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Woods ready to rumble at Hero

ALBANY, Bahamas – Not that long ago the only use of a golf club for Tiger Woods was as a crutch to get out of bed. Now the two-time FedExCup champion is confident his latest comeback will not be like the others because this time he’s pain free as he gears up to play at the Hero World Challenge at Albany in the Bahamas. Returning to competitive golf for the first time since February after spinal fusion surgery – the fourth back surgery since March 2014 – Woods believes this time is different. The 79-time PGA TOUR winner has played just 19 official events since 2014 and can’t confirm how many he may play in the future – but he’s excited none-the-less to test himself against the elite 18-man field. A year ago everyone left the Bahamas optimistic after Woods made as many birdies as winner Hideki Matsuyama (he finished 15th) only to see things fall apart in his next start at The Farmers Insurance Open. At Torrey Pines he was stiff and wooden on the way to missing the cut and then withdrew from the Dubai Desert Classic the following week before going in for surgery. “This is very different because last year I was still struggling with a little bit of pain and I was able to hit some good shots, able to play, but in looking back on it now, I look on it as playing in slow mo,â€� Woods said Tuesday. “I didn’t realize how bad my back had become and how much I was flinching and just how slow I was. I didn’t realize it because it’s been a slow degrading process. “I thought I had some speed, thought I was playing halfway decent, shot some good scores, but now I’ve looked back on it and man, I didn’t even have much at all.â€� Woods says now the only issue he has is the odd bit of stiffness but given his back is fused that is no surprise. He’s “winging itâ€� as he learns just how hard he can swing and just what recovery he will need after competitive rounds and tournaments. Most people have the fusion surgery in their late 50’s. Woods is 41. “I’ll have a better understanding once I’m in game speed. I know I’ve always hit it harder come game time because of adrenaline and I’m looking forward to it and I’m also looking forward to see how I feel,â€� he says. The famous Woods smile was back as he thought about the possibility of competing with the new breed on TOUR. His last win came in 2013 when the likes of Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas were not really on the radar. Now they have joined him as major winners and FedExCup champs. Last year the under 25 brigade dominated the TOUR. They mostly know Woods via what they watched on television growing up plus clips from YouTube and video games, not the heat of battle. “In an ideal world, I would like to have them feel what some of my past guys had to go against all those years. I’d like to have them feel that same play,â€� Woods smiled. “When I turned pro, I think Jordan was still in diapers, right. “But I’m just looking forward to getting through these four rounds and having an understanding, a better understanding of where I’m at. I don’t know where I’m at. I don’t know how hard I can hit it, what shots can I play. “I don’t know what the future entails in that regard because I’m still learning this body. I just really want to be able to complete this week, play all four days and give myself a chance on that back nine on Sunday to win this thing.â€� Just what Woods will be able to achieve over the next few years is yet to be seen. He clearly is on the back nine of his career. But anything of note from this point on should be seen as gravy on a legendary career. “This surgery was about quality of life because I didn’t really have much. I’ve been in bed for about two years and people ask me, why don’t you go out to dinner? I can’t, I can’t sit,â€� the 14-time major winner revealed. “So to be able to have the ability to go out and do things like that, and on top of that to be able to participate in my kids’ sports again… I’ve missed it.â€� With his daughter Sam, now 10, and son Charlie, now eight, Woods is also driven by the fact they’ve not seen him at his best. He would like for them to know their dad outside of the YouTube realm. And while they won’t be in Albany this week… if things go well there might come a day where a young Woods gets to carry the bag for dad somewhere, perhaps Augusta National like Jack Nicklaus’ son famously did for the 1986 victory. “I want them to see what I’ve been able to do my entire career. I’ve been fortunate enough to play tournament golf for 37 years and I want them to experience some of that, have a better understanding of it,â€� he said. “I don’t know how long I’m going to be playing but I want them to come to a few events, I want them to feel it, I want them to understand it a little bit more.â€� Not that long ago it appeared this day might never come again. It appeared it could all be over. But despite some really rough days Woods always thought he would be back. “I always thought that I was tough mentally,â€� Woods said. “My dad always thought so as well. Going through all this just reaffirmed that.â€�

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Hideki Matsuyama+800
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Rory McIlroy+450
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Patrick Cantlay+4000
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Miss+200
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Miss+220
Jordan Spieth - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Miss+180
Russell Henley - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-275
Miss+200
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Make-275
Miss+200
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Make-225
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Miss+165
Tony Finau - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-200
Miss+150
Rory McIlroy
Type: Rory McIlroy - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish-105
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Keith Mitchell - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-200
Miss+150
Scottie Scheffler
Type: Scottie Scheffler - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+100
Top 10 Finish-190
Top 20 Finish-425
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Type: Sungjae Im - Status: OPEN
Make-225
Miss+165
Bryson DeChambeau
Type: Bryson DeChambeau - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+175
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Robert MacIntyre - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Robert MacIntyre - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Justin Thomas
