ahead – Golfing Agency https://golfingagency.com Golf news & updates Thu, 22 Dec 2022 15:37:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://golfingagency.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/cropped-GA_favicon-32x32.png ahead – Golfing Agency https://golfingagency.com 32 32 The year in golf and a look ahead to 2023 https://golfingagency.com/the-year-in-golf-and-a-look-ahead-to-2023/ Thu, 22 Dec 2022 15:37:42 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/the-year-in-golf-and-a-look-ahead-to-2023/

 

It’s fair
to say golf enjoyed a healthy bounce-back in 2022 after the previous couple of
years were mired by you-know-what.

With things now back to normal in the world of sport (at least on the face of it), it’s time to take stock and reflect on the last twelve months and what 2023 has in store for golf.

We sat down with eight-time Ryder Cup player, three-time European Ryder Cup captain, and Golf Care ambassador Bernard Gallacher to chat through the highs and lows of 2022, and what he thinks we’ll see in the year ahead.

Here’s what he had to say…

bernard gallacher

 

Bernard’s 2022 golf highlights

Rory McIlroy was the standout performer in 2022, despite not winning a Major. His superb, consistent play throughout the season and his Tour Championship win still meant he finished up the leading money winner on the PGA Tour. He also finished number one on the DP World Tour from only 10 starts and won the much-coveted Vardon Trophy for the fourth time. He currently sits top of the world golf rankings and is unlikely to move any time soon.

 

Scottie Scheffler had a fantastic season which saw him win The Masters, the WGC-Dell Match Play, and finish tied in second place at the US Open, just one stroke behind Matt Fitzpatrick. Tour colleagues also voted Scheffler the 2022 Tour Player of the Year.

 

Justin Thomas won his second PGA Championship in 2022, on the tough Southern Hills Golf Course in Oklahoma—beating Will Zalatoris in a play-off. Thomas’ low winning score of -5 was a real reflection of the difficulty of the course, which had narrow fairways, thick rough, fast greens, and was played in pretty strong wind.

 

Sheffield’s Matt Fitzpatrick lifted the nation’s spirits when he won the US Open, following in the footsteps of Tony Jacklin and Justin Rose. He clenched victory at the Country Club in Brooklyn—the same venue where he won the US Amateurs in 2013. Matt has a good, no-nonsense technique, an excellent temperament, and one of the best caddies around in Billy Foster. I predict more Major wins ahead.

 

Cameron Smith won the landmark 150th Open at St Andrews in 2022. He also won the Tour Championship at Sawgrass and The Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii with a PGA Tour record score of 34 under par! He also won the Australian PGA in his home nation, but his deflection to the LIV Tour means it’s difficult to predict the future.

 

John Rahm is another golfer who had an outstanding season despite not winning a Major. However, he recorded two runners-up on the US Tour before winning the Mexican Open to claim his seventh win on the PGA Tour. Over on the DP World Tour, Rahm won the Spanish Open for the third time at Club de Campo in Madrid, before winning the season-ending DP World Championship in Dubai—not bad!

 

Twenty-five-year-old Cameron Young only turned pro in 2019 but is an outstanding prospect. A product of the Korn Ferry Tour, he first came to attention when he finished third in the USPGA Championship and was runner-up to Cameron Smith at the Open.

 

Tom Kim is only 20 but was the leading money winner on the 2021/22 Asian Tour. He finished third in the co-sanctioned Scottish Open, which won him ‘Special Temporary Membership’ on the PGA Tour, which he won twice on—at the Wyndham Championship and the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas. He becomes only the second-ever player to win twice on the PGA Tour before age 21—the first was Tiger Woods!

 

Lydia Ko has been a prodigious talent even from an early age. She was the number one ranked women’s pro golfer at just 17. Still just 25, she was won 19 tournaments to date on the LPGA and a further 12 tournaments around the world. She finished the 2022 season by winning the Ladies Tour Championship and the LPGA Player of the Year.

