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It was not the start J.B. Holmes was hoping for on Sunday at the WGC-Cadillac Championship.
Since his Masters collapse in 2011, Rory McIlroy is through playing defense. Sunday at Doral, he’ll be squarely on the offensive.
Whatever you call it, Rory McIlroy has taken his new putting grip straight to the top of the Doral leaderboard.
There’s a European who has been putting lights out at Doral using a cross-handed putting grip. Yep, Danny Willett has been impressive.
Earlier this year while he was playing the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship, Jordan Spieth began asking an odd question that still has no answer.
Sergio Garcia started the WGC-Cadillac Championship with rounds of 73-71 but rebounded on Saturday with a 5-under 67 that included just one bogey.
Adam Scott’s second-round 66 on Friday at Doral was even more impressive considering how hectic the last three weeks have been for the Australian.
Two weeks ago when Bubba Watson won the Northern Trust Open he talked about the anxiety he has during rounds.
It was widely assumed that Adam Scott would struggle after the anchor ban. He’s proving those assumptions wrong.
For an hour or so on Friday at the WGC-Cadillac Championship Phil Mickelson looked unbeatable.
Putting cross-handed, Rory McIlroy needed just 23 putts on Friday for his best round on the PGA Tour this season.
Brandt Snedeker withdrew from the WGC-Cadillac Championship on Friday with sore ribs.
You will get no complaints from Marcus Fraser regarding the limited field at the WGC-Cadillac Championship.
Last year at Doral, Rory McIlroy launched his 3-iron into the lake adjacent the par-5 eighth hole. On Thursday, he faked the same toss, this time for fun.
The grouping of world 1-2-3 Jordan Spieth, Jason Day and Rory McIlroy was too contrived to generate any electricity on Day 1.
Following his first missed cut in nearly six months two weeks ago in Los Angeles and playing a golf course that he’s never performed particularly well on, Jordan Spieth wasn’t going to let a late miscue ruin what was an otherwise solid round.
Phil Mickelson continued his solid play on Thursday at the WGC-Cadillac Championship, opening with a 5-under 67 for his lowest round at Doral since Day 2 at the 2013 event.
Two weeks ago in the moments after he’d won the Northern Trust Open Bubba Watson was savoring the victory when he realized the extent of his spoils.
Some of the world’s best players proved just as adept avoiding the current political minefield as staying out of Doral’s other ubiquitous hazards on Wednesday.
For the second time in three months Masters champion Jordan Spieth returned to Augusta National, this time for two days earlier this week.
If this is Doral’s exit from golf’s top stage, the impressive cast assembled in Miami will send the Blue Monster off in style.
Early Wednesday morning, Rory McIlroy unveiled via Instagram that he’d spent his time since missing the cut at last week’s Honda Classic practicing a new putting stroke.
Following his first missed cut since last June, Jason Day figured there was one guy, Tiger Woods, he needed to talk to.
If the PGA Tour is in Florida that means the conversation almost always turns to the Masters and for Danny Willett that was certainly the case on Tuesday at Doral.