Keegan Bradley’s whirlwind summer is only ramping up — as are the Ryder Cup questions

While well-known as a major champion, Bradley’s career has experienced a meteoric rise this summer.

Forgive Keegan Bradley if he feels his life has been a whirlwind this summer.

Just two months ago, the Jupiter, Florida, resident’s career had seemingly plateaued — his world ranking fluctuating from 14 to 21 in the last year. He had become known for the heart-wrenching scene in “Full Swing” when cameras were in his home as he received the crushing news from captain Zach Johnson he had not been chosen for the 2023 U.S. Ryder Cup team.

That, now, must feel like a lifetime ago for the Vermont native. Since, Bradley was a stunning choice to captain the 2025 Ryder Cup team after many believed Tiger Woods would accept the offer, was named an assistant for the 2024 Presidents Cup at Royal Montreal, became the last man to qualify for the BMW Championship (which earned him a spot in the 2025 signature events) and on Sunday won the BMW, his seventh title on the PGA Tour in 16 years.

That win in Castle Rock, Colo., gives Bradley a real shot at the Tour Championship and $25 million bonus, moving from No. 50 to No. 4 in the FedEx Cup standings.

This is the story Netflix needs to capture.

“I can’t even wrap my head around it,” Bradley said after winning the BMW, and $3.6 million prize money, by one shot over Sam Burns, Ludvig Aberg and Adam Scott.

Keegan Bradley celebrates after a birdie putt on the 18th hole during the first round of the BMW Championship golf tournament at Castle Pines Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports

While well-known as a major champion and a two-time member of the U.S. Ryder Cup team, Bradley’s fame and career still have taken a Tim Walz-like meteoric rise this summer.

Bradley, 38, now faces a 13-month grind in which he remains a full-time member of the PGA Tour while adding his captaincy duties, especially for the Ryder Cup. That should mean plenty of conversations with Johnson, who last year was forced to multi-task his duties as captain while playing 19 Tour events between January and heading to Rome for the competition at Marco Simone.

Johnson, though, is 10 years older than Bradley and in a different spot in his professional career. So much so that Bradley is not eliminated from being a part of that Presidents Cup team next month in which he is an assistant captain or even the Ryder Cup team next year as a player-captain.

“I don’t know where that’s going to go, but I’m happy to do whatever … play whatever role they want me to play,” Bradley said. “I think being the Ryder Cup captain has put me into this category of sort of player when they haven’t really had a Ryder Cup captain that’s been playing full-time on the Tour. One of my goals was to make that Presidents Cup team.

“I hope I didn’t throw a huge wrench in everybody’s plans, but I’m proud to be in consideration.”

The last Ryder Cup-playing captain for either side was Arnold Palmer in 1963. And that went pretty well with the U.S. dominating Great Britain, 23-9, and Palmer unbeaten in four matches with three wins and a halve.

If he is on the team, Bradley made it clear it would have to be as one of the six automatic qualifiers.

“It’s going to be really hard for me to make that team, but if I make the team, I’ll play,” Bradley said. “I don’t see myself being a captain’s pick. But I’ll be proud to just be the captain.”

2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Keegan Bradley walks the first fairway during the second round of the 2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind. (Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)

LIV Golf adds scrutiny to job

Being a Ryder Cup captain nowadays comes with more scrutiny, thanks to the formation of LIV Golf.

Ask Johnson, who last year was under the microscope as the first Ryder Cup captain forced to deal with the LIV Golf dilemma. Johnson was for the most part defensive when asked how LIV golfers fit into the equation, especially when asked about Jupiter’s Brooks Koepka, who won the PGA Championship and was runner-up at the Masters in 2023.

Johnson downplayed Koepka’s strong Masters saying, “It’s one week,” a comment on which he surely would liked to have had a mulligan. That was before Koepka won his fifth major at the PGA Championship. Johnson then stumbled around on the topic, raising the question of “chemistry” and saying he’d have a difficult time evaluating LIV golfers because he did not see LIV events.

If the Ryder Cup were this year, we would be having the same conversations about Bryson DeChambeau.

Eventually, Johnson did the right thing and made Koepka one of his six captain’s picks. Koepka was the lone LIV golfer who deserved a spot on the team.