 

Charley Hull plays on both the LPGA Tour and the Ladies European Tour. She’s been one to watch ever since she turned professional in 2013, winning the 2014 Order of Merit and Player of the Year. Hull has represented Europe at the Solheim Cup five times, and won the Ascendant LPGA in Texas in September. I particularly admire her swing, but her general attitude also means she has the potential to win Majors in the future.

 

24-year-old Nelly Korda has one Major
win to her name at present, and has won an impressive eight times on the LPGA and
twice in Europe. She’s also a reigning Olympic champion, currently sitting
number two in the world rankings behind Lydia Ko, having previously held the
number one position. It’ll be a good battle between the two to see who comes
out on top in 2023.

 

What didn’t go so well for golf in 2022?

bernard gallacher

How can we not talk about LIV Golf?

Greg
Norman’s tour continues to disrupt the game and cause major issues to the
traditional, well-established Major tournaments. The PGA Tour, in particular,
sees LIV Golf as a real existential threat.

Personally,
I’m not at all confident that the ongoing issues can or will be resolved in
court, purely because there’s such ill feeling on both sides of the argument.

Players like Bryson DeChambeau, Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia, Brooks Koepka, Bubba Watson, Matthew Wolff and Martin Kaymer all had pretty anonymous seasons by their standards, and LIV’s supposed star player Dustin Johnson looked way off the pace when he dropped down to a tie for sixth place at the Open in July.

The reality
is that playing just eight tournaments a year is simply not enough to maintain
a good competitive game. In 2023, however, LIV says it will consist of 14
tournaments—but even that is still short of ideal.

The Masters has already confirmed it will allow LIV golfers to compete in 2023, but we’ve no confirmation regarding the other Majors yet. Time will tell.

Related: Bernard Gallacher fears Greg Norman will not reach a compromise over LIV Golf

 

Looking ahead to golf in 2023

bernard gallacher

2023 is Ryder Cup year, which gives Europe a chance to redeem themselves after the humiliating 10-point loss at Whistling Straits in 2021.

The European side will have huge partisan support in Rome—something which was, of course, missing in the US due to COVID travel restrictions.

I fully
expect Europe to put on a much better display than in 2021, but they may have
to play without the likes of Sergio Garcia, Lee Westwood, Paul Casey and Ian
Poulter as things stand. Captain Luke Donald will have a few sleepless nights
when he comes to picking his wild cards, that’s for sure.

The Solheim
Cup is also taking place in Spain in September. Suzann Petterson, who holed the
winning putt at Gleneagles in 2019, is the European captain, while Stacy Lewis
captains the American side.

Europe won the last time out in the US, and I expect an equally-exciting match between two pretty evenly-matched sides this time, too.

2023 also
sees the phasing in of various changes to the Rules of Golf. The rules are
somewhat complex, but perhaps the most notable changes to mention are the new modifications
for players with disabilities.

From January, a new Rule 25 consisting of multiple provisions for those living with disabilities will automatically apply to all competitions and all forms of play, instead of it being down to individual competition committees deciding whether to adopt such rules and provisions on a tournament-by-tournament basis. This can only be a good thing as far as inclusivity in golf is concerned.

We should also acknowledge Tiger Woods as we look ahead to 2023. The veteran golfer has vowed to compete in the four Major tournaments despite his ongoing injury problems, and I sincerely hope he does. It’s hard to imagine the big tournaments without him.

 

Up and coming golfers to look out for in 2023—Bernard’s top picks

Of course,
the best golfers in the world are all well-established and well-known. But what
about those more ‘on the fringes’, as it were, with exciting futures ahead?

We asked Bernard that exact question.

Jordan Smith

Big things were expected from Jordan Smith after he won the prestigious Porsche Open in 2017, but his form has dipped since. However, he secured an emotional win at the Portuguese Open more recently, so here’s hoping he can now kick on with his career.

