Think you know what’s going to happen? Play ‘The Match: Champions for Charity’ free trivia game

USA TODAY has released a new, special trivia game around The Match: Champions for Charity, which you can take part in absolutely free.

The Match: Champions for Charity is finally here, pitting Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning against Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in a charity match to raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts.

USA TODAY has released a new, special trivia game around The Match: Champions for Charity, which you can take part in absolutely free. It’s easy to participate and adds some extra excitement to Sunday’s event.

The Match: Trivia – How to play

  • Sign up for free at USA TODAY Trivia
  • Select The Match: Champions for Charity box among the listings Note: There will be pre-event and in-event trivia questions!
  • Answer each question with how you believe The Match will play out
  • Sit back and watch your “My Stats” results to see how you’re doing
  • Don’t forget to also take part in the in-event trivia, too

Sign up now for USA TODAY’s The Match trivia game.

Looking to place a legal sports bet on this event in NJ, IN, CO or WV?  Get some action on it at BetMGMBet Now!

The Match II: Odds, picks and prop bets for Woods-Manning vs. Mickelson-Brady

Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning will face off against Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady on Sunday. Here are the best prop bets for the event.

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Tiger Woods teams up with Peyton Manning Sunday to battle Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in The Match: Champions for Charity. The sequel to the Woods vs. Mickelson showdown from Nov. 2018 is being held at Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Fla. and will begin at 2 p.m. ET. Below, we look at the best prop bets for The Match II and make our picks.


Looking to place a bet on The Match II? Get some action on it at BetMGMBet Now!


The Match II: Outright odds and best bet to win

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Wednesday, May 20 at 3 p.m. ET.

Woods/Manning: -223 | Mickelson/Brady: +160 (Price Boost: +180)

Woods and Manning, the rightful favorites, carried -208 odds Monday. With a $10 bet at the current price point returning a profit of just $4.81 with an outright win, the play is to HOLD until Sunday in wait of a higher number.

Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson were sizable favorites over Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff ahead of the TaylorMade Driving Relief event last week, but the line came much closer on the day of the match. Expect similar movement this week – especially with the inclusion of the famous NFL quarterbacks and a broader, sports-starved audience – to get the best odds on the favorites closer to tee time.


SUBSCRIBE to Golfweek and get the most comprehensive coverage of golf’s greatest athletes. Click here or call 1-800-996-4653 to subscribe.


The Match II: Best prop bets

Longest drive on hole 3: Mickelson (+130)

Even amid a poor start to the 2020 PGA Tour season, Mickelson, ranked 222nd in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings, was outdriving Woods (16th) 301.1 yards to 291.1. The two PGA Tour pros share the +130 odds, but Mickelson is the pick.

Both Manning and Brady are +700 but don’t overthink this one. They’re still amateur golfers. Note: Per BetMGM rules, the ball has to be in the fairway to count.

Nearest the pin on hole 4: Brady (+600)

Though we’re trusting the pros above, the playing field becomes a little more level on the short par-3 fourth. It’s the shortest of the four par 3s at Medalist at just 191 yards in length.

Manning is typically the better golfer of the two future Hall of Fame QBs with a handicap of 6.4 to Brady’s 8.1, but on such a short hole chase the value with Brady holding the longest odds.

Who will lead after 9 holes? Woods/Manning (-112)

The teams will play the Four-Ball (Best Ball) format on the front nine with the better score of each twosome counting as the team score on each hole. As such, the first nine holes will primarily be Woods vs. Mickelson.

Trust in Woods’ superior world ranking and better play earlier in the 2020 season. The halftime odds are much more appealing for the favorites than their outright odds, and things will become much less predictable with a modified alternate shot format being played on the back.

Who will win hole 18? Woods/Manning (+220)

The expectation is that The Match II will go right down to the wire and the final hole, if not a playoff. It’s a charity event and it’s being televised; organizers will do all they can with various side bets and challenges to draw this out to an exciting finale.

Once there, stick by the opening favorites to pull off a dramatic victory. Woods will have his revenge over Mickelson, and Manning has plenty of reasons for wanting to get back at Brady.

Get some action on The Match II by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren, and follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and Facebook. Please gamble responsibly.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Forward Press podcast: Talking TaylorMade Driving Relief and ‘The Match II’

Golfweek’s David Dusek chats with Steve DiMeglio about the TaylorMade Driving Relief skins match. They also look ahead to ‘The Match II.’

