The 7 dumbest comments made at Tuesday’s pathetic LIV Golf press conferences

One golfer said with a straight face that he tries to be a great role for kids. For real!

The LIV Golf Tour is here, unfortunately, and while it’s a super gross league funded by the dirty money of stone-cold killers, it is also shining the light on some golfers and who they really are as human beings.

And let me tell you something, they aren’t great!

LIV Golf held player press conferences Tuesday in London ahead of this week’s debut event and the whole thing was a total mess that was full of embarrassing comments by golfers who should be ashamed of themselves.

If you’re wondering about LIV Golf, it’s a new golf league funded by the Saudi government, which executed 81 people on March 12 of this year. It’s the same government that has committed various human rights violations for many years but now this golf league is here to try to help them look like better people. Sportswashing, folks. It’s called sportswashing.

Let’s look at some of the worst comments from today.

2022 Charles Schwab Challenge odds, field notes, best bets and PGA Tour picks

Abraham Ancer has finished T-14 at Colonial the last two seasons and is coming off a top 10 at the PGA.

The week after a major always feels like a hangover.

Four straight days of 12 hours on the couch, eating like crap, and maybe indulging in a few adult beverages will do it every time.

Now, it’s time for a quick turnaround as the PGA Tour heads back down to Texas for what feels like the 10th time.

The Charles Schwab Challenge, despite its spot on the schedule, has conjured up quite the field here in 2022. PGA champion Justin Thomas isn’t taking any time to celebrate his second career major win and is set to tee off Thursday at Colonial Country Club.

Joining him are World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Jordan Spieth, Collin Morikawa, Viktor Hovland and Will Zalatoris.

Golf course

Colonial Country Club | Par 70 | 7,209 yards | Perry Maxwell design

Jason Kokrak
Jason Kokrak hits an approach shot on the ninth hole during the final round of the 2021 Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo: Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Key statistics

Driving accuracy: Colonial has the fourth narrowest fairways on Tour.

Strokes Gained: Around the Green: Colonial has the seventh smallest greens on Tour, so players who get up and down when they inevitably miss the green will have a significant advantage this week.

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. TPC Sugarloaf, 2. Westchester CC, 3. Sea Island GC

Trending: 1. Scottie Scheffler (last three starts: T-18, T-15, MC), 2. Justin Thomas (T-35, T-5, 1), 3. Will Zalatoris (T-4, MC, 2)

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Justin Thomas (7.8 percent), 2. Scottie Scheffler (6 percent), 3. Jordan Spieth (4.7 percent)

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Talor Gooch, a first-time participant in the Masters, apparently not aware of the dress code at Augusta National Golf Club

The 2021 RSM Classic champ made a rookie mistake at Augusta.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Masters rookie Talor Gooch didn’t realize shorts aren’t allowed at Augusta National Golf Club – not just for Masters Tournament participants like himself, but members and their guests, as well. The rule even carries over to the volunteer day held in May.

On Saturday afternoon, Gooch, was putting on the practice green adjacent to the driving range at the Tournament Practice Area. For at least 15 minutes, no one said anything before co-head pro J.J. Weaver approached. A few minutes later, a pair of black rain pants arrived, Gooch put them on over his black shorts and continued his practice.

On the PGA Tour, golfers are allowed to wear shorts during the practice rounds. Caddies are allowed to wear them during practice rounds and tournaments rounds. At the Masters, which is conducted by Augusta National Golf Club, caddies must wear the white jumpsuits every time they are on the course or practice area.

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Arnold Palmer Invitational: It’s survival of the fittest with Bay Hill ‘on a knife’s edge’

Bay Hill bites back with dry greens, windy challenges as Talor Gooch, Billy Horschel share third-round lead.

ORLANDO – Graeme McDowell stiffed his approach at 18, tapped in for birdie and signed for 3-under 69 at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill and Lodge for one of just seven rounds in the 60s on the third day of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. But that doesn’t mean the former U.S. Open champ wasn’t spent after a trying day on the course.

“It’s a stressful golf course with a lot of shots that stress you out,” he said.

McDowell, who lives in the City Beautiful, planned to kick up his feet, check out the remainder of the broadcast, fire up the grill and watch the rest of the field get roasted by baked-out greens.

