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FedExCup scenarios for Wyndham Championship

GREENSBORO, N.C. – A year ago, it took 365 points to make the FedExCup Playoffs. This year, the required total is projected to be slightly higher. According to the latest ShotLink calculations, 375 points will be needed to advance to the Playoffs after this week’s Wyndham Championship. While the final total won’t be known until the final putt drops Sunday at Sedgefield, 375 is a good target to reach. The top 123 players in the FedExCup standings are already at that number, leaving No. 124 Martin Piller (371 points) and No. 125 Tyrone Van Aswegen (364 points) in the most precarious spots this week. Based on the 375 total, here’s where each player (250th or higher) in the Wyndham field likely needs to finish to reach that 375-point mark and advance to next week’s FedExCup Playoffs opener, THE NORTHERN TRUST. (Click here for point distribution for each finish.)

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+160
Bryson DeChambeau+350
Xander Schauffele+350
Ludvig Aberg+400
Collin Morikawa+450
Jon Rahm+450
Justin Thomas+550
Brooks Koepka+700
Viktor Hovland+700
Hideki Matsuyama+800
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PGA Championship 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+450
Scottie Scheffler+450
Bryson DeChambeau+900
Justin Thomas+1800
Collin Morikawa+2200
Jon Rahm+2200
Xander Schauffele+2200
Ludvig Aberg+2500
Joaquin Niemann+3000
Brooks Koepka+4000
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AdventHealth Championship
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Kensei Hirata+2000
Mitchell Meissner+2200
SH Kim+2200
Neal Shipley+2500
Seungtaek Lee+2800
Hank Lebioda+3000
Chandler Blanchet+3500
Pierceson Coody+3500
Rick Lamb+3500
Trey Winstead+3500
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Regions Tradition
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Stewart Cink+550
Steve Stricker+650
Ernie Els+700
Steven Alker+750
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1200
Bernhard Langer+1400
Jerry Kelly+1600
Alex Cejka+1800
Retief Goosen+2500
Richard Green+2500
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+500
Bryson DeChambeau+1200
Xander Schauffele+1200
Jon Rahm+1400
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Brooks Koepka+1800
Justin Thomas+2000
Viktor Hovland+2000
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The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Rory McIlroy+500
Scottie Scheffler+550
Xander Schauffele+1100
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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The fabulous dad life of Mike ThomasThe fabulous dad life of Mike Thomas

Mike Thomas travels with knitting needles and stretchy string. Before every round his son Justin plays on the PGA TOUR, Mike, a 60-year-old PGA teaching professional at Harmony Landing Country Club in Goshen, Kentucky, stakes out the practice green. He eyes the various hole locations, finds a place to stick two strung needles in the ground (an alignment drill) and waits. When Justin comes out he finds his father and sets up at those knitting needles to stroke putts. Sometimes they chat, sometimes they don’t, and then Justin and his caddie Jimmy Johnson head to the tee. This will happen each tournament day until it’s over, whereupon they’ll both pack up and head to the next town, or go home to their respective homes – Jupiter, Florida, for Justin, and Goshen, just outside Louisville, for dad/coach Mike. (He and his wife Jani recently got a place in South Florida, as well.) He’s not just the father of a world-class golfer, he’s also the son of one – Paul Thomas, a lifelong teaching pro in Ohio who made the cut in the 1960 PGA Championship and played on the PGA TOUR Champions. As we inch toward Fathers’ Day, Mike Thomas seems to be living the dad dream. What’s it really like? We caught up with him three days in a row as he set up those knitting needles. Herewith, an edited version of those interviews, and his thoughts on being Justin’s dad. Everybody was telling us what he was going to accomplish. ‘He’s going to play the TOUR.’ I’m like, ‘How do you know that? He may quit playing next year.’ I mean, he was accomplished at every level he went to, but some of the best junior golfers in the country and even the world have struggled on TOUR. So there was no guarantee. Justin had an incredible drive. He was at the course eight to 10 hours a day. One time, he was probably 11 or something. I go, ‘Justin, why don’t you stay home tomorrow and just play some basketball in the backyard with some of your buddies or go play some video games? Just be an 11-year-old, take a day off.’ He goes, ‘I might do that, I’m kind of tired, my hand is hurting.’ About 9:30 the next morning I’m out there teaching and I see him down there hitting balls. I get done with my lesson and I say, ‘I guess that didn’t work out very good.’ He goes, ‘I was bored.’ He was driven to do better than he did the day before. It’s not that it came easy to him, but he just didn’t have a complex motion that could get out of whack real bad. My swing is the opposite. I’m inside out and flip it over. I never knew what I was going to have any day. Now, I’m a lot better today, swing‑wise, but I don’t score as well because of all the short game stuff and distance that I’ve lost and just from inactivity. My dad is 88, man. He’s dinking it out there about 80 yards. My dad, he dug it out of the dirt. That was back in the day when he could make it work with anything. He was a grinder. He played and practiced every single day. He was that old‑school player that was a club pro. He was a club pro for 25 or 28 years in Ohio, and it was important to play golf with your members. He played golf with them all the time, always gambling, you know, that’s what you did if you were a good player. It’s different now than it used to be. With Justin I tried to keep it fun. It would be seven at night, and we’d play three holes and we’d gamble. If he was 8 years old we’d play for a dollar, and I was giving him s— and he was giving me s—. But he liked it. My dad did not keep it fun. He made it pretty difficult, which he admits to now. I told myself, I’m never going to do that to Justin. I didn’t care whether he played golf or not; I just made an oath to myself that I’m going to be his friend, not his father. So we goofed off, played cards, razzed each other and ribbed each other. If I had to be a parent about something, I would, but I made sure that we were buddies first. My dad and I were both hard on each other. I mean, he was hard on himself, I was hard on myself, when I was playing competitively. So I spent a lot of time making sure Justin wasn’t. I think better players by nature are hard on themselves; that’s how they got where they are. But there’s a fine line; take some credit for some good things that you did. My dad was a great player. I always tell everybody it skipped a generation. He was Player of the Year in the Southern Ohio section, golly, 10, 12 times. I probably won eight or 10 section events, played in the CPC one year, the national PGA championship for club pros. But most of my highlights in golf center around Justin. I underachieved, for sure. I teach probably 40 kids at Harmony. I’ll leave here Sunday night and go to Florida for a day because my wife is there. Tuesday morning I’ll go home to Kentucky, and then I’ll be teaching every day all day long, even in February when it’s still cold. These kids don’t care. I’ve been there 31 years, 27 years maybe head pro. I’m Emeritus now because about four years ago in Phoenix, I was traveling to maybe eight events a year, and I said to Justin, ‘Am I out here too much? Not enough? Just right?’ He goes, ‘I’d like you out here a lot more.’ I’m like, ooh, a lot more. So I went back to the club and said, ‘Justin comes first,’ and the club has been extremely supportive. I love to work. I’m the first one there and the last to leave. I still pay all Justin’s bills, handle tons of his correspondence, a lot of his charity work. We run a huge AJGA event at our club, the Justin Thomas Junior Championship, which is really a year‑long process getting sponsors and everything. I played two rounds of golf last year. We played twice in Las Vegas for my wife’s surprise 60th birthday a couple days before L.A. (the Genesis Invitational) so we had to play – or Justin had to, which gave me a license to play, and actually I played pretty good out there. We played Shadow Creek and The Summit Club. I think I was 1‑over one day and then I think we played 14 holes the next day because it was really nasty out, and I think I was about even that day, but it was – the wind was howling and