Welcome to episode 49 of Forward Press, a weekly Golfweek podcast.

In this edition of Forward Press, host David Dusek chats with Steve DiMeglio about the TaylorMade Driving Relief charity skins match that took place this past weekend. They also look ahead to ‘The Match II’ with Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Tom Brady, and Peyton Manning.

In each episode of Forward Press, you’ll get insight and commentary on all that is golf from David Dusek, Steve DiMeglio, Beth Ann Nichols, Eamon Lynch and Adam Schupak, as well as special guests throughout the industry.

You can download and listen on all of your favorite platforms, including: iTunesStitcherSpotifyCastbox and Radio Public.

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Medalist is back on TV, but don’t expect to see Greg Norman around

Greg Norman was excited to be on the broadcast for this weekend’s match at a club he helped build. An invite never came. How come?

It’s been 25 years since Medalist Golf Club last appeared on national television, when Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf pitted then-world No. 1 Nick Price against Greg Norman, the world No. 2 and founder of the newly opened club.

On May 24, the exclusive Florida enclave hosts another made-for-TV affair with Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning taking on Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady to raise funds for COVID-19 relief.

Just don’t expect to see Greg Norman anywhere.

A spokesperson for Norman confirmed to Golfweek that the World Golf Hall of Famer was approached by Turner Sports about joining the broadcast team for The Match.

“He was very interested. Next thing he heard was that Justin Thomas had been chosen for the role,” said his representative Jane McNeillie. “That’s all we really know.”

It’s been seven years since Norman had an acrimonious and very public split from Medalist after the board hired architect Bobby Weed to make changes to the course, which the two-time major winner furiously described as “a slap in the face.” He famously removed a stuffed shark mounted above the bar in the grill room, which was replaced by a board listing winners of the member-guest including, in 2002, Norman and Andy Mill, his former best friend whose wife, tennis great Chris Evert, left him for Norman in 2006.

I asked Kevin Quigley, the president of the board at Medalist, if the club had requested Norman not be part of the production. 

“No,” he replied.

Is it a preference of Medalist that he not be involved?

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There was a lengthy pause.

“I wouldn’t say a preference,” Quigley finally offered. “We asked who would be involved and we received the answer. His name wasn’t one of them. So there’s nothing in the contract between all the parties that says Greg Norman cannot be involved.”

Of course, not everything has to be contractual to be understood by all parties. An inquiry to Turner Sports on whether Norman was approached was not answered by press time.

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When told that Norman says he was approached and doesn’t know why there was no follow-up, Quigley said, “I have no idea what happened between him and Turner Sports. I can only say what happened between us and Turner Sports. They threw out a bunch of names and Greg Norman’s name was not among them. So we assumed he was not involved.”

Had Turner suggested Norman, would the club have been comfortable with that?

“I don’t know why he would want to be involved. You can go back and I’m sure you’ve seen the stories,” Quigley said before trailing off into another long pause. “His opinion of the golf course was so low that I don’t know why he would want to go on television and be a commentator to a product that he doesn’t approve of.”

In Medalist’s early years, Norman ran the club as he saw fit, and that included making changes to the Pete Dye design on which he was either a consultant or co-architect, depending on who you believe. When members took over the club, Dye was invited back to discuss restoring what had been changed. The legendary designer was driven around the property and was surprised by what he saw. “What happened here?” he asked.

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“Greg Norman tweaked pretty much every hole,” Quigley said. “As the founding member, Greg ran the club at his sole discretion. There’s seven members on the board, he had four seats. His golf course design company did the work, his company was paid for the work, and the members were the ones paying for it. And the members didn’t want the fifth green changed, they didn’t want the bunkers moved from one side of the fairway to the other.”

Quigley says the Medalist board sent Norman registered mail inviting him to submit a proposal at the time of the restoration but received no response. “He didn’t like the idea that anyone else was touching the golf course,” said Quigley. “He had a hissy fit when it was changed. He had an opportunity. He chose not to participate.”

Medalist has earned an enviable reputation as base camp for PGA Tour stars in the last decade since Woods moved to Jupiter and joined the club. More than 20 other professionals are members, including Brooks Koepka, Rickie Fowler, Matt Wolff and Justin Thomas, who Norman believes replaced him on the broadcast team for the Tiger-Phil event. “Justin and Tiger are very close so that might have had something to do with it,” Quigley said dryly.

