Max Homa, as only he can, compares the LIV Golf rumors to finding out about a high school fight in math class

Homa counted himself among the “fortunate,” who didn’t get caught in the rumor mill.

NASSAU, Bahamas – Max Homa experienced pangs of guilt as he left his wife and newborn son, Cam, to compete in this week’s Hero World Challenge at Albany Club.

“Didn’t expect it to be this kind of difficult,” he said. “I feel guilty being in beautiful Bahamas while my wife’s grinding changing diapers, but here I am so might as well play well.”

Homa, who has ascended to No. 16 in the Official World Golf Ranking and won the Fortinet Championship to start the 2022-23 PGA Tour campaign, took time during his pre-tournament press conference to reflect on the year that was and compared the LIV-PGA Tour drama to being in high school all over again.

“Every week was kind of fun in a way, or funny. It got old, but every Monday, Tuesday was, ‘Did you hear so-and-so is going? Is that true? Did you hear this about this tournament? Is that true?’ It felt like you were in high school again in a way and you just got out to lunch and you got a text while you were in math that somebody got in a fight with somebody and now you’re going to go figure out what part of that was true, and rarely any of that was true, which is exactly how this season was for us. So, I think part of it is just like enjoying the little noise.”

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Homa counted himself among the “fortunate,” who didn’t get caught in the rumor mill and have to field a steady diet of questions of whether they were going to be the next player to jump to LIV.

“You know, hearing stories about certain guys saying, ‘Oh, I hear he’s gone.’ and then I’ll talk to them and they’ll say, ‘I haven’t talked to them in months,’ so this is just made up. I feel bad for them, I feel that’s a much harder gig.

“Obviously what Rory’s been doing and playing so well, kind of feels like two jobs, is tricky. Mine was just the fun end of it. Hear a rumor, joke about the rumor, forget about the rumor and move along, so it wasn’t so bad for me.”

Yet in a twisted way, Homa said he tried to insert himself into the conversation “just for the fun of it,” and cracked that it was “a huge insult” that his efforts to do so went unnoticed.

“I guess it would have been cool to be a part of that so I could live the life of, you know, it felt like a reality TV series for a bit,” he said. “I guess I tried. I changed my bio on Twitter once when I think Brooks changed his bio and everyone figured out he was going or something like that. I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to get in on this and see if people catch on,’ but didn’t realize that my Twitter bio doesn’t get a ton of traction, so that was news to me.

“The craziness of all of this was I feel like a little more outside than it was inside. Inside, like I said, I thought it was funny and fun, we were just trying to make light of it. It’s people’s lives, they can do what they want to do. I don’t know, I feel like a lot of us had fun with it. I had fun with it. It was taken as, like, slights to the LIV Tour, but I never meant, I just make fun of everything that I do and other people do. So it was funny. I would have liked to be caught in the rumor mill so I could have run with it for a little while, it would have been good for that PIP thing, but was not lucky enough to be caught up.”

As for the ‘PIP thing,’ Homa banked an additional $3 million for finishing 14th in the standing but was none too happy to finish one spot back of Kevin Kisner, his partner in the 2021 QBE Shootout.

“I’m not quite sure how that happened. Played better than him, carried him at the QBE last year, so not sure how I lost to him, so that was disappointing,” he said. “Just back to the drawing board, got to figure out more ways to impact the golfing world. I am surprised that I’m 16 in the world and I was 14 on the PIP. I always thought I was significantly more popular than I was good at golf, so it feels nice that those things are aligning, so that’s a little mini bonus, but at the end of the day I’ll take 14th is pretty good.”

“It is a little confusing how it works, but it does seem to work,” Homa added. “Tiger won again, so as long as he’s winning, it’s not broken, so that’s good.”

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Watch: Tiger Woods, Justin Thomas praise Max Homa’s swing at Hero World Challenge

Max Homa may never stop watching this video.

Tiger Woods is no longer in the field for this week’s Hero World Challenge at Albany in the Bahamas, however, he’s still on the grounds and not only met with the media on Tuesday, but also participated in the Hero Shot competition alongside Justin Thomas, Matt Fitzpatrick and several other big-name stars set to tee it up Thursday.

One of them being Max Homa.

Homa and Woods played together during the first two rounds of the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews earlier this year, a dream come true for Homa who grew up idolizing the 15-time major champion.

On Tuesday, Woods sat next to Thomas during the shootout and whispered praises of Homa’s swing while the Cal product took cracks at the 87-yard floating green.

HERO: Tee times, TV info | Yardage book | Merchandise

Imagining Tiger loving your swing? That’s the dream.