Type: Justin Thomas - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+300
Top 10 Finish+140
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Top 40 Finish-320
Davis Thompson - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Davis Thompson - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Collin Morikawa
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Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
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Type: J J Spaun - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Jon Rahm
Type: Jon Rahm - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
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Top 30 Finish-190
Top 40 Finish-280
Sam Burns - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Sam Burns - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Xander Schauffele
Type: Xander Schauffele - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+375
Top 10 Finish+170
Top 20 Finish-140
Top 30 Finish-190
Top 40 Finish-280
Maverick McNealy - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Maverick McNealy - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Ludvig Aberg
Type: Ludvig Aberg - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+400
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Harris English - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-200
Miss+150
Joaquin Niemann
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Top 5 Finish+500
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Denny McCarthy - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Denny McCarthy - Status: OPEN
Make-200
Miss+150
Brooks Koepka
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Top 5 Finish+650
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Make-200
Miss+150
Hideki Matsuyama
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Top 5 Finish+650
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Make-185
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Top 5 Finish+650
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Make-185
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Tommy Fleetwood
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Top 5 Finish+650
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Mackenzie Hughes - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Mackenzie Hughes - Status: OPEN
Make-185
Miss+140
Jordan Spieth
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Top 5 Finish+700
Top 10 Finish+325
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Will Zalatoris - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Will Zalatoris - Status: OPEN
Make-185
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Tyrrell Hatton
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Top 5 Finish+700
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Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
Wyndham Clark - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Wyndham Clark - Status: OPEN
Make-185
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Sepp Straka
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Top 5 Finish+800
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Justin Rose - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-175
Miss+135
Shane Lowry
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Top 5 Finish+800
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Brian Harman - Make Cut / Miss Cut
Type: Brian Harman - Status: OPEN
Make-175
Miss+135
Viktor Hovland
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Top 5 Finish+800
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Top 30 Finish-110
Top 40 Finish-165
J.T. Poston - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-175
Miss+135
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Top 5 Finish+1000
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Adam Scott - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-185
Miss+140
Patrick Reed
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Top 5 Finish+1200
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Sergio Garcia - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-165
Miss+125
Russell Henley
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Top 5 Finish+1200
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Rasmus Hojgaard - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-165
Miss+125
Daniel Berger
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Make-150
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Make-150
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Sungjae Im
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Top 5 Finish+1200
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Make-175
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Dustin Johnson - Make Cut / Miss Cut
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Make-150
Miss+110
Keith Mitchell
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Make-150
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Make-150
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Maverick McNealy
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Top 5 Finish+1600
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Top 5 Finish+1600
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Top 5 Finish+1800
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Top 5 Finish+1800
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Sam Burns
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Top 10 Finish+800
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Top 30 Finish+170
Top 40 Finish+110
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Type: Si Woo Kim - Status: OPEN
Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
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Top 5 Finish+1600
Top 10 Finish+650
Top 20 Finish+250
Top 30 Finish+175
Top 40 Finish+115
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Top 5 Finish+2200
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Andrew Novak
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Top 5 Finish+1800
Top 10 Finish+800
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Top 40 Finish+125
Regions Tradition
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Stewart Cink+550
Ernie Els+700
Steve Stricker+800
Steven Alker+800
Miguel Angel Jimenez+1000
Jerry Kelly+1400
Bernhard Langer+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
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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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USA-150
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Happy 25th, Happy Gilmore!Happy 25th, Happy Gilmore!