Norman, who lives 15 minutes away, remains on the member roll at Medalist. “As the founding member of the club, he is a member. The way the document is written, he will always be a member,” the gregarious Quigley said. “He cannot be thrown out nor can he quit. He comes around sometimes and you see him. There’s no controversy.”

Norman did make one poorly-timed visit with his grandson only to find it was member-member weekend. “We had 120 people on the range. So it wasn’t the ideal time for him to hit balls with his grandson,” Quigley said. “He was here earlier in the year. He was in the grill room, sat down and had lunch. Tiger was at a table at the same time. It was all good.”

The course viewers will see on Sunday is much closer to what was broadcast a quarter-century ago, the board president believes. “It’s not an identical restoration but we restored a lot of it,” he said. “We’ll never get it back to the original golf course but it’s a lot closer than it was five years ago.”

I asked if Norman appreciates now the work that was done. “I’ve never heard him make a complimentary comment about the golf course, but I don’t communicate with him regularly,” Quigley said.

The Medalist board will have no say in how its golf course is presented to the world. The Match is being managed by the PGA Tour and last week Tour official Slugger White spent more than four hours touring the layout and discussing pin locations in the company of the club’s professional, it’s superintendent and Olin Browne, a board member and Tour veteran. At the halfway house, the group ran into the man who has replaced the Shark as the alpha male at Medalist, Woods, who was playing with Thomas and Fowler. “They chatted for 10 or 15 minutes and Tiger was funny,” Quigley recounted with a laugh.

“He suggested to Slugger he put all the pins on the front right that way Phil couldn’t use that cut shot of his to get it in there close.”

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The Match II: Betting odds, picks and prop bets for Woods-Manning vs. Mickelson-Brady

Highlighting the best prop bets for The Match II between Tiger Woods-Peyton Manning and Phil Mickelson-Tom Brady, with PGA Tour betting odds, picks and best bets.

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Tiger Woods teams up with Peyton Manning Sunday to battle Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in The Match: Champions for Charity. The sequel to the Woods vs. Mickelson showdown from Nov. 2018 is being held at Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Fla. and will begin at 2 p.m. ET. Below, we look at the best prop bets for The Match II and make our picks.


Looking to place a bet on The Match II? Get some action on it at BetMGM. Bet Now!


The Match II: Outright odds and best bet to win

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Wednesday, May 20 at 3 p.m. ET.

Woods/Manning: -223 | Mickelson/Brady: +160 (Price Boost: +180)

Woods and Manning, the rightful favorites, carried -208 odds Monday. With a $10 bet at the current price point returning a profit of just $4.81 with an outright win, the play is to HOLD until Sunday in wait of a higher number.

Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson were sizable favorites over Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff ahead of the TaylorMade Driving Relief event last week, but the line came much closer on the day of the match. Expect similar movement this week – especially with the inclusion of the famous NFL quarterbacks and a broader, sports-starved audience – to get the best odds on the favorites closer to tee time.


SUBSCRIBE to Golfweek and get the most comprehensive coverage of golf’s greatest athletes. Click here or call 1-800-996-4653 to subscribe.


The Match II: Best prop bets

Longest drive on hole 3: Mickelson (+130)

Even amid a poor start to the 2020 PGA Tour season, Mickelson, ranked 222nd in the Golfweek/Sagarin world rankings, was outdriving Woods (16th) 301.1 yards to 291.1. The two PGA Tour pros share the +130 odds, but Mickelson is the pick.

Both Manning and Brady are +700 but don’t overthink this one. They’re still amateur golfers. Note: Per BetMGM rules, the ball has to be in the fairway to count.

Nearest the pin on hole 4: Brady (+600)

Though we’re trusting the pros above, the playing field becomes a little more level on the short par-3 fourth. It’s the shortest of the four par 3s at Medalist at just 191 yards in length.

Manning is typically the better golfer of the two future Hall of Fame QBs with a handicap of 6.4 to Brady’s 8.1, but on such a short hole chase the value with Brady holding the longest odds.

Who will lead after 9 holes? Woods/Manning (-112)

The teams will play the Four-Ball (Best Ball) format on the front nine with the better score of each twosome counting as the team score on each hole. As such, the first nine holes will primarily be Woods vs. Mickelson.

