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HOGGARD

Earlier this week Rory McIlroy was criticized for saying he “didn’t get into golf to try and grow the game.” He expounded on Thursday.
Patrick Reed has had success in Scotland before and is off to a positive start at The Open with a 66 on Thursday.
For the top four players in the world, Troon should provide a major without rules entanglements, setup issues, or distractions.
On the eve of the 145th Open, two-time Open champion Ernie Els feels confident at a course he finished runner-up 12 years ago.
Marc Leishman came painfully close to winning last year’s Open at St. Andrews. On the eve of The Open at Royal Troon, he reflects back on last year’s loss.
Missing last year’s Open at St. Andrews gave Rory McIlroy a unique perspective on golf and life that could serve him well this week at Troon.
One year removed from just missing out on a historical season, Jordan Spieth is back at The Open.
Davis Love III is recovering following surgery to repair a torn labrum in his left hip on Wednesday.
A day after the WGC-Bridgestone, Jordan Spieth spent a large portion of his Fourth of July and taking pictures and signing everything in front of him.
Brendon de Jonge became the 13th player to withdraw his name from consideration for this year’s Olympics.
Davis Love III, who withdrew on Thursday from the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational after an opening-round 78, is scheduled to have hip surgery next Wednesday, according to his manager.
The charter flight originally scheduled to take players from next week’s Greenbrier Classic to the Open Championship will now leave on July 10 from Philadelphia.
The PGA Tour unveiled its 2016-17 schedule on Monday with a few notable changes.
The flooding that caused officials to cancel next week’s Greenbrier Classic has also impacted player travel plans for The Open Championship.
A rules snafu at the worst possible time at the U.S. Open and another Olympic snub dominate this week’s edition of Cut Line.
Someone should have been penalized at Oakmont, but it shouldn’t have been Dustin Johnson.
Unlike his bunker affair in the 2010 PGA, Dustin Johnson won the U.S. Open despite a putting penalty.
Dustin Johnson was assessed a one-stroke penalty following his final round at the U.S. Open.
The U.S. Open could come down to Saturday’s top two, Shane Lowry and Andrew Landry, or a trio of veterans looking for their first major.
Rory McIlroy bolted Oakmont’s stately clubhouse without speaking to the media after missing the 36-hole cut at the U.S. Open.
Phil Mickelson said there was “zero chance” that he’d go for the par-4 17th green. Things changed (sort of) on Saturday.
For all of Dustin Johnson’s accomplishments on a marathon day at the U.S. Open it was his ability to avoid an untimely meltdown that impressed the most.
Dustin Johnson has gotten some bad breaks at majors, but at Oakmont, Mother Nature seems to be on his side.
Daniel Summerhays’ best round this season on the PGA Tour is a 65. On Friday he matched that . . . at Oakmont.