Complete coverage of Happy Gilmore’s 20th anniversary. Editor’s note: This story was originally published on February 16th, 2016. We can all agree that Adam Sandler's movie “Happy Gilmore” - which celebrates its 25th anniversary this week — took several liberties with the Rules of Golf, flouted conventional wisdom and mocked some of the sport's time-honored traditions and decorum. That was part of the fun, right? Well, you should have read the first draft of the script ... or the second ... or third ... or fourth. Mark Lye did, as the one-time PGA TOUR pro-turned-broadcaster was hired as the official script consultant. As Lye worked his way through those early readings, he kept crossing out parts, wondering if there would be anything left to film. At one point, he told Sandler and his co-writer Tim Herlihy, "You gotta be crazy. You cannot do a movie like that." His concerns? "They had the green jacket. They were desecrating the USGA. Making fun of Augusta National," Lye recalls. "I just said, ‘No, no, no. I don't think you better go there at all. We can get the same effect by doing our own fictitious event.' " They listened, which is why Happy Gilmore (25-year-old spoiler alert!) wins the coveted Gold Jacket at the Tour Championship, not the Green Jacket at the Masters. Meanwhile, Lye was also worried about the movie crossing too far over the line of believability. Early scripts had Happy hitting 400-yard drives on every hole and acing par 4s on a regular basis. It was like the writing team had never been to a golf tournament - and that's when the lightbulb came on. Lye arranged to have key members of the movie crew attend the PGA TOUR event at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth. He provided clubhouse badges, allowing them to get a feel for the atmosphere, to see the marshals, officials and volunteers and observe the demeanor of the pros. He thinks that visit paid dividends in dialing down some - the key word here being "some" — of the over-the-top situations. "They saw what the limits were," he says. Even so, this was a Sandler comedy, not a glorification of pro golf, and thus boundaries of believability would be pushed. Hockey blades as putters? Punching out members of the gallery - as well as playing partners? Washing underwear in the ball washers? Runaway Volkswagens driven down the middle of a fairway? Lye just had to grit his teeth. Finally after the fifth script, he gave his seal of golf approval. "I'm not sure about marking the ball with a cookie and eating it," Lye recalls telling the producers, "but as far as value and not offending anybody, I think you're fine." Of course, Happy's achievements aren't the point of the movie. It's the humor - sophomoric to be sure, but funny nonetheless - that has given it a cult following both in and out of golf circles since its release on Feb. 16, 1996. "There's just so much goofy, fun, stupid stuff in that movie," says five-time TOUR winner Jimmy Walker. "It just made you laugh. I don't even think you have to be a golfer to enjoy it. It could appeal to everybody just because it was funny." Certainly funny enough to turn a tidy profit - Happy Gilmore made more than $41 million on a $12 million budget. We can all agree that Caddyshack is the quintessential golf comedy, right? Well ... Released in 1980, Caddyshack mocked the stuffy environment of country clubs and its members, allowing Saturday Night Live alums Chevy Chase and Bill Murray free rein at the height of their comedic powers. Golfers routinely recite lines from the movie, and Murray's assistant greenskeeper Carl Spackler has carved out a special place in golf lore. But for young golfers today, their first exposure to a wacky golf movie was not Caddyshack but “Happy Gilmore,” which came out 16 years later and was made by another SNL alum in Sandler. Instead of making fun of country clubs, it mocked professional golf - which certainly hit home to those who hoped to make their living on the PGA TOUR. And instead of Spackler's Cinderella story, it gave us Happy's much-imitated running-start tee shot. Asked which movie he prefers, 31-year-old Jonas Blixt responds, "Happy Gilmore, but I like Caddyshack too. The older guys probably will go more with Caddyshack." Adds 32-year-old Marc Leishman: "I didn't actually see Caddyshack until about five years ago, so I prefer Happy Gilmore. I love it." Patrick Rodgers, 23, says Happy Gilmore and Tin Cup are his two