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Phil signs up for majors, requests release for LIV

Phil Mickelson registered to play in the PGA Championship and U.S. Open and has requested a release from the PGA Tour to allow him to play in the first event of the Saudi Arabian-financed LIV Golf Invitational Series.

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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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Grace Under Fire: The loss of Branden Grace’s father hit hard, but resiliency shines throughGrace Under Fire: The loss of Branden Grace’s father hit hard, but resiliency shines through

Branden Grace was on a tropical island and in contention for a PGA TOUR title. It’s hard to imagine a more ideal situation, but he was in tears as he sat in his rental car before the final round of last year’s Puerto Rico Open. His father, Peter, had died of COVID-19 just five weeks earlier, and the loss weighed especially heavy as Branden prepared to play. Branden described his dad as his “rock,” but that solid foundation was gone. Branden wouldn’t be able to call him before the round as he had done so many times before. “I always phoned my dad before I played. That was our thing,” Branden said. “That day it hit me that it wasn’t happening anymore.” The loss of Peter was the culmination of a difficult stretch when Grace also was struggling with the game that had made him one of the top-10 players in the world. He’d gone from contending in majors and winning around the world to struggling to make cuts, and now his biggest supporter was gone. Grace’s wife, Nieke, told her husband that she could still draw strength from his father on that Sunday in Puerto Rico. “We (were) all in tears and she just said, ‘Listen, he’s there every step of the way,’” Branden recalled. “Whenever you’re in doubt, smile and look up and just keep on going because he will be there.” Grace started that final round one shot off the lead. He was still one back when he faced a crucial decision on the second-to- last hole, a drivable par-4 with a lake in front of the green. Grace could take the aggressive route or play it safe. It was Peter Grace who helped his son make this important decision, just as he’d done so many times before. Peter Grace built Branden’s first club. He helped him decide to turn his sole focus on golf. And now he was helping Branden in one of the most important moments of his career. “Dad always told me, ‘I don’t know how to play this game safe,’” Branden said. “So of course I thought I should go for it.” Branden drove into a greenside bunker, but his ball came to rest on a downhill lie. It was an improbable shot, the one that easily could go astray, but Branden holed it for eagle to take a one-shot lead. He birdied the par-5 finishing hole, as well, to win by one. Grace was in tears again, just as he’d been hours earlier, but for a different reason. “You win and I’m making happy phone calls again,” he said. “Everybody is in tears. … It was magic.” Phone calls had always played an important role in Branden Grace’s golf career. They were a source of positive reinforcement as he played a game that provides so much negative feedback. For as long as he could remember, from flip phones to smart phones, Grace called his father before every round he played. But, in recent years, phone calls had been the source of too much bad news. There was the one from his hero, Ernie Els, informing Branden that he wasn’t going to be on the 2019 Presidents Cup team. Grace called it “one of the worst moments of my career.” And it was over the phone that he was informed Peter had passed away last January from COVID-19. It was Peter who built his son’s first club, a cut-down 3-iron that Branden used to hit balls around their farm. The family sheepdog happily served as Branden’s ball retriever. Golf was one of several sports that Branden excelled in, and it was Peter who helped him make the difficult decision about which one to focus on. Grace agonized over the decision because in South Africa the most popular sports, like cricket and rugby, were team sports. To specialize in golf, he’d have to give up those dreams, and some friends, as his practice schedules became longer and isolated. “When I was 14 my dad said that I can do anything with a ball if I put my mind to it but you kind of have to pick one, you can’t do everything for the rest of your life and think you’re going to be successful in all of them,” Grace recalls. “He said golf is the one you should do because I see more potential for you then you see yourself.” It was advice that changed Branden’s life and led him to a successful