Despite chance to win Race to Dubai, Jon Rahm withdraws from European Tour season finale

The tour finale won’t include a two-time champion and the No. 3 player on its points standings.

The European Tour will be without a two-time champion and the No. 3 player on its points standings for next week’s season finale.

World No. 1 Jon Rahm withdrew from the DP World Tour Championship on Sunday, citing the need to rest and spend time with his family. Rahm won the Race to Dubai money title in 2019 and has twice won the tour’s season finale in 2017 and 2019.

“After lengthy discussions with my team, I have come to the difficult decision not to travel to Dubai next week. The demands of a long season with many ups and downs has taken a lot out of me. I feel I need to take time to recharge my batteries while spending quality time with my family,” Rahm said via a statement. “I would like to take this opportunity to wish DP World and the European Tour all the best for the season-ending event, which is always such a special tournament.”

It’s been a long year to say the least for Rahm, who is now a father after wife, Kelly, gave birth to baby Kepa before the Masters.

In 22 PGA Tour events last season, Rahm made the cut in all but one and earned 15 top-10s. The 27-year-old Spaniard won his first major at the U.S. Open in June at Torrey Pines just two weeks after being forced to withdraw from the Memorial with a six-shot lead after 54 holes due to a positive COVID-19 test. Another positive test kept Rahm from traveling to the Tokyo Olympics.

In nine European Tour starts in 2021, six were either majors or WGC events, where he finished: T-32 (WGC-Workday), T-5 (WGC-Match Play), T-5 (Masters), T-8 (PGA Championship), 1 (U.S. Open) and T-3 (British Open). He also finished seventh at the abrdn Scottish Open, T-17 at the Spanish Open and T-99 at the Andalucia Masters.

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Veterans Day: Golf world shares appreciation for those who served

To those who served, thank you.

Thursday features a loaded slate of golf, with the first rounds of the PGA Tour’s Hewlett Packard Enterprise Houston Open, LPGA’s Pelican Women’s Championship and PGA Tour Champions’ season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship.

But today, Nov. 11, it’s important to stop and honor those who have served in the armed forces. Whether you call it Veterans Day, Remembrance Day or Armistice Day, take a scroll through some of the social media posts of professional golfers, like Justin Thomas and Annika Sorenstam, who shared their appreciation for those who served their country.

From all of us at Golfweek, thank you for your service.

Justin Thomas

Annika Sorenstam

Ian Poulter

Jim Herman

Lee Westwood

Alison Walshe

Graham DeLaet

Ryan Palmer

Mackenzie Hughes

Brian Gay

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European Tour sells naming rights for the circuit, to be called DP World Tour in 2022 season

The European Tour has sold its naming rights and will be known as the DP World Tour beginning in 2022.

The European Tour has a new name.

Beginning with the start of the 2022 season, its 50th year of existence, which begins at the Joburg Open in South Africa, from November 22-25, it will be known as the DP World Tour.

As a result of the title sponsorship, total prize money will exceed the $200 million mark for the first time (including majors and WGC’s and $140 million without them), with a new minimum prize fund of $2 million for all tournaments solely sanctioned by the DP World Tour. In addition, the DP World Tour Championship, the season finale and final Rolex Series tournament of 2022, will become the first European Tour event in history outside the majors and WGCs to feature an eight-figure prize fund ($10 million).

In 2022, the DP World Tour will feature a minimum of 47 tournaments in 27 different countries, including new tournaments in the UAE, Japan, South Africa and Belgium and an expanded Rolex Series comprising five events: the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship, the Slync.io Dubai Desert Classic, the Genesis Scottish Open, the BMW PGA Championship and the season-ending DP World Tour Championship.

For the first time, it will also feature three tournaments co-sanctioned with the PGA Tour – the Genesis Scottish Open, as well as the Barbasol Championship and the Barracuda Championship taking place in the United States – as a result of the “Strategic Alliance” between male professional golf’s two leading Tours.