favorite golf movies. No mention of Caddyshack. Longtime golf announcer Verne Lundquist, who plays himself in the movie, told The Sherman Report that the movie has "helped keep me relevant to a generation, maybe even two. I get more questions about Happy Gilmore than I do about the game." Lundquist recalled the time he and Billy Packer were scheduled to call a basketball game at the University of North Carolina in 2009. Lundquist was asked to visit the locker room and address the home team; he replied that they surely wanted Packer. No, it was Lundquist they wanted - and Tyler Hansbrough, then a star for the Tar Heels, told him why: "We need you to say, ‘Who the hell is Happy Gilmore?" It was a line from the movie. Lundquist obliged - and the players went crazy. "I said, ‘If you guys win the national championship, I expect to get credit for giving you a motivational speech,'" Lundquist told The Sherman Report. "They won, but I never got any credit." While Happy Gilmore may speak more to millennials, older golfers still seem to prefer the classic. Zach Johnson, 16 years older than Rodgers, puts Happy Gilmore in his top five among golf movies but not at the top. "We all know what No. 1 is," he said. "Caddyshack." Eight-time TOUR winner Geoff Ogilvy, 38, used to be able to quote Caddyshack from start to finish. He's never been able to do that with Happy Gilmore. "I was truly a Caddyshack junkie," Ogilvy says, "but not really a Happy Gilmore junkie." It's safe to suggest that Murray and Chase (along with Rodney Dangerfield and Ted Knight) have a broader, more approachable appeal than Sandler, who can be an acquired taste for some. Lye was one of those who didn't always get Sandler's kind of humor; in fact, he gravitated more to the subtle humor of Sandler's nemesis, Shooter McGavin (played by Christopher McDonald). But as he worked on the movie - he was close friends with the father of producer Robert Simonds - Lye began to appreciate what Sandler brought to the table. Lye remembers the first day he showed up on set in Vancouver, British Columbia (due to the conversion rate, it was cheaper to film movies in Canada than in the United States). It was early in the morning, about 5:30 a.m., and Lye was escorted to his trailer. The trailer next door had loud acid rock music blaring. He asked what was going on. "That's Adam Sandler's trailer," he was told. "That's how he gets fired up in the morning." Today, when asked about Sandler, Lye says "He was a meek guy, but as soon as the cameras came on, he became a beast. It was like Gremlins — just feed him after midnight. A cute little guy off the set but hilarious on it." We can all agree that the Happy Gilmore sidestep-and-swing tee shot is the most imitated in golf, right? C'mon, you know you've tried it. Instead of standing perpendicular to the ball at address, you stand behind it, take a couple of side steps and let it rip, Happy-style. Essentially, it's Happy's way of converting his hockey shot into a golf swing - and the results are extremely accurate 400-yard drives that became his calling card. Goodness knows how many TOUR pros have tried their hand at it - Jordan Spieth, Phil Mickelson, Rory McIlroy among them. All in good fun, of course. "I'm not very good at it," says five-time winner Nick Watney. "I don't have the timing down. I've got some work to do on my Happy Gilmore shot, that's for sure." FedExCup winner Bill Haas isn't very good at it, either. "It's tough to do," he says. "I can hit it every now and then, but it doesn't help me hit it any further. I probably can make contact, but it's not going to be good contact." Others, however, became quite adept at it. "I was pretty good at it when I was younger," Blixt adds. So was Carl Pettersson when he tried it on the range. "Never done it in a tournament," he says, adding, "Maybe I should." Technically, it's not illegal to attempt the shot during competition, so there is no penalty stroke. But a rules spokesman for the R&A told CNN in 2012 that the "major concern we do have is regarding whether it fits with the etiquette of the game as defined in the rules. Players must have respect for the course itself and perhaps this shot lends itself to increased likelihood of damage to the course." Of course, if players thought it would give them a significant advantage, they might be prone to at least experiment with it. But not even the most recognizable Happy Gilmore imitator on TOUR