career that’s included 13 wins around the world, six top-7 finishes in majors and appearances on three Presidents Cup teams. It was his omission from the most recent team, however, that was especially painful. Branden Grace has known Ernie Els since childhood, when Grace was a member of the Fancourt Foundation squad that was co-founded by Els. The program was meant to help promising junior players realize their dreams. It played an important part in Grace’s career but also made the pain of being passed over by Els, the captain of the 2019 International Team, even worse. “It was one of the worst moments in my career. I know I wasn’t playing great golf at the time but I thought that the history I had at the Presidents Cup, and the fact that I’ve always been one that brings a lot of energy in a team situation like that, would help me,” Grace admits. “It was a kick in the guts. And I didn’t take it well at first. But it gave me an immediate attitude of I’ll show them.” Grace has his sights on this year’s team, which is captained by another of his countrymen, Trevor Immelman. Returning to the top 30 in the world – Grace is currently ranked 93rd – also is a goal. “I want to be on that team. I’m going to do everything I can to make it. And I feel with the changes I’ve made I’m going to play myself into the team.” Grace started working with instructor Justin Parsons, who also coaches Louis Oosthuizen, recently. Using a U.S.-based coach has simplified his practice and given him consistent feedback, versus the occasional video call back to South Africa. Working with Parsons is one reason Grace thinks his peak is still ahead. That’s saying something, considering what the 33-year-old has already accomplished. He’s one of just four men to go 5-0-0 in a Presidents Cup, doing so in 2015 after forming a successful pairing with Oosthuizen. He’s a two-time PGA TOUR winner and had a run of 10 majors where he finished sixth or better in half of them. He’s also the only man to shoot 62 in a major championship, which he did in the 2017 Open Championship. Grace has fought through difficult times before. After quick success on the DP World Tour, he admits that he lost his focus and had to regain his card at Q-School for the 2012 season. He won four times that year, becoming the first player to earn his first four wins on that tour in the same year. He had two top-5 finishes in majors in both 2015 and 2016 and earned his first PGA TOUR win at the 2016 RBC Heritage en route to reaching a career-best 10th in the world ranking. Grace was struggling before the 2019 Presidents Cup – he had just one top-10 in a stroke play event before Els submitted his picks – and he missed half his cuts in 2020. But he followed his win in Puerto Rico last year with a fourth-place finish at the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday and was part of a six-man playoff at the Wyndham Championship in August, which was won by Kevin Kisner. His 55th-place finish in last year’s FedExCup was his best in five years. If he can find that form, he’ll undoubtedly be an asset to an International Team that is trying to build on the momentum from 2019, when the International Team took the lead into the final day before narrowly falling, 16-14. Immelman’s squad will face the U.S. Team on Sept. 22-25 at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina. “I really hope he finds his top form again and I think he can,” Immelman said. “He’s been there and done it all. He has always been a great match player because he has that bulldog mentality and he’s just tough to beat.” Grace’s old friend Oosthuizen figures to be one of the linchpins of this year’s International squad. He’s one of six potential International Team members who rank in the top 25 of the world ranking, along with Cameron Smith, Hideki Matsuyama, Abraham Ancer, Joaquin Niemann and Sungjae Im. Oosthuizen hopes a reunion with Grace is in the cards at Quail Hollow. “I know it hurt him not to be there last time but I also know it motivated him,” Oosthuizen says. “He has what it takes to push his way into Trevor’s team at the end of the year. He’s got the type of personality that can come back from challenges and likely come back better from them. “Gracie is such a positive guy on the golf course and he never gets down and it makes for a great partner. I could hit the worst shot in the world and he immediately is smiling and saying, ‘Hey bro, watch this, I’m going to hit the best chip you’ve ever seen.’ We had a great team in Melbourne but he was still definitely missed.” After overcoming tragedy, Grace wants to keep history from repeating itself. He’s looking for a happy phone call this time.

