PGA golfer Adam Schenk somehow shot a ball into someone’s drink during The American Express

Glass-in-one!

During Thursday’s round of The American Express, PGA golfer Adam Schenk pulled off something staggering: he knocked his ball into a spectator’s drinking cup.

Yes, as improbable as it sounds, Schenk knocked his golf ball all the way across the green at the Coachella Valley as you’d expect for a shot.

However, the ball somehow found its way into someone’s glass watching the tournament.

While the drink as ruined, this spectator had quite a souvenir to take with him from the day’s action on the golf course. He raised his glass into the air to show everyone, yes, it had caught Schenk’s shot.

While we’re doubtful Schenk got any extra points for knocking his shot into somebody’s cup, maybe it could count as a separate point for an impromptu round of PGA-sanctioned mini golf?

Heck, that sounds like fun to us. Even the most shanked shots in the game could turn into something rewarding.

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Adam Schenk hit his approach shot into a fan’s drink then proceeded to make birdie

Cheers, Adam Schenk.

Adam Schenk had an interesting path to a birdie on the 16th hole Thursday during the first round of the 2024 American Express.

Hitting his second shot into the par-5, his ball said wayward toward the fans. Some would say, it was a shank.

Nevertheless, it’s hard to imagine where the ball ended up… in a fan’s cup!

No, really.

The fan held up his cup, almost in shock, as cameras zoomed in on the golf ball floating in the cup.

After a drop, Schenk was able to get up-and-down for a birdie at PGA West’s Stadium Course, one of five he had during an opening 2-under 70 on Thursday.

Cheers, Adam Schenk.

Even his wife, who was walking with Schenk, chimed in.

Players to watch: Predicting 10 first-time PGA Tour winners in 2024

Keep an eye on this mix of veterans and rising stars in 2024.

After taking a nearly two-month holiday hiatus, the PGA Tour will return to action the first week of January with the 2024 Sentry in Hawaii.

The last time we saw the boys in action, rookie Ludvig Aberg earned his first win on Tour at the RSM Classic in November. There were 13 first-time winners on Tour in 2023, up one from 12 the year prior. Golfweek predicted four of them.

So who do we have our eyes on for next year? From veterans to rising stars from the amateur ranks, here are 10 players who we predict will hoist a trophy on Tour for the first time in 2024.

Lexi Thompson among 8 big names to miss cut at 2023 Shriners Children’s Open

Here’s a look at some of the bigger names who were sent packing early.

LAS VEGAS — As part of the FedEx Cup Fall, players either fighting to maintain their PGA Tour cards or looking for entrance into the first two Signature events had plenty to play for at the Shriners Children’s Open at TPC Summerlin.

But not everyone will be around for the weekend.

Windy conditions on Thursday morning put some players in a tough spot to make the cut this week and others simply didn’t play well enough to move on.

Although a few players saved their best for when they needed it: Brandt Snedeker, James Hahn and Scott Piercy all made birdie on their final hole of the day to eke out a place on the right side of a cutline that landed at 3 under.

Here’s a look at some of the bigger names who were sent packing early.

Did Adam Schenk really finish ahead of Jon Rahm in the FedEx Cup? Here’s how it happened

This example is why Rory McIlroy thinks the playoff system works.

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ATLANTA – Jon Rahm picked a bad time to go into a mini-slump.

The Masters champion held the lead in the FedEx Cup for 30 consecutive weeks but after a pair of middle-of-the-pack finishes, he fell to fourth heading into the Tour Championship and began the third and final leg of the Playoffs at 6 under. A final-round 74 sent him tumbling to T-18 in the final FedEx Cup standings. Despite winning four times during the season and being the favorite to capture PGA Tour Player of the Year honors, Rahm got passed by Adam Schenk, who was winless during the season.

Schenk, who started the week T-23 at 1 under in the staggered start, finished in a five-way tie for ninth at the Tour Championship and earned $980,000, upping his winnings for the season to $5.8 million.

Rahm didn’t speak to the media after his finish on Sunday but he shared his feelings about the FedEx Cup beforehand.

“It’s easier to understand,” he said. “I don’t think it’s the best we can come up with. I think I’ve expressed my dislike towards the fact that you can come in ranked No. 1 in the FedEx Cup. You can win every single tournament up until this one. You have a bad week, you finish 30th, and now you’ll forever be known as 30th in the FedEx Cup this season. I don’t think that’s very fair.”

Rahm makes a fair point. Schenk finishing above Rahm in the final standings is akin to the New York Giants beating the undefeated New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.

Rory McIlroy, for one, has no problem with Rahm tumbling down the FedEx standings despite having the most wins in the regular season.

