Jordan Spieth, Harold Varner III among those whose season ended at Northern Trust

After missing the cut at the Northern Trust, several big names who started the week ranked higher than No. 70 in FedEx Cup points are out.

NORTON, Mass. – The numbers don’t play favorites, and after missing the cut at the Northern Trust, several well-known golfers who started the week ranked higher than No. 70 on the FedEx Cup points list have now been eliminated from the playoffs. Only players ranked 70 or better are eligible to play in next week’s BMW Championship.

While it is not official yet, Phil Mickelson will almost assuredly finish worse than 70th on the FedEx Cup points list. Mickelson started the week at No. 67 and missed the cut. As of Friday night, he is projected to move to 76th, and the Hall of Famer has already said that he plans to play the PGA Tour Champions event that starts on Monday.

Among those golfers who will not be moving on are:

  • Jordan Spieth – The winner of the 2015 FedEx Cup, Spieth entered the Northern Trust ranked No. 100 on the point list, but his 71-69 performance left him one shot over the cutline.
  • Harold Varner III – Started the week at No. 73 and missed the cut after shooting 71-69
  • Shane Lowry – Despite playing in eight tournaments after the PGA Tour restarted in June, the 2019 British Open champion entered the week at No. 122 on the FedEx Cup points list. He missed the cut at TPC Boston by two shots.
  • Lucas Glover – The 2009 U.S. Open champion entered the week at No. 115 on the FedEx Cup point list and shot 70-75.
  • Brandt Snedeker – The 2012 FedEx Cup winner struggled after the PGA Tour restart and started the week at No. 98. he shot 73 and 72 at the Northern Trust to miss the cut.
  • Graeme McDowell – This was the eighth event for the 2010 U.S. Open champion, who started the week at No. 113 on the point list. Since the tour restarted and after shooting 77-72, he missed the cut for the sixth time.

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Dustin Johnson stole the show, and the lead, at TPC Boston with 60 after Scottie Scheffler’s 59

The second round of the Northern Trust was a wild day of scoring, especially for Dustin Johnson and Scottie Scheffler.

NORTON, Mass. – Danny Lee walked off the golf course after shooting a 64, signed his scorecard and talked with a couple of media members. He was one of the first players to complete his loop of TPC Boston on Friday morning, and his name was at the top of the leaderboard. Anyone who shoots 66-64 to start a tournament has the right to pump out his chest a little and feel good about things, but by the time Lee’s rental car rolled down the driveway and turned onto Route 40, his fantastic start at the 2020 Northern Trust would be forgotten.

The course, originally designed by Arnold Palmer in 2002 and updated in 2017 by Gil Hanse, became an aviary on Friday. Birdies and eagles were flying everywhere, and Scottie Scheffler and Dustin Johnson were hunting.

Scheffler set a tournament course and posted the 12th sub-60 round ever on the PGA Tour, shooting a 59 in the morning wave that included 12 birdies. He finished at 13 under. But five hours after he holed a 4-footer on the 18th green, Johnson missed a 25-footer on the same hole for a 59. He tapped in from 2 feet for a 60.

At 15-under, Johnson will take a two-shot lead over Scheffler and Cameron Davis (who had a second-round 65) into the third round of the Northern Trust. He will have a three-shot lead over Lee, Louis Oosthuizen (65) and Harris English (66).


Northern Trust: Leaderboard | Best photos | Scheffler’s 59| DJ’s 60


“Today was obviously a good day on the course. I got off to a really good start and made a bunch of birdies on the front nine,” Scheffler said. “Had some key up-and-downs at the beginning of the round that kind of got me rolling, freed me up a little bit. Then the momentum just kind of kept going. I never really lost momentum, which was nice. A lot of times, when you’re playing well, you can lose that momentum toward the end of the round or have a hiccup here or there. The momentum stayed the whole time, and I made a lot of putts.”

After hitting 16 of 18 greens in regulation, Scheffler needed just 23 putts on Friday.

Johnson, who is ranked No. 4 on the Official World Golf Rankings and started the day at 4 under, surged up the leaderboard and set a front-nine tournament record by shooting 27. He made five birdies and two eagles and then birdied the next two holes to reach 11-under par for the day through 11 holes.

Had fans been lining the ropes lines and filling the bleachers, as there have been in past years, the noise would have rivaled the roars heard when the New England Patriots score at Gillette Stadium.

“Everything was going well today,” Johnson said. “Any time you’re that many under through 11 holes, you’re putting well. I made some nice putts, but also I hit some really good shots.”

