Sound the trumpets! Raise the banners! TGL has finally had a close match! Tiger vs. Rory headlined the evening, but eventually took a backseat to the actual competition, which was settled with a closest-to-the-pin shootout in overtime. Did the newfound parity result in an improved product? Let’s take a closer look …
The last time Woods played in a TGL match, his Jupiter Links Golf Club suffered a blowout loss to Los Angeles, 12-to-1. The 15-time major winner looked rusty, but so did Kisner an
The fourth match of the inaugural TGL season pitted the founding fathers of the league against on another as Rory McIlroy's Boston Common made its debut against Tiger Woods' Jupiter Links Golf Club. After a horrendous debut match,
Rory Mcllroy and Keegan Bradley are set to go against Tiger Woods in TGL— the new tech-infused indoor golf league. They will play for Boston Common Golf alongside Adam Scott.
So, for a moment, let’s treat this like a serious competition. Jupiter Links ran out Woods; Kevin Kisner, who struggled the last time he played two weeks ago; and Tom Kim, making his TGL debut. Boston Common featured McIlroy, Adam Scott and Keegan Bradley, major winners across the board.
TGL gave golf fans a taste of its new overtime format as the finale to the matchup between Tiger Woods' Jupiter Links and Rory McIlroy's Boston Common.
Boston's team, Boston Common Golf, includes some of the superstars in the game: Rory McIlroy, Adam Scott, Hideki Matsuyama, and Keegan Bradley. In their first match, they'll face Jupiter Links Golf Club, led by superstar Tiger Woods.
After a year of domination, world number one Scottie Scheffler returns to action on Thursday, making his PGA Tour season debut in the Pebble Beach Pro-Am.
McIlroy recognizes that golf's issues might run a bit deeper than simply giving fans more face time with the game's top players though. With the emergence of LIV Golf, plus a jam-packed PGA Tour schedule, the Northern Irishman believes fans could be burnt out from simply consuming too much.
So far this season pro golf's headlines have focused on injuries, on issues, on alternate leagues. This week at Pebble? That could change.
Scottie Scheffler and Jordan Spieth will make their first starts in the 2025 PGA Tour season at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Until now, they have been out with different ailments: Scheffler will be trying to play through a hand injury he suffered during the holiday break, while Spieth will be making his first start after wrist surgery.