And 13 months out, Bradley already is facing the questions.

“The only weird area is the LIV guys, what they do and where they fall on the list,” Bradley said. “We’re going to have to really get with the captains, get with the team that’s going to be there and figure that out. But I think the system works.

“I’m going to have the best 12 players. So we’ll make sure if some of those guys that we think might make the team, we’ll make sure that they are a member.”

Tom D’Angelo is a senior sports columnist and golf reporter for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at tdangelo@pbpost.com.

Will the PGA Tour regularly return to Denver? (And will Peyton Manning help the cause?)

Golfweek also has learned that Cherry Hills is seeking to bring a significant championship there.

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — Blue skies, gentle breezes, and balmy temperatures made for a glorious week of golf in the Colorado Rockies. Fan support at the BMW Championship? It was off the charts. Some of the crowds on pro-am day at Castle Pines Golf Club looked as if Tiger Woods was approaching the green even if it was actually Tommy Fleetwood.

“Denver showed out great,” said hometown hero Wyndham Clark, the 2023 U.S. Open champion. “I would love for us to come back at least every few years or every other year or every year. It would be great to be able to come back here. I hope we do, and hopefully that happens.”

Showed out, they did. Ticket sales, with crowds of upwards of 35,000 a day, sold out for three of the four rounds, and it was the earliest sell-out for weekend tickets in BMW Championship history. Hospitality sold out in record time too. More than twice the number of volunteers that were needed had signed up within two days.

More: Wyndham Clark’s long winding road to playing a home game at the BMW Championship

Ten years of pent-up demand will do that – the PGA Tour was last in the Mile High City in 2014 at Cherry Hills for that year’s edition of the BMW – but Denver is a city that lives for its sporting events.

Nearly two decades had passed since the state’s only regular Tour event, The International, ceased to exist at Castle Pines after a 21-year run. It was a beloved event with its unique modified Stableford scoring format. Pros raved about the milkshakes and the club’s hospitality. Members, dressed in green jackets, modeled their event as “the Masters of the West.”

Fortunately, the absence of this popular summer staple had been lessened by an incredible run of high-profile events visiting the Rockies. The Broadmoor in nearby Colorado Springs hosted U.S. Senior and Women’s Opens. Colorado Golf Club in Parker, Colorado, approximately 25 minutes southeast of Denver, was the venue for the 2010 Senior PGA Championship and the setting for the 2013 Solheim Cup. In addition to the BMW, Cherry Hills hosted the 2012 and 2023 U.S. Amateur, which produced record crowds.

“But it was what we had out here for Tuesday for the practice rounds,” said George Solich, the president and chairman of Castle Pines.

When Solich was asked if he could envision Castle Pines hosting an event more regularly than once every 10 years, he smiled and said, “We don’t want to call the victory before the clock runs out. And so I think it’s important that we really look at this week and see how the players like it, see how the sponsors like it, and see how the PGA Tour likes it. What are some of the things we can do better? But you know, short answer is we would love to have PGA Tour golf here more often.”

More: The best public-access and private golf courses in Colorado, ranked

Billy Horschel, who won the 2014 BMW, suggests that Castle Pines and Cherry Hills rotate hosting the Tour and make a play for being in the BMW’s rota, which already is slated to bounce to Caves Valley near Baltimore next year, Bellerive in St. Louis in 2026 and Liberty National in Jersey City, New Jersey in 2027. (The BMW hasn’t been held at the same venue in consecutive years since 2011.)

An effort is underway to lure prominent events back to Cherry Hills. A source at the Tour tells Golfweek that club member Peyton Manning has been enlisted to assist efforts. Cherry Hills officials attended the U.S. Amateur at Hazeltine two weeks ago to meet with members of the USGA.

Golfweek also has learned that Cherry Hills is seeking to bring a significant championship there and eyeing 2035, which would be the 75th anniversary of Arnold Palmer’s iconic victory there. That Open is already spoken for with anchor site Pinehurst No. 2, but anniversaries such as these do resonate with the USGA and perhaps Pinehurst, which has ’29, ’41 and ’47 on the books would agree to move dates. Conversations with the PGA of America about a PGA Championship, which Cherry Hills hosted in 1941 and 1985, and a Ryder Cup are under consideration too.

