Bubba Watson, who opened with a 6-under 65 on Thursday at the Northern Trust, said after his round that he has been working more on his mind than his game the past year.
Golfing News & Blog Articles
Horsfield behind after Wales Open day one
Sam Horsfield shot 2-over 73 in the first round of the Wales Open, leaving him seven strokes off the lead held by Jordan Smith and Connor Syme.
Golfers play through in 120-plus temperatures in Death Valley
At Oasis in Death Valley, California, golfers brave temperatures that have reached 130 degrees in the past week.
Olson leads by three in windy British Open
American Amy Olson carded a four-under-par 67 to take a three-shot lead in the women's British Open as several players struggled to come to grips with the unforgiving conditions at the Royal Troon Golf Club in Scotland.
Tiger rides putter swap, birdie run for opening 68
Tiger Woods says his last-minute decision to go back to the shorter Scotty Cameron putter came from "stubbornness," but it worked out, as Woods shot a 3-under 68 in the first round of the Northern Trust.
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Korda withdraws late from Women's British Open
Jessica Korda, one of the top U.S. hopes at the Women's British Open, withdrew from the first major of the year because of medical reasons before the first round started Thursday.
Slumbers on R&A Hosting The Women's Open This Week
A question I’ve gotten and seen asked a far amount with this week’s AIG Women’s Open and two men’s majors to go: why didn’t they reschedule The Open for the fall?
Given that events seem to be able to play without horrible travel restrictions and other constraints, it’s a fair question. But the R&A had pandemic insurance and this, in Ewan Murray’s Guardian story quoting Chief Executive Martin Slumbers suggests the R&A only recently saw an opportunity to play this week at Royal Troon:
“But if I’m really honest, it was probably only a month or so ago that we were really comfortable that we could get this away. It has been an enormous effort by an enormous number of people, and our thanks go to not just our partners but the government both in Westminster and Scotland who have been tireless in helping us try and make a statement of putting this championship on.”
So Not Everyone Loves Links Golf: England's Charley Hull Confirms Her Longing For Tree-Lined Courses On Open Eve
As the AIG Women’s Open Championship kicks off at historic and legendary Royal Troon, one of England’s great hopes admitted she’s not fan of links golf.
Ewan Murray reports for The Guardian from Troon on Charley Hull’s forthright assessment of links golf:
The prospect of Charley Hull ending her wait for a major title this weekend at Royal Troon has diminished after the 24-year-old admitted her indifference towards links golf. Hull risked offending those immersed in the ancient form of the sport by admitting she will visualise holes at the famous Ayrshire venue lined with trees during the Women’s Open when it begins on Thursday.
“I’m not the biggest fan of links golf,” said Hull. “I like playing with my friends and stuff as a bit of fun but I find it hard to score around sometimes. I like parkland golf courses and American-style.”
“I just try to picture the fairways being tree-lined because I like really, really tight golf courses. I like to feel like tunnel vision, where this is kind of open and flat and it’s hard to pick your lines because it’s hard to pick out the fairways sometimes. So you’ve just got to be really focused.”
Well then, we’ll be looking elsewhere with out investment strategies this week.
Collin Morikawa Isn't Sure Where The Infamous PGA-Winning Driver Will End Up
AP’s Doug Ferguson looks back at Collin Morikawa’s 2020 PGA Championship win at Harding Park and tries to pin down the winner on where various artifacts are headed. The caddy gets the loathsome Giants-themed bag no lifelong Dodgers fan would want, but the shoes and the world famous driver? Morikawa isn’t sure.
“The driver, who knows when TaylorMade is going to come out with a new one and I’ve got to switch,” Morikawa said. “I’ll probably just mark it with a little ‘PGA Championship,’ maybe a Sharpie on the head to remember it.”
And then?
“Probably just stick in my other bags at home when I start collecting them and they start piling up,” he said. “I really don’t know.”
I bet there will be plenty of prominent places happy to display that one when it gets loses a place in the rotation.
Playoffs: Brooks Koepka's "Season" Ends Due To Injury
With two majors looming, Brooks Koepka might still get well in time for his favorite events, but in withdrawing from this week’s Northern Trust at TPC Boston, the gym-rat and major-slayer is also giving us a peak into the future of “athletes” in golf.
From Ryan Lavner’s bleak assessment of Koepka’s physical health and WD from the Boston stop which means no more 2019-20 playoff events:
The 3 1/2-month coronavirus shutdown should have come at a perfect time. Gifted a total reset, he could rest and rehab his body. He could sort out his swing. But other than a sterling final round at the RBC Heritage, he wasn’t a factor until his title defense at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, where he chased Justin Thomas down the stretch before a water ball on the 72nd hole. The following week, at the PGA, he was two shots off the lead heading into the final round before fading badly on Sunday. He’ll end this lost season with only two top-25s in 13 starts.
The good news? The season restarts in September with a schedule featuring a U.S. Open and a Masters, so the man now synonymous with majors has plenty to get well for. Assuming he does not need the assistance of a surgeon’s scalpel.
What to watch in the Women's British Open, the LPGA's first major of 2020
This week, the LPGA Tour tees it up at Royal Troon in Scotland for the Women's British Open, the first women's major of the 2020 season.
"Hosted Experiences" The First Effort To Welcome Back Golf Fans
Rex Hoggard looks at the “hosted experiences” apparent at last week’s Wyndham and does so through the eyes of Tournament Director Mark Brazil, a way to get some sponsors on site and commence what will be a slow, strange process in keeping sponsors happy and eventually welcoming spectators back to tournaments.
