Can Rory McIlroy ‘flip the script?’ He’s hoping the FedEx Cup playoffs will do just that

McIlroy said he has “three (events) on the PGA Tour to turn an OK season into a very good one.”

Rory McIlroy hopes to use the next three weeks to “change the narrative” of his season as he bids to win the FedEx Cup title for a record-extending fourth time.

McIlroy has won twice worldwide this season but is all too aware of letting other chances slip through his fingers, most painfully in the US Open at Pinehurst and the Olympic Games in Paris.

As a result, the 35-year-old heads into the first playoff event – the FedEx St Jude Championship at TPC Southwind – almost 3,500 points behind Scottie Scheffler, the world number one having won six times on the PGA Tour before securing Olympic gold at Le Golf National.

“I certainly don’t want to sit up here and belittle my achievements at all this year and what I’ve done, but at the same time I expect a certain standard from myself,” McIlroy said.

“I’ve won a couple of times. I’ve had an opportunity to win a few more times than that and haven’t been able to get over the line. So I would have liked to have added a couple more to that win column.

“But as I said, there’s still three tournaments left in this PGA Tour season. I think I’ve actually got eight or nine tournaments left this year, but three on the PGA Tour to turn an OK season into a very good one.

“I think when the bulk of the season has come and gone and you’ve got this opportunity of three weeks to really, I guess, flip the script a little bit or change the narrative and what that season means, I think that’s a motivating factor and part of the reason that I’ve probably played well in the playoffs for the last three years.”

Ireland’s Rory McIlroy competes in round 1 of the men’s golf individual stroke play of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at Le Golf National in Guyancourt, south-west of Paris on August 1, 2024. (Photo by Emmanuel DUNAND / AFP)

Asked if he needed to do anything different to get rid of the “nearly man” tag he gave himself after the Olympics, McIlroy added: “I just have to finish off tournaments better.

“There’s been glimpses where I have done it, like Quail Hollow (at the Wells Fargo Championship), for example. But obviously the US Open, Olympics.

“I feel like this year and maybe the last couple years I’ve just found a way to hit the wrong shot at the wrong time. That might go into preparation and trying to practice a little more under pressure at home.

“You go through these things in golf and you go through these little challenges and you just have to try to figure out a way to get through it and my challenge right now is that.

“It’s really good but not quite good enough to take home the silverware. It’s just something I’m having to work through.”

Scheffler has topped the FedEx Cup standings heading into the season-ending Tour Championship in each of the last two years but has relinquished the two-stroke lead that gives him on both occasions.

McIlroy overturned a six-shot deficit in the final round at East Lake in 2022, while Viktor Hovland wiped out Scheffler’s advantage by the end of the first round 12 months ago.

“I don’t really think about an exclamation point (on the season) or anything like that, but I definitely want to win the FedEx Cup,” Scheffler said.

“It’s quoted as the season-long race but at the end of the day it really all comes down to East Lake. I didn’t have my best stuff at East Lake the last couple of years.

“I’m kind of excited that they changed the course a little bit. It may give me some new vibes around there.”

Scottie Scheffler calls the FedEx Cup playoff format ‘silly’

“You can’t call it a season-long race and have it come down to one tournament.”

Scottie Scheffler showed up for the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis this week with his Olympic gold medal but he wasn’t exactly showing it off.

“It’s a bit heavy around the neck,” he told members of the media during his pre-tournament interview on Wednesday. “I brought it for a deal this morning, and I promptly put it back in my backpack.”

Scheffler’s victory in Paris was his seventh of the year, though there were no FedEx Cup points awarded for this one. Never mind, he has plenty. Scheffler enters the FedEx Cup playoffs this week with 5,993 points, or double the amount earned by every other competitor on the PGA Tour other than Xander Schauffele.

Nevertheless, his lead will be winnowed to a two-stroke head start over his closest competitor heading into the 72-hole Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, the final of three legs in the playoffs. That is should Scheffler remain on top with points worth quadruple for the next two weeks. (A win that was worth 500 points is suddenly worth 2,000.)

It has Scheffler questioning how fair the season-long points race really is.