In pictures: Peyton Manning’s golf life

Castle Pines passed its test from an operational standpoint and shouldn’t have to wait another decade for the Tour’s return.

“My last comment to the Tour was let’s sit on it a little bit and then go talk about what the art of the possible is,” Solich said.

Either Cherry Hills or Castle Pines would be a worthy Presidents Cup site but the first open date for a home venue? 2034. That would be another decade from now. Denver — and Colorado for that matter — deserves better.

2024 BMW Championship prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at Castle Pines

Bradley making the BMW field turned out to be worth $3.6 million.

What a week it was for Keegan Bradley in Colorado.

He was the last man in the 50-player field at the 2024 BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club. He’s leaving with the trophy.

Bradley secured his seventh PGA Tour victory Sunday, shooting even-par 72 to win by one shots over Ludvig Aberg, Adam Scott and Sam Burns. It’s Bradley’s first win since the 2023 Travelers Championship and is a big key for him moving forward if he wants to earn a spot on the 2024 U.S. Presidents Cup team, where he is already an assistant captain.

For his win, Bradley will take home $3.6 million from the $20 million purse. And he’s not the only one going home with a lot of money.

Here’s a look at how much each of the players in the 50-man field with no cut earned at Castle Pines.

Prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Keegan Bradley -12 $3,600,000
T2 Sam Burns -11 $1,503,333
T2 Ludvig Aberg -11 $1,503,333
T2 Adam Scott -11 $1,503,333
T5 Cam Davis -8 $728,750
T5 Tommy Fleetwood -8 $728,750
T5 Si Woo Kim -8 $728,750
T5 Xander Schauffele -8 $728,750
T9 Chris Kirk -7 $560,000
T9 Alex Noren -7 $560,000
T11 Rory McIlroy -6 $480,333
T11 Sungjae Im -6 $480,333
T13 Tony Finau -5 $344,111
T13 Shane Lowry -5 $344,111
T13 Byeong Hun An -5 $344,111
T13 Will Zalatoris -5 $344,111
T13 Sepp Straka -5 $344,111
T13 Tom Hoge -5 $344,111
T13 Patrick Cantlay -5 $344,111
T13 Taylor Pendrith -5 $344,111
T13 Wyndham Clark -5 $344,111
T22 Billy Horschel -4 $229,000
T22 Russell Henley -4 $229,000
T22 Corey Conners -4 $229,000
25 Brian Harman -3 $197,000
T26 Denny McCarthy -2 $177,500
T26 Viktor Hovland -2 $177,500
T28 Matt Fitzpatrick -1 $160,000
T28 Max Greyserman -1 $160,000
T28 Collin Morikawa -1 $160,000
T31 Thomas Detry E $142,500
T31 Nick Dunlap E $142,500
T33 Max Homa 1 $119,667
T33 Matthieu Pavon 1 $119,667
T33 Christiaan Bezuidenhout 1 $119,667
T33 Jason Day 1 $119,667
T33 Scottie Scheffler 1 $119,667
T33 J.T. Poston 1 $119,667
T39 Justin Thomas 2 $102,000
T39 Stephan Jaeger 2 $102,000
T41 Davis Thompson 3 $94,000
T41 Adam Hadwin 3 $94,000
T43 Aaron Rai 4 $86,000
T43 Cameron Young 4 $86,000
45 Akshay Bhatia 5 $80,000
T46 Eric Cole 7 $74,000
T46 Austin Eckroat 7 $74,000
48 Sahith Theegala 11 $70,000
Robert MacIntyre WD
Hideki Matsuyama WD

 

Keegan Bradley goes from last man in the field to winner of the 2024 BMW Championship

The ’25 U.S. Ryder Cup captain added intrigue to the idea that he could be the first American playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963.

The last man into the field at the BMW Championship was the last man standing when it was all said and done on Sunday.

Keegan Bradley shot a final-round even-par 72 at Castle Pines Golf Club to win his seventh career PGA Tour title in Castle Rock, Colorado. Sam Burns closed in 7-under 65, the low round of the day, to finish second along with Ludvig Aberg (71) and Adam Scott (72), one stroke back.

