Source: Getty Images

Scheffler cruises to £19m Tour Championship victory

Tour Championship final leaderboard

-30 S Scheffler (US); -26 C Morikawa (US); -24 S Theegala (US)

Selected: -16 R McIlroy (NI), S Lowry (Ire); -11 R MacIntyre (Sco); -10 T Fleetwood (Eng); -6 A Rai (Eng)

Scottie Scheffler underlined his status as the world’s number one golfer with a dominant victory at the season-ending Tour Championship in Atlanta.

It caps a remarkable 2024 for the American who has won an Olympic gold medal, his second Masters and become the first to land successive Players Championship titles.

He is the first player since Tiger Woods in 2007 to win seven events in a PGA Tour season.

Scheffler, who started the final round with a five-shot lead over Collin Morikawa, shot a four-under 67 to win on 30 under and collect $25m (£19m) of the $100m prize fund.

He was four clear of Morikawa, who hit a 66, with another American, Sahith Theegala, in third on 24 under after a 64.

For a third successive year, Scheffler began the week on 10 under par as the leader of the FedEx Cup standings, two clear of Xander Schauffele in second, with Morikawa among a group on four under in the staggered start.

And he stayed ahead through the first three rounds to set up what looked like a straightforward final round.

His five-shot lead was six after Morikawa bogeyed the first hole.

However, Scheffler made uncharacteristic errors as he recorded successive bogeys on the seventh and eighth holes that allowed Morikawa, who birdied the fourth, sixth and eighth holes, to close to within two.

A wayward drive left Scheffler hacking out from underneath a conifer tree down the left of the seventh, while he mis-hit a greenside bunker shot on the eighth that squirted out right and ended up further away from the hole.

“I was a bit frustrated because it was quite a basic shot, but I’ve shanked it from a similar lie before,” he said.

“Ted [Scott, Scheffler’s caddie] did a good job of helping me reset. He gave me a nice pep talk there on the back of the eighth green because I looked at him like, ‘man, I don’t know about this, this isn’t looking so hot right now’.

“He gave me a little pep talk and then I was able to hit a really nice iron shot in there [on nine] and got things rolling.

“He really is a huge part of the team. I don’t know if I’d be able to do any of this without him on my bag.

“And then I did some really nice stuff to finish this tournament off.”

That “nice stuff” started on the ninth hole with a birdie, and two more followed on the 10th and 11th as Scheffler surged four clear.

Morikawa responded with a birdie on the 13th, but Scheffler drained a 15-foot eagle putt on the next to re-establish his five-shot lead, and he parred his way home to secure his first FedEx Cup title.

“Nothing fazes him,” said Morikawa, who collected $12.5m for finishing runner-up.

“Whether I was gaining some ground or he was gaining ground, it didn’t change how he walked or how he played or how he went through every shot.

“That’s something to learn. His mental game is a lot stronger than a lot of people know.”

Sunday’s prize money takes Scheffler’s official earnings for the season to around $54m and he has broken the PGA Tour record in that respect for a third season in a row.

It has also been quite the year off the course for Scheffler, who became a father for the first time in May and then just days later was arrested on the morning of the second round of the US PGA Championship for an alleged traffic offence as he arrived at the course.

He was taken to the police station and charged with assaulting a police officer but made it back to the course in time to play. All charges were later dropped.

“I feel like I’ve lived almost a full lifetime in this one year,” said Scheffler “It’s been nuts.”

Meanwhile, Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy finished the best of the UK golfers. He started the week level with Morikawa on four under and closed with a five-under 66 to end joint ninth on 16 under.

Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre had six birdies on his back nine as he shot a 64 to end 11 under, one ahead of Tommy Fleetwood who sneaked into the top 20 with a 67.

Fleetwood’s fellow Englishman Aaron Rai, who won his first PGA Tour title in August, hit a closing 70 for a total of six under.

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PGA Tour: Scottie Scheffler builds big lead over Xander Schauffele at season-ending Tour Championship

World No 1 Scottie Scheffler seven clear of Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa at the Tour Championship; Scheffler looking to win the FedExCup for the first time

Scottie Scheffler made a dream start to his bid for a maiden FedExCup victory after surging into a seven-shot lead following the opening round of the PGA Tour’s season-ending Tour Championship.

The world No 1 has already won six times on the PGA Tour this season and arrived at East Lake with a two-shot cushion over closest challenger Xander Schauffele, with Scheffler recovering from a bogey start to take early control of the tournament.

Scheffler fired seven birdies – including five in his last seven holes – to close a round-of-the-day 65 and jump to 16 under, making the 28-year-old the overwhelming favourite to win the season finale and claim the $25m jackpot.