DP World, a provider of global smart end-to-end supply chain and logistics solutions headquartered in Dubai, first became associated with the European Tour as sponsor of its Race to Dubai in 2009, before the Rolex Series event was renamed the DP World Tour Championship in 2012. It was in this year that DP World became the tournament’s title partner. DP World then became an official partner of the European Tour in 2015.

“The DP World Tour is a natural evolution of our decade-long partnership, and the presence of ‘World’ in our new title better reflects our global reach.,” said Keith Pelley, chief executive of the European Tour group.

Added Jay Monahan, Commissioner of the PGA Tour and board member of the European Tour: “Our respective Tours are positioned to grow – together – over the next 10 years faster than we ever have at any point in our existence, and today’s announcement is another point of proof in those efforts.”

To view the full 2022 schedule, please click here.

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What we know: History of and latest updates surrounding the Saudi Arabia-backed rival golf league

Everything you need to know about the history of the proposed rival golf league.

The landscape of men’s professional golf may be changing right before our very eyes.

After years of 72-hole stroke-play tournaments with four majors sprinkled throughout the schedule, golf fans may soon have a new option with a rival golf league making noise once again.

Liv Golf Enterprises, backed by the Public Investment Fund which operates on behalf of the government of Saudi Arabia, will have Greg Norman be the chief operating officer of the enterprise as well as commissioner of a new league which hopes to debut in the spring of 2022.

Here’s what we know about the situation with the Saudis.

Professional golf in Saudi Arabia

The first professional golf event in Saudi Arabia — the Saudi International — was held in 2019 as a European Tour event, just months after the death of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi. The event has been criticized as a targeted attempt by the Saudi government to “sportswash” its controversial human rights record and improve its image.

A handful of big names have made the trip to play over the years, including two-time champion Dustin Johnson (2019, 2021). Major champions like Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka have also been paid to play the event. After the 2020 tournament, the Saudi International moved from the European Tour to the Asian Tour schedule for 2021.

Because of this, Golfweek learned back in July that the PGA Tour would refuse to allow players to compete in the controversial tournament in 2022. Tour members must obtain a waiver to compete on other circuits and, because the Saudi event is no longer sanctioned by the European Tour, the PGA Tour noted to managers that permission would no longer be granted.

That said, last week eight players asked for permission to play in the tournament, scheduled Feb. 3-6 at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in King Abdullah Economic City: Johnson, 2020 winner Graeme McDowell, Abraham Ancer, Lee Westwood, Tommy Fleetwood, Henrik Stenson, Kevin Na and Jason Kokrak (who is sponsored by Golf Saudi).

What will the new league look like?

While the official format is still unknown, two different variations of a rival league with Saudi ties — the Premier Golf League and Super Golf League — have been pitched over the last year and a half.

The Norman-led golf league slated for next spring is not the formerly proposed Premier Golf League, whose plan featured 40-48 players on teams of four with a captain playing an 18-event schedule all over the world with a season-ending team championship. In Feb. 2020 the league’s CEO said the PGL would receive backing from the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia.

What players may be involved

No names have been officially announced yet, but a handful of players have previous ties to golf in Saudi Arabia.

Phil Mickelson’s involvement in a rival, Saudi-backed league dates back to the 2020 Saudi International pro-am, where Lefty reportedly played alongside Premier Golf League representatives.

In July 2020, the Guardian reported that the league had sent formal offer letters worth “hundreds of millions of dollars” to a handful of players including Mickelson, Adam Scott, Stenson, Justin Rose, Rickie Fowler, Paul Casey and Koepka.

Almost a year later on May 4, 2021, a report in the Telegraph stated that multi-million dollar offers, some ranging from $30-50 million, were sent to Mickelson, Johnson, Scott, Koepka, DeChambeau, Fowler and Rose. That same month, player managers and agents met with the league’s backers on the Tuesday night before the 2021 PGA Championship at Kiawah, won by Mickelson.