“I might have to drink a little less wine than I was going to,” said McDowell, who teed off more than three hours ahead of the leaders Saturday. “It’s very difficult out there and not getting any easier.”

By the end of the day, McDowell stood tied for sixth at 3 under. The wind blew and scores soared. Just ask rookie Hayden Buckley, who skied to an 84 and ditched his putter outside scoring and left his caddie to retrieve it. At least he finished the round with his short stick. Australian Matt Jones heaved his into a lake in frustration.

“It’s just on a knife edge,” said Rory McIlroy, who struggled to 76 and was tied with McDowell after three rounds. “The last few years, we sort of know what to expect coming here. It just seems to be this way over the weekend. It’s just hard. It’s hard not to get frustrated.”

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McDowell described the greens as icy and the rough as U.S. Open length. Add in the crosswinds and it was a recipe for disaster.

“If you don’t hit the fairway, it’s almost impossible to hit a green,” McIlroy said.

Billy Horschel was one of the few, the proud to shoot in red figures, sinking a 30-foot birdie putt from just off the green – after taking a fortunate free drop from the rough because of a sprinkler head – at 18 to post 1-under 71 and share the 54-hole lead at 7-under 209 with Talor Gooch. Those who embraced the challenge, such as Horschel, seemed to fare better.

“This is awesome golf. It’s testing and it wears you down,” he said. “I can’t even say we all enjoy it all the time, but we do enjoy because it does reward fairly good golf shots on a regular basis. It rewards people who think their way through a shot and how it needs to be played to really turn out properly.”

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“It was not fun, but it’s the right test,” said Max Homa, who made a hole-in-one at the 14th en route to a 73 and attested to Scottie Scheffler tying for low round of the day with 68. “I played with a guy who’s one of the best players in the world, and he played a really good round of golf and made it look pretty easy.

“If you’re out of position, you have no chance, but you put yourself out of position. So I think it’s quality that’s going to separate the field into who played really well, who played well, who played OK and who didn’t play well. I think that’s the way golf should be.”

To his point, only 16 of the 78 players that made the cut were in red figures after three rounds. For a time it looked as if Viktor Hovland might run away with the tournament. The 24-year-old Norwegian holed out for eagle from 38 yards in a greenside bunker at the par-5 sixth hole to offset a shaky bogey-bogey start to his third round.

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“I kind of thought I was in no-man’s-land, just try to chunk it out there and give myself a putt at it. Came out really soft and landed in the first cut and just died and went in,” he said. “That was really nice for at least the next few holes, and I was really in a good rhythm until some bad shots on the back nine.”

He was 10 under for the tournament and leading Gooch by four strokes at the turn after a birdie at No. 8. That happened to be his final birdie of the day, and he sprinkled four bogeys on his inward card including at the final two holes to shoot 75 and trail the co-leaders by a shot.

When asked if he enjoys playing a tournament where single digits could very well be enough to win Sunday and earn his first victory on U.S. soil, Hovland said, “To be honest, not really. I think now it’s maybe on the border where everything kind of becomes a scrambling competition. As I’ve said before, that’s not really the strength of my game. But what I think is cool at least is I’m able to be in contention in a tournament under these conditions that don’t really play into my hands.”

Horschel, who was born and raised in Grant-Valkaria, Florida, about 90 minutes from Bay Hill, said he expected Sunday to be an emotional day, especially if he were to slip into the winner’s red alpaca sweater.

“It would be very special. You said I grew up an hour from here, came here as a kid, caddied in the Pro-Am multiple times. A lot of family and friend support around here,” he said. “Then you add on Arnold Palmer’s name to it. It would be something very special that at the end of my career I could say that was a special victory.”

‘You’re going to have adrenaline’: What PGA Tour pros say about playing the 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale for WM Phoenix Open

What’s it like to step into the coliseum during the tournament? These pros have some opinions.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The combination of an entertainment-starved crowd happy to be returning to live golf, a picture-perfect afternoon, fantastic weather and a star-studded field made the famous 16th hole at the WM Phoenix Open a site to behold once again.

TPC Scottsdale’s iconic par-3 has become one of the bucket-list events for pro golfers and fans alike.

It only plays about 140 yards but it’s surrounded by an estimated 17,000 fans, many who get louder as the day grows longer.