Schauffele’s one-under 70 leaves him tied-second alongside Collin Morikawa, who started his back nine with six consecutive birdies, with Hideki Matsuyama and Keegan Bradley – the winners of the first two Playoff events – in the group sharing fourth on eight under.

Scheffler’s two-shot pre-tournament advantage temporarily disappeared at the par-four first, where he failed to get up and down from short of the green to save par and Schauffele holed an eight-foot birdie to move to nine under.

The FedExCup leader edged back ahead with a close-range birdie at the third but missed a chance from inside 10 feet to double his cushion at the fifth, allowing Schauffele to pull back level when he set up a close-range birdie at the par-five sixth.

Scheffler responded by rolling in a 35-footer at the seventh to regain the solo advantage and reach the turn one ahead, although he only stayed in front when Schauffele squandered an eight-foot birdie opportunity at the par-four 10th.

Schauffele failed to convert from six feet to save par at the 11th and quickly fell further behind, as Scheffler posted back-to-back birdies from the 12th to jump to 13 under and four clear of the field.

Scheffler missed his eagle attempt from 20 feet at the par-five 14th but tapped in for a third straight birdie, as Schauffele holed from 15 feet to also pick up a shot before bogeying the 16th to drop five strokes adrift.

The lead increased further when Scheffler added a 15-foot birdie at the par-four 17th, before a brilliant up and down from the greenside bunker saw him take advantage of par-five last and build the biggest opening-round lead since starting strokes were implemented at the Tour Championship in 2019.

“Yeah, I’m pleased with the day,” Scheffler told Sky Sports. “I tried not to think about any sort of lead or anything like that, my job was to go out there and execute and I felt like I did a really good job of that. I felt like I was doing some good stuff to start the day. I had the bogey on one but after that I felt like I played some really good golf.”

Schauffele mixed three birdies with two bogeys in a frustrating opening round, with Morikawa’s 66 initially equalling the lowest score of the day until Scheffler’s late birdie run.

Matsuyama and Bradley are joined eight back by Adam Scott, Sam Burns and Wyndham Clark, with Sahith Theegala jumping to ninth after five birdies in the last six holes.

Rory McIlroy’s bid for record fourth FedExCup victory required three birdies in the last five holes to salvage a two-under 69, leaving him 10 strokes back, with defending champion Viktor Hovland on four under and tied-20th despite making seven birdies in his opening-round 69.

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2024 Tour Championship odds, picks, field: Surprising predictions by golf model that’s nailed 13 majors

The FedEx Cup champion will be crowned this weekend at the conclusion of the 2024 Tour Championship. Only the top 30 players in the 2024 FedEx Cup points list get invitations to this event, which will be held at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. Past champions include Viktor Hovland, Rory McIlroy and Patrick Cantlay, and they’re all in the Tour Championship 2024 field. However, the favorite is still searching for his first FedEx Cup championship in World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.

With the staggered format scoring, Scheffler — who tops the FedEx Cup standings — will begin at 10-under-par. That’s a big reason why he’s the -110 favorite, while Xander Schauffele (8-under-par) is at +230. Hideki Matsuyama (7-under-par) won the first FedEx Cup playoff tournament and is at +1200 in the 2024 Tour Championship odds. Before locking in your 2024 Tour Championship picks, be sure to see the golf predictions and projected leaderboard from the proven computer model at SportsLine.

SportsLine’s proprietary model, built by DFS pro Mike McClure, has been red-hot since the PGA Tour resumed in June 2020. In fact, the model is up more than $9,500 on its best bets since the restart, nailing tournament after tournament.

This same model has also nailed a whopping 13 majors entering the weekend, including the 2024 Masters — its third Masters in a row — and this year’s PGA Championship and U.S. Open. Anyone who has followed it has seen massive returns.

Now with the 2024 Tour Championship field locked in, SportsLine simulated the tournament 10,000 times, and the results were surprising. Head to SportsLine now to see the projected leaderboard.

Top 2024 Tour Championship predictions
One major surprise the model is calling for at the 2024 Tour Championship: McIlroy (+1800), a 26-time winner on the PGA Tour and one of the top favorites, stumbles this week and doesn’t even crack the top five. McIlroy had quite the late-spring/early-summer run over a span of seven tournaments. He had back-to-back victories, as well as five top 5s over that stretch, but it’s been a struggle on the PGA Tour since then. He missed the cut at The Open, finished 68th out of 70 golfers at the St. Jude Championship, and then placed 11th a week ago at the BMW. Eleventh place was also his finish at last year’s Tour Championship, based on his 72-hole score.

