storylines – Golfing Agency https://golfingagency.com Golf news & updates Tue, 15 Nov 2022 21:39:30 +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 storylines – Golfing Agency https://golfingagency.com 32 32 2022 DP World Tour Championship: Storylines to follow as Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm headline field in Dubai https://golfingagency.com/2022-dp-world-tour-championship-storylines-to-follow-as-rory-mcilroy-jon-rahm-headline-field-in-dubai/ Tue, 15 Nov 2022 21:39:30 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/2022-dp-world-tour-championship-storylines-to-follow-as-rory-mcilroy-jon-rahm-headline-field-in-dubai/

This week’s DP World Tour Championship marks the end of the season on the DP World Tour and the conclusion of a very tumultuous year for that league. Amid an increased strategic alliance with the PGA Tour and the LIV Golf drama that has coursed up and down the tour, the focus has hardly been on the golf.

Still, there’s an opportunity for the focus to shift back to the course entirely with Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry, Viktor Hovland, Matt Fitzpatrick, Tommy Fleetwood, Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton teeing it up at Jumeirah Golf Estates in Dubai for a $10 million DP World Tour Championship purse and, additionally, the top spot on Europe’s season-long race (tantamount to the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup).

Let’s take a look at a few things to know about this week’s finale in Dubai and set the stage for what could happen.

1. Down to seven

Though anyone in the field can win the DP World Tour Championship, the list of golfers who can win the season-long points race is down to seven. Despite playing just nine DP World Tour events this season, McIlroy leads the race narrowly over New Zealander Ryan Fox, who has played 23 events. Those two are the most in control of their own destiny in Dubai. Here are the scenarios:

  • Rory McIlroy: If he wins this week or finishes ahead of the other six, he wins the season-long race
  • Ryan Fox: Has to win or finish ahead of McIlroy (and everyone else) by a wide enough margin
  • Matt Fitzpatrick: Has to finish in top two and have McIlroy finish worse than seventh and Fox not win
  • Tommy Fleetwood: Has to win and have McIlroy finish worse than third and Fox worse than second
  • Viktor Hovland: Has to win and have McIlroy finish worse than fourth and Fox worse than third
  • Shane Lowry: Has to win and have McIlroy to finish worse than seventh, Fox worse than fifth and Fitzpatrick worse than second
  • Adrian Meronk: Has to win and have McIlroy to finish worse than 16th, Fox worse than eighth and Fitzpatrick worse than second

The scenarios are complex for everyone other than McIlroy and Fox, and given how well McIlroy plays on this golf course (see below), he truly controls his own destiny in ways the other six do not.

2. No defending champion

Two-time major winner Collin Morikawa will not defend his title from last year. Morikawa said he has “some upcoming personal commitments”, and therefore won’t attempt to become the first since Henrik Stenson in 2013-14 to go back to back at the season-ending tournament.

3. Rory’s double

McIlroy has won three FedEx Cups and three season-long races on the European side, but he’s never held both at the same time. Considering the level at which he’s playing — 3.0 strokes gained per round since June 1, which is laugh-out-loud good — and with the FedEx Cup currently under his belt, this is probably his best opportunity to do something that has never been accomplished. In his last eight events worldwide, McIlroy has more wins (2) than finishes outside the top eight (1).

4. Matt Fitzpatrick’s magical ending

I’m not sure Fitzpatrick has gotten the credit he deserves for his 2022. He has 11 top 10s across all tours and has improved his strokes gained number for the 11th (!!) consecutive year. His U.S. Open title was a highlight, but it does feel as if he’s been a little lost in the shuffle since then. This is an opportunity to, like Morikawa a year ago, punctuate a fantastic season that included a major win with the best topper of all on the DP World Tour. Fitzpatrick has won two of the last six DP World Tour Championships (Rahm has two others), and to make it three of seven in this field would be extraordinary.