Trust in Woods’ superior world ranking and better play earlier in the 2020 season. The halftime odds are much more appealing for the favorites than their outright odds, and things will become much less predictable with a modified alternate shot format being played on the back.

Who will win hole 18? Woods/Manning (+220)

The expectation is that The Match II will go right down to the wire and the final hole, if not a playoff. It’s a charity event and it’s being televised; organizers will do all they can with various side bets and challenges to draw this out to an exciting finale.

Once there, stick by the opening favorites to pull off a dramatic victory. Woods will have his revenge over Mickelson, and Manning has plenty of reasons for wanting to get back at Brady.

Get some action on The Match II by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @EstenMcLaren, and follow SportsbookWire on Twitter and Facebook. Please gamble responsibly.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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Tale of the Tape: Breaking down Tiger-Peyton and Mickelson-Brady matchups

The Match: Champions for Charity consists of two top-notch teams, Tiger Woods-Peyton Manning and Phil Mickelson-Tom Brady, but who will win?

There are a lot of rings, trophies and jackets between these four guys.

On Sunday, the team of Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning will take on the team of Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady in The Match: Champions for Charity at Medalist Golf Club.

The dream foursome for many sports lovers which will be broadcast by Turner Sports this Sunday is Part II of the competition between Woods and Mickelson after the Mickelson won the first match in 2018.

While each team consists of one golf Hall of Famer and a future football Hall of Famer, we break down the specifics to help you decide who has the edge in this weekend’s event.

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Tiger Woods after winning the 2019 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Tiger Woods

Age: 44

Years pro: 24

Major titles: 15, including five Masters titles

PGA Tour wins: 82

Notable career accomplishments: Held all four major titles at once from June 2000 to April 2001, leads PGA Tour’s all-time money list, tied for most PGA Tour wins (82), sits third in all-time European Tour wins (43) and nominated for World Golf Hall of Fame Class of 2021.

Peyton Manning during the second round of the 2014 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am at the Pebble Beach Golf Links. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Peyton Manning

Age: 44

Years pro: 18, before retirement in 2016

Super Bowl titles: 2 (2016 and 2007)

Notable career accomplishments: First-overall NFL Draft pick in 1998, Super Bowl MVP in 2007, 14-time Pro-Bowler, five-time League MVP (2003, 2004, 2008, 2009, 2013) and still leads League in passing touchdowns in a season (55) and passing yards in a season (5,477)

Phil Mickelson celebrates after winning the 2004 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Phil Mickelson

Age: 49

Years pro: 28

Major titles: 5

PGA Tour wins: 44

Notable career accomplishments: Ninth all-time in PGA Tour wins (44), World Golf Hall of Fame member (2012), three-time Haskins Award winner while at Arizona State (1990-1992).

Tom Brady during the first round of the 2010 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am at Monterey Peninsula Country Club. (Allan Henry-USA TODAY Sports)

Tom Brady

Age: 42

Years pro: 20

Super Bowl titles: 6 (2002, 2004, 2005, 2015, 2017, 2019)

Notable career accomplishments: Four-time Super Bowl MVP, three-time NFL MVP (2007, 2010, 2017) and 14-time Pro Bowler (2001, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009–2018).

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Why you should root for Peyton Manning (and that other guy) in The Match II in two words: Sweetens Cove

Peyton Manning is a partner in a 9-hole public course in southeast Tennessee that has become a cult favorite and ranked in Golfweek’s Best.

The thing about a truly great sports rivalry is that it makes you pick sides. No one roots for the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox or the Boston Celtics and the Los Angeles Lakers.

In golf, during their heyday, you were either an Arnie guy or a Jack guy. And that’s perhaps the most appealing part of The Match II: Are you for Tiger or Phil? Both have loyal followers. But for many, the rooting interest is muddied this go-round by the addition of Tom Brady and Peyton Manning.

Manning is in many ways the Phil Mickelson of the NFL, who must stay up late at night wondering how many Super Bowl rings he might have if not for Brady (and his New England Patriots) standing in his way. Mickelson and Manning would seem to be a natural partnership, but the organizers thought otherwise and paired Manning with Woods. It may make for some strange bedfellows if you’re a Tiger guy but also a Brady lover, or Mickelson and Manning supporter. There are few more polarizing athletes than this foursome.