McIlroy is starting the 2024 Tour Championship 4-under-par, so he has a sizable six strokes to overcome to catch Scheffler. That’s quite a large gap considering that McIlroy ranks just 67th on tour in total birdies. He’s had numerous birdie opportunities slip through his fingers due to his putter, as the Irishman is just 65th on the PGA Tour in strokes gained: putting. Considering his recent slide, strokes to overcome and struggles on the greens, McIlroy is one to fade with 2024 Tour Championship bets. See who else to fade here.

Another surprise: Sam Burns, a +4000 longshot, makes a strong run at the title. The LSU product has only gotten better and better over the last two months, culminating in a runner-up last week at the BMW Championship. He’s improved his finish in each of his last four tournaments, and there’s only one spot to improve to after a second-place finish. Over Burns’ last eight events, he has six top-15 finishes, including at the U.S. Open and each of the first two FedEx Cup Playoff events.

Based solely on his 72-hole score, Burns was in fourth place at last year’s Tour Championship, finishing ninth overall with starting strokes applied. He will start at 4-under-par on Thursday, so just five golfers will be ahead of him on the leaderboard. Burns has shot multiple strokes under par in five of his last six rounds at East Lake Golf Club, so he’s shown the ability to make up ground quickly and shouldn’t be overlooked this weekend. See who else to back here.

How to make 2024 Tour Championship picks
The model is also targeting two other golfers with odds of 35-1 or longer who will make a strong run at the title. Anyone who backs these longshots could hit it big. You can only see the model’s picks here.

Who will win the 2024 Tour Championship, and which longshots will stun the golfing world? Check out the Tour Championship 2024 odds below and then visit SportsLine to see the projected Tour Championship leaderboard, all from the model that’s nailed 13 golf majors, including the last three Masters and three majors this year.

2024 Tour Championship starting scores, odds to win

Scottie Scheffler (-10) -110
Xander Schauffele (-8) +230
Hideki Matsuyama (-7) +1200
Keegan Bradley (-6) +1800
Ludvig Åberg (-5) +2200
Rory McIlroy (-4) +1800
Collin Morikawa (-4) +3500
Wyndham Clark (-4) +4000
Sam Burns (-4) +4000
Patrick Cantlay (-4) +4500
Sungjae Im (-3) +10000
Sahith Theegala (-3) +22500
Shane Lowry (-3) +15000
Adam Scott (-3) +10000
Tony Finau (-3) +10000
Byeong Hun An (-2) +30000
Viktor Hovland (-2) +7000
Russell Henley (-2) +12500
Akshay Bhatia (-2) +30000
Robert MacIntyre (-2) +40000
Billy Horschel (-1) +27500
Tommy Fleetwood (-1) +12500
Sepp Straka (-1) +50000
Matthieu Pavon (-1) +150000
Taylor Pendrith (-1) +150000
Chris Kirk (E) +150000
Tom Hoge (E) +150000
Aaron Rai (E) +50000
Christiaan Bezuidenhout (E) +100000
Justin Thomas (E) +30000

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2024 BMW Championship odds, predictions, field: Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy picks by proven golf model

SportsLine’s model revealed its 2024 BMW Championship predictions for Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele and the rest of the field at Castle Pines Golf Club in Colorado as the FedEx Cup Playoffs continue

The FedEx Cup Playoffs continue this week with the 2024 BMW Championship, which is being hosted by Castle Pines Golf Club in Castle Rock, Colorado. This is the first time the BMW Championship is returning to the Denver area since 2014, and this will be the longest course in PGA Tour history at 8,130 yards. However, the average altitude is 6,200 feet, so the ball flies much farther than it does at sea level. How should that factor influence your 2024 BMW Championship bets?

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is the +320 favorite (risk $100 to win $320) in the 2024 BMW Championship odds, followed by Xander Schauffele (+650) and Rory McIlroy (+1000). There are 50 golfers in the 2024 BMW Championship field, and the top 30 will advance to the Tour Championship next week. Before locking in your 2024 BMW Championship picks or PGA props, be sure to see the golf predictions and projected leaderboard from the proven computer model at SportsLine.

Our proprietary model, built by DFS pro Mike McClure, has been red-hot since the PGA Tour resumed in June 2020. In fact, the model is up more than $9,500 on its best bets since the restart, nailing tournament after tournament.

This same model has also nailed a whopping 13 majors entering the weekend, including the 2024 Masters — its third Masters in a row — and this year’s PGA Championship and U.S. Open. Anyone who has followed it has seen massive returns.

Now with the BMW Championship 2024 field set, SportsLine simulated the tournament 10,000 times, and the results were surprising. Head to SportsLine now to see the projected leaderboard.