5. LIV Golf presence

There are LIV players in the field — Richard Bland and Adrian Otaegui will both tee it up — but none of them have a chance to win, which is not a scenario DP World Tour CEO Keith Pelley wants on his hands. What’s perhaps more interesting is that the No. 7 player in the points race, Thomas Pieters, is not teeing it up in Dubai. He announced in October that he was going to miss time because he and his wife were expecting their second child, so it’s likely that’s why he won’t be here. However, his name has recently been in the LIV rumor mill, which as we’ve seen with LIV, could be nothing at all but could end up being something. Only time will tell, though Pieters’ presence at the finale will certainly be missed after the great season he’s put together.



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2022 Presidents Cup: Potential for U.S. team domination among nine storylines to watch at Quail Hollow https://golfingagency.com/2022-presidents-cup-potential-for-u-s-team-domination-among-nine-storylines-to-watch-at-quail-hollow/ https://golfingagency.com/2022-presidents-cup-potential-for-u-s-team-domination-among-nine-storylines-to-watch-at-quail-hollow/#respond Tue, 20 Sep 2022 22:31:34 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/2022-presidents-cup-potential-for-u-s-team-domination-among-nine-storylines-to-watch-at-quail-hollow/

Presidents Cup week is here, and while it doesn’t hold the excitement everyone thought it would after the United States narrowly eclipsed the international team in Australia three years ago, team golf at the highest level is always a thrill.

The heavily favored U.S. side seems poised to rout Trevor Immelman’s International squad, but the projection of a rout is something that has often led to some of the greatest moments in sports history. Davis Love III is leading the stars and stripes into a true David vs. Goliath situation this week in Charlotte. The level of play on both sides is inequitable, but there are still plenty of storylines to pay attention to this week at Quail Hollow Golf Club.

This event also represents a reprieve from the long, (sometimes) slow slog of individual stroke play that we get throughout the year. Even in a massive victory back in 2017 at Liberty National Golf Club, the days were still compelling. We got to see future U.S. stars, a variety of pairings on both sides and the types of exhilarating celebrations match play golf often offers up.

Let’s take a look at a few narratives that could develop this week at Quail Hollow and break down what we’ll be watching over the remainder of what should be an awesome week of golf.

1. Over by Saturday? We know the first few days of golf will be a blast because the first few days of Ryder Cups and Presidents Cups are always fun, no matter the matchup or score. You always get insane hole-outs, weird, golf-y celebrations and interesting pairings that may or may not foreshadow the future of either team. In 2017, however, the U.S. led 14.5-3.5 after the Saturday matches, and the entire event was completely over going into singles play. That’s a rarity, even when teams are mismatched like this; team competitions are normally close until the last few hours of the week. Hopefully this one will be, but the threat of a boat race exists here in a way that it has not in most recent team competitions (specifically the Ryder Cup last year at Whistling Straits).

2.  Who’s not there: Normally at team events, we discuss who got snubbed by one of the captains. Instead, this year is about who snubbed themselves. No LIV Golf League players are permitted at the Presidents Cup, which means that international team stars like Cameron Smith, Joaquin Niemann, Abraham Ancer and Louis Oosthuizen will be watching from home and possibly texting with LIV Golf colleagues Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka and Dustin Johnson, all of whom were Team USA pillars over the last five years. While this should not (and will not) be the primary talking point of the week, it’s another way LIV has permeated into every crevice of the golf world, including one of the handful of sacred team weeks that we have every year.

3. Course fit: One of the big talking points going into this week is that even with the international team at full strength, the U.S. advantage at a long, brawny track like Quail Hollow would be too much for them to overcome. One reason they nearly broke a now-24-year winless streak at Royal Melbourne is because the golf course played away from the advantages of the U.S. team (length) and into the hands of a crafty, feisty international team. Of the top nine golfers historically at Quail Hollow who are also in this event, seven are Americans. Furthermore, of the top 10 best fits for this course in the event this week, eight are Americans. It’s difficult to envision either the course or the way it’s set up as anything other than an advantage for Love’s team.