Previous reactions

Rory McIlroy was the first big name to denounce the Premier Golf League with his, “For me, I’m out,” quote in Feb. 2020. A month later he would be joined by Jon Rahm and Koepka. At that time, the players were all ranked inside the top-three in the world.

In May of 2021 after the news of the $30-50 million offers, McIlroy doubled down, saying, “I don’t see why anyone would be for (the new league).” The PGA Tour — which created a “strategic alliance” with the European Tour to combat any rival leagues — has been steadfast in its stance. In a meeting with players that same month, commissioner Jay Monahan drew a line in the sand with multiple sources telling Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch that leaving the Tour for the new league would result in an immediate suspension from the PGA Tour and likely a lifetime ban.

On top of that, PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh said PGA Tour defectors would be barred from competing in the biennial Ryder Cup against Europe.

“If someone wants to play on a Ryder Cup for the U.S., they’re going to need to be a member of the PGA of America, and they get that membership through being a member of the Tour,” Waugh said in May. “I believe the Europeans feel the same way, and so I don’t know that we can be more clear kind of than that. We don’t see that changing.”

In a direct response to rival golf leagues, the PGA Tour also created the Player Impact Program, a $40 million bonus pool designed to compensate players who drive fan and sponsor engagement. At the end of this year, the money will be distributed to 10 players, with the player deemed most valuable receiving $8 million.

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Why Greg Norman?

This isn’t the Shark’s first time wading into the waters of a rival golf league.

Norman, the two-time major champion and World Golf Hall of Famer who won 20 times on the PGA Tour and 14 times on the European Tour, attempted to get the World Golf Tour off the ground in 1994, but was unsuccessful. The two-time British Open champion’s play was rejected by then-Tour commissioner Tim Finchem, who announced the World Golf Championships three years later in 1997.

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European Tour golfer Fredrik Andersson Hed, 49, dies of cancer

Fredrik Andersson Hed, who won the Italian Open in 2010 and retired in 2015, has died of cancer.

Fredrik Andersson Hed, who won the Italian Open in 2010 and retired in 2015, died Sunday of cancer.

The European Tour confirmed his death. He was 49.

“Fredrik was much loved in the golfing world and beyond, particularly amongst our Scandinavian players and staff, past and present,” said European Tour chief operating officer Keith Waters. “Our hearts go out to them at this incredibly sad time.”

Hed was from Sweden and played in 358 Euro Tour events. He was an outstanding amateur golfer, winning the European Young Masters and Swedish Junior Stroke Play Championship. He also competed in the Eisenhower Trophy before turning pro in 1992. He won twice on the Challenge Tour before spending the next decade on the European Tour. Six times in his career he kept his status via qualifying school.

Laurie Canter takes lead at Andalucia Masters as he seeks maiden Euro Tour victory

The 31-year-old Canter is leading by three shots at Valderrama.

With his birdie on the final hole at Real Club Valderrama in Sotogrande, Spain – one of precious few made by the whole field on Saturday – Laurie Canter positioned himself firmly atop the leaderboard with one round to go at the Andalucia Masters.

Canter, of England, posted a round of 4-under 67 to reach 7 under for the tournament. That put him three shots ahead of Matthew Fitzpatrick in second and four ahead of David Lipsky.

Breezy conditions made for a difficult day for the field, but Canter mixed eight birdies, including two at the starting two holes, with four bogeys.

The 31-year-old Canter is looking for his first European Tour win but he has three second place finishes in the last two seasons, including at the 2021 BMW PGA Championship. He has won in Spain before, too, having claimed the 2011 Spanish International Amateur.

“The golf course doesn’t give you loads,” he said. “Although, as we all know, there’s opportunities to drop shots here. I think what it means is I can go out tomorrow and play how I have these last couple of days. The score I end up on will be competitive, I think. That gives me a lot of confidence going in.

“The course is asking a lot of different challenges and you can’t dwell when it goes against you. I’m trying to stay as level as I can and I’m doing a good job.”

Valderrama is a former Ryder Cup venue, having hosted the 1997 matches. Fittingly, Fitzpatrick is competing there for the first time this week since the Europeans lost the Cup last month.