Top 2024 BMW Championship golf predictions

One surprise: McIlroy, a four-time major champion and one of the top favorites, does not crack the top five this week. McIlroy finished second to Bryson DeChambeau in the U.S. Open after missing a pair of short putts in the final three holes, and he has struggled to post consistent results since then. He missed the cut in the final major of the year at the Open Championship before finishing T68 in the FedEx St. Jude Championship last week.

McIlroy ranks outside the top 100 on the PGA Tour in GIR percentage and outside the top 80 in driving accuracy. He might be tempted to pump up his driving distance this week on the long course, which could bring more of his inaccuracy issues into play. The model does not feel good about backing the inconsistent Northern Irishman this week, recommending other golfers instead.

The model has also examined where Schauffele finishes. The 30-year-old is amid the best season of his career, winning his first two majors while making the cut in all 19 events he has played in. Schauffele won the PGA Championship in May before winning the Open Championship in July, and he has finished inside the top 15 in nine straight tournaments. He finished T2 in the FedEx St. Jude Championship last week, despite starting the final round nine shots back of the lead.

Schauffele played a bogey-free round of 63 on Sunday, giving him momentum heading into Thursday’s opening round. However, he ranks outside the top 30 on the PGA Tour in driving distance and driving accuracy, which could be an issue at a course this long. Schauffele is the only player who can jump Scheffler in the FedEx Cup standings before the Tour Championship. The model just locked in its Xander Schauffele BMW Championship picks here.

How to make 2024 BMW Championship picks

The model has revealed where Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele finish, along with identifying three golfers with odds of 30-1 or longer to make a strong run at the title. Anyone who backs these longshots could hit it big. You can only see the model’s picks here.

2024 BMW Championship odds, field

Scottie Scheffler +320
Xander Schauffele +650
Rory McIlroy +1000
Collin Morikawa +1200
Viktor Hovland +1800
Ludvig Aberg +1800
Hideki Matsuyama +1800
Patrick Cantlay +2200
Tommy Fleetwood +2500
Tony Finau +2500
Corey Conners +3000
Sam Burns +3000
Wyndham Clark +3500
Sungjae Im +3500
Cameron Young +4000
Billy Horschel +4000
Adam Scott +4000
Aaron Rai +4000
Russell Henley +4000
Justin Thomas +4000
Shane Lowry +4500
Sahith Theegala +4500
Jason Day +4500
Byeong Hun An +5000
Akshay Bhatia +5000
Matt Fitzpatrick +5000
Davis Thompson +5000
Christiaan Bezuidenhout +5500
Robert MacIntyre +5500
Brian Harman +6000
Keegan Bradley +6000
Alex Noren +6500
Will Zalatoris +6500
Taylor Pendrith +6500
Max Greyserman +6500
Denny McCarthy +7000
Thomas Detry +7500
Si Woo Kim +7500
Sepp Straka +7500
Tom Hoge +8000
Nick Dunlap +8000
Max Homa +8000
Eric Cole +8000
Cam Davis +9000
Austin Eckroat +9000
J.T. Poston +11000
Chris Kirk +12000
Adam Hadwin +12000
Stephan Jaeger +12000
Matthieu Pavon +15000

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Rory McIlroy aiming to ‘flip the script’ at FedEx Cup

Rory McIlroy believes the FedEx Cup is an opportunity to “change the narrative” around his season.

The 35-year-old from Northern Ireland has won the PGA Tour’s season-ending title on three previous occasions, most recently in 2022.

However when teeing off on Thursday at the FedEx St. Jude Championship, the first of this year’s three playoff events, the world number three will sit almost 3,500 points behind leader and recent Olympic champion Scottie Scheffler.

The American world number one also won his second Masters this season, while golf’s biggest prizes continue to elude McIlroy.

“I think when the bulk of the season has come and gone and you’ve got this opportunity of three weeks to really flip the script a little bit or change the narrative and what that season means, I think that’s a motivating factor, and part of the reason that I’ve probably played well in the playoffs for the last three years,” McIlroy said.

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Rai wins first PGA Tour title after Greyserman falters

Wyndham Championship final leaderboard

-18 A Rai (Eng); -16 M Greyserman (US); -15 J Spaun (US), R Hisatsune (Jpn)

England’s Aaron Rai claimed his maiden PGA Tour title, winning the Wyndham Championship by two shots after leader Max Greyserman faltered late on.

Rai, 29, had trailed by four shots midway through the back nine in North Carolina but carded a closing 64 to finish on 18-under-par to seal victory.

Greyserman looked to be in a comfortable position when he holed his second shot to eagle on the par-four 13th hole.

But the American, 29, then suffered a quadruple bogey on the 14th after driving out of bounds.