 

Richard Mansell

Richard Mansell is a product of the Challenge Tour, and gained his full status on the European Tour back in 2020. With one professional win and a second-place finish in the 2020 Andalusia Open under his belt to date, he also led the 2021 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship by four strokes going into the last four. He fell away in the end but will still have learnt lots from the overall experience.

 

Nicolai & Rasmus Højgaard

These young Danish twins were the first brothers to win back-to-back tournaments on the European Tour in 2021. They’re both outstanding prospects with a bright future in golf for sure.

 

Adrian Meronk

Adrian Meronk became the first-ever Polish golfer to win on the European Tour when he won the Horizon Irish Open in 2022. Even more recently, he held off Adam Scott to win the Australian Open by an impressive five strokes. He stands at an almighty 6’6 and is another I expect to go on to achieve big things in golf.

 

Connor Syme

Scottish golfer Connor Syme turned pro in 2017 after a stellar amateur career, and featured in the Walker Cup the same year. He’s got no wins so far on the DP World Tour but is more than ready to break through in 2023.

 

Eugenio Lopez-Chacarra

The 22-year-old Spaniard was ranked number two on the Amateur World Rankings before turning pro in 2021. He currently plays on the LIV Tour, where he won the Bangkok Invitational this year. It still remains to be seen whether he’ll reach his full potential playing on the LIV Tour, but the ability is undoubtedly there.

 

Linn Grant

Linn Grant is a Swedish golfer of Scottish heritage through her grandfather. She turned pro in 2021 after an outstanding amateur career, and already has nine professional wins under her belt, including the Volvo Car Scandinavian Mixed on the DP World Tour—making her the first woman to win on a men’s Tour. She won the 2022 Ladies European Tour Order of Merit and is also qualified to play on the LPGA. She has the potential to emulate her compatriot Annika Sörenstam—arguably one of the best women’s golfers of all time.

 

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]]> Tiger Woods talks recovery, uncertain playing schedule ahead of teaming with son at 2022 PNC Championship https://golfingagency.com/tiger-woods-talks-recovery-uncertain-playing-schedule-ahead-of-teaming-with-son-at-2022-pnc-championship/ Fri, 16 Dec 2022 22:06:58 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/tiger-woods-talks-recovery-uncertain-playing-schedule-ahead-of-teaming-with-son-at-2022-pnc-championship/

A fun, family-filled weekend kicks off at the 2022 PNC Championship with Tiger Woods and his son, Charlie, capturing most of the headlines. While younger Woods’ swing has taken social media by storm, it is the status and health of the elder one — the one who has taken social media by storm since its inception — that remains on the minds of most.

“I can practice. I just can’t walk,” Woods said, echoing his comments from the Hero World Challenge. “So when you’re dealing with the plantar [fasciitis] like this, it’s one of these things where I need rest, and I haven’t exactly been doing that.”

Developing plantar fasciitis in his right foot, Woods was forced to withdraw from the Hero World Challenge — the event he hosts annually — at the beginning of December. Despite this foot injury accompanying a recovering leg and five prior back surgeries, the 82-time winner competed in The Match 7 with Rory McIlroy against Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth, and will hit the course again at this week’s PNC Championship. 

“It’s been a lot harder than people probably imagine,” Woods said of his road to recovery. “There’s some of the players who are very close to me know what I’ve kind of gone through, and they’re the ones that keep encouraging me to back off a little bit. But that’s not really in my nature. My nature is trying to get better. And I have. And through work ethic, I was able to, as I said, play and compete in three major championships this year. 

“And this offseason hasn’t really been an off season. I’ve kind of ramped things up. But after this, come Monday, we shut it all down and take care of this foot so that I can ramp up properly. As you’ve seen, I can hit golf balls. I can do all that. I can practice at home. I can hit shots around the green. I can do all that. I just can’t get from point A to point B.”

With plans to get off his feet following the conclusion of the PNC Championship, one can’t help but wonder what Woods’ future playing schedule may look like. Playing only nine competitive rounds during the 2021-22 PGA Tour season — four at The Masters, three at the PGA Championship and two at The Open — the 15-time major champion was rarely seen, an oddity golf fans will have to get used to.

