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RH

REX

HOGGARD

In this edition of Cut Line, the USGA gets it right with the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach and Michelle Wie casts doubt on the future of her career after an ugly return from injury at the Women’s PGA.
There are a handful of players who could capture the PGA Tour’s Player of the Year award. But there is one man who is the clear front-runner.
While Phil Mickelson’s years of a ceremonial golfer are years away, the 50-year-old is no longer a serious threat at U.S. Opens.
There are certain to be people surprised that Gary Woodland beat Brooks Koepka at the 119th U.S. Open. But not Woodland, nor those who know him best.
Gary Woodland has a lot of pivotal moments to pick from after winning the U.S. Open on Sunday in thrilling fashion.
“I think I’m going to take a little bit of time off and enjoy some family time,” said Tiger Woods, who has never played Royal Portrush, site of next month’s Open Championship.
Phil Mickelson will be 57 years old when the U.S. Open returns to Pebble Beach in 2027, which made Sunday’s final round bittersweet.
This Pebble Beach Open, on what is widely considered a thinking man’s golf course, appears destined to come down to a strong-man contest.
Graeme McDowell won the 2010 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. And thanks to four straight birdies on Friday, he’s back in contention again.
Louis Oosthuizen is 36 holes away from joining one of the game’s most exclusive clubs.
On paper, the U.S. Open doesn’t set up well for a perfectionist like Justin Rose.
Brooks Koepka got off to a hot start in Round 1 at Pebble Beach, but cooled off at the finish. Still, he’s in great shape to win his third straight U.S. Open.
Louis Oosthuizen holing out from the fairway at a major? Yep, it happened again in Round 1 of the U.S. Open.
Few players feast on a soft golf course like Rory McIlroy, and the marine layer over Pebble Beach is setting him up claim his second U.S. Open.
The USGA has booked the U.S. Open through 2027 when it will return to Pebble Beach for the seventh time, but missing from those stops is Chambers Bay, which hosted its first U.S. Open in 2015.
The USGA certainly has a problem with the media and players at the moment, but it also has an opportunity at Pebble Beach to begin to change the narrative.
In March when the USGA named Jason Gore the association’s first senior director of player relations the move was widely applauded. Three months later, that’s still the case.
Tiger Woods could painfully relate when Kevin Durant reinjured his right Achilles tendon during Monday’s NBA Finals game between the Toronto Raptors and Golden State Warriors.
Of all the defining moments in Tiger Woods’ career, the 2000 U.S. Open is the one time when Woods truly played a different game.
Tiger Woods’ legal team weighed in last week and denied all allegations stemming from the December death of Nicholas Immesberger, who was a bartender at Woods’ South Florida restaurant.
Consolidation continued this week in the golf management industry with GSE Worldwide’s acquisition of Impact Point, a Switzerland-based firm.
USGA officials have said they will syringe greens between the morning and afternoon waves on Thursday and Friday if needed.
This week’s U.S. Open will be Rickie Fowler’s 37th start in a major championship – and his 37th major start without a victory.
In this week’s edition of Cut Line, the game’s decision makers take on slow play, again, the PGA Tour makes a plea “fore” safety and Hank Haney doubles down in the most dubious way.