is willing to go that far. Three-time major winner Padraig Harrington has become pro golf's poster boy for the swing. His peers are amazed as his consistency in using the run-up tee shot. "He hits it like 15 yards by his normal swing," says Ben Crane. "And he hits it pure." "He does it as a training aid to separate his body," adds Pettersson. "Arms going one way and body going forward. It's actually the correct way to hit a driver." Harrington was featured on a Sport Science video that asked the question of whether a successful Happy Gilmore swing could provide more distance off the tee than the standard golf swing. Using motion capture cameras, Harrington's Happy Gilmore swing was found to generate an addition 4 mph in clubhead speed, as well as increase his shoulder turn for more torque. Meanwhile, the swing plane was nearly identical. His drives averaged 30 more yards than his traditional set-up. But with more distance comes potentially less accuracy if the ball isn't properly struck - and that's why Harrington never plans to use his Happy Gilmore swing in competition. "I don't believe I'd be as accurate," he says during the Sport Science shoot. "Would the gain of 20-30 yards be worth it? I'd like to do it on the golf course but I'm too cautious for that." But he does have advice for anybody who wants to try it? "Don't think too much about it," he says. "Just give it a good hit." We can all agree that Bob Barker punching out Happy Gilmore is the most absurd scene in a movie that has many such moments, right? It starts at the Pepsi Pro-Am, with Barker - playing himself, the legendary host of the game show, The Price Is Right - meeting Happy for the first time as playing partners. " You know, Faldo and I won this thing last year," Barker says to Happy. "I'd like to win this year." As a professional golfer who has played hundreds of pro-am rounds, Lye says that line most sticks with him. "How many times have I heard that on the freakin' first tee," he notes. "Heard it about 100 times." But it's the fight scene that's best remembered, especially since Barker was 72 years old and Sandler just 29 when the movie was released. At one point, Barker threw 11 consecutive punches — mostly left jabs — at Gilmore, who eventually got the upper hand and landed (what he thought) was the ending blow, resulting in the signature line from the movie (which we'll post here with a little family-oriented editing): The price is wrong, b—-! Of course, Barker rises up, grabs Happy by the throat, and gets the last laugh as he punches out Happy and leaves him writhing on the course. "The Bob Barker scene is pretty fantastic," says Brandt Snedeker. "Hell, yes, I've wanted to do that, and I'm sure some guys have wanted to do that to me. "It sets up the pro-am scene pretty well on some weeks." When Lye left the movie set after filming his lone scene - a cocktail party in which he plays himself as a Gold Jacket winner - he asked one of the executives how the movie was going. "It's going to be a classic," was the reply. "How would you know?" asked Lye. "Wait until you see the Bob Barker scene." So when Lye attended the premier in Hollywood 25 years ago, the first person he saw was Bob Barker. He couldn't help but laugh. "It looked like he had died 10 years earlier," Lye said. "He was just a wisp of a man. Wore a spatula full of makeup." Then he saw the fight scene and thought, "Damn, that was pretty good." Barker has said on many occasions that following the release of Happy Gilmore, he never taped an episode of The Price Is Right without being asked about the movie by someone in the audience. He said young men, in particular, ask him: "Did you really whip Adam Sandler?" Barker's stock reply: "Adam Sandler, he couldn't whip Regis Philbin." Perhaps that's what makes Sandler's Happy Gilmore so endearing. He beats up gallery members and fellow competitors, but he wasn't above taking one or two - or 11 - punches on the chin himself from the person you least expect. Of course, what Happy Gilmore does best is whack you over the head with absurd humor. "I was just blown away at the golf inaccuracies that were in there, but also how funny it was and how it brought the attention of Hollywood to the golf world," says three-time TOUR winner Johnson Wagner. "It was cool, but I just remember thinking how horribly inaccurate it was for professional golf." Good thing he didn't see the first few drafts of the script.