Conventional wisdom suggests Woods potentially teeing it up in February at the Genesis Invitational, and maybe even The Players Championship in early March if the body is up for it. If not, all sights remain on Augusta National for The Masters in April in what would be the first of four major championship appearances in 2023. 

Perhaps that’ll be it for Woods and five tournaments will be the max. Perhaps not. There are other events, including The Memorial, squarely between the PGA Championship and U.S. Open, which make sense but only time will tell as more information about his health, stamina and endurance come to light.

What is for certain is the recently developed plantar fasciitis is doing Woods no favors. Stripping him of an opportunity to play alongside 19 of the best players in the world in The Bahamas, it has also brought a sense of precariousness to his recovery timeline.

“No, not yet,” Woods said of knowing his future schedule. “Because if I didn’t have the plantar feeling like this, then, yes, I could tell you that and I’d have a better idea. But I’m supposed to be resting this thing and stretching and letting it heal. But I’m not doing that at the moment.”

Instead, Woods is playing alongside his son as the two attempt to improve on their runner-up performance from a year ago. With the potential for new injuries or aggravation of old ones lingering, the soon-to-be 47-year-old Woods sees the bigger picture, and if some additional soreness is the price he has to pay for a couple rounds with his son, then so be it.

“I don’t really care about that [a potential setback],” said Woods. “I think being there with and alongside my son is far more important, and get to have a chance to have this experience with him is far better than my foot being a little creaky.”



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2022 PNC Championship: Charlie Woods moved to third-longest tees ahead of two-round event https://golfingagency.com/2022-pnc-championship-charlie-woods-moved-to-third-longest-tees-ahead-of-two-round-event/ Thu, 15 Dec 2022 23:38:13 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/2022-pnc-championship-charlie-woods-moved-to-third-longest-tees-ahead-of-two-round-event/

This weekend’s PNC Championship has a main event, and I’m not sure his name is Tiger, Jordan or Justin. No, the person everyone is clamoring to see play golf in Orlando in the pro-am is Charlie Woods. Tiger’s son won the day last year when he nearly birdied his way to chasing down John Daly and his son for the victory. After a year of improvement and a golf swing that is about as good as it gets for a teenager, he’ll be the main event in 2022.

Humorously, there is some controversy (if you want to call it that) over what tee boxes Charlie will play. In an event that features an 11-year-old and an 87-year-old, there are a wide variety of tee boxes to be played. Charlie was reportedly going to play the second-longest tee boxes originally, but the tournament committee bumped him to the third-longest, according to Golf Channel. The course is expected to play around 6,400 yards from where he will tee off.

Tiger admitted last week that Charlie recently out-drove him, so I’m not sure the second-longest tees (around 6,700 yards) would have been an issue. The younger Woods will likely dominate from 6,400 yards.

Despite Tiger playing in just his fifth event of 2022, his son is the talk of the tournament even among other competitors.

“Anybody we play with will be a treat and will be a thrill,” said Jordan Spieth’s dad, Shawn, on Thursday. “Is Charlie carrying it 260 or 290? Everybody wants to know which one it is, so that will be fun, or more, after the last two weeks.”

“Charlie,” responded Padraig Harrington when asked which Woods he was more interested in seeing swing. From PNC transcripts: 

 “Actually, to be honest, definitely Charlie, Charlie, Charlie. But kind of just strange enough, after watching Tiger in The Match, to me, with a bit more speed and a bit more of that, like,  you never doubt Tiger’s mental ability, and it’s always one where is he able to come back, and you don’t want to give up — like he looked better physically at that match and the speed.

“And you know me, obviously, I’m interested in that stuff. You know, you’d never run Tiger off, but I actually think he might be even better than that — in a better place than I had thought. So I will take a little sneaky look at Tiger, no doubt. But Charlie, to be honest, I’m more interested in Charlie.