He is seeking seventh win in as many seasons on the European Tour.

“I’m excited to be in the final group,” Fitzpatrick said. “The aim at the start of the week is to be up there. It doesn’t get better than having a chance to win on Sunday. I’ll go out there and enjoy it.

“Valderrama was a real test today. I’m really pleased with the way I grinded it out and I’m happy with the one under.”

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Jon Rahm hasn’t forgotten where he came from, spending time signing autographs in his home country of Spain

“I’m going to sign all the children, no matter how long it takes.”

The purse for the CJ Cup at The Summit Club this week is $10 million. The purse at the Andalucia Masters on the European Tour is $4 million. Where’s Jon Rahm?

Right where he wants to be, in his home country of Spain, for the second straight week.

Some things are bigger than money. Rahm is playing for a smaller paycheck this week, if you put the potential appearance fee aside, but the impact he’s making across the pond is no doubt larger than the one he’d be having in Las Vegas if he was teeing it up in Sin City.

After stumbling to a disappointing 78 in his opening round, the world No. 1 reportedly hung around after his last putt dropped to sign autographs for anyone and everyone who were willing to wait.

Not sure many do that after one of their worst rounds of the year.

The fans at Valderrama aren’t the only ones receiving love from their hometown hero. Last week at the Spanish Open, Rahm did the same thing. Despite opening the week with a 63, the Spaniard flattened off the rest of the way, finishing Sunday in a tie for 17th.

“I’m going to sign all the children, no matter how long it takes.”

Some stars just get it. Rahm, undoubtedly, is on that list.

On Friday, he’ll try to bounce back from his 7-over round, and put on a show for all the fans who made the trip to see their idol.

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Spaniard Rafa Cabrera Bello takes over top spot at Spanish Open; Jon Rahm six back

A different Spaniard has become the frontrunner in Madrid with one round to go at the Spanish Open.

Rafa Cabrera Bello certainly has the home crowd behind him at the Acciona Open de Espana, and the Spaniard will need it as he takes a two-shot lead into the final round at Club de Campo Villa de Madrid. Cabrera Bello positioned himself at the top of the leaderboard in Saturday’s third round with a bogey-free 64.

At the beginning of the week, all eyes were on another Spanish player: World No. 1 Jon Rahm. But after opening rounds of 63-67, Rahm slid to a 1-over 72 on Saturday and at 11 under, is six shots off the lead and part of a tie for ninth.

That leaves Cabrera Bello in the lead spot and with a chance to better his runner-up finish at this event in 2019, the last time it was played. A win would check an interesting box for the 37-year-old in his long competitive career.

“I’ve won every Spanish amateur title there is and I’m missing this one which would be the pinnacle of Spanish golf,” he said. “I’m going to have a very good chance at it tomorrow but I’m sure there’ll be more chances in the future too so I’ll just go out there, have fun, feed off the crowd and try to put on a show for them again.

“Today was one of my favorite days ever out there, in front of my countrymen, playing on a course that I love and with beautiful conditions, I felt really good. I felt their support – I was getting goosebumps almost every hole hearing them yelling my name, it was very special and I’m very proud that I could put on a show for them.”

Cabrera Bello didn’t make a single bogey on the day, and has made only two bogeys in three rounds as he played his way to 17 under, two shots ahead of compatriot Adri Arnaus and Frenchman Julien Guerrier.

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Danny Willett leads Alfred Dunhill Links Championship; Tyrrell Hatton and Shane Lowry in striking distance

Can anyone catch the 2016 Masters champion?

The Alfred Dunhill Links Championship is always one of the most fun events on the European Tour schedule. Players and their partners rotate among three of the best golf courses in the world through the first three days of the event. The Old Course at St. Andrews, Carnoustie, and Kingsbarns are some of Scotland’s finest, with all hosting a round before the final day returns to the home of golf.