What’s it like to step into the coliseum during the tournament? These PGA Tour pros have some insight.

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2022 American Express best bets, odds, key statistics, and more

Can Scottie Scheffler finally get it done on the PGA Tour?

Last week hurt, not going to lie to you. Russell Henley, who was not only on the card for a top 20 but an outright win, was leading Hideki Matsuyama by five shots at the turn. Five. But the Masters champ came storming back, eventually beating the Bulldog in a one-hole playoff after sticking a 3-wood from 276 yards to about three feet.

Tough pill to swallow.

Anyway, it’s time to move on. This week is the American Express, and after COVID-19 forced the tournament into numerous changes in 2021, it’s back in full force this year. The tournament’s three-course rotation returns, along with a pro-am. For the first three rounds, the pros will be paired with a group of amateurs before a 54-hole cut is made and the remaining professionals will play their final round at the Stadium Course.

It’s also the first week where we get a glimpse of the new ESPN+ PGA Tour live service (we had it in Hawaii but in a limited capacity). Oh, and the field’s loaded.

Course(s)

PGA West (Stadium): Par 72, 7,113 yards
La Quinta Country Club: Par 72, 7,060 yards
PGA West (Nicklaus Tournament Course): Par 72, 7,159 yards

Last year’s top 5

  1. Si Woo Kim
  2. Patrick Cantlay
  3. Cam Davis
  4. Tony Finau
  5. Abraham Ancer, Doug Ghim, Michael Thompson

Weather

Day Conditions Percent chance of rain Wind & Direction
Tuesday Sunny 2 percent 8 MPH (NW)
Wednesday Sunny 2 percent 4 MPH (WNW)
Thursday Sunny 0 percent 7 MPH (NW)
Friday Sunny 0 percent 6 MPH (NNW)
Saturday Sunny 0 percent 12 MPH (NNW)
Sunday Sunny 0 percent 7 MPH (NW)

Key stats

It’s difficult to know what’s important at this event. It’s played on three courses and only one of them records ShotLink data (Stadium). Course history and recent form will play a lot into the picks this week. However, Data Golf does note driving distance as an important aspect while playing the Stadium Course — something to keep in mind.

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. Accordia Golf Narashino CC, 2. TPC Louisiana, 3. Caves Valley Golf Club

Percent chance to win (based on course history, fit, trending, etc.): 1. Jon Rahm (13.1 percent), 2. Patrick Cantlay (9.2 percent), 3. Scottie Scheffler (4.6 percent)

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Betting odds

Odds provided by Tipico Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds a full list.

Player Odds
Jon Rahm (+550)
Patrick Cantlay (+900)
Tony Finau (+2000)
Corey Conners (+2000)
Scottie Scheffler (+2000)
Talor Gooch (+2000)
Sungjae Im (+2000)
Seamus Power (+3000)
Russell Henley (+3000)
Abraham Ancer (+3000)

Betting card for the 2022 American Express (& Abu Dhabi HSBC)

Last week’s results (Sony Open)

Corey Conners – Top 20: Cash, +130
Charles Howell III – Top 20: Miss
Kevin Kisner – Top 20: Cash, +162
Russell Henley – Top 20: Cash, +162
+354 (+3.54 units) at Waialae

+4.49 units in 2022.


Rory McIlroy — Top 10 (EVEN)

Hero World Challenge 2021
Rory McIlroy watches his tee shot on the fourth tee during the second round of the Hero World Challenge PGA Tour at the Albany Golf Club, in New Providence, Bahamas, Friday, Dec. 3, 2021.(AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Rors has played in this event since 2014 — he hasn’t finished worse than T-3. Pretty good.

He’s also my guy, so have to have him on the card somewhere.

Matthew Wolff — Top 20 (+155)

Matthew Wolff plays his shot from the third tee during the final round of the Hewlett Packard Enterprise Houston Open at Memorial Park Golf Course on November 14, 2021, in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)

Wolffy hasn’t played since the Houston Open, but he’s off to a tremendous start to the season. In four events so far, he’s finished T-17 (Sanderson Farms), 2 (Shriners), T-5 (Mayakoba), and T-11 (Houston Open).

He has yet to post a top 40 finish here, but it’s impossible to ignore this guy at an event that requires you to make an immense amount of birds. He’s 11th on Tour in birdie average, and first in scoring average.