“A basketball team could go 82-0 and lose in the first round of the playoffs. If that’s sort of the competitive environment that we’re trying to create, then I would say more Jon Rahm finished second in the regular season in the Comcast Top 10,” Mcilroy said. “I think as that might become more prevalent as the years go on and more money gets put into the regular season as well. You know, it’s almost like two different competitions, two different events.

“You’ve got the regular season and then you’ve got the playoffs. I think everyone tries to put them together in the same sort of thing, but really they’re like regular season and then this is sort of like a 12-round sprint to the finish.”

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Collin Morikawa’s career-low round, Scottie Scheffler’s putting woes among Tour Championship’s first-round takeaways

Here’s everything you need to know from the first round at East Lake.

ATLANTA — On a sweltering hot day, Adam Schenk torched East Lake Golf Club in his Tour Championship debut to the tune of 7-under 63. Yet he still got beat by two strokes in his pairing with fellow competitor Collin Morikawa.

“It sounds bad to say, but I’ve never won out here, so I guess I get kind of used to losing a little bit,” Schenk said. “But I played great, he just played a little better.”

If it makes Schenk feel any better, the 26-year old Morikawa posted his career-low on the PGA Tour, a sizzling 9-under 61 that was as hot as the temperature. Morikawa, who entered the week at No. 24 in the FedEx Cup, began the tournament at 1 under and 9 strokes behind FedEx Cup leader Scottie Scheffler in the staggered start. By the time the day was over he was in the thick of the trophy hunt, tied with Keegan Bradley, who shot 63, and Viktor Hovland (68) for the lead at 10 under.

Scheffler (71) led by as many as five strokes on the front nine but hit it in the water and made a triple bogey at 15 to squander his lead. At the conclusion of the Tour Championship, the player with the lowest stroke total over 72 holes when combined with FedEx Cup Starting Strokes, will be crowned the FedEx Cup champion.

“Shoot, no better time, I guess, in our Tour Championship to show up and start playing some golf,” Morikawa said.

The two-time major champion said he made some subtle changes to his setup on Tuesday, and his iron play shined Thursday. He hit 16 greens in regulation and gained nearly four strokes on the field with his approach shots and ranked first in proximity too. Walking up the 15th hole with caddie JJ Jakovac, Morikawa joked he had already hit more shots pin high than he had in four rounds at most tournaments of late. At the water-guarded 224-yard par-3 15th, Morikawa oozed with such confidence that he didn’t even bother to watch the ball flight.

“Because I knew where it was going to go, and that’s the kind of control you want,” he said.

On one of the rare occasions when Morikawa misfired, he got a lucky break when he tugged his tee shot at the fifth hole and it ricocheted off a tree, back to the fairway and he made birdie.

“That’s kind of the momentum stuff that I just haven’t seen all year,” he said.

One hole later, he drilled his second shot from 224 yards to inside 4 feet and made eagle. Morikawa and Schenk combined to make 15 birdies and that eagle and nary a bogey between them for what would’ve been a best-ball 13-under 57, and both agreed they fed off each other as the round built.

“There’s a rhythm to it,” Morikawa said. “It was just really, really easy I think for both of us.”

Schenk, 31, also started the tournament trailing by nine strokes but closed the gap with four birdies in his final five holes and improved to T-5.

“I just fed off more of Collin than anything probably, and then I made some, and then he made some maybe off of me, but it’s definitely an enjoyable day when you are playing with someone that does play really well,” said Schenk, who is searching for his first career Tour title and summed up the round “as one of those days where nothing could go wrong.”

Here are four more things to know from the first round of the Tour Championship.

PGA Tour fraternity house leads the way Saturday at 2023 John Deere Classic

Here’s what we learned from Moving Day at TPC Deere Run.

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The field took the phrase “Moving Day” to heart on Saturday at the 2023 John Deere Classic.

Of the 69 players to make the cut this weekend at TPC Deere Run, 53 players were under par in the third round, with 16 signing for rounds of 5 under or better.

With just 18 holes to play, it’s truly anyone’s tournament as 23 players are within five shots of the lead. Those in the mix include a handful of would-be first-time PGA Tour winners, as well as a small group of rookies and amateurs looking to make a name for themselves.

Get ready for what should be an exciting final round with the five things that we learned from the third round of the 2023 John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run.

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PGA Tour players feeling pressure to qualify for revamped FedEx Cup playoffs

“It’s just that time of year where guys are trying to push and push because there aren’t as many tournaments left.”

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SILVIS, Ill. – Hundreds of players tee it up each season on the PGA Tour.

But of the 237 who have made money in official events so far over the 2022-23 campaign, only 70 players will advance to this year’s first leg of the three-event FedEx Cup Playoffs – the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Aug. 10-13 – down from 125 players in previous years.