“It’s very interesting for a 13-year-old. And he did it when he was 11. It’s hard to support the angles in a golf swing when you don’t have — at 11, he could hold the club at the right position. Like most kids who are good at 11, 12, 13 years of age, their swing hasn’t even come close to developing.

“Like I bet you if you went back and looked at Rory at 12 years of age, he was hitting a big loopy, you know, drop kicking. Because that’s what they do, kids. But Charlie has always managed to pressure the golf ball, which is exceptional at that age. It really is. So, yeah, I’d be looking at and looking at the swing to see how it is.”

Just a three-time major champion looking forward to seeing the swing. No pressure or anything.

Regardless, the Charlie-Tiger pairing — which is among the favorites to win the PNC at 5-1 — will be a fascinating watch on both accounts. Charlie, because he’s Tiger’s son and obviously gifted at golf, and Tiger, because he’s the best to ever do it and any chance to see him in the twilight of his extraordinary career is always quite a gift.



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Rory McIlroy reveals he, Tiger Woods contracted COVID-19 ahead of 2022 British Open at St. Andrews https://golfingagency.com/rory-mcilroy-reveals-he-tiger-woods-contracted-covid-19-ahead-of-2022-british-open-at-st-andrews/ Sun, 27 Nov 2022 18:01:14 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/rory-mcilroy-reveals-he-tiger-woods-contracted-covid-19-ahead-of-2022-british-open-at-st-andrews/
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Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods made headlines this past summer at The 150th Open for two completely different reasons. In what was possibly Woods’ last competitive stroll around the Old Course at St. Andrews, McIlroy ascended to the top of the leaderboard and went into the pivotal final round with a share of the lead. Yet just days before, the two were hardly feeling their best as McIlroy revealed in an interview with The Independent that the pair contracted COVID-19 in the lead-up to the final major championship of the year.

“Tiger needed a rest on Wednesday. We had played two days of golf at Adare [Manor] and the plan was to play Ballybunion on Thursday. I woke up that morning feeling a bit achy but didn’t really thing anything of it,” said McIlroy. “JP [McManus] gave us his chopper and we went down with Sean and Tiger’s manager, Rob [McNamara]. We got around fine, flew back to Adare for lunch and as I’m getting up from the table, I’m sore and stiff and super tired. 

“I said to Erica, ‘I’m felling a bit weird. I’m just going upstairs to lie down for a bit.’ I slept for maybe two hours and the sweat was just pouring off me, then Erica took my temperature and it was sky high. I rang Tiger: ‘I’m not feeling so good here.’ And he goes, ‘Oh, I feel okay.’ But he texted me at 10 o’clock that night, chills, fever, and I’m like, ‘F—ing hell, I’ve just given Tiger Covid! This is horrendous!’ (laughs) So we both had Covid going into The Open.”

Something to laugh at now, but imagine just how different The Open would have been without the presence of McIlroy or Woods. The 15-time major champion may have never walked over the Swilcan Bridge where golf fans held with bated breath wondering if Woods would pause to soak in the Old Course one last time or not. The scenes of Woods subsequently walking down the 18th hole may be considered by some the moment of the year in golf.

For McIlroy, he may have never came so close to adding major No. 5 to his impressive résumé. Capturing the hearts of St. Andrews in the process, locals attempted to will the Northern Irishman to the Claret Jug and made for one of the great home field advantages in recent memory.

Speaking in hypotheticals, the inclusion of both was essential to what was an incredible 150th Open. Luckily for golf fans, the two will be back in action sooner rather than later as they face off against Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth in The Match VII on Dec. 10.