Scottie Scheffler — Top 10 (+210)

The RSM Classic 2021
Scottie Scheffler reacts on the 5th hole during the third round of The RSM Classic on the Seaside Course at Sea Island Resort on November 20, 2021, in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo: Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

Scheffler wasn’t around for the weekend a year ago, but back in 2020, the Texan snagged a solo third in the desert. He’s played in six events so far this season, three of which ended in top 4 finishes (two runner-ups).

The Ryder Cupper ranks inside the top 15 in birdie average on Tour, which again, will help around these tracks.

Talor Gooch — Top 20 (+125)

Sony Open in Hawaii 2022
Talor Gooch hits his tee shot on the 11th hole during the second round of the Sony Open in Hawaii golf tournament at Waialae Country Club. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Gooch holds the second-best cumulative score at the American Express over the last three seasons. He’s also finished no worse than T-21 in those appearances highlighted by a solo fourth in 2019.

He’s coming off two solid weeks in Hawaii, shooting in the 60s seven of his eight rounds.

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Twilight 9 podcast: Tiger Woods is swinging a golf club again, Talor Gooch and Collin Morikawa win, the Match V, and tons more

It’s so good to have Tiger Woods back in the mix.

For a week that doesn’t have a PGA Tour event, there’s a lot to talk about.

First things first, Talor Gooch grabbed his first PGA Tour win at the RSM Classic this weekend. His worst round of the week was a 67; he was absolutely dialed in.

Collin Morikawa chased down 54-hole leader Rory McIlroy to win the DP World Tour Championship, while also capturing the European Tour’s year-long Race to Dubai, the first American to do so. The guys discuss if he’s a Hall of Famer already.

Rory McIlroy, out of frustration, ripped his shirt after his final round in Dubai. The photo should be hung in the Louvre.

Jin Young Ko hit 63 consecutive greens on her way to winning the CME. 63!

The Match V is this week between Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka. We can guarantee one thing: It’s going to be cringy.

Finally, Tiger Woods dropped a three-second swing video and may have won the PIP with one tweet. He’s back. He’s going to play soon. Unbelievable.

Download this week’s episode here:
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Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!

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Winner’s Bag: Talor Gooch, RSM Classic

Check out the clubs that helped Gooch win his first event on Tour.

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A complete list of the golf equipment Talor Gooch used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 RSM Classic:

DRIVER: Callaway Epic Speed (9 degrees), with Fujikura STMOS Blue 7X shaft (From $529.99 at Carl’s Golfland and Dick’s Sporting Goods)

FAIRWAY WOOD: Callaway Rogue (15 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana D+ 80 TX shaft (From $149.99 at Carl’s Golfland)

HYBRID: Callaway Big Bertha Alpha 815 (20 degrees), with Aldila Tour Blue Hy 105 TX shaft

IRONS: Callaway X Forged CB (4-6), Apex MB (7-9), with Nippon N.S. Pro Modus3 125X shafts (From $1,399.99 at Dick’s Sporting Goods)

WEDGES: Callaway JAWS MD5 (46, 52, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts (From $149.99 at Carl’s Golfland)

PUTTER: Odyssey Tri-Hot prototype

BALL: Titleist Pro V1 (From $50 per dozen at titleist.com and carlsgolfland.com)

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

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Talor Gooch goes bogey-free to win first PGA Tour title at 2021 RSM Classic

Gooch made golf look easy on Sunday. Really easy.

On Sunday in Georgia it was Talor Gooch’s world and we were all living in it.

The 30-year-old shot a 6-under 64 in the final round of the 2021 RSM Classic at Sea Island to earn his first PGA Tour win at 22-under. Gooch’s last win came in 2017 at the News Sentinel Open on the Korn Ferry Tour.

The Oklahoma State product made it look easy from the start with birdies on Nos. 2 and 4 to make the turn at 2 under on the day. Playing with the lead, Gooch turned up the pressure on the rest of the field with more birdies on 10, 11, 13 and 15. With three holes to play, Gooch held a five-shot lead. Gooch made par on each of his final three holes to win by three shots. Mackenzie Hughes finished solo-second at 19 under, with Sebastian Munoz in third at 18 under.