“I think it’s silly,” he said. “You can’t call it a season-long race and have it come down to one tournament. Hypothetically we get to East Lake and my neck flares up and it doesn’t heal the way it did at the Players, I finish 30th in the FedEx Cup because I had to withdraw from the last tournament? Is that really the season-long race? No. It is what it is.”

He added: “It’s a fun tournament. I don’t really consider it the season-long race like I think the way it’s called. But you’ve got to figure out a way to strike a balance between it being a good TV product and it still being a season-long race. Right now, I don’t know exactly how the ratings are or anything like that, but I know for a fact you can’t really quite call it the season-long race when it comes down to one stroke-play tournament on the same golf course each year.”

This is the 18th year of the FedEx Cup and it has been tweaked several times. In 2008, Vijay Singh had clinched the title based on the then point structure without needing to play the final tournament, which made for bad TV ratings. Scheffler said that scenario would be great for him but understood it would be a ratings dud. He’s held the lead going into the Tour finale the last two years but hasn’t come out on top as Rory McIlroy and Viktor Hovland have tracked him down. This has been Scheffler’s most dominant season but it’s not out of the realm of possibility that Schauffele, winner of two majors, could edge Scheffler for Player of the Year honors should he win the Tour Championship and the FedEx Cup.

“I don’t really think about exclamation point or anything like that, but definitely want to win the FedExCup,” Scheffler said. “It’s quoted as the season-long race, but at the end of the day it really all comes down to East Lake. I didn’t have my best stuff at East Lake the last couple years. I played good there my rookie year, but outside of that, the last few years I haven’t had my best stuff. I’m kind of excited that they changed the course a little bit. It may give me some new vibes around there.”

On Sept. 1, the Tour Championship concludes and someone will take home the season-long trophy as FedEx Cup champion.

Hideki Matsuyama robbed in London airport, will play FedEx St. Jude Championship without regular caddie and coach

“I’m going to play golf as if I went back to the way I was before I had a coach.”

Hideki Matsuyama won a bronze medal at the Olympics in Paris but lost his wallet during a layover in London.

Matsuyama told Japanese reporters, including those at Golf Digest Japan, that someone swiped his wallet and also nabbed the passport and visas of his caddie, Shota Hayato, and coach, Mikihito Kuromiya. They had no choice but to return to Japan and request expedited travel documents instead of going to Memphis for the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs. The top 50 in the season-long points race qualify for the second leg, the BMW Championship at Castle Pines in Denver.

“There’s a chance they’ll make it [to Colorado], but we have to go into it thinking it’s close to zero,” Matsuyama told Golf Digest Japan.

According to the report, the earliest they could make it to the U.S. would be just ahead of the Tour Championship in two weeks.

“I’m going to play golf as if I went back to the way I was before I had a coach,” Matsuyama told the Japanese press in Memphis. “I feel like all the responsibility is on me.”

He has hired Taiga Tabuchi, who caddies for fellow Japanese tour pro Ryo Hisatsune, to fill in as a caddie in the absence of Hayato, who famously bowed on the 18th green after his boss won the Masters in 2021.

“I’m glad he accepted,” said Matsuyama of Tabuchi, whose regular boss finished a career-best T-3 last week but fell short of the top 70 and a berth in the playoffs. “He’s worked with Hisatsune this year, so I think he knows the ropes, and he can speak English, so I can rely on him.”

Matsuyama, who won the Genesis Invitational in February, enters the FedEx Cup playoffs in eighth place. He did note that the bronze medal remained safely in his possession.

Photos: 2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind

Check out the scenes from Memphis.

The PGA Tour’s postseason got underway at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, as the top 70 in the point standings are competing in the 2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship.

Defending champion Lucas Glover was not in the field after he failed to finish the regular season inside the top 70. Gold medalist Scottie Scheffler headlines the field and is joined by Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa and Ludvig Aberg, among others.

In the end, it was Hideki Matsuyama making birdie on Nos. 17 and 18 to clinch the title, his second of the year and the 10th of his career.

Check out some of the best photos from the week in Memphis below.

Reigning FedEx Cup champ Viktor Hovland feels like an underdog in the playoffs, which is just the way he likes it

“It’s just not that fun to play golf when you don’t know where the ball is going.”

It’s hard to be the underdog as the reigning FedEx Cup champion but Viktor Hovland found a way.