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Fantasy Insider: THE NORTHERN TRUSTFantasy Insider: THE NORTHERN TRUST

Unless you’re in a dogfight for your league title in PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf, THE NORTHERN TRUST is the last hope for chasers. The first event of the FedExCup Playoffs is the last tournament of the 2018-19 season with a cut. This means that all golfers in all lineups, assuming they’re saved and barring mid-round withdrawals and disqualifications, will post numbers in every round of the BMW Championship and the TOUR Championship. And since fantasy scoring is relatively even in the short-term, there won’t be any walk-offs among those of us with but a chip and a chair entering the Playoffs. As has been the case for weeks, my lineup is completely different than that of my target, Ben Everill, the front-runner in the PGA TOUR Experts League. However, because his margin is more than 300 points, my only reasonable chance to make a dent is if no fewer than five of his guys missed the cut at Liberty National and no more than two of mine are snipped. That could translate into a 300-point swing before we all but cancel each other out in the final two events. If you’re in a Playoffs pool or just curious about historical trends in the series, take a read of my special Playoffs Power Rankings. It’ll help understand for whom starts should be rationed and how the field of 30 at East Lake will be constructed. With that feature published, the next special assignment will be my full-membership fantasy ranking. While billed as such, it’s more of an introduction and guide. It will run before A Military Tribute at the Greenbrier opens the 2019-20 season on Sept. 12. All other complementary pages will turn over during the brief offseason as well. This grouping consists of the Rookie Ranking, Qualifiers, Medical Extensions and Korn Ferry Tour Graduate Reshuffle. Please continue to monitor the FANTASY page or select any of these pages via the MENU and Fantasy slider at the top. PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf My roster for THE NORTHERN TRUST (in alphabetical order): Patrick Cantlay Rickie Fowler Brooks Koepka Rory McIlroy Jon Rahm Justin Rose You’ll find my starters in Expert Picks. Others to consider for each category (in alphabetical order): Scoring: Jason Day; Dustin Johnson; Hideki Matsuyama; Sungjae Im; Ryan Palmer; Andrew Putnam; Patrick Reed; Xander Schauffele; Adam Scott; Webb Simpson; Justin Thomas Driving: Jason Day; Tommy Fleetwood; Tyrrell Hatton; Charles Howell III; Sungjae Im; Matt Kuchar; Hideki Matsuyama; Joaquin Niemann; Louis Oosthuizen; Kyle Stanley Power Rankings Wild Card Xander Schauffele … Tough crowd. No, not the locals at THE NORTHERN TRUST, although if he plays poorly, he’ll probably hear a little heat; rather, the Power Rankings proper. He was the last cut but only because he didn’t factor in his last two starts. Still, he’s entering his third Playoffs as the 4-seed thanks to a massive season. He loves the brightest lights and never should be counted out. Draws Tiger Woods … There’s no reason not to believe in him, but his comments after missing the cut at Royal Portrush were telling. For as much as we’ve expected him to reinvent himself as a tee-to-green tactician – and he has in a big way – he’s still learning how to balance the professional with the personal. Back in the U.S. and committed to the Playoffs, opportunity is in the 28-seed’s grip to capture a third FedExCup title (and first in 10 years). He was the runner-up at Liberty National in 2009 and 2013, so he had little issue with the worst and the best of the course. Hideki Matsuyama … For different reasons, I’m chalking up each of his last three starts as anomalies, albeit consecutively, obviously. From the vagaries of The Open to his debut at TPC Southwind to what felt like a weird fit at Sedgefield (despite an endorsement in the Power Rankings that acknowledged three top 15s on the course), Liberty National sets up best of the four tracks because it caters to distance control and precision on approach. Plus, the 