After having a terrible putting day on Thursday morning, Johnson hit the practice green Thursday afternoon and found a spark using a drill that helps him position his right arm more effectively. He repeated the exercise on Friday before his round and utilized it before several putts on the course Friday. It paid off because Johnson made over 151 feet of putts in the second round and was the leader in strokes gained putting for the day, too (5.132).

Both Scheffler and Johnson said they were very aware that a 59 was possible as they came down the stretch, and they took similar approaches to handling it.

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“I wouldn’t say those thoughts are negative at all,” Scheffler said. “You obviously put them in the back of your head when you’re hitting shots, but as far as thinking about (shooting 59), it’s not necessarily a negative because it encourages me to continue to make birdies.”

Johnson also wanted to attack the course and said that he was looking to make birdies on every hole, but a couple of wayward tee shots on the back nine prevented him from attacking a few flags.

If there is one shot he regrets, it is the tee shot on 18.

“I should have hit 3-wood off the tee there because I could have had 3-wood and 6-iron on the green,” Johnson said. “If I had to do over again, I’d hit a 3-wood there.”

Two rounds of 59 have never been fired on the same day at the same PGA Tour event. However, this is the second time there has been a 59 and a 60. In 2010, Paul Goydos shot 59 and Steve Stricker posted the 60 in the first round of the John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run.

While plenty of low scores were posted at TPC Boston on Friday, several notable players struggled and missed the cut of 3 under (139). Jordan Spieth finished at 2 under, Tony Finau was 1 under, and Phil Mickelson, Patrick Cantlay, Gary Woodland and Bryson DeChambeau ended at even par. Collin Morikawa, the PGA Championship winner two weeks ago, struggled to a 1-over finish to miss his second career cut as a professional.

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Reigning FedEx Cup champion Rory McIlroy searching for attitude adjustment to regain form

Reigning FedEx Cup champion Rory McIlroy is working on adjusting his game ahead of the PGA Tour’s Northern Trust.

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Which Rory will be the story this week?

The Rory McIlroy who was dominant during the front nine of his season, wracking up top-5 finishes in seven consecutive tournaments, including a victory in the World Golf Championships-HSBC Champions, en route to his return to No. 1 in the Official World Golf Rankings?

Or the Rory McIlroy who has struggled on his back nine of the season after golf returned from a 13-week COVID-19 break, posting zero top-10s in his last six starts, with a tie for 11th in The Travelers Championship his only top-30 result?

The reigning FedEx Cup champion is obviously hoping for the former as the lucrative postseason begins Thursday with the Northern Trust at TPC Boston.

“The last few weeks haven’t really been what I’ve wanted from a golf standpoint on the course and also results-wise, and even just sort of practice-wise and technique-wise, hasn’t really been where I’ve wanted it to be,” McIlroy told reporters Wednesday. “I sound like a broken record. I saw some good signs last week in practice, and it’s just a matter of it translating out into the competitive arena.”


Odds | Bet on Tiger | Fantasy | Tee times, TV info


If the world No. 3 is to reverse his lost in translation ways of late, however, he said he needs an attitude adjustment. During his dull stretch, McIlroy, 31, has talked about losing focus on the golf course and struggling to stay motivated.

But last week, he heard a quote he hopes will change things: Don’t let your golf influence your attitude; let your attitude influence your golf.

“I’ve been letting my golf influence my attitude on the course instead of the other way around, because if you go out there with a good attitude, that will hopefully help,” said McIlroy, who starts the playoffs in eighth place as he tries to become the first three-time winner of the FedEx Cup. “I’ve sort of got those a little crossed the last few weeks. I think going out there with a bit of a better attitude, not being as reactive to misses or certain shots, will definitely be better for me going forward as we enter this big stretch of golf.

“Our mind is way more powerful than really anything else. If you can utilize that the right way, it’s inevitably going to help your game on the course.”

What might help is the venue. McIlroy won the Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston in 2012 and again in 2016, when he won his first FedEx Cup title. But while he has an affinity for the course, he knows it won’t matter if he doesn’t get his attitude in the right place and his wedge game, putting and driving on track.

In the PGA Championship in his last start two weeks ago at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco, where he won the WGC-Match Play Championship in 2015, his love for the course offered little help as he never contended and tied for 33rd, extending his winless streak in majors to 20 since winning his fourth major in the 2014 PGA Championship.