A birdie at the next hole was followed by four putts on the par-three 16th to end his hopes of lifting the trophy.

He ended his tournament at Sedgefield Country Club on 16 under.

The final day saw most golfers play 36 holes after bad weather disrupted the previous days’ schedule.

Rai, who moved to 25th in the FedEx Cup standings, said his win was “truly a dream come true”.

He added: “I felt pretty calm. I knew the situation. I did just a good job sticking to what we do well.”

American J.J. Spaun and Japan’s Ryo Hisatsune tied for third place on 15 under.

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2024 Wyndham Championship odds, picks, field: Surprising predictions by golf model that’s nailed 13 majors

SportsLine’s proven model simulated the Wyndham Championship 2024 10,000 times and revealed its surprising PGA Tour golf picks

The 2024 FedEx Cup Playoffs begin next week in Memphis and the 2024 Wyndham Championship will be the last regular-season stop on the PGA Tour schedule before the postseason. The top 125 players in the FedEx Cup standings retain their PGA Tour cards, while only the top 70 will be eligible to play the FedEx St. Jude Championship to begin the PGA Tour playoffs next week. Frenchman Victor Perez finished just off the podium in the Olympic men’s golf tournament last week in Paris but now he’ll have to make the quick turnaround to play this week at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro. The first tee times come at 6:50 a.m. ET on Thursday.

Perez is currently 71st in the FedEx Cup standings and he’s listed as an 80-1 longshot in the 2024 Wyndham Championship odds. Meanwhile, Sungjae Im is the 16-1 favorite in this week’s PGA Tour odds, while Shane Lowry, Billy Horschel and Si Woo Kim are all priced at 25-1. Before locking in your 2024 Wyndham Championship picks, be sure to see the golf predictions and projected leaderboard from the proven computer model at SportsLine.

SportsLine’s proprietary model, built by DFS pro Mike McClure, has been red-hot since the PGA Tour resumed in June 2020. In fact, the model is up nearly $9,000 on its best bets since the restart, nailing tournament after tournament.

This same model has also nailed a whopping 13 majors entering the weekend, including the 2024 Masters — its third Masters in a row — and this year’s PGA Championship and U.S. Open. Anyone who has followed it has seen massive returns.

Top 2024 Wyndham Championship predictions
One major surprise the model is calling for at the 2024 Wyndham Championship: Horschel (25-1), an eight-time winner on the PGA Tour and one of the top favorites, stumbles this week and barely cracks the top 10. Horschel is coming off an impressive T-2 finish at the Open Championship, his best-ever showing in a major championship.

However, Horschel had been struggling mightily prior to that outing, finishing T-41 or worse in three consecutive starts, which included a missed cut at the Genesis Scottish Open. Horschel’s iron play has been wildly inconsistent all season and he enters the Wyndham Championship ranked 102nd in greens in regulation percentage (65.65%) and 120th in strokes gained: approach to green (-0.113), which doesn’t bode well for his chances to finish on top of the leaderboard this week. See who else to fade here.

Another surprise: Keith Mitchell, a 60-1 longshot, makes a strong run at the title. He has a much better chance to win it all than his odds imply, so he’s a target for anyone looking for a huge payday. Like Perez, Mitchell needs a big week at Sedgefield to earn his spot in the 2024 FedEx Cup Playoffs. He’s currently 79th in the FedEx Cup standings and is the 91st-ranked player in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Mitchell scored his lone PGA Tour win at the 2019 Honda Classic but he’s had three top-10 finishes this season and has been top 25 nine times while making the cut 15 times in 21 PGA Tour starts. He’s made the cut in three of his four career starts at the Wyndham Championship and his ball striking should come in handy this week. Mitchell ranks fifth on the PGA Tour this season in strokes gained: tee-to-green (1.399). See who else to back here.

How to make 2024 Wyndham Championship picks
The model is also targeting four other golfers with odds of 35-1 or longer who will make a strong run at the title. Anyone who backs these longshots could hit it big. You can only see the model’s picks here.

Who will win the 2024 Wyndham Championship, and which longshots will stun the golfing world? Check out the Wyndham Championship 2024 odds below and then visit SportsLine to see the projected Wyndham Championship leaderboard, all from the model that’s nailed 13 golf majors, including the last three Masters and three majors this year.

