19-year-old Denwit Boriboonsub wins first Asian Tour title by three shots over LIV Golf’s Henrik Stenson

The phenom from Thailand shot 7-under 64 to win the Saudi Open on Sunday.

Denwit Boriboonsub of Thailand made his first Asian Tour title Sunday his third win in three weeks.

The 19-year-old shot 7-under 64 to win the Saudi Open on Sunday to finish at 18 under and win by three shots over LIV Golf’s Henrik Stenson. The season-ending tournament was held at the at the Riyadh Golf Club.

Boriboonsub won the Aramco Invitational two weeks ago on the Asian Development Tour and then claimed the Thailand Open.

“It is an unbelievable feeling because it is incredible winning three weeks in a row. It is like magic,” Boriboonsub said.

Stenson is a former champion of the tournament.

“I came in with two months off, so it was a good opportunity for me to kind of see where we’re at and what needs to be worked more on when we start preparing for next year in the middle of January,” he said.

Travis Smyth of Australia finished third.

A look back at every FedEx Cup Playoff champion, beginning with Tiger Woods

View all the former FedEx Cup Playoff champions, beginning with Tiger Woods in 2007.

The FedEx Cup Playoffs have gone through multiple format changes over the years, but one thing remains the same — a massive payout to the winner.

A total of $18 million goes to the winner of the PGA Tour’s season-long race. Only the top 30 players make their way to East Lake and are broken down into an aggregate scoring system that went into effect in 2019.

Since the FedEx Cup Playoffs began in 2007, 13 different champions have been crowned. Rory McIlroy leads the way with three FedEx Cups to his name, surpassing Tiger Woods’ record in 2019. The two all-time greats are the only players to claim multiple FedEx Cups.

Although the winner of the event has claimed an eight-figure prize since 2007, everyone who makes it to Atlanta goes home with a sizeable check in their back pocket.

Who will add their name to the list this year?

LIV Golf players dish on if they even want to return to the PGA Tour

Phil Mickelson said “not a single” LIV Golf player wanted to return to the PGA Tour and his colleagues backed him up.

As the powers that be continue to iron out details for the proposed framework agreement that aims to unite professional golf, one of the biggest questions is what must happen for players who left for LIV Golf to return to the PGA Tour and DP World Tour.

Phil Mickelson didn’t mince words when he recently claimed “not a single player” who joined LIV Golf wanted to play on the PGA Tour. Are there some events players have fond memories of and wish they could play? Absolutely. But a full PGA Tour schedule, or even an abbreviated one, doesn’t sound appealing to the vast majority of those who made the leap to the 48-player, 12-team league.

We asked a handful of players what they thought ahead of this week’s LIV Golf Bedminster event at Trump National in New Jersey, and the answers were very similar.

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LIV Golf’s European stalwarts holding out hope for future inclusion in Ryder Cup

“At the end of the day, I’m happy where I am, and that doesn’t change,” said Sergio Garcia.

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BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Henrik Stenson was slated to be the European Ryder Cup captain for the upcoming matches in Italy later this year. Then he joined LIV Golf last summer and saw his captaincy removed.

Sergio Garcia has been a stalwart for the Euros since his debut in the biennial bash back in 1999. His current lackluster form may not have led the all-time points leader – 28 ½ with a 25-13-7 record – to one of the 12 spots on the roster, but the 43-year-old Spaniard would be a shoe-in as a vice captain at the very least. Then he resigned his DP World Tour membership, removing himself from consideration.

Because of their own decisions, neither player will be present at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club near Rome, Sept. 29-Oct. 1, to help the Europeans reclaim the cup. That said, they’re both hopeful to don the blue and yellow in future matches.

“Yes, I would love to, obviously. It is disappointing to see that I’m not going to be able to be part of the Ryder Cup this year and the DP World Tour for the same matter,” said Garcia ahead of this week’s LIV Golf event at Trump National Bedminster. “But it is what it is. At the end of the day, I’m happy where I am, and that doesn’t change.

“But at the end of the day, hopefully there will be a way back and something that we can work on, and we’ll see what happens in the future.”

“I hope. I hope maybe we can see a different future down the line somewhere, whether that involves me or some of the other guys,” added Stenson. “It’s kind of a lot of speculation, and I’ll just wait and see what happens. If things change in the future, which I hope they will, we’ll see if there’s a time and a place for some of us to be involved going forward.”

World No. 3 Jon Rahm has been adamant about wanting his friend Garcia on the squad, and the fellow countrymen have spoken about the event often over the last year.