30-seed just doesn’t slump for long. Scott Piercy … No need to overanalyze a guy who does everything well. Terrific complement in every fantasy situation and in excellent position to advance to the TOUR Championship as the opening 26-seed. Bubba Watson … Presents coolly as a guy with nothing to lose as the 71-seed. It hasn’t been the most memorable of seasons with just three top 10s and no wins, but he’s in position to have a hot week like he has in so many editions of THE NORTHERN TRUST. Among his six top 15s in the tournament was a T13 at Liberty National in 2013, also a season in which he recorded three top 10s and didn’t record a victory. Ryan Palmer … Perfect in nine appearances in THE NORTHERN TRUST in the Playoffs, the last three of which resulted in a top 15, so he’s a proven hot starter. Also fresh off a pair of top 10s and another top 20 in his most recent five starts. The 24-seed is rising above his old profile as a streaky talent. As a 42-year-old who still can move it off the tee, he’s a consistent force who matches up well. Tony Finau … Filed under the category of cautiously optimistic, he’s deviated from consistently strong form over time to an all-or-nothing value, and that scares us. He doesn’t profile like that for long, and at least there’s good with the bad. At 16th in points, he’ll get to East Lake without much trouble, so there’s reason to invest in the opportunity to free-wheel it at Liberty National. Andrew Putnam … Since the PGA Championship, the 38-seed is 8-for-8 worldwide with a pair of top fives among four top 25s. He’s sixth on TOUR in Strokes Gained: Putting and 15th in putting: birdies-or-better. Charles Howell III … It’s always strange to think of him as a commodity at this time of year, but he’s back in form after a customary spring swoon. This one included a hip injury in May. Never bashful about taking advantages of the easiest tracks, he arrives 15th in points with a T23-T6-T22 burst in tow. Matthew Wolff … The locals are gonna love him, of course, and he’s held his own since the breakthrough victory at TPC Twin Cities. While he’s been busy, he’s still the shiny, new toy with everything to gain in his Playoffs debut. However, his first goal of making the cut as the 70-seed to advance might be his biggest challenge thus far as a professional. To steal the line from Chicago Cubs manager Joe Maddon, will Wolff permit the pleasure to exceed the pressure? Tyrrell Hatton … If he wasn’t inside the top 50 of the Official World Golf Ranking, he’d have been among my Sleepers in part because of that fact. Three top 10s among eight top 25s in his second straight season with a PGA TOUR card, the 27-year-old is 77th in points. Fades Bryson DeChambeau … The defending champion is seeded 18th despite a confounding few months of inconsistency blanketing consecutive top 10s a month ago. He’s also undergoing equipment changes. J.T. Poston … Watch, he’ll bogeyed his first hole in the opening round. I jest only because he went bogey-free en route to his breakthrough title at Sedgefield last week. It was tough to gauge his level of stress visually, but we should expect a letdown after the monumental achievement. Even though the objective will be to keep the pedal down and sustain form into his second Playoffs appearance – he opens 27th in points – the win was just his second top 25 in three months. What’s more, everything at this point is gravy. Shane Lowry … The conservative in me has to respect the banality of returning to competition after experiencing the thrill of winning The Open Championship near home. Not surprisingly, he pulled out early from two commitments since, but the lights have to go back on at some point. At 20th in the FedExCup, he’s in outstanding position to pay off the career achievement. For the record, he qualified for the Playoffs in 2016 but elected to play the European Tour. Phil Mickelson … If the NYC crowds can’t inspire him to end his extended slump, nothing will. He’s benefited by short rough and enough experience at Liberty National to feel as comfortable as anyone, not to mention a strong early portion of the season