How to break the tie? I’m basing my rooting interest during Sunday’s match on the simple fact that Manning is the more legit golf guy in my book. Which is not to say that Brady, who lives off The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, where he is a member and recently joined Seminole Golf Club after signing on with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and has competed in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, lacks street cred in the golf community. Manning isn’t lacking in having memberships at some posh private clubs either: Castle Pines and Cherry Hills in Colorado; The Honors Club in Tennessee; and a little old club in Georgia you may have heard of, Augusta National. But it is his ownership stake in Sweetens Cove in South Pittsburg, Tennessee — population 3,000 — that sways my allegiance.

Sweetens Cove, a quirky, strategic, nine-hole course is arguably golf’s greatest success story of the last decade. Since opening in 2015, it has climbed to No. 49 on Golfweek’s Best Modern List and you can read about it here. As for Manning’s ties to the place, architect Rob Collins of King-Collins Design & Golf Construction, tells it best. He recalls how when Sweetens Cove first opened, he and Patrick Boyd, the original course general manager, always would say the one investor they’d really love to get on board is Manning. “No one better to be involved in a golf enterprise in the state of Tennessee,” Collins said. “We’d laugh and say, ‘Maybe one day, who knows? How cool would that be?’ ”

Fast-forward to Oct. 21, 2018. By that time, Collins had met and partnered with Mark Rivers, a real estate developer, who put together a group of partners that included Tom Nolan, then of Polo Golf and now CEO of Kendra Scott, and tennis Hall of Famer Andy Roddick. Rivers suggested dinner at Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse in Chattanooga so Collins could meet Nolan, the newest partner.

Arriving a few minutes early, Collins waited at the bar with Rivers and his back to the door.

“Mark said, ‘They’re here.’ I thought, They? Did Andy come to? I turn around and Peyton is walking towards me and sticks out his hand and says, ‘Hey, I’m Peyton Manning’ and I said, ‘Hey, I’m Rob Collins.’ Over my shoulder, Mark says, “And there’s your fifth partner.’ ”

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Collins played with Manning during his first trip around Sweetens Cove, which has become a cult favorite and social media darling, and Manning has been back often, including on May 23, 2019, when he took a video of himself playing the eighth hole and declared what should be a slogan printed on a T-shirt: “Carrying my bag, playing nine holes, God bless America.”

“It’s got great character to it,” Manning says of Sweetens Cove. “Love The Shed. You can drop your money in a bucket. It’s just short and sweet. You’ve got to play it and then everybody understands.”

Even now, Collins marvels at his good fortune that Manning loves the game of golf and the state of Tennessee enough to invest in his and original partner Tad King’s little engine that could. Collins laughs as he recounts the tale before adding, “How the hell did this even happen, you know?”

That’s a pretty funny story, too.

“It turns out that Tom (Nolan) called Brad Faxon to see if he knew Peyton,” Collins said. “He didn’t, But Brad said, ‘I know Tom Brady and I’ll call him.’ Brad called Brady and then Brady called Manning. Isn’t that crazy?”

Does that mean the Manning partnership is all Brady’s doing? Should Collins really be rooting for Brady and Mickelson on Sunday?

“We’re very grateful to Tom for making that phone call, but I’m a total homer for Peyton,” Collins said.

 

Charles Barkley, Justin Thomas on the call for Tiger-Phil match

Justin Thomas, Charles Barkley are on the on-air team calling The Match: Champions for Charity featuring Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.

Justin Thomas, fresh off landing the cover for PGA Tour 2K21, has been announced as one of the commentators for The Match: Champions for Charity.

It’ll be Part II of the Tiger Woods-Phil Mickelson showdown, but this time, it features two NFL greats, as Woods will team up with Peyton Manning, while Mickelson’s teammate will be Tom Brady.

The Match: Champions for Charity is set for Sunday, May 24 at 3 p.m. ET.

Thomas will be an on-course reporter, as will CBS’ Amanda Balionis. Brian Anderson is the host and he will be joined by two analysts: NBA legend Charles Barkley and 2008 Masters champ Trevor Immelman. Barkley also works as a basketball analyst on TNT’s Inside the NBA.

All the action will be live on four different cable channels: TNT, TBS, truTV and HLN. There will also be a live pre-match show on the Bleacher Report app starting at 2 p.m.