“The most important thing is executing the shots, and my execution over the last few weeks hasn’t been as good as it’s needed to be, and it doesn’t matter how good you’ve played on a certain golf course before,” said McIlroy. “If you’re not hitting the shots the way you want, then it’s not going to happen.

“You’re not going to have a chance.”

If history is an indicator, however, McIlroy will have a chance this week and beyond. He has excelled in the playoffs as he and Tiger Woods are the only two-time winners of the FedEx Cup. His five victories in the playoffs are the most won by anyone, with Woods and Dustin Johnson second at four apiece.

And McIlroy is the all-time money earner in the playoffs, with $40.5 million in prize money and bonuses.

“The playoffs are always an exciting time of the year and exciting stage of the season,” he said. “This is usually a time of year where I’ve historically played pretty well, and Boston’s a place and a golf course where I’ve got some nice history, so hopefully that can ignite something for me this week and I can get on a good little run of golf coming up.”

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Brooks Koepka withdraws from Northern Trust due to knee, hip injuries

World No. 7 Brooks Koepka has withdrawn from the Northern Trust, the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs.
The four-time major winner is backing out of the event due to a knee and hip-related injury.
After missing the cut at last week’s Wyndham Championship, Koepka traveled to Massachusetts but never came to TPC Boston, the site of the Northern Trust.
The 2019-2020 season is officially over for Koepka. He entered this week at No. 97 on the FedEx Cup point list and only the top 70 are able to play at next week’s event.
Last September, Koepka underwent a stem cell procedure on his left knee. He injured the same knee after slipping on wet concrete at the CJ Cup at Nine Bridges.
The U.S. Open is scheduled to start on September 14, an event Koepka is likely to play in

World No. 7 Brooks Koepka has withdrawn from the Northern Trust, the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs.
The four-time major winner is backing out of the event due to a knee and hip-related injury.
After missing the cut at last week’s Wyndham Championship, Koepka traveled to Massachusetts but never came to TPC Boston, the site of the Northern Trust.
The 2019-2020 season is officially over for Koepka. He entered this week at No. 97 on the FedEx Cup point list and only the top 70 are able to play at next week’s event.
Last September, Koepka underwent a stem cell procedure on his left knee. He injured the same knee after slipping on wet concrete at the CJ Cup at Nine Bridges.
The U.S. Open is scheduled to start on September 14, an event Koepka is likely to play in

The Northern Trust Preview

Golfweek’s David Dusek discusses the field in the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs at TPC Boston for The Northern Trust.

Golfweek’s David Dusek discusses the field in the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs at TPC Boston for The Northern Trust.

2020 FedEx Cup Playoff Guide: Who’s in, who’s out, how does it work, where is it played

The playoffs will look and sound different as there will be no fans lining the fairways, but there will be millions of dollars on the line.

NORTON, Mass. — The PGA Tour season has felt disjointed thanks to a prolonged break due to the coronavirus pandemic, but after Jim Herman won the Wyndham Championship on Sunday, the 2019-20 regular season concluded.

Last year, Patrick Reed won the first event in the re-formatted FedEx Cup playoffs, the Northern Trust at Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City, New Jersey. This year, the event has picked up stakes and moved north on I-95, and now TPC Boston is hosting the first round of the 2020 postseason.

The playoffs will look and sound different this year because there will be no fans lining the fairways at the tournaments, but there are millions of dollars on the line every week.

Here is everything you need to know about the playoffs and how the next three weeks will work.

Who’s in, who’s out?

Since last September at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier, PGA Tour players have been earning FedEx Cup points based on their performances. Ten events in the spring and summer were canceled, including the British Open, but 12 events were completed after the Arnold Palmer Bay Hill Invitational.

The top 125 players on the FedEx Cup point list are eligible for this week’s Northern Trust. Golfers who finished above No. 125 on the list are done for the season. If someone withdraws before the tournament starts, there will not be an alternate added to the field.

Among the notable players who failed to qualify for this season’s playoffs are former Masters champions Charl Schwartzel (No. 128), Sergio Garcia (135) and Danny Willett (146), 2009 British Open champion Stewart Cink (144) and 2013 PGA Championship winner Jason Dufner (164).

Round 1 – The Northern Trust

The Northern Trust has a 125-player field and is the only FedEx Cup playoff event with a 36-hole cut. The low-65 players and ties will play the final 36 holes and earn more FedEx Cup points. Only golfers who finish ranked No. 70 or better on the FedEx Cup point list after the Northern Trust’s conclusion will advance to the next round of the playoffs.