4. Rookie ringers (on both sides): I’m more intrigued than normal to watch the first-timers this time around. On the U.S. side, Sam Burns, Max Homa, Billy Horschel and Cameron Young are all interesting not only as players but also potential future U.S. anchors (especially in the case of Burns, Homa and Young). Burns, Homa and Horschel are all fairly animated competitors that I expect to thrive in a team environment. For the International Team, they’ll lean on eight rookies, but the most compelling are 20-year-old Tom Kim, Corey Conners, Taylor Pendrith and Cam Davis; the latter two were selected because they can match some of the firepower on the U.S. side. If those four play to their relatively high ceilings, the internationals could be a little plucky.

5. U.S. leaders: Want to feel old? Jordan Spieth is the most experienced U.S. player … by three events (Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup). Even with the LIV players in the mix, Spieth and Justin Thomas would have likely been the heart and soul of this U.S. squad, but it’s unquestionably true now with D.J., Koepka and DeChambeau out of the picture. Phil Mickelson talked about Spieth as the future guy for the U.S., and it has turned out to be true. It will be especially true this week without Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson around as assistant captains. J.T. and Spieth are an interesting duo. The latter a chest-thumping monster who is 10-2-3 in team sessions at these team events, and the former a calm, confident presence in the press tent and, presumably, the locker room for players who aren’t much younger than him. They should be who we thought Mickelson and Woods were going to be for the next 10 years of U.S. team golf.

6.  Top Scheff: I joked that the best player in the world and Jon Rahm were playing the singles match of the Ryder Cup last year, and this year it turned out to not be a joke as Scheffler rose to the top spot in the OWGR after four wins early in the year. He was perhaps a bit of a surprise hero last year at his first U.S. team event as he went 2-0-1, but he’ll sneak up on nobody this year. My question is whether he can lead from out in front as one of the Americans with the biggest targets on his back.

7. Foursomes advantage: The big problem for the international team — other than the fact that it has three players ranked in the top 25 of the OWGR and the U.S. has 12 — is that it has been unable to compete in foursomes at this event over the last two decades. The stat below is jarring. The internationals have actually outperformed the U.S. team in singles play and tied them in fourballs over the last 15 years, but have been absolutely torched in foursomes. That’s something to keep an eye on going into the week.

8. U.S. pairings: I care way too much about the in-the-weeds minutia on the U.S. side of things, and I think we’re probably going to get some pairings this week that we’ve either already seen at the Ryder Cup or will see again next year in Rome. Here are the pods for the first two days of practice rounds for the U.S.

Burns-Scheffler is an obvious pairing. So are J.T.-Spieth and Cantlay-Schauffele. Finau is so pliable from a personality standpoint that you could plug him in with any of the three guys in his pod and it could make sense. Kisner and Horschel are pretty interesting, and though they’re not necessarily off the charts statistically at Quail Hollow, they would be a nightmare to go up against. Morikawa-Homa is a ball-striking extravaganza. I cannot wait to see how these play out.

9. What does U.S. future look like after optimistic Whistling Straits? I wrote about the U.S. Dream Team that invaded Lake Michigan this time a year ago. In that moment, the future looked indelible as the red, white and blue looked unbeatable. However, nearly half that team is gone (either to LIV or to injury), and in their place steps some question marks. This year’s Presidents Cup won’t determine what the future of U.S. team golf looks like, but it might actually be more representative of what the next five years will look like than last year’s Ryder Cup did. It would be surprising if that resulted in a more optimistic outlook given the talent on that team and what has been lost, but it could result in a similarly unified group that moves into the future of Ryder Cups and Presidents Cups against the best players from the rest of the world.