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LOOK: Augusta National lengthens iconic No. 13 hole with big change ahead for golfers at 2023 Masters https://golfingagency.com/look-augusta-national-lengthens-iconic-no-13-hole-with-big-change-ahead-for-golfers-at-2023-masters/ Tue, 22 Nov 2022 17:55:51 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/look-augusta-national-lengthens-iconic-no-13-hole-with-big-change-ahead-for-golfers-at-2023-masters/

One of the loneliest spots on the course at Augusta National is about to get even lonelier as a big change is coming to the 2023 Masters. The governing bodies in golf have not yet decided to roll the ball back or change equipment regulations, so Augusta National took matters into its own hands with its course and lengthened the iconic 13th hole.

This move had been rumored for years, of course, and talk only heated up after Augusta National purchased land from the adjacent Augusta Country Club that would allow it to push its tee box back up.

The 510-yard hole has come under much scrutiny over the last decade as several golfers have attempted — successfully, in most cases — to turn it into a drive-and-pitch play off the tee. Historically, the 13th has been one of the great risk-reward holes in the sport, offering golfers who were willing to take on the creek running in front of the green a look at eagle but wreaking havoc for those whose approach shots came up short. That dramatic risk-reward option, with the first major of the year on the line, hasn’t really presented itself many years.

In April, Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley was asked about whether one of the most famous holes in golf would ever change.

“There’s no timetable,” said Ridley. “Nothing to announce at this time. That’s something that certainly we have considered and will continue to consider. Admittedly, and I’ve said this before, the 13th hole does not have the same challenges that it has historically. I can just remember as a young guy watching the Masters, you know, some of the triumphs and tragedies. And while we still have those, the fact that players are hitting middle to short irons into that hole is not really how it was designed.

“My reluctance to date has been that it’s such an iconic hole,” Ridley added. Probably along with 11 — or 12 rather, and maybe 15. I mean, probably the three holes where the most history has been made at Augusta National.  
So that probably, you know, has been sort of a counter to doing anything. At some point in time, it’s something that we likely will do. We just don’t have anything to say about it right now. ”

Things have changed since April, apparently, as satellite photos show that the tee box has been moved and trees have been planted in surrounding areas. This will, in most cases, make it difficult for most of next year’s Masters competitors to put themselves in a position off the tee where reaching the green with a wedge or short iron is simple and straightforward.

The unfortunate part about all of this is that it could be avoided by regulating equipment. Perhaps that doesn’t pose a challenge to Augusta National given its resourcefulness and position in the game, but not every club or course can spend millions for an extra 40-60 yards of distance on every hole.

“We won’t know [if equipment changes are coming] for some time because there’s sort of a process that sort of everyone has agreed to as to how any equipment changes such as this are going to take place,” said Ridley in April.

“So we really can’t make any predictions as to what’s going to happen, but I think if there are some marginal modifications to the equipment rules, from what I have observed over the past few years with the players and their athleticism, their strength, their size, the efficiency of their golf swings, I don’t think that we are going to see courses being shortened. 


“So perhaps the two sort of factors might converge, but I don’t think that what the governing bodies do is going to have a direct impact on what we might do at 13 or any other hole on the golf course.”

That’s an interesting admission from somebody in the know. He’s essentially saying that even if the ball is rolled back or driver neutralized, the effects probably will not be so great that moving the tee back on No. 13 — which ANGC has now done — wouldn’t be necessary.

As for the move itself, it’s going to be one of the big stories at the 2023 Masters. Just as No. 15 was lengthened ahead of the 2022 Masters (a move that led to no eagles being made for the first time since 1966), this change to No. 13 will affect the outcome of the golf tournament. While 50 or so yards (it’s tough to tell in the photo above) is not a massive shift, perhaps the bigger problem for players will be that they are not as able to cut the corner up the left side because some of the overhanging trees block that ball flight.

Some players like Tony Finau, Bubba Watson, Cam Young and Rory McIlroy may still attempt a line way out to the left, but the hole is certainly going to engender a wide array of strategies than it has in the past. More and different strategy is what you want when you’re watching and experiencing championship golf. While the path to get to this point (lack of equipment regulation) has been frustrating, this is ultimately a good decision and should be a net positive both for ANGC as well as the Masters.