He’s recorded just one top-10 finish all season – finishing third at the PGA Championship in May – in 13 starts and enters the week at No. 57 in the FedEx Cup standings. That means if he doesn’t get his act together this week at the FedEx St. Jude Championship, which is contested at TPC Southwind in Memphis, the first of three playoff events, and leap into the top 50, he’ll be out of the playoffs. No winner of the BMW Championship, the second playoff event, has failed to qualify and defend his title since the playoffs began in 2007. (It should be noted that the top 70 made the BMW until it was reduced to the top 50 last year.) Even if Hovland does squeeze his way into the BMW at Castle Pines in Denver, he’ll need to vault inside the top 30 to make the Tour Championship in Atlanta to defend that title. So, Hovland, who grew up in Norway, where the chances of finding one’s way to the PGA Tour let alone to becoming a world-beater and FedEx Cup champ are slim to none, is in some way right where he likes to be.

“I feel like maybe I’ve been an underdog in some way my whole life,” he said on Tuesday during his pre-tournament press conference ahead of the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

A year ago, Hovland finished T-13 in Memphis and noted that if not for making a mess at the 18th hole, he might have won that tournament too. He then went on to win the remaining two playoff events with a final-round 61 at the BMW and a 63 at the Tour Championship. He was a trendy pick to win his first major this year and knock Scottie Scheffler from the title of world No. 1.

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But he made a curious coaching change at the end of the season and went down a few different rabbit holes in search of perfecting his swing and it backfired. He’s dropped from fifth in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green last season to 65th this go-round. All of his attention on his full swing has hurt his short game, which had long been his Achille’s Heel. After improving to No. 86 last season, he has fallen back to No. 174 this season.

“I’m just working on the things that I need to work on to get back to where I was last year,” Hovland said. “Then I believe I can do some great things again.”

But Hovland, who has won six times on Tour and at 26 seemed well on his way to having a Hall of Fame caliber career, looked lost at times this season. He returned to working with swing instructor Joe Mayo, who guided him to the FedEx Cup last season, but other than being a one-week wonder at the PGA at Valhalla, it has been a baffling year for Hovland.

2024 PGA Championship
Viktor Hovland reacts after a putt on the sixth green during the final round of the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Sports

“It’s just not that fun to play golf when you don’t know where the ball is going,” he said, which are words the average duffer can relate to. “I feel like it’s a waste of time for me to be playing golf if that’s where I’m at. I’d rather be off the golf course and work on it, trying to figure out why I’m doing those things.”

Someday, Hovland could probably write a book on what went wrong with his swing this season or at least a lengthy chapter for his autobiography, but on Tuesday he chalked it up to changing his “pattern.”

“I knew my pattern was really good. But I was upset that I wasn’t cutting the ball as much as I would have liked. My ball flight started to become a little bit of a draw, which is fine. I was still hitting it good. But sometimes visually I would have liked to have seen the cut,” he explained. “Then in the off-season I made a conscious effort to try to cut the ball more, and when I did that, I ruined a relationship that happens in my swing that makes it really difficult for me to control the face coming down. So now it’s just kind of me learning from that. I know exactly why it happened. I know exactly what happens because I’ve gotten myself measured, and now it’s just kind of a process of getting back to where I was.”

The process of rediscovering his old pattern and the confidence he once had in it is what makes golf great. Even for some of the game’s best, finding it can be fleeting, and Hovland knows that there’s no guarantee he will ever play as well as he did a year ago during the FedEx Cup Playoffs. Perhaps it’s the part of him that loves being the underdog that enjoys the search for something close to perfection in his swing.

“I’m not sure how long it’s going to take for me to play my best golf. It might be this week. It might be next week. But at least now I’m on a path to progress. I’m on a path to improvement,” he said. “Whereas before, one thing is playing bad, but you don’t know why and you don’t know how to fix it. That’s very challenging mentally. I might play terrible this week, but at least I feel like I’m on a path to improvement, and that’s all that kind of matters for me.”

FedEx Cup Playoffs are set as Victor Perez hangs on to 70th and final spot

The bubble didn’t burst for Perez.

GREENSBORO, N.C. – The bubble didn’t burst for Victor Perez.