everything, so that was really good. When the PGA TOUR wanted to do some pieces on us a couple years ago and asked if I had any footage, I go, you know, lucky for me, I was using video long before other people were using video and teaching. I saw someone doing it, and I’m like, wow, I’ve got to do this, so I had all these fancy cameras at a very early stage of video and teaching, so when we went out to play, I’d video it. Even when he was 3 years old, I’d video it. I spent some time around Davis Love – Davis Love, Jr., I guess it is – when I was an assistant in Pittsburgh. I like a lot about Butch Harmon. I’m a big fan of the people that are old school. So when I read some of these things that teachers are talking about, I’m like, I’m not sure I even understand that. I’ve lost students because they want more information, and my stock line is golf is already hard, it’s my job to make it easier. Because when you’re standing out there on 17 tee to a back hole location over water, are you going to be thinking about P1 coming down or P3 on the top? That’s “Golfing Machineâ€� stuff. Or are you just going to visualize your shot and let your athletic abilities take over and do what you were trained to do? That’s kind of how Justin plays. That’s how I teach. As a kid Justin swung in and down on it quite a bit. He does not do that anymore. His lines always got off when he was little, and we still keep an eye on that today – today on the range we’re going to be looking at his lines. He’d just get cock-eyed where his feet would be going over there and his hips would be going over there or vice versa. He played baseball until he was 7 or 8 and traveling too much with golf. Basketball and soccer in the winter. One of the biggest fights I got in with my wife, we were playing like in a sixth-grade basketball game, you’d stay for the seventh- and eighth-grade games. I’m like, ‘This is Justin’s last year. He’s never going to be able to do what those guys do.’ It’s night and day because that seventh and eighth grader now had been to 20 basketball camps. Justin had been to zero. Jani goes, ‘He’s going to be better a year from now.’ I go, ‘Jani, he sucks.’ I said that. She goes, ‘I can’t believe you’d say that about your own son.’ I go, ‘I love him, but compared to these guys he’s got no chance.’ Now, he’s athletic enough, he’ll put it up, but he doesn’t have the skill set to bounce a pass or to go – he would not go in there where people were inside. I’m like, ‘He’s never going to be able to do that.’ Justin laughs about this. I think seventh grade was the year when you try out and they put your name on the door and you go over at 9 o’clock at night for the final cut. I remember thinking, man, he’s got no shot. You don’t want to discourage him and say he can’t do it, but this is what’s coming. He’s like, well, I don’t know. And we go over there and his name is not on that door, and you don’t see his name, and you’re looking at it again – still not there. You go, ‘OK, let’s go, you’re done.’ But I’ll tell you what: Nobody out on that court is going to hit a 3‑wood to a tucked pin over water like he is. He was tiny until he was a junior, and if you’ve ever seen any of his pictures when he won the FootJoy invitational in Greensboro at 15, he was hitting hybrids and woods into greens. I’m a realist. So many golf parents are like, ‘We really want to work toward the AJGA,’ and I’ll tell them, ‘Your child hasn’t broken the top 15 in the Pepsi Junior Tour in Louisville yet. Let’s stay here.’ They go, ‘We’re going to do a bunch of AJGA qualifiers this year.’ I go, ‘That’s a huge mistake.’ ‘Well, he’s got the talent.’ I go, ‘No, he doesn’t. Now, he will, but right now he doesn’t, and you want to send him out there and continue to beat him up, he’s going to quit.’ I’ve lost parents and kids because of that, but it’s like, here’s the reality. My goal is to make them better, but if they don’t want to do what I want to do, I can’t. I’m at 90, 95 percent of his events. It’s a fabulous life for one reason: You get to watch your child do something they have a passion for. That is kind of – that’s the only reason. If you go and watch your son do surgery all the time, or win legal cases, the joy of any parent or father is to watch your child, whether it’s a girl or boy, have a passion for something. I mostly fly commercial. Like if I’m in the right place where he’s going to hop to the next event, I’ll go with him. There’s times where he’ll hop to the next event and doesn’t have room on the plane. But yeah, I do travel some with him, but probably 80, 90% of my travel is commercial, which as you know, those airports and those layovers … Being out here has afforded me some things that I would never get to do if I wasn’t Justin Thomas’s father. At the (Sony Open in Hawaii), we were on the battleship USS Abraham Lincoln which just came into port for six months. The Admiral took us out there after we played in the pro‑am. Two years before that, he took us on I think it’s called the USS Houston, a nuclear sub, which came into Pearl Harbor. Admiral Tom Fargo with the Navy – he’s a great guy. We played with him in a pro‑am three years ago, and we’ve just become friends with him since then. If Justin plays well this week, I’ll hear from him, ‘Great playing,’ and I’ll tell Tom, he’s an inside-outer, I’m like, ‘Hey, you need to get those arms going across your body more, keep working on it.’ I meet a lot of celebrities and actors, which, I couldn’t care less. But I met this Admiral, I’m like, wow, the stories that you have and the places that you’ve been and served our country. It’s a fabulous life for one reason: You get to watch your child do something they have a passion for. At the BMW one year I did laps around the motor speedway at Indy – wouldn’t have gotten to do that if it wasn’t with Justin. We did five or six hot laps in an M3, and I think some in an M2. I’m thinking I’m going to get in a car with a guy and he’ll drive, but no; ‘Here’s your car. Justin, here’s your car. There’s a radio in there, I’ll be in front of you. If you’re on my ass, I’m going to go faster. If I lose you, I’ll slow down.’ It was one of the coolest things I’ve ever done. I did 140 down the straightaway. The first time on turn one, you’re doing it at 40 or 50, and the guy is on the radio saying you can go faster. The car is not going to tip over, it’s not going to slide. The next time you try it at 60. Next thing you know you’re going through these curves at 80, like, this is nuts! Jimmy (Johnson, Justin’s caddie) and I talk a lot. He caddied for Charles Howell III, Nick Price and Steve Stricker, and when he got on Justin’s bag, the time that stands out was at Whistling Straits, at the PGA (in 2015). On the fourth or fifth hole, Justin is in the fairway bunker on the right. Nothing but crap between him and the green. He’s got like 245. Big lip, big mound in front of him. He goes, ‘Do you like 5‑iron?’ Jimmy is like, ‘I like wedge right down there.’ Justin goes, ‘I can get over that mound. I can get there.’ Jimmy goes, ‘Why don’t we hit a wedge down there.â€� Of course, Justin knocked it on the green, and Jimmy was like, I need to readjust my thinking here a little bit. He said no player he caddied for even saw that shot. You have to be smart about it. I used to always tell Justin, and a lot of my kids that I teach, ‘I know you can hit this shot, but do you need to?’ That’s the deciding factor. I’ll be out here as long as Justin wants me. It is tiring. I can’t see doing this when I’m 75 years old. I mean, I’m 60 now. It recharges me to get busy teaching when I’m home because I haven’t seen those kids and I’ve missed them, and after 10 days or two weeks at home, it recharges me to get back on a plane and get back out on TOUR, so it works out.

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Power Rankings: Fantasy golf advice for THE NORTHERN TRUSTPower Rankings: Fantasy golf advice for THE NORTHERN TRUST

The 12th edition of the FedExCup Playoffs tees off with THE NORTHERN TRUST at Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey. It’s the fourth time that the 27-hole facility due north of New York City has hosted the tournament, most of any in the FedExCup era. A composite course utilizing all three nines on the A.W. Tillinghast original serves as the backdrop. It’s a par 35-36–71 with three par 5s and features slightly different routing than what qualifiers in 2008, 2010 and 2014 experienced. Scroll beneath the ranking for more on the track, what it rewards and other nuggets. POWER RANKINGS: THE NORTHERN TRUST RANK PLAYER COMMENT The defending champion hasn’t pegged it at Ridgewood since a T9 in 2010, but that matters not. He’s been a machine all season, evident as the top seed to open the FedExCup