Danny Willett, leader after 54 holes, played St. Andrews Saturday without making a bogey, carding a 6-under 66. Through three rounds, Willett has only signed for two scores above par, which have been offset by a pair of eagles.

The 2016 Masters champ was feeling himself out on the links Saturday in some pretty miserable weather.

Tyyrell Hatton, who won this event in back-to-back years in 2016-17, enters the final round three shots behind Willett after a 1 under round at St. Andrews today. Luckily for him, the Old Course will be the host for the final round, so a few early birdies could put him right back in the mix. Hatton is playing with his dad, Jeff, this week.

Shane Lowry was an electrical spark for the European Ryder Cup team last week at Whistling Straits, and some of that energy has carried over this week in Scotland. The Irishman sits three shots back, and is tied with Hatton at 11 under. He, too, played the Old Course on Saturday, and paired six birdies with one bogey for a 5-under 67.

When playing golf in Scotland, you have to expect the worst when it comes to the weather. Billy Horschel has fully embraced that this week.

Click here for the full leaderboard.

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‘Motivated’ Billy Horschel wins European Tour’s BMW Championship. Should he be 13th man for U.S. Ryder Cup if Brooks Koepka can’t play?

Billy Horschel used a Ryder Cup snub as motivation to win the BMW PGA Championship in Surrey, England.

Billy Horschel was “gutted” that he didn’t get a call from U.S. Ryder Cup captain Steve Stricker earlier this week. He used the snub as motivation and fired a final-round 7-under 65 at Wentworth Golf Club to win the BMW PGA Championship in Surrey, England.

In doing so, Horschel became the first American to win Europe’s flagship event since Arnold Palmer and the first American to win any of the European Tour’s Rolex Series events.

It was also a throwback to 2014 when Horschel won the BMW Championship and Tour Championship after the U.S. Ryder Cup team’s captain choices already were selected. Despite a victory at the WGC Dell Match Play earlier this year and a fiery personality that seems well-suited for international team competition, Horschel was overlooked as one of Steve Stricker’s six captain’s picks. (He took Scottie Scheffler, who Horschel defeated in the finals of the Match Play instead.) Asked if he thought he might get a call from Stricker to replace the injured Brooks Koepka if he is unable to play, Horschel said, “I don’t know. It sucks not making the team. I didn’t play well enough after winning the Match Play to warrant a pick or to be an automatic selection.

“I was a little gutted that I didn’t get the call this week. I didn’t think the call was going to say I made the team, but I was a little gutted I didn’t get a call to say, hey, you didn’t make the team. In my mind, I thought I would at least get that. It was a little more motivation for that.”

Horschel birdied the 18th hole to edge England’s Laurie Canter, Wales’s Jamie Donaldson and Thailand’s Kiradech Aphibarnat.

“It’s pretty special,” Horschel said. “I grew up watching this event on TV. I don’t say this lightly, this event goes hand in hand with our Players Championship so it’s nice to check that box off.”

Horschel, 34, played his final 29 holes bogey-free and made birdies on five of his first 12 holes on Sunday. But up ahead, Aphibarnat was torching Wentworth to the tune of 9 under for his first 16 holes, which included an 18-foot made putt for eagle at 12 and pumped his right fist.

Thailand’s John Daly, as he’s called, led by three strokes over Horschel at the time. But he pulled his second shot at the par-5 17th into a hedge, had to take an unplayable and made bogey to shoot 64 and grab the clubhouse lead at 18 under. Donaldson birdied the final two holes for 66 but missed his eagle putt at the last and finished one short. Canter, who was attempting to become the first Englishman to get his first European Tour victory at Europe’s flagship event since Tony Jacklin in 1972, made par at the final two holes, a pair of par 5s, to close in 67.

Horschel burned the left edge on a 23-foot birdie putt at 17 to break the deadlock at 18 under, but wedged from 91 yards to a foot for the decisive birdie at 18 to finish at 19-under 269.

Horschel, who has six PGA Tour career wins, won for the first time in Europe and assumed the lead in the Race to Dubai.

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