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RSM Classic: Talor Gooch, leads by 3, seeks to prove he can close the deal on Sunday

Talor Gooch is in unfamiliar territory, holding his first 54-hole lead as he seeks his maiden victory at the RSM Classic.

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. – Talor Gooch is 18 holes away from achieving a lifetime dream of winning on the PGA Tour. He fired a 3-under 67 on Saturday to build a three-stroke lead heading into the final round of the RSM Classic at Sea Island Golf Club. The question remains: Will he be able to handle the pressure?

To hear Gooch tell it, he thrives in moments like this. On Sunday, if he gets in a tough spot, he’ll flash back to the second stage of PGA Tour Q-School in 2016. Playing at TPC Craig Ranch, his third trip to the grueling multi-stage process to earn playing privileges, Gooch, whose bank account had just about been depleted, entered the third round on the number.

“I was 3 over through four walking off the par 3 and I thought to myself, I don’t know why this came up, but Best Buy, ‘I’m going to have to go work at Best Buy, I’m going to have to go do something to make a few bucks unless you like get it together,’” Gooch recalled. “Yeah, I think just as a sportsman, if you don’t have that little bit of grit to go prove people wrong, you’re not going to make it.”

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Gooch showed plenty of grit on Saturday. It was a chilly, windy day that was better suited for sipping a cup of hot cocoa, or something stronger, and curling up with a book around a log fire. When Tom Hoge, who shot 3-under 67 on Saturday, was asked what he was most satisfied with from his day, he answered, “That we finished and we’re in a warm building here.”

Gooch rolled in two birdies on the front nine and led by as many as three strokes, but Sebastian Munoz tied him for the lead with birdies at Nos. 7 and 9 and a bogey at 10 by Gooch. A three-putt from 19 feet at the par-3 12th slowed Munoz’s momentum – his second bogey in a row – but he birdied 15 to finish at 13 under and is tied for second.

“On 12 Talor gave me a good line and I just wanted to bury it like in front of him and I got a little greedy, got myself like a six-footer coming back and I missed it,” Munoz said.

Ireland’s Seamus Power, who knows a thing or two about playing in the wind, also shared the lead briefly with Gooch on the back nine. He chipped in for eagle at the par-5 15th and signed for a 3-under 67 to share second with Munoz.

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“It was a pretty straightforward shot, but obviously with the wind nothing is that easy,” Power said of his eagle chip in. Power noted that he has lived in the U.S. for 15 years and made it sound like he had become just another Irishman who had sought warmer climes and whose blood has thinned.

“I’ve gotten kind of like pick and choosy with my weather,” he said.

Every time someone mounted a charge to catch Gooch, he had an answer. Gooch made birdies on two of the last four holes to give himself his first 54-hole lead. For the week, he leads the field in Strokes Gained: Around the Green and ranks fifth in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green. It’s a continuation of strong play for Gooch, who has shown steady progress since turning pro and has been knocking on the door all fall to earn his first PGA Tour title.

“Over the last two months, I have a hard time thinking anyone is hitting the ball any better,” said Gooch’s swing instructor Boyd Summerhays.

Gooch’s stinger drive, a product of his upbringing in Oklahoma, has been a weapon in the wind. Sunday, A.K.A. payday, is a different day, and Gooch always has been the pursuer rather than the pursued in the trophy hunt. Power finally broke the victory seal a few months ago at the Barbasol Championship and already booked his ticket for the Sentry Tournament of Champions, while Sebastian Munoz last won at the Sanderson Farms Championship in 2018. Gooch said he’s ready for the pressure of trying to close out his first win in his 104th Tour start.

“If you don’t enjoy pressure, you’re in the wrong sport, you know,” he said. “I’ve been fortunate since I’ve been five years old to have a group of buddies that when we’re together we’re always competing at something, we’re always doing something to put some pressure and try to break each other basically. So, it’s just what I’ve always known is just try to enjoy the pressure and try to prove people wrong.”

Gooch expects to hear from his five buddies tonight in some form or another. What will they discuss? Likely, their golf buddies trip, which is always scheduled for the first week of January in Scottsdale, Arizona. That happens to be the same week as the PGA Tour’s next tournament at Kapalua in Maui, and reserved for winners only.

“I’m hopeful that we’re going to have to adjust that,” he said. “So that’s what will be talked about.”

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