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PGA Tour predictions, golfers to watch and storylines to follow as 2022-23 golf season begins https://golfingagency.com/pga-tour-predictions-golfers-to-watch-and-storylines-to-follow-as-2022-23-golf-season-begins/ https://golfingagency.com/pga-tour-predictions-golfers-to-watch-and-storylines-to-follow-as-2022-23-golf-season-begins/#respond Thu, 15 Sep 2022 20:25:05 +0000 https://golfingagency.com/pga-tour-predictions-golfers-to-watch-and-storylines-to-follow-as-2022-23-golf-season-begins/

The long, dark golf offseason has finally come to a close. The PGA Tour returns this week to kick off its 2022-23 season, a 47-event marathon which will conclude at the end of August 2023 with the Tour Championship and the crowning of a FedEx Cup champion. 

After such an insane 2022, it’s difficult to imagine what the Tour is going to do for an encore, but there are several storylines, players and events to watch out for going into the next 11 months. Of course, LIV Golf will permeate all of this, just as it has done over the last six months. Even when we aren’t talking about who’s leaving next (which we will below), the Tour will still feel the effects of its presence in both good and bad ways.

Let’s not tarry any longer — I think the opening few paragraphs of this article lasted longer than the time between seasons for the Tour — as we look forward to what will be an historic year (and a marker in professional golf) for the PGA Tour.

Five storylines to watch

1. Unity at the top: I have not been this excited at the beginning of a PGA Tour season in a long time. The primary reason is that the Tour has functionally sectioned itself off into two different tours. There will be 12 elevated events, the Players and the four majors in which we will see, presumably, the top 50 players in the world at every event. That’s something that could only have been said about the Players and the four majors in years past, and it’s both a thrill to imagine the top players at 17 of the same events and also provides clarification as to which weeks matter most; no sport has a 47-week schedule that everyone pays attention to all the time.

2. What do majors and Official World Golf Rankings decide? While everyone is paying attention to Phil Mickelson et al vs. the PGA Tour, the real defining legal battle will likely come elsewhere. Thus far, the major championship organizations — Augusta National (Masters), USGA (U.S. Open), PGA of America (PGA Championship) and R&A (Open Championship) — have perhaps been irritated at the shifting pro golf landscape but have yet to ban LIV golfers from playing their tournaments. I don’t believe they’re going to do this outright either. What could happen is that the OWGR board, which is made up of representatives from these organizations, could prevent LIV from obtaining OWGR points, effectively keeping most of their players out of the major championships. It seems like that’s probably the road down which we’re headed, although I’m sure there will be myriad twists and turns.

3. What is Tiger’s plan? It was a strange year for Tiger Woods. He only played nine total rounds last year but also engendered perhaps the moment of the year when he waved his cap across the Swilican Bridge at The Open in July. His performances at both the Masters and the PGA Championship were also uniquely inspiring. I’m guessing we see a very similar schedule for Tiger in 2023 with perhaps the U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club or an Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill thrown in there, as well as an elevated role on the U.S. Ryder Cup team as a vice captain to Zach Johnson in Rome.

4. PGA Tour/DP World Tour strategic alliance: In 2022, the DP World Tour shifted into more of a feeder system for the PGA Tour. That was highlighted by the announcement that the top 10 players on the DP World Tour each year will receive PGA Tour cards for the following season — which is the definition of a feeder system. However, there is plenty of opportunity for the PGA Tour and DP World Tour to continue to work together in the future like they did this year with the Scottish Open. I don’t know if they can pull it off, but I would love to see some of the elevated events on the PGA Tour schedule as co-sanctioned events with the DP World Tour. It’s a good way to fend off LIV players who are joining the rival tour just because it plays a more global slate. You could move the elevated PGA Tour events around and have two or three tournaments in Europe every year alongside the Open Championship.

“I think for the benefit of the global game, a handful of those [elevated] events need to be in Europe,” said Rory McIlroy last week at the BMW PGA Championship. “I’ve said that from the start. This can’t be American-centric.”

