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Weve gone with the favorite (Tiger Woods/WGC-Accenture Match Play), the defending champion (Ernie Els/Honda Classic) and the hot hand (Geoff Ogilvy/WGC-CA) and were so far back in the standings if this were a World Baseball Classic outing the game would have been called two innings ago.
There’s an ageless quality to golfs most high-profile club match between Isleworth and Lake Nona.
It wasn’t the duel everyone expected to see at Doral, but as senior writer Rex Hoggard writes, Phil Mickelson vs. Nick Watney was a great show to see. And Phil’s win may have set up another showdown with you-know-who down the road.
Golf Channels Steve Sands has learned that Phil Mickelson was taken to an Urgent Care facility late Saturday.
Aaron Baddeley had made a move up the leaderboard on Friday, shooting a second-round 69 following a lackluster 75 on Thursday. The Australian was 1 over through eight holes on Saturday when he was informed by Tour officials hed signed an incorrect scorecard a day earlier and was disqualified.
There may be no cut at Doral, but our Cut Line has plenty of material for this edition of March Madness.
The international men of mystery at the WGC-CA are making names for themselves.
John Daly has been working on his game and slimming down his body in preparation for his return.
It’s easy to get lost in all the Tiger Woods hoopla and forget about the rest of the best at Doral.
History and heart and traditional horses aside, this is not the week to burn a precious Tiger Woods offering. Yes, the world No. 1 owns Doral ' having won three of the last four gatherings on the South Florida pitch ' and hes due, but this is no time for reason.
In this week’s Cut Line, heart and youth are champions, while last year’s champion falls short.
Rory McIlroy and Oliver Wilson are two young men from the UK making their presence known.
After a week of bracket-busting and broken dreams lets celebrate a return to normalcy by way of old-fashion, 72 holes of stroke play on a what-you-see-is-what-you-get Honda Classic layout.
In order, Geoff Ogilvy dispatched the best America, Japan, Colombia, Northern Ireland and finally England could muster at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.
Hank Haney has helped Tiger Woods wins major championships. But can he help Charles Barkley?
In this week’s Cut Line, a Ryder Cup-er is in the Sweet Sixteen, while the desert is no place for dancing.
South African Tim Clark proved to be the nasty thorn in the side of the world’s No. 1 ranked player.
That was what Aussie Brendan Jones had to say about his first round opponent in Arizona.
Conventional wisdom takes a breather Match Play week, but this may be the easiest pick all year.
Policy Board veteran Davis Love III was asked if he had any interest in putting back on his player director hat during these difficult economic times.
In this week’s edition of Cut Line, Tiger Woods is ready to finally take center stage once again.
This week marks another crossroad for Vincent Johnson, the recipient of the Charlie Sifford exemption.
Padraig Harrington, the reigning Player of the Year and winner of the last two major meet and greets, misses the cut and Dustin Johnson, winner of one Tour event making his second start at Pebble Beach, takes the 54-holer.
This week, the LPGA and Arnold Palmer make the cut while Bill Murray gets the early hook.