“Oh, man, I was shaking over that last putt,” Bradley said. “We did it. It was a battle all day.”

Bradley called last Sunday’s final round of the FedEx St. Jude Championship “one of the toughest afternoons of my PGA Tour career,” after sneaking into the BMW’s field as the 50th and final player to qualify for the second leg of the playoffs. After struggling to a T-59 finish in the first leg of the playoffs, he returned to his Memphis hotel room, packed his bags and paced back and forth hitting refresh of the scores on his phone as he waited for his flight home in what he described as “a state of shock” that he wasn’t going to get to play in the BMW, his favorite tournament, which he’d never missed during his 14-year career on Tour. Thanks to Tom Kim’s 6-6-6 finish, Bradley finished 17 points ahead of Kim for the 50th spot.

“It just shows you why you have to grind it out every week because you never know how fast it can switch,” he said. “I had to have a lot of magical things happen for me to just play in this tournament, and when I got here, I was so grateful just to be here. I played with a real sense of calm all week, which is not the norm for me.” He added: “Now I go to Atlanta with a chance to win the FedExCup. I can’t believe it.”

Bradley, who won the BMW in 2018, took the title for the second time, and won for the first time with his father, Mark, a PGA professional in attendance.

Bradley opened with 66 to take the lead and trailed Scott by three strokes at the midway point after a 68. Bradley shot a roller-coaster ride 2-under 70 on Saturday with eight birdies mixed with six bogeys. He sank a 9-foot birdie putt at 18 and pumped his fist as he grabbed the 54-hole lead.

On Sunday, he wedged from 94 yards to 3 feet at the first for a birdie but lost his solo lead as Scott tied him with an eagle. But Scott, who was looking to end more than a four-year winless stretch, made three bogeys in a row beginning at the 10th to give Bradley as big as a three-stroke cushion. Bradley reeled off 13 straight pars until making a bogey at No. 15. With his lead cut to one, Bradley lofted his second shot from 227 yards over the front green side bunker at the par-5 17th to 16 feet and made birdie.

“I was a little jacked up,” Bradley said of his 5-iron into the thin mountain air. “One of the best shots of my life.”

The birdie restored his lead to two and made a three-putt bogey at the last uneventful in the final accounting. He finished with a 72-hole aggregate of 12-under 276 and vaulted to fourth in the playoffs heading into next week’s Tour Championship.

Bradley, who was named the 2025 U.S. Ryder Cup captain in July, added intrigue to the idea that he could be the first American playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963.

“To be named Ryder Cup captain and still be a full-time player is strange. I don’t know anyone knows how to handle this situation,” Bradley said. “So I’m doing the best I can. The only thing I can keep doing is play my best golf and maybe play my way on to some of these teams.”

Bradley, who was recently named an assistant captain for the U.S. Presidents Cup team in September, also made a convincing case for one of six captain’s picks to the biennial team competition scheduled for Montreal.

“I hope I didn’t throw a huge wrench in everybody’s plans, but I’m proud to be in consideration,” he said.

In the tournament within a tournament, Bradley, Scott, Tommy Fleetwood and Chris Kirk moved into the top 30 in the season-long FedEx Cup points standings and advanced to the FedEx Cup finale next week in Atlanta at East Lake Golf Club. In doing so, Brian Harman, Jason Day, Davis Thompson and Denny McCarthy were bumped out and their playoffs are over. Justin Thomas was the Bubble Boy at No. 30, flipping to the right side of the cutline by 30 points when Harman double-bogeyed the 18th hole to fall to 31st.

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler shot 72 on Sunday and finished T-33 but held on to the top spot in the FedEx Cup, which means for the third straight year he’ll begin at 10 under in next week’s staggered start and with a lead ranging from two strokes better than Xander Schauffele to four better than Bradley and as many as 10 better than Thomas.

“Scottie starting ahead,” Burns said. “He doesn’t need any more help than how good he already is.”

Watch: Rules official determines Matt Fitzpatrick’s driver isn’t damaged enough to be replaced

“This is outrageous, it’s an absolute disgrace.”

