For a sport needing a jolt of energy, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is as good a test as any. Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy make their PGA Tour season debuts, while Jordan Spieth returns following wrist surgery last summer.
Lackluster fields, slow play and zero buzz have been the Tour's story so far in 2025, but the ingredients are in place this week to change the narrative.
HOLYWOOD hotshot Rory McIlroy is scaling back his PGA Tour schedule this year. The four-time major winner wants the tour’s overall number of tournaments to be reduced in the future. The
The famously impatient Spieth will have to be comfortable with baby steps after wrist surgery. A 2-under 70 on Thursday was a start.
For a sport needing a jolt of energy, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is as good a test as any. Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy make their PGA Tour season debuts, while Jordan Spieth returns following wrist surgery last summer.
Talk all you want about Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy, about Collin Morikawa and Jordan Spieth, about all the marquee golfers headlining this week’s AT&T Pro-Am. They offer a much-needed upgrade from the often-mediocre professional fields of the past 10 to 15 years.
Scheffler went from the hill right of the 10th fairway at Spyglass to a front bunker, blasted out some 20 feet and missed his par putt. That was his only bogey, though he was 1 over until lacing the fairway metal to 30 feet for two-putt birdie on the par-5 14th, just as McIlroy on the hole next to him plucked his ball from the cup.
This Pebble Beach Pro-Am is a welcome-back party for many top pros. Their time away has led to a hidden benefit this week. The post Those chatty pros at Pebble Beach? Here’s 1 theory why they’re talking appeared first on Golf.
Wyndham Clark doesn’t like watching himself on tournament television tapes. He didn’t revisit his first PGA title two years ago or the U.S. Open victory six weeks later
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — For a sport needing a jolt of energy, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is as good a test as any.
Doug Zeghibe, CEO of The Skating Club of Boston, mourned the six members of his team who were killed in the Washington, D.C., plane crash Wednesday night. While lamenting the tragedy, he noted it’s also a devastating blow to the figure skating community.
While Netflix is still holding back the trailer for Happy Gilmore 2, the streamer did offer the first official look at the sequel to the 1996 Adam