Sunday at Norwood Hills Country Club in St. Louis, with Y.E. Yang seeking his first PGA Tour Champions victory. His playoff foe? None other than the guy with the most wins all time on the senior circuit, Bernhard Langer.

Now 67, Langer shot his age in Saturday’s third round and then beat his age by three shots Sunday with a 64. Those rounds were the 16th and 17th time he’s shot his age or better in his career.

His remarkable return from tearing his left Achilles tendon while playing pickleball on Feb. 1, however, came up just short, as Yang birdied the first playoff hole to claim the title.

“This week I think very special,” said Yang, who beat Tiger Woods in the 2009 PGA Championship and who was making his 72nd career Champions tour start.

As for Langer, he continues to battle through rehab as he returns to tournament play, and he admits his leg is not back to 100 percent.

“No. I wish it was. You know, I’m in the middle of it so I don’t see a lot of improvement,” he said Sunday. “If I look back two months, yeah, I’m definitely walking better than I did two months ago. So there is some improvement, but it’s slow. It’s going to continue to take probably five more months or something like that. That’s what I’m told. I would like to have it happen sooner, but it’s not.”

Langer, who has a PGA Tour Champions-best 46 wins, now has 42 second-place finishes.

In the latest Charles Schwab Cup standings, Yang is up to sixth. The top five:

  • Ernie Els
  • Stephen Ames
  • Steven Alker
  • Richard Green
  • K.J. Choi

There are four regular-season events left before the three-tournament playoffs.

Famed caddie Mike “Fluff” Cowan undergoes surgery, but says he’s not done yet

“I hope I have another year or two in me.”

Mike “Fluff” Cowan had surgery on his left hip on Tuesday and is recovering at home, using a walker to get around the house for now.

“I ignored it and tried to work my way through it but it was time,” he said of the surgery.

Eventually, it became clear that he had to go under the knife. Fluff, 76, ended a 25-year run as caddie for Jim Furyk in May and joined C.T. Pan on the PGA Tour but it was a short-lived arrangement.

“To summarize it,” Fluff said, “it didn’t work out.”

Fortunately, Furyk hadn’t hired a permanent replacement and had been relying on his son, Tanner, who was ready to enjoy his own summer adventures before returning to college. Fluff reunited with Furyk in late June at the Dick’s Open on PGA Tour Champions.

Fluff’s hip already was bothering him and he suffered through the U.S. Senior Open but only lasted one day at the Kaulig Companies Championship in Akron, Ohio.

“He was hobbling and in a lot of pain and he went home,” Furyk said. “He had to bite the bullet and it was inevitable that he had to get it done.”

On June 2, at the RBC Canadian Open, Fluff’s final event on the bag for Pan, he slipped on the wet grass during the fourth round and cut his hand and was replaced first by a fan and then by another caddie. At first, Fluff thought the hip injury was unrelated to the fall but now he’s not so sure.

“In my head I don’t think it did,” he said, “but I have no way of knowing.”

Ricky Winn, a longtime caddie who has bumped around between bags and is friendly with Fluff, has been filling in on Furyk’s bag.

Fluff also has worked for Peter Jacobsen and Tiger Woods during a career spanning nearly 50 years during which he became as famous and recognizable with his fluffy moustache as some of the players.

Fluff has a follow up appointment scheduled for Sept. 11. His goal is to be mobile enough to be Furyk’s cart driver at the Presidents Cup in Montreal, Sept. 27-29.

“Who knows? It’s a process and it’s just begun,” said Fluff when asked when he might be back by Furyk’s side. “I’m hoping to be able to work the Furyk & Friends event in October (4-6).”

Furyk has battled his own myriad of injuries, which has limited him to 11 starts on the Champions Tour this season. Hopefully, they can both get healthy enough for another successful run that has already included the 2003 U.S. Open, a 58 and a 59 and nearly 20 victories between the two tours.

“I’m still working for Jim but I can’t work,” Fluff said. “I hope I have another year or two in me.”