Matt Fitzpatrick wasn’t allowed to replace his cracked driver for the last 10 holes of the final round of the BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club on Sunday after a PGA Tour rules official determined the damage didn’t qualify as significant.

“This is outrageous, it’s an absolute disgrace,” said Fitzpatrick.

Fitzpatrick called for a ruling on the eighth tee after he detected a crack in the middle of the face of his driver. Model Local Rule G-9 in the U.S. Golf Association’s Rules of Golf states a club isn’t replaceable solely because of a crack. A PGA Tour rules official determined that Fitzpatrick couldn’t replace the club due to a lack of significant damage.

Fitzpatrick, who entered the week at No. 36 in the FedEx Cup standings, didn’t agree and voiced his disgust.

“It has to be significant, surely,” Fitzpatrick said.

“They made the rule so it had to be folding in on its own,” the first rules official said.

“Terrible rule,” Kevin Kisner said on NBC. “This is a no-brainer.”

The rules official, speaking to a colleague via walkie-talkie noted he could see the crack and feel it with his fingernail.

“Not enough in my opinion looking at it to justify that,” he said. “I can feel it with my nail, about a half an inch crack right in the center of the face.”

The local rule cited doesn’t cover Fitzpatrick’s damage. Another rules official cited a previous situation with Seung Yul Noh as precedent for not allowing Fitzpatrick to swap the club out with one of the two drivers in his locker.

“There’s an obvious crack there that is causing a defect to the ball flight,” Fitzpatrick said.

“We have said no to something worse than this,” the rules official said, who took the club to chief referee Stephen Cox.

“So, I’m going to have to hit my 3-wood the rest of the day is what you’re telling me?” Fitzpatrick said.

When told the final verdict, Fitzpatrick uttered, “this is an absolute joke.”

Cox gave a detailed explanation of why Fitzpatrick’s request to change out his driver was denied.

“We on the PGA Tour in very similar to other major golf tours around the world have a slightly stricter guideline in terms of when a player is permitted to take a damaged club out of play, and that club needs to be significantly damaged,” he said. “In our assessment, not only with the first official but also a couple of others including myself, that threshold of being significantly damaged hadn’t been significant met. Although there was a small crack in the face, there was no separation in the metals, and on that basis, that threshold wasn’t met, so his only choice in that case was to continue using that club.

“Now, if that club were to get worse, then we would obviously continue to reassess, and at that point he may have been able to have taken it out, but in his case, I think he chose not to continue to use it and proceeded with his 3-wood from then on.”

Watch: Rory McIlroy takes shoes off, hits laser with feet in creek after snapping driver at BMW Championship

It was a wild two-shot sequence for McIlroy.

It was a wild two-shot sequence for Rory McIlroy on Sunday. One you’ll have to see to believe.

The World No. 3 hit a wayward tee shot on the par-4 ninth during the final round of the 2024 BMW Championship, and his ball came to rest on the bank just above a creek that meanders down the right side of the fairway. As McIlroy leaned on his driver to bend and grab his tee, his shaft snapped.

Down a club, McIlroy got to his ball and began to take off his shoes and then socks. He stepped in the creek and took a few different practice swings while adjusting his feet in the water and then on and around some rocks. He then took a swing, and what would you know, he hit a laser than landed right over the flag.

The birdie putt came up just a couple rolls short, leaving him with an easy par.

Watch: Ludvig Aberg gets a bloody nose, buries a 53-foot bomb at 2024 BMW Championship

Who said golfers never bleed?

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — U2 once recorded the album “Under a Blood Red Sky” not far from Castle Pines Golf Club at famed Red Rocks. Instead of Sunday, Bloody, Sunday, it was Saturday, bloody, Saturday for Ludvig Aberg at the BMW Championship.

The Swede got a bloody nose from the high altitude but he didn’t let it bother him. Located east of the Rocky Mountains, Denver is known as the Mile High City because its elevation is exactly one mile or 5,280 feet above sea level. Castle Pines is even higher, reaching a peak of 6,305 feet. The thin, mountain air gave Aberg a nose bleed on the first hole, but he wiped it away and then stepped up and buried a 53-foot birdie putt at the par 5 and smiled with glee.

Who said golfers never bleed?