“Yeah, we’ve talked a lot about it, him and I. Everyone knows how much I love the Ryder Cup and the bonds that we’ve been able to build and are created in those Ryder Cups. Obviously, Jon is no different. We had a great time. We obviously are good friends, and our friendship kind of got even stronger after the last Ryder Cup,” explained Garcia. “Yeah, it is going to be a shame. I will miss him, too.”

Stenson, on the other hand, hasn’t spoken about the matches too much with other players, noting how everyone understands the situation as the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund continue to iron out details regarding the framework agreement to create a new golf entity that hopes to unite the divided professional game. Despite his ousting as captain, the 47-year-old Swede – who boasts a 10-7-2 record in five appearances – still plans to watch the action next month.

Ryder Cup has been a big part of my career. I’ve got some of my greatest golfing memories from the Ryder Cup, and a lot of my friendships were built from the Ryder Cup. Yeah, I’ll follow. I’m a golf fan, as well, and I’ll follow the scores,” said Stenson. “I don’t know, it’s not like I’ve decided that I got my lounge chair and the popcorn bucket and that I’m going to sit there every hour of it, but of course I’ll check in. I know what the bags are going to look like.”

“If you’ve been part of something and then you’re not part of it, there’s certain aspects you’re going to miss,” he said, “but I’ll follow and obviously support from a distance.”

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LIV Golf team announces crypto exchange company OKX as first global sponsor

Uncertainty swirls around the future of LIV amid the news of a partnership between the PGA Tour and PIF.

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As uncertainty swirls around the future of LIV Golf amid the news of a partnership between the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund to create a new global golf entity, one team is moving ahead like it’s business as usual.

On Wednesday morning Majesticks GC named OKX, a crypto exchange company, as its first global sponsor. The Majesticks are three-way captained by Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood and Henrik Stenson, with Sam Horsfield and Laurie Canter (a temporary injury replacement for Horsfield) filling out the roster. The OKX logo will feature on team uniforms.

“Having been an OKX Ambassador, I know that the company brings passion, technological expertise and creative thinking to everything it does,” said Poulter. “We both have ambitions not only to win but to challenge the status quo.”

The sponsorship is OKX’s latest venture in the sports world after previous partnerships with the McLaren Formula 1 Team, as well as English Premier League giants Manchester City. OKX is not available in the United States due to regulatory and compliance reasons and the press release came with a lengthy disclaimer warning about the high degree of risk that comes with trading digital assets.

With a global sponsor and team principal already in place, the Majesticks are furthest along with regard to team development compared to the other 11 squads in the league. LIV Golf will return to action next week, June 30-July 2, at Real Club Valderrama in Spain.

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Mito Pereira, Sebastian Munoz officially join LIV Golf as first four team rosters are revealed

The rosters are slowly but surely becoming official for the 2023 LIV Golf League.

The first two in the next crop of players to leave the PGA Tour for the LIV Golf League are now official.

On Wednesday the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financially backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund revealed the rosters of four teams and confirmed previous reports that Mito Pereira and Sebastian Munoz would be joining the league. Both players will join David Puig on Joaquin Niemann’s Torque GC.

Brooks Koepka’s Smash GC also got a shake up with the addition of Matthew Wolff to the roster alongside Jason Kokrak and Chase Koepka.

The Majesticks, co-captained by Henrik Stenson and Ian Poulter, remain unchanged from 2022 with Lee Westwood and Sam Horsfield completing the team.

Just days after the 4 Aces GC won the team championship, it was reported they had already made a move to add Peter Uihlein alongside captain Dustin Johnson, Patrick Reed and Pat Perez. That move is now official as Uihlein replaces Talor Gooch.

Here’s the roster release schedule for the rest of the week (captains in parentheses):

  • Thursday: Cleeks GC (Martin Kaymer), Crushers GC (Bryson DeChambeau), Fireballs GC (Sergio Garcia) and RangeGoats GC (Bubba Watson)
  • Friday: HyFlyers GC (Phil Mickelson), Iron Heads GC (Kevin Na), Ripper GC (Cam Smith) and Stinger GC (Louis Oosthuizen).

Broadcast plans

Earlier this week the league also announced its television plans after signing a TV deal with the CW Network last month. LIV will be available in every U.S. market in 2022 across CW affiliates, as well as Nexstar owned and operated stations. Second- and third-round coverage on Saturday and Sunday will be broadcast from 1-6 p.m. ET for all 14 events. Opening rounds on Friday will only be available on the CW app. If fans want to watch the live action when LIV tees it up in time zones opposite the states – Australia, Singapore or Saudi Arabia, for example – live coverage will be available on the app.