Playoffs. Answered his win at Firestone with a T6 at Bellerive where his putting was average. Can’t win ’em all, but he wins a lot. No. 2 on TOUR in the all-around and the FedExCup standings. If there’s a negative, it’s that he’s curious as to why he doesn’t perform better in non-majors. The PGA champion put on a clinic at Bellerive, but he’ll have to downshift a bit at Ridgewood. Couldn’t ask for a better reinforcement of confidence than a personal-best 62 on Sunday at Sedgefield where he’s been a persistent threat. Currently America’s version of Justin Rose. He has a major, two World Golf Championships and a gold medal, but the 38-year-old is still without a FedExCup trophy. He’s never been in better form. T15 (2010) and T30 (2014) at Ridgewood. Three wins in as many countries in his last eight starts in which he’s also finished second twice and T6 (in his last at the PGA Championship). Ridgewood fits his profile splendidly. First appearance in the event since 2013 and just his second trip to Ridgewood (T12, 2010). Ranked second in birdies-or-better percentage with the putter en route to solo second at Bellerive. The pacesetter in strokes gained: putting also sits fourth in birdies-or-better percentage after hitting GIR. T5 (2010) and T2 (2014) with a scoring average of 68.375 in last eight rounds at Ridgewood. Rested after a T4 at Bellerive where he authored as balanced an attack as any throughout his brief career. He’s scattered eight top fives in 2018, four of which in his last seven starts. Not only ranked second in strokes gained: putting at Bellerive but got stronger as the tournament progressed. Inside the top 25 on TOUR in both GIR and proximity. T22 at Ridgewood in 2014. Entrenched in the hearts of locals as the 2016 winner of this tournament (at Bethpage) and successful reprise as Captain America at Liberty National in the 2017 Presidents Cup. T9 here in 2014. You heard it in his voice after he secured victory at Sedgefield. He can’t wait to get the Playoffs started. Given his early-year frustration, his soles aren’t touching the ground right now. The Spaniard should relish the requirements at Ridgewood. His tee-to-green game has been phenomenal and his putting is improving rapidly. Peaking at the perfect time. Continues to fulfill his massive potential as he learns the rotation of courses. Opens as the 14-seed and ranks seventh in both the all-around and strokes gained: tee-to-green. With top 20s in six consecutive starts upon arrival, including three majors, a pair of top 25s at Ridgewood (2010, 2014) and bentgrass greens on which to putt this week, he’s an automatic. The 38-year-old Aussie earned last week off with a solo third at Bellerive. It begot some breathing room as he begins the Playoffs seeded 73rd. Top 15s in the last two editions at Ridgewood. Arguably the most flexible talent with only one victory. The quick study lets courses come to him and exploits the weak spots with his scoring ability. Ranks 13th in the all-around. Making his Playoffs debut at 23rd in the FedExCup standings. The Brit has made it look easy too often. Ranks third in both total driving and the all-around; also fifth in par-5 scoring. Still not contending – a T11 at the Wyndham is his second-best effort of 2018 – but he continues to percolate. Ranked second in proximity to the hole at Sedgefield. Placed T30 here in 2014. Essentially slump-proof, so anticipate a rebound after going T31-MC at Firestone and Bellerive. Steady T7-T12-T22 record at Ridgewood obscures his career roller coaster amid that consistency. Phil Mickelson, Bubba Watson, Bryson DeChambeau, Alex Noren, Matt Kuchar and Gary Woodland will be among the notables reviewed in Tuesday’s Fantasy Insider. With the cooperation of Mother Nature, Ridgewood Country Club is poised to present a proper platform to showcase the 2017-18 qualifiers for the FedExCup Playoffs. Seasonable and dry conditions are expected throughout with daytimes highs in the low to mid-80s and light breezes. FedExCup points for all entrants are carried into the Playoffs, but points earned in the Playoffs are quadrupled. The top 100 in the updated ranking will advance to next week’s Dell Technologies Championship. So, with jobs already secure for 2018-19, those outside the bubble have everything to gain. Ridgewood is the kind of test that will reward those who can balance aggression with patience, a