2024 Wyndham Championship odds, top contenders
Get full 2024 Wyndham Championship picks, best bets and predictions here.

Sungjae Im +1600
Billy Horschel +2500
Shane Lowry +2500
Si Woo Kim +2500
Cameron Young +3000
Min Woo Lee +3300
Jordan Spieth +3300
Brian Harman +3500
Akshay Bhatia +3500
Davis Thompson +3500
Cam Davis +4000
Luke Clanton +4000
Aaron Rai +4000
Christiaan Bezuidenhout +4500
Keegan Bradley +5000
Robert MacIntyre +5000
Nicolai Højgaard +5000
Thomas Detry +5500
Maverick McNealy +5500
Jhonattan Vegas +5500
J.T. Poston +6000
Nick Dunlap +6000
Will Zalatoris +6000
Justin Rose +6000
Webb Simpson +6000
Harris English +6000
Keith Mitchell +6000
Kurt Kitayama +6000
Erik van Rooyen +6000
Max Greyserman +6500
Ryan Fox +6500
Stephan Jaeger +7000
Denny McCarthy +7000
Eric Cole +7000
Taylor Moore +7500
Sam Stevens +7500
Michael Thorbjornsen +7500
Victor Perez +8000
Doug Ghim +8000
Ben Griffin +8000
Andrew Novak +9000
Adam Hadwin +9000
Patrick Fishburn +9000
Harry Hall +9000
Mac Meissner +9000
Patrick Rodgers +9000
Mackenzie Hughes +9000
Seamus Power +10000
Mark Hubbard +10000
Matt Wallace +10000
C.T. Pan +10000
Brendon Todd +10000
Thorbjørn Olesen +10000
Chan Kim +10000
Alex Smalley +10000
Adam Svensson +10000
Matt Kuchar +10000
Lucas Glover +11000
Beau Hossler +11000
J.J. Spaun +11000
Matthias Schmid +11000
Andrew Putnam +11000
Austin Eckroat +11000
Nick Taylor +11000
Emiliano Grillo +12000
K.H. Lee +12000
Rico Hoey +12000
Michael Kim +12000
Hayden Springer +15000
Ben Silverman +15000
Kevin Yu +15000
Daniel Berger +15000
Ben Kohles +15000
Jacob Bridgeman +15000
Chesson Hadley +15000
Jake Knapp +15000
Lee Hodges +17000

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GB’s Fleetwood pipped to Olympic gold by Scheffler

Paris 2024 Olympics final leaderboard

-19 Scheffler (US); -18 Fleetwood (GB); -17 Matsuyama (Jpn); -16 Perez (Fra) -15 McIlroy (Ire), Rahm (Spa)

Great Britain’s Tommy Fleetwood had to settle for Olympic silver in the men’s golf after falling agonisingly short of American world number one Scottie Scheffler in an enthralling finale.

On a tense last day in Paris, Fleetwood was tied with Scheffler on 19 under walking on to the 17th hole.

But a bogey after missing the green and over-hitting a chip left him trailing Scheffler – who shot a course record-equalling nine-under 62 – going down the last.

The 33-year-old Englishman also misjudged an approach on the 18th as he attacked, settling for a par which secured the silver medal.

Fleetwood, who shot a wonderful 66, tipped his head back in disappointment before breaking out into a beaming smile as thousands of fans chanted his name.

“Part of me is disappointed, of course, but at the same time I never dreamed I’d be an Olympic medallist,” said Fleetwood.

“I’m still unbelievably proud and happy of the way the week went. I’m proud of the way I played today.”

Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama took bronze on 17 under.

Home favourite Victor Perez finished fourth on 16 under, a shot ahead of Rory McIlroy, representing Ireland, and Spain’s Jon Rahm.

How Fleetwood pushed Scheffler all the way

As one of the finest players without a major, Fleetwood was aiming to win the biggest individual title of his career by earning Olympic gold.

He started the final day one off the lead as he trailed playing partners Rahm and American defending champion Xander Schauffele.

After Saturday’s third round, Fleetwood said he was not “swinging freely” and lamented his lack of birdie chances.

It was a steady if not spectacular outing – but Sunday started in a different manner.

A bogey on the first was quickly erased by a birdie two on the second, followed by two more birdies on three and four.

The problem was everyone else – Rahm and Scheffler in particular – made even better starts.

Another bogey on the seventh threatened Fleetwood’s chances, but a run of four birdies between the eighth and 12th holes kept him in the hunt.

Rahm had surged ahead with a five-under 31 on the front nine. Then his round unravelled after the turn.

Bogeys on 11 and 12 were followed by a costly double on 14, allowing Fleetwood a clear run at Scheffler – who was just finishing on the last – after another birdie on 16.

Fleetwood knows how to perform at Le Golf National.

He won the 2017 French Open here before famously leading Europe to Ryder Cup glory – as one half of ‘Moliwood’ with Italian Francesco Molinari – in 2018.