The LIV Golf League will begin its 14-event second season next week at Mayakoba’s El Camaleón Golf Course on the Riviera Maya, Feb. 24-26.

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Drama in Dubai: Thomas Pieters tied for lead while LIV member and ex-European Ryder Cup captain Henrik Stenson paired with Luke Donald on Sunday

Things may get a bit awkward in Dubai.

Until the dispute between LIV Golf and the DP World Tour is settled in court, tension will riddle the range at most events throughout the season.

Exhibit A: Henrik Stenson, who lost his position as European Ryder Cup captain once he joined the Saudi-backed LIV Series, will be paired with Tyrrell Hatton, a Ryder Cup veteran, and Luke Donald, the man who replaced Stenson as captain, on Sunday for the third round of the Hero Dubai Desert Classic.

All three players are 2 under through two days and eight back of Thomas Pieters, Richard Bland and Michael Thorbjornsen.

Dubai Desert Classic: Leaderboard, round three tee times

Thorbjornsen, a junior at Stanford and Massachusetts native, was a Golfweek 2022 All-American honorable mention. At the ’22 Travelers Championship on the PGA Tour, an event played down the road from where he grew up, Thorbjornsen finished solo fourth.

Rory McIlroy didn’t have his best stuff Saturday, making 15 pars, one birdie, one bogey and an eagle to post a day two 2-under 70. He’s tied for seventh, two back of the lead.

Patrick Reed, who’s been in headlines all week thanks to a viral moment with McIlroy, is also at 8 under. The old Ryder Cup rivals aren’t paired together for the third round.

A disappointment for most of the golf community.

Due to weather delays earlier in the week, play will conclude Monday in Dubai.

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‘What sort of tour is that?’: Gary Player went off on LIV Golf, Cameron Smith in recent interview

It’s safe to say Player, 86, isn’t the biggest fan of LIV Golf.

Gary Player is not one to mince words.

And in his latest rant, he sounded off against the LIV Golf Series. Player, who is a Golf Saudi ambassador, said recently in a BBC interview numerous things going against LIV Golf, Cameron Smith and other players who’ve defected to the breakaway series that’s backed by Saudi Arabia.

The nine-time major winner even called for those breakaways to be banned from majors.

“I wouldn’t take a billion dollars for my nine majors on both tours,” Player said. “I worked hard. I had desire. I traveled the world. It was an education, I met wonderful people.

“How can you ever be a champion playing a tour with 54 holes and no cut? What sort of tour is that? 54 holes, no cut, a team event nobody understands. It’s a tour for people who don’t have confidence in their future. They don’t have the confidence they can be winners. It’s never going to compare to the regular tour. No chance.”

“They’ve declared war on the PGA Tour,” Player added. “They must not expect to play in the Ryder Cup, the Presidents Cup, play in the majors and all those things. You can’t have your cake and eat it. That’s the bed you’ve chosen, that’s the bed you’ve got to lie in.”

Asked whether LIV could overtake the PGA Tour as the top circuit, Player responded: “Not even a chance.”

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Player also specifically went after Smith, the second-ranked golfer in the world who joined LIV Golf ahead of its tournament in Bolton, Massachusetts, this week.

“Here’s a young man I really thought was going to be a superstar. Now, what sort of future does he have?” Player said. “Will he be able to realize this great dream of being a champion? I don’t know. I don’t blame [Henrik] Stenson for going. He had no money, so he had to go. But this is a potential superstar. I think his advisors have given him the wrong advice.”

It’s safe to say Player, 86, isn’t the biggest fan of LIV Golf.

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Henrik Stenson holds off charging Matthew Wolff to win LIV Golf debut at Trump Bedminster

The LIV Golf Bedminster event came down to the wire on both the team and individual leaderboards.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Henrik Stenson said the last few weeks haven’t been much fun, which may be the undersell of the century seeing as the five-time member of Team Europe lost his Ryder Cup captaincy for the 2023 matches after joining the LIV Golf Invitational Series.

The 46-year-old Swede was somehow able to block the outside noise and focus in his debut for the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, taking home the individual title by two shots at 11 under. Stenson last won at the 2019 Hero World Challenge, Tiger Woods’ unofficial event in the Bahamas. His last PGA Tour victory came at the 2017 Wyndham Championship. The victory netted Stenson a cool $4 million.

