RH
REX
HOGGARD
Adam Scott seemed a cinch to win at Bay Hill and take over the No. 1 ranking. Instead, Matt Every took home the hardware.
Voting for the Hall of Fame used to be an inclusive process. Now, with the new selection criteria, golf has another exclusive club.
Hunter Mahan has withdrawn from the Arnold Palmer Invitational with a sore back.
After failing to extend his lead at Bay Hill in Rd. 3, Adam Scott is looking to shut the door on the competition on Sunday.
Never let it be said that Davis Love III doesn’t have a sense a humor, even when it comes to perhaps the most difficult chapter in his career.
The numbers have been crunched, the scenarios vetted. If Adam Scott continues his march to victory this week at Bay Hill he will unseat Tiger Woods atop the World Golf Ranking before the Masters in a fortnight.
Chris Stroud was visiting with his family at Walt Disney World last week when he contracted what turned out to be a stomach flu.
Cut Line exams the fine line between confidence (Patrick Reed), cockiness (Donald Trump) and conceit (Steve Williams).
For the first time since 2007, Jim Furyk won’t be teeing it up at Bay Hill next week.
Patrick ‘Top Five’ Reed isn’t the first sports figure to make a controversial statement in the immediate flush of victory.
Brendon de Jonge planned to have an MRI on Monday back home in Charlotte, N.C., but there was a scheduling mix up and he decided to play this week’s Valspar Championship.
For Eric Axley the byproduct of improved play is sleep deprivation.
While assessments varied, most players considered the redesigned Blue Monster a work in progress following four windy days at the WGC-Cadillac Championship.
Bubba Watson has finished outside the top 10 in just two of his seven starts this season and followed his victory at the Northern Trust Open last month with a runner-up showing on Sunday at Doral.
Some might say Patrick Reed was a tad too cocky after his win. Meanwhile, the state of Tiger Woods’ health remains in question.
TaylorMade unveiled its new “SLDR Mini Driver” at this week’s WGC-Cadillac Championship.
It was night and day from Rounds 2 and 3 at the Blue Monster, where a world of possibilities awaits players on Sunday.
Phil Mickelson’s third-round 69 on Saturday at Doral was a marked improvement over his first two turns on the Gil Hanse redesign, but he didn’t seem to be holding out much hope of a Sunday a charge.
Jimmy Walker carded the second-lowest round of the day on Saturday, a 5-under 67, and wasn’t surprised at all with his 10-stroke turnaround from an eventful second round.
Before his round on Saturday at the WGC-Cadillac Championship Hideki Matsuyama sought out Ian Poulter, Charl Schwartzel and Jason Dufner to apologize for damaging the 13th green with his putter.
Ian Poulter and Hideki Matsuyama will tee off on Saturday at Doral at 11:15 a.m. ET, but the Englishman took some shots at the Japanese player well before that.
Tiger Woods is 5 over, but on the diabolically difficult Blue Monster course at Doral, he’s still right in the mix.
Tiger Woods was asked to sum up Friday’s play at Doral in a word, and there was no hesitation – “tough.”
It will be another quick turnaround for Tiger Woods at the WGC-Cadillac Championship, which may be a blessing in disguise.