combo that typically rewards experience. The course tips at 7,385 yards and boasts a stern trio of par 5s, but overall, the composite course plays into the grips of ball-strikers and shot-shapers who also know how to convert on their scoring opportunities. When it last hosted THE NORTHERN TRUST in 2014, Ridgewood yielded middle-of-the-pack percentages in fairways hit (63.99), greens in regulation (64.80) and par-breaker conversion rate after hitting GIR (29.11). Scoring averages also have reflected the diplomatic layout. After debuting at 71.406 in 2008, it decreased incrementally to 70.977 in 2010 and 70.809 in 2014. En route to his victory here during a primarily dry tournament in 2014, Hunter Mahan led the field in greens hit (58), but he was one of only two who posted a top 10 who also finished inside the top 10 in GIR. Seven of the 12 who finished inside the top 10 on the leaderboard ranked inside the top 10 in strokes gained: putting. Mahan slotted 15th. Patrick Reed (T9) was worst of the dozen and he was still a lofty 26th. Mahan’s 14-under 270 was the lowest of the first three winners at Ridgewood. This goes to show how familiarity translates into lower scoring. Bentgrass greens are average in size and will run upward of a comfortable 12-and-a-feet on the Stimpmeter. That leaves the primary defense around the edges where rough as high as four inches is waiting. A secondary defense, at least for some, and in line with the value of experience, is that 51 of the 120 in the field (as of Monday) competed in THE NORTHERN TRUST four years ago. Rickie Fowler (partial tear in right oblique; 17th in the FedExCup standings), Rory McIlroy (rest; 21st) and Henrik Stenson (left elbow; 50th) also pegged it here in 2014, but each is sitting this edition out. Patrick Rodgers (wedding in Italy; 93rd) and Bud Cauley (continued recovery from multiple injuries suffered in an automobile crash on June 1; 122nd) also are not in play. ROB BOLTON’S SCHEDULE PGATOUR.COM’s Fantasy Insider Rob Bolton reviews and previews every tournament from numerous angles. Look for his following contributions as scheduled. MONDAY: Rookie Ranking, Reshuffle, Medical Extensions, Power Rankings (THE NORTHERN TRUST) TUESDAY*: Power Rankings (FedExCup Playoffs), Sleepers, Facebook Live, Fantasy Insider WEDNESDAY: One & Done THURSDAY: Champions One & Done * – Rob is a member of the panel for PGATOUR.COM’s Expert Picks for PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO, which also publishes on Tuesdays.

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How to watch U.S. Open, Round 4: Live streaming, live scores, tee times, TV timesHow to watch U.S. Open, Round 4: Live streaming, live scores, tee times, TV times

Round 4 of the U.S. Open from Torrey Pines takes place Sunday. Louis Oosthuizen, Mackenzie Hughes and Russell Henley share lead heading in to Sunday at Torrey Pines. Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau both are two shots behind after impressive rounds in the 60s on moving day. Other big names such as Jon Rahm, Dustin Johnson and Collin Morikawa are still in with a chance of lifting the trophy Sunday all under par for the championship. Here’s everything you need to know to follow the action. Leaderboard Full tee times HOW TO FOLLOW (All times Pacific) Television: Sunday, 7 a.m.-9a.m. (Golf Channel), 9 a.m.-5 p.m. (NBC). Radio: Sunday, 3 p.m.-8 p.m. (SiriusXM 92) For more live streaming information, click here for the official USGA Viewing Schedule. NOTE: The USGA, who owns and operates the U.S. Open, controls all digital streaming and broadcast rights to this event. For more information on how to watch this week, please visit the U.S. Open’s website. PGA TOUR LIVE coverage will resume on Thursday, June 24 at the Travelers Championship. MUST READS Iconic shots set up major chance for Oosthuizen, Hughes and Henley Louis Oosthuizen, Mackenzie Hughes, Russell Henley share lead at U.S. Open Jon Rahm, Bubba Watson look to mirror Farmers Insurance Open success at U.S. OpenRichard Bland: Five things to know DeChambeau and this history of ‘bomb and gouge’ Nine things about Torrey Pines An open letter to Phil Mickelson The (astonishingly) long story on Wilco Nienaber Schauffele discusses watching Tiger’s win in person in 2008 Recalling Payne Stewart’s U.S. Open win 30 years ago

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