This week’s John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run marks the 38th of 44 regular-season events on the PGA Tour schedule, meaning it’s crunch time for players who need to make a move inside the top 70 of the FedEx Cup standings.

“It’s just that time of year where guys are trying to push and push and push because there aren’t as many tournaments left,” said defending champion J.T. Poston, who entered the week No. 85 in the standings and finds himself back in contention after the first two days. “Every playoff event that you make it through and on to the next is going to be a huge bonus, whether it’s going from Memphis to BMW or BMW to Atlanta.”

“Now it’s the end of the season, so it’s important to peak now,” echoed Adam Schenk, who finds himself safely in 26th in the FedEx Cup standings. “It’s important to peak in Memphis and Chicago because those are the ones that I think they’re worth four times the points if I’m not mistaken. Top 10 at either of those two events is going to get you to East Lake.”

Players inside the top 50 of the standings after the St. Jude Championship advance to the BMW Championship, Aug. 17-20, at Olympia Fields Country Club outside Chicago. The top 30 after the BMW will advance to the season finale, the Tour Championship, Aug. 24-27, at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

As part of the Tour’s eligibility adjustments for 2024 that were announced in March, players who finish outside the top 70 will compete in the Fall to stay inside the top 125 to earn exempt status for all full-field events in 2024.

“So it is a little different kind of end of the year push. I don’t know if desperation is the right word,” added Poston. “I think for me I’m fortunate enough with the win last year I know I’m — if I don’t get it done, I can still work hard in the fall and get some momentum going into next year no matter what.”

The change in eligibility impacted the thought process for a lot of players when it came to planning their schedule for this season to project into next, and some are still making tweaks to their plans. Poston was looking forward to a week off before the Wyndham Championship and the playoffs, but he’s since added the 3M Open to his schedule because, as he stated, “I have to make sure I’m in the playoffs.”

“Yeah, it’s a little different with it being 70 this year,” he explained. “Usually being 85th and the playoffs being 125, you obviously want to make a nice push, but there wouldn’t be as much stress on whether or not I was going to make the playoffs.”

While players like Poston are feeling the stress to find some form late in the season, others like Jonas Blixt and Lucas Glover – who are both in contention entering the weekend – are playing stress-free.

“At this point when you don’t have that much confidence in your game and you find something, you just kind of go out and see where you swing at it, and that’s what happened,” said Blixt, who fired a 9-under 62 in Thursday’s first round. “I kind of came to the point in my season where it’s so late that I don’t feel any pressure anymore really and just kind of go out and swing at it.”

Ranked No. 210 in the standings, Blixt was projected to jump all the way to No. 70 after he led following the first round. The 39-year-old Swede has missed more cuts than he’s made over the last three years following a back surgery in 2019, and his time lost in the pro golf wilderness has given him a unique perspective on where he stands and what it takes to compete. Same with Lucas Glover, No. 130, who joined the mix in the Quad Cities on Friday with a 6-under 65.

“Until now I wasn’t even in position to pay attention (to my FedEx Cup standing), I had been playing so poorly,” he said. “But after a good finish last week and seeing some putts go in finally and continuing that this week, yeah, I like the way I’m trending anyway.”

There’s still time for players to make their move like Glover, but the window is closing. Fast. The FedEx Cup bartender hasn’t made last call just yet, but he’s walking to the bell to give it a ring.

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John Deere Classic a perfect match for rising PGA Tour stars and those looking to take the next step

The event has long been a feeding ground for up-and-coming talent and those looking for their first win on Tour.

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SILVIS, Ill. — The John Deere Classic has a history and reputation for offering up-and-coming PGA Tour talent a chance to showcase their abilities on the game’s biggest stage.

When you think about the PGA Tour’s annual stop in the Quad Cities, one of the first thoughts that comes to mind – aside from the tractor tee markers, of course – is a 19-year-old Jordan Spieth in the 2013 John Deere Classic, right? If you don’t remember, Spieth holed out from a greenside bunker on the 72nd hole to make a three-way playoff against local fan-favorite Zach Johnson and David Hearn. Spieth went on to win for the first time in his career on the fifth playoff hole to become the fourth-youngest winner in Tour history and the first teenager to claim victory since 1931.

A decade later, Spieth’s win still resonates with the next crop of rising stars who will step into the spotlight and continue the trend this week at TPC Deere Run. Ludvig Aberg, who became the first college player to earn his Tour card after finishing atop the PGA Tour University rankings, leads the list of potential future stars in the field that includes fellow rookies Tommy Kuhl (an Illinois grad), William Mouw and Ross Steelman, as well as amateurs Michael Thorbjornsen (Stanford) and Gordon Sargent (Vanderbilt).