to sit 34th in points upon arrival, but the results haven’t been there for months. Gary Woodland … So much to love about the possibilities, but I want to see the 5-seed turn the page on the mini-slump that bridged his U.S. Open victory and birth of twin daughters. Jordan Spieth … Went in the books with the dubious distinction as one of the last victimized by the 54-hole/MDF cut provision at the Wyndham Championship. The rule ended at Sedgefield because it’s not in play during the Playoffs and it won’t continue in 2019-20. That he found himself in that grouping after sitting T12 at the midpoint reminds you of everything you need to know about his inconsistency all season. He’s 69th in points and he makes most cuts, so he sets up as nothing better than a contrarian if you can’t look away. Marc Leishman … No matter his opening position – this year 12th – the Aussie has been a notoriously slow starter in the Playoffs. He’s just 4-for-10 without a top 30 in THE NORTHERN TRUST. Sergio Garcia … The 65-seed hasn’t posted a top-50 finish in a full-field event in the U.S. in three months. He hasn’t appeared in THE NORTHERN TRUST in five years. This week’s commitment serves as his 15th start of 2018-19 and meets the membership minimum. It’s the fourth time in five seasons that he’s totaled exactly 15. Chez Reavie … A curious fit for Liberty National as the TOUR’s leader in fairways hit who also ranks T4 in proximity on approach. However, and although he’s the 14-seed, gamers have lost some faith after tumbling off the summit attained with victory at the Travelers in June. Kevin Na … Recently bothered by a sore neck, the 48-seed broke par in only one round at TPC Southwind (T43). It’s his only red number in seven rounds of a quiet summer since emerging victorious at Colonial. Brandt Snedeker … Simply put, and despite scoring 10-under 270 at Sedgefield, he didn’t deliver as the defending champion en route to a T39. Surprisingly, it was his putter that let him down, not his irons. He also missed the cut in 2013 at Liberty National. Seeded 33rd. Returning to Competition Jhonattan Vegas … Left the Barracuda Championship before his second round to attend the birth of his second child, Louis Alexander. He’s 80th in the FedExCup after a three-month drought, but he’s recorded three straight top 15s in THE NORTHERN TRUST. The 34-year-old elevated to a career season the first time the Nappy Factor took hold in March of 2016. Never underestimate its power. Notable WDs Paul Casey … The 8-seed just finished a three-week road trip with a T13 at Sedgefield, so he’s opted for rest and family time in advance of the BMW Championship. Rafa Cabrera Bello … Awaiting the birth of his first child. As the 59-seed, he’s in jeopardy of elimination. Henrik Stenson … If he didn’t open as low as the 85th seed, we could wonder if he’d appear, but he’s going to focus on prepping for the European Tour’s Scandinavian Invitation in his native Gothenburg, Sweden. It coincides with the TOUR Championship on Aug. 22-25. Sam Burns … As first noted in the Fantasy Insider for the week of the Barracuda Championship, he’s out indefinitely after breaking his ankle grabbing a rebound in a pickup basketball game. As the 89-seed, he cannot advance. Power Rankings Recap – Wyndham Championship Power Ranking  Golfer  Result 1  Webb Simpson  2nd 2  Brandt Snedeker  T39 3  Lucas Glover  T72 4  Billy Horschel  T6 5  Patrick Reed  T22 6  Hideki Matsuyama  MC 7  Scott Piercy  T36 8  Collin Morikawa  T31 9  Paul Casey  T13 10  Cameron Smith  MC 11  Rory Sabbatini  T6 12  Jordan Spieth  T78/MDF 13  Joaquin Niemann  T13 14  Martin Laird  MC 15  Sungjae Im  T6 Wild Card: Viktor Hovland  4th Sleepers Recap – Wyndham Championship Golfer  Result Bud Cauley  T22 Brice Garnett  T6 Doc Redman  MC Roger Sloan  T39 Sepp Straka  T39 Birthdays among active golfers on the PGA TOUR August 6 … none August 7 … Andrew Landry (32) August 8 … Webb Simpson (34) August 9 … Brett Wetterich (46); Curtis Luck (23) August 10 … Kenny Perry (59) August 11 … Morgan Hoffmann (30) August 12 … none

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