Robert MacIntyre withdraws from 2024 BMW Championship

The Scotsman, who entered the week at No. 12 in the FedEx Cup, was making his debut at the BMW Championship.

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — Robert MacIntyre withdrew from the third round after playing nine holes at Castle Pines Golf Club on Saturday, citing a lower back injury. He was 2-over par for the day and 1-over for the tournament at the time.

The Scotsman was making his debut at the BMW Championship, the second leg of the FedEx Cup playoffs. He entered the week at No. 12 in the FedEx Cup season-long point standings and should be safe to advance to the Tour Championship next week at East Lake in Atlanta.

MacIntyre notched his first PGA Tour title at the RBC Canadian Open in June and then won his national title last month with a 72nd-hole birdie to capture the Genesis Scottish Open. He’s improved from No. 56 at the end of last year to a career-best ranking of No. 15 in the Official World Golf Ranking entering this week.

BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times

The 28-year-old MacIntyre opened with rounds of 72-71 and was paired with Tony Finau in Saturday’s third round. He’s the second player in the 50-man field to withdraw this week, following Hideki Matsuyama, who pulled out with a lower back injury as well before he began his second round.

The story of George and Duffy Solich, the two newest members of the Caddie Hall of Fame

George and Duffy Solich are both graduates of the Evans Scholars program at the University of Colorado.

CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — In 1981, when Castle Pines Golf Club was opening, Jack Nicklaus, who designed the course, loaned golf professional Keith Schneider from his home club at Muirfield Golf Club. All these years later, Schneider’s still on permanent loan at Castle Pines, rising to the role of general manager.

But 43 years ago, Schneider had a real problem on his hands — he needed 20-25 caddies for opening day and time was running out. In a moment of great ingenuity, he reached out to the president of the Evans Scholar house at the University of Colorado and made him an offer he couldn’t refuse: he’d send a bus to pick up the caddies, pay them handsomely and on the ride home he’d supply a keg.

“The keg was the key,” Schneider said.

BMW Championship: Leaderboard | Photos | Tee times

One of the caddies who signed up was George Solich, then a Buffalo sophomore, who recalled there wasn’t even a clubhouse at Castle Pines, just a trailer. Forty-three years later, Solich, a 1983 Colorado Evans Scholar graduate, is the chairman and president at Castle Pines. On Wednesday, Solich and his older brother Duffy, the BMW Championship tournament chairman, were inducted into the Caddie Hall of Fame in recognition of their time spent caddying as young men and their dedication to youth caddie programs.

“Caddying changed our lives,” George said. “Getting the Evans Scholarship changed our lives.”

George Solich (left) and older brother Duffy are both graduates of the Evans Scholars program at the University of Colorado. (Charles Cherney/WGA)

“Caddying has formed who I am, and it provides a great roadmap of service, hard work, trust, patience, teamwork and integrity,” Duffy said.

The brothers, who became very successful in the oil and gas business, both are major supporters of the Evans Scholarship and are the founders of the Solich Caddie & Leadership Academy, as well as The Broadmoor Caddie & Leadership Academy, which together have produced 52 Evans Scholars.

George credited his brother, who began caddying two years before him, for dragging him to the caddie yard at the Broadmoor Resort in their hometown of Colorado Springs when he was 12 years old, and he worked as a caddie there until age 21. At 14, the caddie master pointed at him and three other caddies and said, “Come with me.”

“I thought we were in trouble,” George recalled. “But he told us we were going to be caddying for someone very special. I’m thinking, who am I caddying for, John Wayne?”

It turned out he carried the bag of Jack Vickers that day, who would go on to be the visionary founder of Castle Pines. George replaced him as the president and chairman after he died in November of 2018, and the club hasn’t skipped a beat.

“If George sets his mind to do something, you can bet your life he will get it done bigger and better than it’s ever been done before. He is as big a visionary as anyone I’ve ever met in golf,” said Jim Nantz, who served as the emcee of a dinner tribute to the International during which the Solich brothers received their awards. “His vision for Castle Pines was always grand and glorious – all the while paying a deep homage to its founder, Jack Vickers. I could not be more impressed.”