“It definitely gives you a lot of confidence knowing there are players who jump-started their careers here,” said Sargent, a rising junior and 2021 NCAA individual champion for the Commodores. “It’s going to be a fun week.”

“I think it’s an awesome opportunity,” said defending champion J.T. Poston. “This time of year some of the guys are coming out of college and getting exemptions, and this is a tournament that does a great job of giving those guys chances to prove themselves. They’re obviously doing a good job of that.”

“I think these guys coming out of college are so good, and they’re ready to win right away. I don’t think that’s always been the case, but it’s pretty cool,” he added. “And for them, like you said, they don’t really have anything to lose, but they have a lot to gain. So it’s a great position to be in.”

Aberg himself will tell you how fortunate he was to have played in five Tour events before he turned pro and made his official debut earlier this summer at the 2023 RBC Canadian Open. A little experience can go a long way at this level.

“I think that’s why all these tournaments, especially John Deere, Travelers that do such a good job of giving sponsors invites to younger players,” said Aberg, who has made the cut in all three of his pro starts, including a pair of top 25s. “I know Michael and Gordon are here this week, and I think it’s so valuable.”

More and more players have entered the professional ranks ready to compete over the last few years, and those who are already on Tour have taken notice.

“I feel like they think they can compete out here, and they absolutely can. They hit it a mile. They’re just polished,” said Adam Schenk. “Those guys see people before them have success straight out of college, and then they know they can do that, and they work that much harder and just feel like — since I’ve been out here, it’s gotten a lot harder to keep your card out here. It’s gotten harder to win. It’s gotten harder to top 10.”

“I think these young kids have started to see the people before them have success, and they just strive to get a little better, and they work really hard,” Schenk continued. “They crush it when they come out here, a lot of guys.”

Recent example would be Chris Gotterup, the 2022 Haskins Award winner as the male college player of the year from Oklahoma who finished fourth at TPC Deere Run last year. Aberg has been in the mix this summer, and just last week Peter Kuest finished T-4 at the Rocket Mortgage Classic after Monday qualifying and nearly earned special temporary Tour status for the rest of the season.

“I think through late junior golf and college and amateur golf, I think you’re just very aware of what people are doing. With social media and all that stuff, there’s so much coverage of how guys practice and how they want to get better,” explained Cameron Young, the PGA Tour Rookie of the Year in 2022. “I think it just makes people more aware of what it takes to be really good at this. Any time you have a talented 17-year-old at golf and give him ideas, I feel like that’s just going to add up to somebody that’s more thoughtful and more prepared to play at this level early.”

That knowledge then leads to better competition at the college level, which in turn creates a cycle of improvement where players are improving, learning and developing at a higher rate.

“I kind of benefited from some of that. We had a very good team when I was at Wake Forest,” said Young, who learned a lot from watching teammate and good friend Will Zalatoris. “I think it’s really just a combination of those things. It’s guys aware of what professionals are doing and what the best players in the world are doing and having exposure to that younger is just making people better really early.”

That said, the John Deere Classic isn’t just a playground for future household names on Tour, it’s also a feeding ground for those players who are looking to take the next step in their careers. Five players have won the John Deere Classic before the age of 24 dating back to 1995, and 23 players have seen their first win on Tour come at the event. Over the last 11 years, the tournament has produced five first-time winners.

Young enters the week as the top-ranked player in the field at No. 19 in the Official World Golf Ranking, and one of nine players in the field who find themselves in the top 50. Does that add any pressure given the fact he’s still yet to win? Not quite.

“Honestly, the top-ranked player in the field thing doesn’t really register in my mind just because I feel like every week it doesn’t really matter as much,” said Young. “It’s whoever plays well is going to have a chance to win.”

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2023 U.S. Open field: Emiliano Grillo is among the last six golfers to make it in

The field for the 2023 U.S. Open is now set.

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The field for the 2023 U.S. Open is now set.

On Monday morning, the U.S. Golf Association announced three final exemptions as well as three alternates from final qualifying who are now a part of the 156-man field.

The 123rd U.S. Open starts Thursday at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course.

With the additions of Emiliano Grillo, Pablo Larrazabal and Adam Schenk, there are 89 fully exempt players. Those three earned their spots when the Official World Golf Ranking was updated Monday with all three in the top 60.

Grillo (No. 43) will compete in his fifth U.S. Open. Pablo Larrazabal (No. 52) will play in his second U.S. Open. Schenk (No. 54) will also make his second U.S. Open appearance.

The final three spots went to golfers who were alternates coming out of the 13 final qualifying locations: Bastien Amat (a), Michael Kim and Maxwell Moldovan (a).

Amat, Kim, and Moldovan were all first alternates at their qualifiers. Moldovan had a marathon day, ultimately losing in a playoff in the Columbus qualifier on the 44th hole to Adam Schaake.

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