The event will raise $10 million for COVID-19 relief.

The Match: Champions for Charity will be played at the Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Florida.

The Match: Champions for Charity
The Match: Champions for Charity is live on May 24 across multiple networks.

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Golfweek Rewind, May 11, 2020

The details are ironed out for Tiger-Phil II, the nation’s top college golfers are honored and one pro leaves the golf course for a job on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic. Catch up on the top golf stories of the week on the latest edition of #GolfweekRewind.

The details are ironed out for Tiger-Phil II, the nation’s top college golfers are honored and one pro leaves the golf course for a job on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic. Catch up on the top golf stories of the week on the latest edition of #GolfweekRewind.

Bohannan: Match play events a great test run for golf’s big return

The upcoming match play events could be an important test of what golf will look like with no fans.

When CBS didn’t have a live Masters tournament to televise in April, network officials made an interesting and telling decision.

In selecting two past final rounds to show that weekend, the network didn’t go with victories from Jordan Spieth or Patrick Reed or Sergio Garcia. It went with the time-tested appeal of Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson. CBS selected Mickelson’s 2004 victory and Woods’ 2019 victory to attract as many viewers as possible for a taped event.

So it’s no surprise that a live, televised golf event that also serves as a charity fundraiser for COVID-19 relief will feature Woods against Mickelson in a rematch of their November 2018 event played in Las Vegas.

In doing so, Woods and Mickelson will again be honoring a long history of televised golf events for just a handful of players, a tradition that dates back to the 1950s with venerable events like Shell’s Wonderful World of Golf.

And Turner Sports, which will televise the match on TNT, TBS, truTV and HLN, will be hoping a sports-starved country tunes in.

The first match will be the May 17 TaylorMade Driving Relief event featuring the game’s biggest players at the moment, Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson against Rickie Fowler and Matt Wolff in a skins format. There will be a fifth star that week, the rarely seen and legendary Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Fla.

Hall of Famers and quarterbacks

Woods and Mickelson take the stage a week later with Capital One’s The Match: Champions for Charity. Instead of the $9 million winner-take-all head-to-head match Woods and Mickelson played for television in Las Vegas, the two Hall of Famers will be paired this time with a couple of good players but non-golfers, quarterbacks Peyton Manning (with Woods) and Tom Brady (with Mickelson). The event should generate $10 million for virus relief.

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There will be those who will dismiss both events as not really being golf, as being nothing more than golf merely for some rich golfers to get a little richer, or at least helping their own image while raising money for charity. When Woods and Mickelson met in Las Vegas, there were plenty of critics. But some golf fans and some gambling fans did watch.

Toss in the idea that there hasn’t been any live golf for anyone to watch since the first round of the ill-fated Players Championship on March 26, and people should be tuning in to NBC/Golf Channel for the McIlroy-Johnson match and TNT/TBS for Woods and Mickelson to play.

The matches should include the usual needling – from McIlroy in the first match, likely from Manning and Mickelson in the second match – and some players going for some unlikely shots. Brady and Manning will probably provide at least one or two truly amateur shots for fans to roll their eyes over.

Ready for live sports again

But the matches will test two other important aspects of golf as it tries to become the first sport to reopen in the United States as the pandemic is hopefully flattened. First, just what is the appetite of television viewers for live golf? No, this won’t be a full-field official event for the PGA Tour. But everyone is betting that golf has its loyal following, and that non-golf fans will come along for the ride with no other sports to watch.

Second, this could be a pretty important test of what golf will look like with no fans. When the PGA Tour returns in June – assuming everything goes well for the next few weeks – and the LPGA returns in July, big galleries will definitely not be part of the plan.

Golf is one of the few sports that can be played comfortably without a big on-site crowd. If television viewers still tune in without fans on the fairways, something that might not happen for, say, college football, that could be great news for tournaments in the fall that have been rescheduled. That includes the ANA Inspiration in September in Rancho Mirage and the men’s U.S. Open later in September in New York.

Whatever happens, there will be a core group of fans who will tune in to watch Mickelson and Woods hit honest-to-goodness live golf shots, do a little trash-talking with Manning and Brady and give some hope to fans for the return of live sports across the country. That should be worth tuning in.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for the Palm Springs Desert Sun, part of the USA Today Network. He can be reached at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at Sun.@Larry_Bohannan.

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