“Yeah, it has been a bit of a roller coaster, no question. You’ve all seen that, and we talked about it earlier in the week,” said Stenson. “Now it’s about looking forward, for me at least, and yeah, I’m super proud with the focus I managed to have this week and to get my game in – I’ve been working pretty hard to get the game back in shape, and it’s certainly going in the right direction as we know now.”

Stenson was tied for the lead at Trump National Golf Club after the first round, held the solo lead after Saturday’s second round and did just enough to win Sunday, shooting a 2-under 69 for the second consecutive day. A charging Matthew Wolff tied Stenson and Patrick Reed for the low round of the week with a final-round, 7-under 64 to finish T-2 with Dustin Johnson. Carlos Ortiz finished fourth at 8 under, with Reed rounding out the top five at 7 under.

“I think there might have been a little bit of extra motivation in there this week. When we as players have that, I think we can bring out the good stuff. Yeah, I certainly did that this week,” Stenson explained. “I guess that’s been a bit of a theme over the course of my career, I think, when I really want something I manage to dig a little bit deeper, and a lot of times we manage to make it happen.”

Johnson’s 4 Aces have stacked the LIV Golf deck and won for a second consecutive event, claiming the team competition by eight shots over Lee Westwood’s Majesticks. The 4 Aces will split $3 million ($750,000 each) for their efforts, with the Majesticks earning $1.5 million ($375,000 each). Sergio Garcia’s Fireballs finished third and will split $500,000 ($125,000 each).

“Today we knew we needed to play some good golf to finish if we wanted to win this tournament as a team, and also we were both right in the mix trying to chase down Henrik,” Johnson said of his and Reed’s pursuit. “If we wanted to put a little pressure on him, we had to make some birdies and play good coming home, coming down the stretch.”

LIV Golf has long been criticized as a way for the Kingdom to sportswash its human rights record with guaranteed money and multi-million dollar deals. Saudi Arabia has been accused of wide-ranging human rights abuses, including politically motivated killings, torture, forced disappearances and inhumane treatment of prisoners. And members of the royal family and Saudi government were accused of involvement in the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist.

The series will take the month of August off before its fourth event Labor Day Weekend, Sept. 2-4, at The International near Boston.

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‘Nice to be out there playing golf’: After losing his Ryder Cup captaincy, Henrik Stenson tied for lead with Patrick Reed at LIV Golf Bedminster

“It was actually really fun,” added fellow LIV rookie Charles Howell III.

BEDMINSTER, N.J. — Henrik Stenson could get used to this whole LIV Golf thing.

In his debut with the upstart series led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, the 46-year-old Swede sits tied for first with Patrick Reed after the pair each shot opening rounds of 7-under 64 at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster. After a hectic couple weeks where the five-time member of Team Europe lost his Ryder Cup captaincy for the 2023 matches in Italy, Stenson is happy to be back to business on the course.

“It’s nice to be out there playing golf, and yeah, of course it’s been a busy couple of weeks and not the most fun, but we keep our head down and focus on the golf,” Stenson said after the first round on Friday. ” Just very pleased to have the ability to go out there and do that and play such a solid round. It’s the best I’ve played all year, and yeah, I’ll take a lot of credit from that.”

Stenson’s first impressions for the series lived up to the expectations he had set coming in to the week, adding with a smile, “If I continue to shoot 7-under it’s going to be a good one.”

OPINION: Stenson is another dishonest LIV player, but Europe knew he was a risky Ryder Cup gamble

Fellow rookie Charles Howell III couldn’t help but agree.

“Well, all the feedback I had got from multiple players, managers, etc., was just this, it was fun, the music playing, I really liked that,” said Howell, who sits T-6 and 3 under. “I play a lot of professional events, never played with that. It was actually really fun.

MORE: Stenson holds out hope for Ryder Cup

“It was relaxed, but the golf course is challenging and tough. It’s not exactly relaxing for us standing up here,” he quipped to the media, “but no, listen, it was wonderful. Once we started it was a golf tournament again on a hard golf course.”

Two other players made their debut this week in New Jersey, with Jason Kokrak T-10 at 2 under and Paul Casey a bit further back 1 over, T-31.

Phachara Khongwatmai is third at 5 under, followed by Dustin Johnson and Carlos Ortiz, who are T-4 at 4 under. On the team leaderboard, Johnson’s 4 Aces hold a slim, one-shot lead over Lee Westwood’s Majesticks at 11 under, with Kevin Na’s Iron Heads five shots back at 6 under.

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