Homa had this to say about the video: “Yeah, I didn’t hear that, but it is crazy. At The Open Championship when we played, he came up to me on like the fourth hole and said my swing looked great and I was hitting it really well. That was cool to hear. I think most guys have tried to take something from Tiger’s golf swing because it’s been so perfect for so many years, so it’s very nice to hear that … To hear a guy that, you know, I look up to and kind of play golf because he made it cool say something nice about me is great. And it was nice to beat him in the wedge thing yesterday, that felt really good.”

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Check the yardage book: Albany for the Hero World Challenge

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps of the Ernie Els design at Albany in the Bahamas, site of the Hero World Challenge.

The golf course at Albany in New Providence in the Bahamas – site of this week’s Hero World Challenge – was designed by Ernie Els and opened in 2010. It ranks as No. 24 on Golfweek’s Best list of courses in Mexico, the Caribbean, the Atlantic Island and Central America.

On the island of Nassau, the layout features five par 5s and five par 3s. Part of a resort community, it plays to 7,414 yards with a par of 72.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the players face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

2022 Hero World Challenge odds, field notes, best bets and picks to win

Hoping for big things from the new dad and the newlywed.

If we’re being honest with ourselves, the 2022 Hero World Challenge got a whole lot less interesting Monday when tournament-host Tiger Woods withdrew from the field due to plantar fasciitis. This week was going to be the first time Woods has stepped on a golf course on national television since the 150th Open Championship, where a tough Thursday led to a missed weekend.

Despite the injury, Woods’ plan is to play in the Match VII and the PNC Championship.

All is not lost, however, as many of the world’s best are teeing it up in Albany, The Bahamas, including Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm and Justin Thomas. Viktor Hovland, who won in 2021, is also in the field.

Hero: Thursday tee times, how to watch

Golf course

Albany Golf Course | Par 72 | 7,414 yards

Hero World Challenge 2021
Tony Finau looks on during the second round of the Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course on Dec. 3, 2021 in Nassau. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Data Golf Information

Course Fit (compares golf courses based on the degree to which different golfer attributes — such as driving distance — to predict who performs well at each course – DataGolf): 1. Port Royal Golf Course, 2. Detroit Golf Club, 3. PGA West

Trending (the players’ last three starts): 1. Jon Rahm (1, T-4, 1), 2. Tony Finau (9, MC, 1), 3. Max Homa (1, T-20, T-23)

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Jon Rahm (13.9 percent), 2. Scottie Scheffler (12.8 percent), 3. Tony Finau (8.5 percent)

Betting preview

Baylor vs Albany Prediction, Game Preview

Baylor vs Albany game preview, prediction, and breakdown for the Week 1 game on Saturday, September 3

Baylor vs Albany prediction, game preview, how to watch. Week 1, Saturday, September 3


Baylor vs Albany How To Watch

Date: Saturday, September 3
Game Time: 7:00 ET
Venue: McLane Stadium, Waco, TX
How To Watch: Big 12 Network/ESPN+
Record: Baylor (0-0), Albany (0-0)
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Baylor vs Albany Game Preview

Why Albany Will Win

The Great Danes will bring a little pass defense.

They were among the best in the FCS last season at holding down the big throws, keeping the penalties to a minimum, and controlling the clock. They’re going to have to do everything right to hang around with the Bears, and as long as they’re still good defensively on third downs, they’ll be a bother.

If they can slow the game down to a halt at times, convert a few plays to keep the chains moving, and …

Week 1 CFN College Football Expert Picks

Why Baylor Will Win

Uh oh.

Albany has a decent defense coming into the season, but the jury is out on whether or not the front can hold up against the run.

The bigger problem is on the other side with an offense that didn’t do anything on the ground, struggled overall, and only pushed past 24 points once.

Baylor should be able to do whatever it wants offensively, the defense will be in for a good live scrimmage against this bunch, and as long as there aren’t a slew of turnovers, this will be ugly.

Week 1 Schedule, Predictions, Game Previews, Saturday

What’s Going To Happen

The Bears should be able to call their shot.

Albany really does have a good enough defense to keep this from getting too insane, but scoring against this Bear D is going to be a problem.

Be shocked if the Great Danes get more than 50 yards on the ground.

All of the CFN Predictions

Baylor vs Albany Prediction, Line

Baylor 55, Albany 7
Line: Baylor -42, o/u: 43.5
ATS Confidence out of 5: 1.5

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Baylor vs Albany Must See Rating: 1.5

5: Gangs of London Season 2
1: Mack & Rita

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Eagles sign WR Keric Wheatfall

Philadelphia Eagles sign former Fresno State wide receiver Keric Wheatfall after his tryout during the teams rookie minicamp

The Philadelphia Eagles opened up their rookie minicamp with five NFL draft picks and 12 undrafted free agents.