5. Who leaves next? I don’t know the answer to that question because nobody knows the answer, but it’s a good bet that when the next player leaves from the PGA Tour to go play the LIV Golf League, it’s going to be a non-American. LIV has branded itself as the global tour. The PGA Tour has an opportunity to provide a rebuttal to that by playing more co-sanctioned events in Europe alongside the DP World Tour, but I think any late 2022 or 2023 defectors to LIV will mostly be non-American players.

Three breakout candidates to watch

I loved this thread by Will Haskett, who evaluated the best players of 2022 who didn’t win any tournaments (yet). Looking at strokes gained (your ability to score well against your peers) against a lack of wins is such an interesting way to try and predict the future. Some names that turned up on the list this time last year: Scottie Scheffler, Cam Smith and Talor Gooch, all of whom had great 2022 campaigns. I used his list and added some of my own flavor as we look for some breakout stars in 2023.

1. Justin Suh: It’s not just the pedigree. It’s not just that he won the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. It’s not just that he was introduced alongside Viktor Hovland, Matthew Wolff and Collin Morikawa at the 2019 Travelers Championship. It’s all that plus the way he closed out the Korn Ferry Tour season like an absolute menace.

2. Taylor Pendrith: The Presidents Cup later this month could be his coming out party, but the truth is that he’s been a menace all summer. He has six top 15s in seven starts on the PGA Tour dating back to the Players Championship, and only a below-average putter has kept him from rising into a position where he’s a top 25 player in the world.

3. Cameron Young: This one felt almost too obvious. But if you haven’t been paying close attention, Young has been a top 20 player in the world for a while now and contended at multiple majors in 2022. He is the Will Zalatoris of 2023, but hopefully with him, I won’t have to sweat a win until the third-to-last tournament of the season.

Changes are coming

This is the last year of the fall slate as we know it. The season after this one won’t begin until January 2024, although it sounds as if  there will still be some events in the fall where players who don’t retain their PGA Tour cards will play for status ahead of the upcoming year (it sounds as if stars playing in an international series for a ton of money is now off the table). One other big change coming this year is that only the top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings will advance to the FedEx Cup Playoffs. That’s whittled down from the top 125, which is what the number has been more recently. This mostly won’t affect the stars and superstars of the game, but it could provide more urgency at an earlier part of the year.

Best bets for majors, FedEx Cup

Odds via Caesars Sportsbook

Masters: Cameron Young (40-1) — He should be more like 25-1 or 30-1 based on how he played in the majors this year and how well he drives the golf ball.

PGA Championship: Collin Morikawa (20-1) — The last time the PGA Championship was played at Oak Hill was 2013, and the top two finishers were Jason Dufner and Jim Furyk. Both are short-ish hitters who hit frozen ropes for irons, which is basically the same profile as Morikawa.

U.S. Open: Bryson DeChambeau (65-1) — Do I think DeChambeau is going to win the 2023 U.S. Open? I do not. Do I think 65-1 is outrageously long for somebody who won the U.S. Open two years ago from right now and almost won it again the following year? I do.

Open Championship: Adam Scott (65-1) — He quietly finished T15 this year, and The Open is the one place where it’s much easier for an older player to sneak in and make some noise. I don’t think we’re done hearing from Scott at Opens.

FedEx Cup: Sam Burns (25-1) — He’s made the last two Tour Championships and went into both of those playoffs ranked inside the top 10. He’s a consistent, money-making machine — or at least he has been in recent years — and with big win here or there next season, it’s easy to see him mixing it up on Sunday at East Lake. I also love that he’s improved his strokes gained number in each of the last four seasons.

Predictions for 2022-23 season

  • Player of the Year: Jon Rahm
  • Rookie of the Year: Justin Suh
  • Masters winner: Jon Rahm
  • PGA Championship winner: Will Zalatoris
  • U.S. Open winner: Xander Schauffele
  • Open winner: Jordan Spieth
  • FedEx Cup champion: Jon Rahm



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