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LIV Golf in Chicago leaderboard: Cameron Smith, Dustin Johnson switch spots, stay ahead of field in Round 2 https://golfingagency.com/liv-golf-in-chicago-leaderboard-cameron-smith-dustin-johnson-switch-spots-stay-ahead-of-field-in-round-2/ https://golfingagency.com/liv-golf-in-chicago-leaderboard-cameron-smith-dustin-johnson-switch-spots-stay-ahead-of-field-in-round-2/#respond Sun, 18 Sep 2022 06:46:57 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/liv-golf-in-chicago-leaderboard-cameron-smith-dustin-johnson-switch-spots-stay-ahead-of-field-in-round-2/

The two best players in the field at the LIV Golf event in Chicago remain the top two players on the leaderboard after 36 holes. However, they switched positions on Saturday. Dustin Johnson followed his 63 on Friday in Round 1 with a 73 on Saturday — his first over-par round in LIV Golf — and fell back to 8 under. He’s two back of Cameron Smith, who backed up his 66 in Round 1 with a 68 in Round 2 to get to 10 under and take the lead going into the finale on Sunday.

Smith and Johnson are the class of the field by almost any measure, and they have dominated the first two days of LIV’s first event in Chicago (or at least the first event near Chicago). They should be the two that duke it out on Sunday as they play in the final group starting on the first hole.

The task ahead for Johnson is formidable. Smith is the reigning Players champion and Open Championship winner, and in his three victories this year he has shot 65-66-64 in those final rounds. D.J. is looking for his second consecutive LIV victory, but his play has been inconsistent so far this week with one round in the low 60s and the other one ballooning over par. It’s unclear what’s in store for Sunday, and Smith is the only player in the field to shoot 68 or better in each of the first two rounds.

“It was tricky out there today, and I think I got a couple of breaks and D.J. didn’t quite make the putts he usually does,” said Smith.”It’s going to be tight, and I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”

When asked if there was any part of his game that needed work going into Sunday, Smith declined.

“It all feels pretty good to be honest.” 

It all looked pretty good as well. Smith went out in 32 before making an early bogey on the back, which he erased with two birdies on his final two holes. When he’s driving it accurately — which he was for the most part on Saturday — he is perhaps the best player in the world. Every other part of his game is world-class.

Fittingly, D.J.’s team (4 Aces) and Smith’s team (Punch GC) are fighting for the top spot in the team competition this week as well. For the first time since LIV started, D.J.’s score was not used for his team — only the top two scores are used in the first two days — but Pat Perez (-1) and Patrick Reed (-3) picked him up on Saturday. The 4 Aces are -15, one shot ahead of Punch GC, which used Smith’s 4-under 68 and Matt Jones’ even-par 72.

As for who could challenge Smith and Johnson on Sunday, the list is not lengthy. Peter Uihlein shot the best round of the day on Saturday to slide into third at 7 under, and he’s three back of Smith and one back of Johnson. Beyond that, Laurie Canter and Charl Schwartzel are 6 under, and Bryson DeChambeau, Charles Howell III and Lee Westwood are all 5 under.

Sunday is likely going to be what Friday and Saturday were: a Johnson-Smith showdown for $4 million and the fifth LIV Golf title of the year. LIV Golf has been (rightfully) criticized in a lot of ways, but it’s undeniable this week that it’s a league providing a strong Sunday clash between two of the 10 best players on the planet currently. Even though it remains difficult to contextualize what a win for either would mean as it relates to the bigger picture, it should be a fun final 18 holes as Smith and Johnson try to do what they’ve done for the first 36 holes of this tournament: stay ahead of the rest of the pack.

Individual leaderboard

1. Cam Smith: -10
2. Dustin Johnson: -8
3. Peter Uihlein: -7
T4. Charl Schwartzel: -6
T4. Laurie Canter: -6
T6. Bryson DeChambeau: -5
T6. Lee Westwood: -5
T6. Charles Howell III: -5



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