However, the popular Englishman could not see the job through and faltered as Scheffler – who shot a six-under 29 on the back nine – continued his recent dominance of the men’s game.

“As a young boy taking up the game of golf, none of us had a chance to win Olympic gold so it was never on our agenda,” said Fleetwood.

“That quickly changes when you’re part of the Olympics and it feels unbelievably special.

“I know I didn’t win gold but standing on that podium with a medal was one of the most amazing moments I’ve had as a golfer.”

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Olympic golf gets loud start, slow finish and Matsuyama in the lead

Victor Perez of France repeatedly pumped his fist over his head before the opening tee shot Thursday, celebrating the start of Olympic golf before a large and raucous home crowd.

And then Hideki Matsuyama quietly went about his business for an 8-under 63 and a two-shot lead at Le Golf National. Right behind was a familiar figure — Xander Schauffele, 10 days removed from his British Open title and playing as though he hasn’t missed a beat.

The surprise was outside the ropes — nearly 20,000 spectators in stifling heat, traipsing across rough terrain and seeing unusually low scoring from overnight rain that softened the course.

Matsuyama, who lost in a seven-man playoff for the bronze in the Tokyo Games, had six birdies through 10 holes and kept a clean card with a 15-foot par save on the 17th.

“Fortunately, I was able to keep the ball in the fairway and left myself with a number of chances to score,” Matsuyama said. “So in that regard, I’m satisfied with the end result. But also still a number of things I could improve on. Definitely off to a great start and hopefully I can keep the momentum going for the rest of the week.”

The opening round slowed at the end when storm clouds approached, causing two delays because of lightning in the area. Schauffele had to leave the course while on the 18th tee, returned to make par and then another delay settled in.

Carlos Ortiz of Mexico was challenging for the lead amid the stop-and-start action. He hit his tee shot into the water on the par-3 16th for a double bogey and then a bogey at the end. He had to settle for a 69.

Joaquin Niemann of Chile, Emiliano Grillo of Argentina and Tom Kim of South Korea were at 66, with Masters champion and tournament favorite Scottie Scheffler at 67.

Niemann is among seven players from Saudi-funded LIV Golf in the field, with no guarantee of being in the majors next year. An Olympic gold medal gets him into all four of them next year.

Any Olympic medal would be big for the 22-year-old Kim, because it would exempt him from mandatory military service in South Korea. He would still have at least one more Olympic chance, though he said it’s not on his mind.

“It doesn’t worry me at all,” Kim said.

Scheffler’s family was in full force, including 3-month-old son Bennett, who was wakened by the loud cheer when he birdied the opening hole.

“I didn’t really know what to expect. The last couple days it’s been pretty quiet around the course,” Scheffler said. “But it was nice to play in front of a good crowd — big crowd. It was a lot of fun. Definitely more people than I expected.”

As for his golf, Scheffler felt he could have posted a lower score but had few complaints. He played alongside Rory McIlroy and Ludvig Aberg, who each shot 68.

That was the marquee group early, and the fans stood eight deep around the first green and down the second hole, with children on their father’s shoulders, everyone with phones out to capture whatever they could.

They saw good scoring, with 41 players from the 60-man field under par.

But the biggest takeaway was outside the ropes.

“The first tee wasn’t quiet a Ryder Cup, but way more than a normal tournament for sure, and way more than you would ever see on a Thursday,” Collin Morikawa said.

He played with Matthieu Pavon, the other French player in the field. The gallery began singing “La Marseillaise” when they saw him on the bridge leading to the first tee box, and they cheered so wildly for Pavon that players could hear it from two or three holes away.

Pavon birdied the first hole and it got even louder, though he had only one other birdie for the day in his round of 72.

Schauffele was in the group in front of Pavon.

“When they were chanting Matthieu’s name and it was kind of echoing around the corner there, it was like, ‘This is pretty special,’” Schauffele said. “For me, Tokyo was really special, obviously, but there were no fans. The city was closed. I was stuck in my hotel room.

“Going out to eat dinner, seeing people everywhere, seeing fans everywhere chanting, it feels like I’m here for the first time.”

But the biggest takeaway was outside the ropes.

“The first tee wasn’t quiet a Ryder Cup, but way more than a normal tournament for sure, and way more than you would ever see on a Thursday,” Collin Morikawa said.

He played with Matthieu Pavon, the other French player in the field. The gallery began singing “La Marseillaise” when they saw him on the bridge leading to the first tee box, and they cheered so wildly for Pavon that players could hear it from two or three holes away.

Pavon birdied the first hole and it got even louder, though he had only one other birdie for the day in his round of 72.

Schauffele was in the group in front of Pavon.