He lived on the edge all week at the Wyndham Championship, the final event of the FedEx Cup regular season with the top 70 in the standings advancing for the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

Perez, a Frenchman in his first season as a PGA Tour member, entered the week as the Bubble Boy, but when it was all said and done, no player moved in from outside the bubble to qualify. It was just the second time and first since 2013 that there was no volatility at all.

Perez shot 2-under 68 on Sunday, saving a 6-foot par putt at 18 to finish T-33 and finish seven points clear of Davis Riley.

A week ago, Perez shot a final-round 63 in his native country to finish fourth in the Olympics. A week later, he had to play 36 holes on Sunday and then wait to see what Riley, whose only top-10 finish was a win at the Charles Schwab Challenge, and Japan’s Ryo Hisatsune would do behind him.

“I think you’re always nervous. This was probably a little bit closer to like a chance of winning a tournament because you’re trying to really stretch as much as you can, whereas usually you’re 25th place, you’re just trying to improve but it’s not as do or die,” Perez said.

He shot 69 in his third round in the morning and explained he didn’t know where he stood despite a friend at lunch asking him about it.

“I looked at Joe, my agent, and he had the biggest poker face going and he didn’t give me any clue, so I actually didn’t know where I was,” he said.

Riley, who battled sickness earlier in the week and called the postponement of play on Thursday a blessing in disguise, had good looks at birdie on the final three holes but couldn’t get any of the putts to drop.

“I gave myself a chance, I hit some really good shots coming down the stretch, I just couldn’t make the putts,” said Riley, who shot 70 and finished T-38. “Proud of the way I hung in there on a long day and a week when I was a little under the weather. Having to cap it off with a 36 day took about every ounce of energy I had in me.”

Hisatsune was the last player with a chance to burst Perez’s bubble. He needed a solo second but made a bogey at the last to shoot 67 and finish a career-best T-3. He improved from No. 107 to No. 83, which should lock up his card for next season but he’s officially off until the FedEx Cup Fall begins in September.

Here’s the last five in and out

66. Seamus Power (T-28)

67. Nick Dunlap (MC)

68. Jhonattan Vegas (T-61)

69. Emiliano Grillo (T-59)

70. Victor Perez (T-33)

71. Davis Riley (T-38)

72. Andrew Putnam (MC)

73. Kurt Kitayama (MC)

74. Luke List (MC)

75. Adam Svensson (T-7)

Full FedEx Cup Playoffs field

Pos. Player
1 Scottie Scheffler
2 Xander Schauffele
3 Rory McIlroy
4 Collin Morikawa
5 Wyndham Clark
6 Ludvig Aberg
7 Sahith Theegala
8 Hideki Matsuyama
9 Sungjae Im
10 Shane Lowry
11 Patrick Cantlay
12 Byeong Hun An
13 Russell Henley
14 Tony Finau
15 Akshay Bhatia
16 Matthieu Pavon
17 Robert MacIntyre
18 Sepp Straka
19 Justin Thomas
20 Brian Harman
21 Tom Hoge
22
Christiaan Bezuidenhout
23 Billy Horschel
24 Davis Thompson
25 Aaron Rai
26 Jason Day
27 Taylor Pendrith
28 Chris Kirk
29 Sam Burns
30 Corey Conners
31 Cameron Young
32 Tommy Fleetwood
33 Stephan Jaeger
34 Thomas Detry
35 Max Homa
36 J.T. Poston
37 Adam Hadwin
38 Si Woo Kim
39 Keegan Bradley
40 Matt Fitzpatrick
41 Austin Eckroat
42 Alex Noren
43 Tom Kim
44 Cam Davis
45 Denny McCarthy
46 Adam Scott
47 Max Greyserman
48 Mackenzie Hughes
49 Will Zalatoris
50 Jake Knapp
51 Harris English
52 Nick Taylor
53 Patrick Rodgers
54 Eric Cole
55 Justin Rose
56 Ben Griffin
57 Viktor Hovland
58 Erik van Rooyen
59 Maverick McNealy
60 Taylor Moore
61 Peter Malnati
62 Min Woo Lee
63 Jordan Spieth
64 Mark Hubbard
65 Brendon Todd
66 Seamus Power
67 Nick Dunlap
68 Jhonattan Vegas
69 Emiliano Grillo
70 Victor Perez