“It’s better than nothing and it allowed us to give a special thank you to Wyndham and all the key sponsors who stayed with us,” said Mark Brazil, the Wyndham Championship tournament director. “It wasn’t the 5,000 we planned on a day but I think the Tour has made the right call as far as fans go.”
Brazil built three hospitality-style tents adjacent to the 18th green to accommodate what the Tour has dubbed a “hosted experience.” What that means varies wildly from market to market depending on local and state COVID-19 regulations, but at the Wyndham it meant that 25 guests were allowed to gather outside and 10 were allowed inside the tents.
It seems, at least based on what we know now about COVID-19 spread, that the golf course and even hospitality areas will generally be safe if spaced and mostly outdoors. It’s getting to the site—without a long shuttle bus ride—that will be the long term issue for many tournaments.
Oh, and we’ll need some form of rapid testing or a system to confirm one is asymptomatic and eventually, inoculated against the virus. No problema!
Prioritize Your Focus
If golf wasn’t so bloody difficult, we could all be scratch golfers. Each facet of the game forces you to examine so many setups for the condition of the lie of your ball and the target that you are trying to hit. No wonder why this game drives us all crazy. Your analysis and your execution is the reason why we love this game so much. Most of us play for personal self-satisfaction. To enjoy this game, you really need to narrow your focus for each shot to get all of that clutter out of your brain.
Mentally we all set an outcome that we want for every round. Why not set an easy objective to take the pressure off: Break 100, 90 or 80. Success in Golf really comes down to a few decisions. Start with a mental goal, appraise the hole that you are on, plan the right shot and setup to execute the right shot.
A beginner just wants to hit the ball but recreational players with a reasonable skill level know that they can work back from the hole to decide where they want to land their ball on their first shot. If they don’t hit their target, they just rework their plan to layup or go for the center of the green. All of this is obvious for a golfer but it does come down to the club you select, the setup that you need and the swing that you plan to execute.
The Moment of Truth: Your Swing Thought Sequence
Each club demands a unique swing thought so choose wisely by testing out your focused thought during your practice swing. What is your primary thought?
–A mental image of the shape of your shot to hit your target
–Using a waggle to loosen up your body or as a reminder to start you backswing with the rotation of your hips (followed by your shoulders and then your arms)
–Keep your wrist flat at the top of your backswing
–Start shifting your weight to your leading foot during your transition
–Count “1, 2“ during your backswing to add time to cock your wrists at the top
–Shallow your swing to ensure that you swing from the slot to the outside
–Keep your head and eyes focused on the ball location until after impact
–Finish your swing balanced on your leading foot as you marvel at your shot
[The text in red are my 2 key thoughts.]

Lehman, Bertsch set early pace on Champions
Tom Lehman and Shane Bertsch shared the first-round lead Wednesday in the Charles Schwab Series at Bass Pro Shops Big Cedar Lodge.
Tiger commits to play in BMW Championship
Tiger Woods has entered next week's BMW Championship, the second of three FedEx Cup playoff events, potentially meaning that he would play four events in five weeks, including the U.S. Open.
Laura Davis Teeing Off First In The Open, But About That Wind Forecast...
Slow play is a focus as the women turn up at Royal Troon for a major and, other than Laura Davies going out first to set the pace, the forecast calls major gusts by 9 am. So how long golf can be played remains to be seen.
From Beth Ann Nichols story on Davies, playing in her 40th Open, also working this week for Sky’s broadcast team.
“I played 18 holes yesterday morning at 7:30, basically on my own, in two hours and 15 minutes,” said Davies, “played every hole properly, chipped and putted on quite a few. I’m not saying we can get ’round in two hours and 15 minutes, but we should be ’round in under four, as long as the weather is not crazy. If the weather is crazy then obviously you get up on those holes around the turn, anything can happen. You can spend half an hour on the tee if you’re unlucky.”
The weather on Thursday doesn’t look promising, with wind gusts of up to 55 to 60 mph predicted around 9 a.m. Tournament Troon will look nothing like what they’ve faced in the practice rounds thanks to what they’re calling, “Storm Ellen.”
Martin Dempster points out how the R&A is preparing for delay scenarios, including shortening of the tournament or a 36-hole Sunday. A Monday finish is not in the cards.
Women's Open Headed To Carnoustie, Muirfield, Walton Heath, St Andrews, Porthcawl
The R&A has lined up some incredible future hosts for the AIG Women’s Open, including surprise of all surprises, Muirfield in 2022. The home of the Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers is not currently penciled in for a men’s Open but is still in the rota after relenting and agreeing to admit female members.
Also of note: all but Walton Heath can be classified as a links, steering the championship to primarily links courses after a mix or predominant number of inland courses. Wales will also be hosting its first Women’s major with Porthcawl’s berth.
The full press release:
WORLD-CLASS VENUES ANNOUNCED FOR THE AIG WOMEN’S OPEN THROUGH TO 2025
19 August 2020, Troon, Scotland: The R&A has underlined its commitment to enhancing the AIG Women’s Open’s status as a leading major sporting event by announcing five world-class venues for championships being played from 2021 to 2025.
The future championship venues for the AIG Women’s Open are:
2021 – Carnoustie
Women's British at Muirfield for 1st time in 2022
The Women's British Open will be held in two years at Muirfield for the first time as part of a strong rotation that includes a return to Carnoustie and St. Andrews.
Koepka (knee) withdraws from Northern Trust
Brooks Koepka has withdrawn from the Northern Trust at TPC-Boston over a lingering knee issue, ending his 2019-20 season and putting his status in doubt for the U.S. Open.