Team GM Howie Roseman is always looking for a hidden gem or two and with Philadelphia surrendering six picks during the draft weekend via trade, the organization invited 19 players to the camp as well for a tryout.

After that evaluation period, the Eagles have agreed to a deal with wide receiver Keric Wheatfall, a rookie out of Fresno State who participated in the Rookie Minicamp on a tryout basis.

Wheatfall started his college career at Blinn College before transferring to Fresno State. At Blinn, Wheatfall had 798 yards and six touchdowns on 47 receptions in 2018, including four 100-yard receiving games.

In 2021 with the Bulldogs, Wheatfall played in all 13 games, starting in eight games, as he finished as the team’s third-leading receiver with 38 receptions for 616 yards and four touchdowns.

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Top 42 photos from Day 1 of Eagles rookie minicamp

Top photos from Day 1 of Philadelphia Eagles rookie minicamp where five draft players, 12 undrafted free agents, and 19 invited prospects gathered at the NovaCare Complex

Eagles rookie minicamp began on Friday for five draft picks, 12 undrafted free agents, and 19 selected players invited to try out for the 2022 squad.

Day one was held inside because of the weather conditions, but that didn’t stop Jordan Davis, Cam Jurgens, Nakobe Dean, Kyron Johnson, Grant Calcaterra, Carson Strong, Noah Elliss, and others from taking the first steps to reaching their ultimate dreams.

With Day 2 less than 16 hours away, here are the top-42 photos from Day one.
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Eagles invited 19 players to tryout during rookie minicamp

The Philadelphia Eagles 2022 rookie minicamp is underway and here’s a list of 19 players invited to tryout

The Philadlephia Eagles opened up their rookie minicamp on Friday with five NFL draft picks and 12 undrafted free agents.

Team GM Howie Roseman is always looking for a hidden gem or two and with Philadelphia surrendering six picks during the draft weekend via trade, the organization invited 19 players to the camp as well for a tryout.

One name not familiar to many Eagles fans is the son of a franchise legend.

Viktor Hovland shoots Sunday 66 to steal win at Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas

A loaded field of the PGA Tour’s best didn’t disappoint on Sunday.

A handful of the PGA Tour’s best put on an entertaining week of golf in the Bahamas.

After Collin Morikawa took a commanding five-shot lead after 54 holes of the 2021 Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Course, the two-time major champion was one of just four players over par on Sunday while the rest of the loaded field went low.

A fellow member of the PGA Tour’s 2015 rookie class, Viktor Hovland stole the show with a 6-under 66 on Sunday to win the Hero World Challenge at 18 under thanks to a pair of three-hole stretches on both his front and back nines. The 24-year-old Norwegian birdied Nos. 6-8 to make the turn at 3-under 33 on the day, then made consecutive eagles on Nos. 14 and 15, followed by a birdie on No. 16.

On a day where five players held a share of the lead, Scottie Scheffler finished solo-second at 17 under, followed by Sam Burns, Patrick Reed and Morikawa, who finished T-3 at 15 under.

Hovland has four professional wins, all outside of the United States. The former star at Oklahoma State previously won the 2020 Puerto Rico Open, as well as the 2020 Mayakoba Golf Classic and 2021 World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba. He also won the 2021 BMW International Open in Germany.

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Tiger Woods rocks Sunday red while practicing at Hero World Challenge

He wasn’t competing, but that didn’t stop Tiger from rocking his Sunday red in the Bahamas.

He wasn’t in the field competing on Sunday, but that didn’t stop tournament host Tiger Woods from rocking his famous Sunday red while practicing during the final round of the Hero World Challenge.

The 15-time major champion broke his silence since his single-car accident in February earlier this week, first in an exclusive interview with Golf Digest and again the next day in a press conference where he seemed surprisingly upbeat despite facing his most daunting comeback to date.

Woods has also been teasing his return to the course over the last few weeks. He first shared he was “making progress” on Nov. 21, On Thursday, 11 days later, Woods fanned the flame of a return at the PNC Championship with a longer video on the driving range. On Saturday Woods was hitting driver.

According to Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio, who’s on the ground at Albany in the Bahamas, Woods hit balls on Tuesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday this week. He also joined the television broadcast on Saturday for 30 minutes and discussed how his practice is going.

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“I can hit it. It just doesn’t go as far,” Woods said about hitting driver. “The power is not there, but I can hit drivers. I can hit any club in the bag. I’m not at the point where I can hear it land, OK?”

Next week Woods is expected to announce whether he will play in the PNC Championship alongside his son, Charlie, or not. Woods would be allowed to use a cart.

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