The Northern Trust
Patrick Reed hits his approach shot to the 18th green during the final round of the 2019 Northern Trust at Liberty National Golf Course. Photo by Mark Konezny/USA TODAY Sports

Making cut will be especially crucial at the Northern Trust because any golfer who starts the week ranked No. 71 or worse on the FedEx Cup point list and who misses the cut will fail to advance in the playoffs.

Numerous big names need solid performances this week if they want to crack the top 70 and continue their seasons, including Ian Poulter (85), Rickie Fowler (88), Tommy Fleetwood (89), Brooks Koepka (97), Brandt Snedeker (98) and Jordan Spieth (100). 2018 FedEx Cup champion Justin Rose starts this season’s playoffs ranked No. 109.

Round 2 – BMW Championship

The BMW Championship will be contested on the North Course at Olympia Fields Golf Club outside Chicago Aug. 27-30. Only players who rank No. 70 or better on the points list can play.

There is no cut at the BMW Championship, so every player in the field will play all four rounds and earn FedEx Cup points. However, only players ranked No. 30 or better on the list will qualify for the following week’s Tour Championship.

Many things can change between now and the end of the BMW Championship, but golfers who are just outside the top 30 include 2019 U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland (33), Jason Day (45) and Tiger Woods (49).

Round 3 – The Tour Championship

The PGA Tour’s season-ending event will once again take place at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. Thirty players will qualify for the event, and there will be no cut, but the Tour Championship will have a unique start.

After the conclusion of the BMW Championship, the golfer ranked No. 1 on the FedEx Cup point list will start the Tour Championship with a score of -10, a reward for accumulating the most points throughout the season.

Based on where the other players rank on the point list, they will start between two and 10 shots behind the leader:

Player rank Starting position
1 10 under
2 8 under
3 7 under
4 6 under
5 5 under
6-10 4 under
11-15 3 under
16-20 2 under
21-25 1 under
26-30 Even
Tour Championship
Rory McIlroy signs pin flags after winning the 2019 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club on Aug. 25, 2019 in Atlanta. Photo by Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images

Once players are assigned their starting scores and play begins at the Tour Championship, FedEx Cup points become meaningless.

Whoever wins the Tour Championship will also win the FedEx Cup and the $15 million prize.

Last season, Justin Thomas entered the Tour Championship ranked No. 1 and started at -10. Still, Rory McIlroy, who started the week fifth on the point list, wound up winning the tournament and the FedEx Cup even though he began the week five shots behind Thomas.

List of FedEx Cup champions

Year Golfer
2019 Rory McIlroy
2018 Justin Rose
2017 Justin Thomas
2016 Rory McIlroy
2015 Jordan Spieth
2014 Bill Horschel
2013 Henrik Stenson
2012 Brandt Snedeker
2011 Bill Haas
2010 Jim Furyk
2009 Tiger Woods
2008 Vijay Singh
2007 Tiger Woods

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Tiger Woods takes this week off; where will we see him next?

Tiger Woods is feeling optimistic about his future prospects as he tries to win an 83rd PGA Tour title, a 16th major and a third FedEx Cup.

SAN FRANCISCO – Tiger Woods is feeling optimistic about his future prospects as he tries to win a record-setting 83rd PGA Tour title, a 16th major and a third FedEx Cup.

Before leaving the grounds at TPC Harding Park on Sunday following his final-round 67 at the PGA Championship and before the leaders teed off, Woods spoke with encouraging words of what lies ahead – the FedEx Cup Playoffs beginning in two weeks and the U.S. Open in September.

Woods is not playing in this week’s regular-season finale, the Wyndham Championship, and instead will decide how he’ll attack the trio of events in the FedEx Cup Playoffs before taking a week off ahead of the U.S. Open at Winged Foot in New York.

Woods is currently 48th in the FedEx Cup standings. Starting with 125 players at the first event, the Northern Trust at TPC Boston, only the top 70 will advance to the BMW Championship at Olympia Fields in Illinois. From there, only the top 30 advance to the finale, the Tour Championship at East Lake in Atlanta.

PGA Championship
Tiger Woods tees off from the 16th during the first round of the 2020 PGA Championship golf tournament at TPC Harding Park. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Woods could play the Northern Trust, and depending on his result, could skip the BMW Championship. Or he may roll the dice and skip the Northern Trust and trust he’ll play well enough in the BMW Championship to make it to the Tour Championship. Or he may be forced to play the first two events to try and get to Atlanta. If he were to advance out of the BMW Championship, that would be three starts in as many weeks.