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Discharged Bae ‘dying to play golf’Discharged Bae ‘dying to play golf’

With his stint in the South Korean military now over, two-time PGA Tour winner Sangmoon Bae is eager to turn his attention back to golf. Bae has not played since the 2015 Presidents Cup in Korea, after which he began a 21-month military obligation that is required of all able-bodied Korean men between the ages of 18 and 35. He was discharged from the Korean army on Wednesday and released a statement via the Asian Tour to express his excitement at getting back out on the course. “I’ve had such great memories serving in the military, and I feel that I’ve grown a lot stronger,” Bae said. “I did a lot of weight lifting and running to improve my conditioning, and I am not concerned about my fitness

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An unexpected match for Matt AtkinsAn unexpected match for Matt Atkins

She was expecting Matt Atkins to be an 11-year-old boy. After all, that’s how old Macey Brown was, and the sixth grader kept telling her dance coach that she wanted to introduce Matt to her. “So in my mind, I’m thinking … how cute, you have a little friend who’s out there,â€� Jill Erwin recalls. “That’s awesome. She kept saying Matt, Matt.â€�  The Friday before the Christmas break, Macey brought in a picture of Matt to show to her teacher.  Only, the person Jill expected to be a little boy turned out to be a handsome 25-year-old about to embark on his rookie season on the Web.com Tour. “I want you to date him,â€� Macey told her teacher. And she was telling Matt, a family friend who was helping her with her golf game, the same thing. “I’m like, well, wow, he’s cute,â€� Jill recalls. “So that’s your friend Matt.  And I thought he was 11. Basically, that’s how it started.â€� Macey, her younger sister Adi and her mom Cheryle still had a little more match-making to do, though. So, they sent Jill a video invitation to their New Year’s Eve party. “I thought, oh, that’s sweet, but I kind of blew it off,â€� Jill says. Luckily, the night before the party Cheryle followed up, texting Jill to see if she was coming. When Jill didn’t immediately answer, she sent another message. “I have a date for you,â€� Cheryle texted. Jill was intrigued, even though a month earlier she had vowed she never wanted to be set up again. “I wonder if it’s that Matt guy,â€� she thought. It was, and she went, and both of their lives changed forever.  “There were 32 kids there that I had coached, mentored, that were in my class at some point,â€� Jill recalls. “So all of them were just, like, they were dying. They loved it.  “And he was like, this is so awkward.â€� The two talked that night but between the scavenger hunt and all the other games, meaningful conversation was minimal. But Macey’s grandmother insisted Jill leave her phone number – “I ended up writing it down on a paper plate,â€� she says – and later that night she received a text from Matt. The electronic conversation continued the following day. Jill decided to ask him to join her when she met some friends at a pizza parlor that night. The friends left around 11 p.m. and Matt walked Jill to her car. They ended up talking into the wee hours. “I knew he was different when I first met him,â€� Jill says. “I had a feeling. Like I said, I’ve had some terrible dating experiences.  I was kind of like, okay, whatever. I kind of left it up to God.  I said, just put the person in my life that you want to be there. “So, when I met him, I’m like, please, Lord, let this be the one.  I really like him. He’s so nice. It was that first night we were talking, he was talking about how he found Christ. He was talking about his college experience. It really got to my heart. I’m like, okay, he’s different than the other guys.  So, I kept with it.â€� The dates – and more importantly, the conversations — continued for the next 10 days or so until Matt left Kentucky to head to Florida to prepare for the upcoming Web.com Tour season. “Then we FaceTimed every day,â€� Jill says. “We talked for hours and hours. … And I guess the rest is history.â€� Jill will be the first to tell you that she knew nothing about golf when she met Matt. Her father taught her the basics and the Golf Channel expanded her horizons. “(Matt) FaceTimed me,â€� Jill remembers. “I’m like, I’m watching the Golf Channel, I know who Jordan Spieth is. He’s like, great, he’s been golfing for a little bit. I’m like, I didn’t know that.â€�  Matt tied for 35th the first time she saw him play in person at the 2015 United Leasing Championship. Her education continued that summer when she was able to travel with him to several other events. Eventually Jill resigned her teaching position to be with Matt full-time – “so my new job is paying the bills, taking care of the business,â€� she says. The couple married on July 1, two months after Matt won the El Bosque Mexico Championship by Innova on his way to earning his PGA TOUR card for this year. Macey, the matchmaker extraordinaire, was a junior bridesmaid.    “It was like the best day of her life,’â€� Jill said with a smile.  Of course, no one knows a TOUR player better than his wife. So, now that you know a little more about the couple, Jill gives us 18 things you might not know about her husband below. 1. Matt’s identity is in Jesus Christ. Above all else, he is a Godly man and great leader.  2. Matt does not eat fruits or vegetables…at all. Ever. In fact, when Matt was a baby he would not open his mouth when his mom tried to feed him fruits. To this day, he’s never had an actual fruit or vegetable.  3. Matt knows what he wants. When he makes up his mind, he goes for it without question. He’s incredibly brilliant and that helps him on the course — and me off the course.  4. He has a catch phrase, “My thing is …” And he says it constantly.  5. Matt can eat anything with mint and peanut butter.  6. His heart is the most genuine I’ve ever known. It’s my favorite thing about him.  7. He has a distinctive walk. I can always pick him out in a crowd by how he holds his arms when he’s walking. When he’s frustrated, he walks EVEN faster than usual.  8. His opinions are hilarious. I plan on writing a book titled, “The World According to Matt.” The first line will be: “My thing is…” 9. He is thoughtful. There have been many days when a surprise Starbucks latte or Cherry Coke Zero show up as a little treat just for me. 10. Matt hasn’t even spent a month in our home since we’ve owned it. He travels too much (but that’s a nice blessing)! 11. Matt will tell you his father, Frank was the most responsible for starting him playing golf. Frank took Matt out to the course and encouraged his talent. Frank also was Matt’s best man in the wedding. 12. Matt’s two favorite kiddos are his nephews, Riley and Liam. He eats up any FaceTime we get with them while on the road. He enjoys seeing them grow up and become little men.  13. He’s extremely competitive! Matt is an athlete through and through. He’s played every sport, except hockey growing up. I mean, it’s even hard for him to let his nephews win at Candy Land or Memory.  14. Matt picked up a golf club at five but did not take it seriously until eighth grade.  15. He’s a YouTube-aholic. Being on the road constantly, he has had to find things to do for entertainment. I think he’s seen every singing competition video!  16. He’s a convenience store junkie. His top favorites: Wawa and QT.  17. He loves the challenge of golf which led him to pursue it professionally.  18. Our first date was at a wasabi restaurant. I can get him to eat that any time, but Mexican … that’s usually a no! 

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