“When they were chanting Matthieu’s name and it was kind of echoing around the corner there, it was like, ‘This is pretty special,’” Schauffele said. “For me, Tokyo was really special, obviously, but there were no fans. The city was closed. I was stuck in my hotel room.

“Going out to eat dinner, seeing people everywhere, seeing fans everywhere chanting, it feels like I’m here for the first time.”

Schauffele posting a 65 was a good start for someone aiming for another gold medal. It was harder than it looked. He chipped in for birdie on the first hole. He had to get up-and-down for par on the next. He missed the fairway on the par-5 third and still had a good look at birdie.

“It wasn’t sort of the dream, stripey start that you envision as a golfer,” he said. “But I’m happy to sort of ride the ship in and get away with what could have been worse. I missed a few putts coming in. But it’s Thursday. I’m not really sweating it too much.”

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Paris attracts world’s best male golfers after Rio ambivalence

When golf returned to the Olympics in 2016 after a 112-year hiatus, only six of the top dozen male players in the world showed up for the Rio Games.

In the absence of the then-top four players in the world – Jason Day, Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy – the sport’s return generated a fair amount of ambivalence both within golf and the wider sporting community.

While the threat of contracting the Zika virus was cited as a reason not to travel to Brazil, there was also a feeling that several top stars had not embraced the notion that golf should be an Olympic sport.

Indeed, elaborating on his Zika fears, McIlroy made it abundantly clear just a few weeks before the tournament that he had no enthusiasm for golf’s return.

The inclusion of the sport in the Games still generates plenty of debate. The argument that if a gold medal is not the absolute pinnacle then it should not be included in the Games is one with which many sports fans empathise.

But, as we await the start of the men’s tournament in Paris, there has been a discernible shift of opinion from the world’s best golfers.

Shane Lowry is still pinching himself after carrying the Irish flag at last Friday’s opening ceremony.

“It was an amazing experience and something that I’ll remember forever,” said the 2019 Open champion as he prepares for Thursday’s first tee shot at le Golf National.

“It was a big honour…memories for a lifetime and just even being there and being around the other athletes, it was pretty cool.”

Lowry admits it was something he could not have envisaged growing up as a golfer and said: “It was an amazing experience.”

For this, the third Olympic golf competition since the sport’s readmission, the only players missing from the top 10 are two Americans who were ineligible because there are a maximum four other compatriots above them in the rankings.

So Patrick Cantlay (world number eight) and Bryson DeChambeau (nine) miss out because top dog Scottie Scheffler, Open and US PGA Championship winner Xander Schauffele, Wyndham Clark and Collin Morikawa are all in the top six in the world.

The charismatic DeChambeau is the big miss. The US Open champion would surely be ranked higher if he did not play on the breakaway LIV circuit which does not qualify for ranking points.

“I think that’s the nature of qualification for the Olympics,” McIlroy observed. “You could have the fifth-best sprinter in the world but if he’s from a certain country, he’s not able to make it.

“So I think it’s just the way that the qualification works in the Olympic Games, and that’s not just in golf.”

Despite his recent U-turn to a more accepting view on LIV’s presence in the golfing firmament, the 35-year-old four-time major winner has little sympathy.

“It’s hard to compare the golf that they play to the golf that we play,” he said.

“That’s the reason they didn’t get world ranking points. If you want to qualify for the Olympics, you knew what you had to do.

“Just like if you wanted to qualify for the Ryder Cup, you knew what you had to do. They were very aware of the decision they made when they did.”

But, given the varying levels of strength in depth in various countries, seven LIV players do make the Olympic field, including Spaniards Jon Rahm and David Puig. The latter secured his place by making the cut at June’s US Open at Pinehurst.

“Making the cut wasn’t the main goal of the event but the first round (76) was pretty tough,” said the exciting 22-year-old Spaniard.

“But my second round, the goal was to make the cut and make the Olympic team.

“There were nerves, but they were good nerves and they helped me to perform well on Friday. After the round, I was happy with the score I got (68) and proud of making the team.”

Rahm, the 2023 Masters champion, arrived for his Olympic debut after securing his first LIV win at the JCB course in Staffordshire last Sunday.

“It was important for many reasons,” Rahm said of his first victory since that Augusta triumph.

“When you put yourself in position the next time, you obviously have that covered that you’ve done that already; I’ve been there, done it recently.”

The Olympic competition mirrors the established tours in being 72-hole individual strokeplay. Many observers believe it would be a more engaging set-up if there was a team element.

“We are here representing Spain,” Rahm said.

“Whether as a combined sport or us playing together, to be able to represent Spain, that would be extremely nice to share the stage with another player, to do something different, to maybe what we do every other day.”