“That’s potentially what could happen, and we’ve been training for that,” Woods said. “Trying to get my strength and endurance up to that ability to making sure that I can handle that type of workload.

“We knew once I started playing again when I committed to Memorial that this was going to be a heavy workload, and my training sessions, we’ve been pushing it pretty hard, making sure that I kept my strength and endurance up. This (upcoming) week off will be no different. We’ll be pushing it hard to make sure that I can stay strong and have the endurance to keep on going.”

Joe LaCava, Woods’ caddie, hopes his boss will play the first two events of the postseason. Whatever Woods decides, LaCava knows work needs to be done.

“He knows it,” LaCava said. “He needs to tighten up his short game a little bit, work on that at home. You just keep working at it. To me, it’s just a lack of playing tournament golf, you know what I mean? You can’t duplicate that at home. I understand it.

“He was on lockdown during the virus, so I get that. It’s not a complaint, just a fact. But I just think he needs more reps at this point.”

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Brooks Koepka on recurring left knee issue: ‘Walking downhill’s a pain’

Brooks Kopeka insisted on Tuesday, ahead of this week’s PGA Tour stop at TPC Twin Cities for the 3M Open, that his knee feels a bit better.

The knee simply isn’t progressing, Brooks Koepka is the first to admit, at least from a clinical standpoint. An MRI last week, before the start of play at the Memorial, revealed this unfortunate diagnosis on his left knee, and it’s something the Jupiter, Florida, resident has known for weeks.

But Koepka insisted on Tuesday, ahead of this week’s PGA Tour stop at TPC Twin Cities for the 3M Open, that it feels a bit better. And the four-time major winner also wants something else spelled out perfectly clear — he will not consider the knee an excuse for his recent string of poor finishes.

“I’ll be honest with you, Sunday was the best my knee’s felt in a really
long time. I worked with my physio, Marc Wahl, quite a bit over the week. I don’t know. It was the first course we played where it’s actually been hilly. Going downhill, it bugged me a little bit, uphill’s fine, and that was the hilliest golf course we played,” he said. “But it feels a lot better. Just walking downhill’s a pain. It’s where that patellar extends and just try to adjust going down hills.

“It’s not an excuse of why I’ve been playing bad, I can promise you that.”

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Koepka insisted he was feeling “a million times better” when the golf world restarted at the Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, but his recent results haven’t backed that up. Outside of a seventh-place finish at the RBC Heritage, Koepka hasn’t been a factor for months. In fact, Hilton Head Island marked his only top 25 showing of the season.

And that begs a bigger question —will that knee ever fully come around?

It started bothering him last year, requiring surgery Sept. 2 to repair a partially torn patella tendon, which he then re-aggravated in October when he slipped on wet concrete and was forced to withdraw from the CJ Cup at Nine Bridges in South Korea.

And although he’s been working with a trainer for eight months, the results are mixed. Also, this isn’t a great time for Koepka to be less than 100 percent — he’s in the middle of a five-week run of tournaments with title defenses at WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational in Memphis and then the PGA Championship at Harding Park in San Francisco in the near future.

Koepka admits he’s not where he’d like to be with those two events on the horizon.

“I just need to play good. I’ve played so bad lately. Yeah, just trying to find things. Every week I feel like the results aren’t there, but it’s getting better and better. My good shots are good, but I’ve just got to bring that bottom level up. I’ve hit some real costly shots,” he said. “I seem to miss it short-sided every time and that’s been kind of the downfall of why I haven’t played well. I missed it in very costly spots and just trying to figure out why that is. If I can bring the misses up, I’ll be fine.”

As of now, Koepka isn’t eligible for the FedEx Cup playoffs, which are fast approaching. He’s 154th in the standings, and that might not allow him to ease up as the season continues. He said Tuesday he’s not certain how many events he’ll play down the stretch.

“By the end of the PGA, I was going to see how I feel. I probably have to go back to Challenge Tour days playing this many in a row, going five to seven weeks in a row and then trying to take a week off. But that was, what, six, seven years ago, so it’s been a while since I played this many in a row,” Koepka said. “But at the same time, I’ve had some weekends off, so it hasn’t been — it hasn’t been too bad yet.

“I mean, it’s one swing away. Everybody knows that golf’s that game where you make one good swing and everything clicks and it’s like all right, back to normal.”

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