George has been instrumental in working with the Western Golf Association to bring the Tour to the Mile High City before. In 2014, he was the general chairman of the BMW Championship at Cherry Hills, which raised a then-record $3.5 million for the Evans Caddie Scholarship and was named the Tour’s Tournament of the Year.

“He was the visionary, the leader and the guy who made it happen,” said Ed Mate, executive director of the Colorado Golf Association. “He made it very clear at the very first meeting at Cherry Hills Country Club that this will be the best BMW Championship ever and how we are going to define that is very simple: we’re going to raise more money for the Evans Scholars Foundation than ever has been raised in the history of the tournament.”

Duffy (left) and George Solich joined the likes of Fluff Cowan, Jim “Bones” Mackay, Joe LaCava and Bill Murray as members of the Caddie Hall of Fame during a ceremony on Wednesday at Castle Pines Golf Club. (Charles Cherney/WGA)

The Solich brothers’ greatest contribution may be in the caddie program they started in 2012 at CommonGround Golf Course, a public course owned by the CGA in Aurora. After reading an article about the Sankaty Head caddie program in Massachusetts, George had an epiphany that Denver needed its own version. The CGA wanted help from the Soliches to build a new headquarters but he sent a copy of the article to Mate and said, “We don’t need buildings, we need programs.” Mate’s response: give me a month. He returned with a business plan to build the academy. Each of the caddies receives a grant for the summer and is taught to be a caddie and required to attend classes on leadership and financial literacy among other subjects.

“We’ve been teaching from the book of cowboy. We teach them the 10 principles of the Code of the West and make them come up with their 11th code,” George said. “We blueprinted it and now we have six academies on the Front Range and we’re in four states, including Arizona, Wisconsin and California.”

Their passion is only matched by their generosity. Todd Gervasini, a WGA officer, recounted how the Solich brothers agreed to help endow an Evans Scholar from Castle Pines. Given that Evans Scholarships are for full tuition and housing for the caddies who earn them, it’s estimated that the scholarship is worth an average of more than $125,000 if renewed for four years. (Colorado boasts 57 current Evans Scholars and 548 alumni.) George and Duffy put up $250,000 if the membership would step forward and match it for a total of $500,000.

“I sent an email out to 35 guys who love George and Duffy and my phone started blowing up. Every single guy said, ‘What do you need?’ ” recalled Gervasini. “I was done about 30 minutes later, I just couldn’t answer them all back fast enough, and I knew George and Duffy would want it to be in Castle Pines’ name, not their name. So it’s the Castle Pines Endowed Scholarship.”

The Caddie Hall of Fame is the first of two induction ceremonies this year for George, who is slated to join the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame in December as part of a class that includes Wyndham Clark and Jennifer Kupcho.

“I’ve never met anybody more passionate than George Solich,” Mate said. “There’s a fire burning in him that is a rare thing. You pair that generosity and a desire to pay it forward and you have an amazing combination.”

BMW Championship 2024 Saturday tee times, PGA Tour pairings and how to watch

Everything you need to know for the third round of the BMW Championship.

On Thursday, Keegan Bradley shot a 66 to set the course record held at Castle Pines, but the record didn’t even last 24 hours as Adam Scott torched Jack’s handiwork to the tune of 9-under 63 on Friday, pushing into the lead.

The two will be paired in the final group of Saturday’s third round of the 2024 BMW Championship, with the top 30 qualifying for next week’s Tour Championship in Atlanta.

Castle Pines is a par-72 track measuring 8,130 yards, the longest course in PGA Tour history.

The purse at the BMW Championship is $20 million with $3.6 million going to the winner. The champion will also earn 2,000 FedEx Cup points.

BMW: Photos | Leaderboard

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the third round of the BMW Championship. All times listed are ET.

Saturday tee times

How to watch, listen

ESPN+ is the exclusive home of PGA Tour Live. You can also watch the 3M Open on Golf Channel free on Fubo. All times ET.

Saturday, Aug. 24th

Golf Channel/Peacock: 1-3 p.m

NBC: 3-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6 p.m

ESPN+: 9 a.m.-6 p.m

Sunday, Aug. 25th

Golf Channel/Peacock: 12-2 p.m

NBC: 2-6 p.m.

Sirius XM: 1-6 p.m

ESPN+: 9 a.m.-6 p.m

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