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Home Blog Page 8554

PGA News: LIV’s Brooks Koepka on U.S. Ryder Cup camaraderie: ‘All one team’

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Brooks Koepka was the only member of LIV Golf to qualify for the 2023 Ryder Cup, but he doesn’t see this week as a moment to represent his tour.

Speaking to reporters Wednesday at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome, Koepka touted the companionship among the U.S. team that he said dates back to playing the junior golf circuits together.

“I feel like I’m representing the USA. That’s what I’ve got on the front of my hat this week, so that’s what I’m representing,” Koepka said. “It’s not a group of individuals in that locker room. We’re just all one team, and that’s the way we think. That’s what I believe, and I’m pretty sure everybody else there thinks that.”

Koepka, 31, will play in his fourth Ryder Cup; he helped the U.S. win in 2016 and 2021 on home soil and was part of the 2018 team that lost in Paris. He feels the Americans are a closer-knit group than they were when he burst onto the scene seven years prior.

To his point, there is only a 10-year age gap between the Americans’ oldest player (Brian Harman, 36) and the youngest (Collin Morikawa, 26), meaning many team members came up through the ranks together.

“You grew up playing junior golf with at least six to eight guys on the team, so traveling — junior golf is the same as any tour,” Koepka said. “You’re traveling the world playing with them, college golf and this and that. You’re always around each other hanging out. I think it’s definitely, like I said, a different atmosphere than in years past.”

Koepka was among the early wave of golfers who left the PGA Tour for LIV Golf in June 2022. His eligibility for future Ryder Cups wasn’t on his mind then, he said Wednesday, but representing the U.S. in Rome became a realistic possibility after he tied for second at the Masters last April.

“I knew it would be tougher, but I think after Augusta I kind of had my eyes on it,” Koepka said. “I realized, I think, after Augusta I went to maybe 20th, somewhere around there on the (U.S. Ryder Cup) points list, and then from there it was just motivation to get on the team.”

He shot to second place on that list after winning the very next major, the PGA Championship, in May. But because the U.S. did not count LIV Golf events for its Ryder Cup qualifying rankings, Koepka had fewer chances to accumulate points.

He slipped out of the top six in the final week of qualifying, with Max Homa and Xander Schauffele passing him in August during the FedEx Cup playoffs. U.S. captain Zach Johnson used a captain’s pick on Koepka, despite previous indications he was not going out of his way to scout LIV players.

Koepka ducked a question Wednesday regarding the fairness of the process for LIV members.

“I don’t make the decisions,” he said. “It doesn’t — everybody had an opportunity to get there. I mean, I had the same opportunity as every other LIV player, and I’m here. Play better. That’s always the answer.”

Now Koepka is preparing to return to a true team golf format, instead of his usual week at an LIV event where his teammates’ best individual scores are added up. In Rome, camaraderie with his ex-Tour peers is valuable to him.

“It matters to me because I think it’s a lot easier when you know that everyone has got your back,” Koepka said. “Like you’re playing for more than just yourself when we’re teeing it up this week. When guys are out there, it’s a lot — it’s always fun looking up — I’m just throwing names, like I’m playing my match, and I see Xander following or whatever, it makes you just fight a little bit harder. It’s a little bit more fun, and you’re just trying to show off for those guys, too.

“But even the stuff that goes on at night, hanging out with everybody, getting everybody to have different conversations. If you’re on (the PGA Tour), you might see these guys a lot. I don’t get to see them as much anymore, so it’s kind of a little bit more special to me.”

–Field Level Media

PGA News: Rory McIlroy: LIVers will miss Ryder Cup more than Europe misses them

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Rory McIlroy admitted it’s different to be at a Ryder Cup without the likes of Sergio Garcia or Ian Poulter in Europe’s team room, but he remains confident the members of LIV Golf are the ones missing out.

The four-time major champion from Northern Ireland spoke to reporters at Marco Simone in Rome on Wednesday ahead of the start of the Ryder Cup. And after back-and-forth drama surrounding LIV dominated the golf world for the better part of two years, McIlroy was asked just one question about LIV players’ absences from Team Europe.

“I mean, it’s certainly a little strange not having them around,” McIlroy said. “But I think this week of all weeks, it’s going to hit home with them that, you know, they are not here, and I think they are going to miss being here more than we’re missing them.

“And I’m not saying that that’s like — it’s just more I think this week is a realization that the decision that they made has led to not being a part of this week, and that’s tough. The landscape in golf is ever-changing and more dynamic, and we’ll see what happens and whether they will be part of it in the future.

“I always thought leading up to this week is when it’s going to hit home that they are not going to be here.”

LIV members were not considered for Team Europe’s 12 spots, and Swede Henrik Stenson was stripped of his captaincy when he joined the Saudi-funded league.

Only one LIV golfer, five-time major champion Brooks Koepka, made the U.S. Team.

The 2023 Ryder Cup could represent a changing of the guard for Team Europe. For the first time since 1995, the roster does not include at least one of the following: Spain’s Garcia, Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell or Englishmen Poulter or Lee Westwood. Garcia is the winningest player in Ryder Cup history and Poulter also is known as a match-play specialist.

McDowell said this week he has no hard feelings and is rooting for Europe to win back the Cup.

“I love the Ryder Cup,” McDowell told Golf Digest. “It is special to me. And it always will be. I’m very much trying to put the small bit of bitterness I feel to the side. It’s not bitterness towards anyone. It’s bitterness that I am not part of the ecosystem. But I’m trying not to let that get in the way of what my true feelings are.”

As for McIlroy, he will compete in his seventh Ryder Cup, 14 years after rankling some golf fans by saying it was an exhibition he did not have strong feelings about winning.

“I think in 2009, I was just so focused on myself and trying to get my career off the ground that I felt like I had sort of bigger and better things to achieve for my individual goals and stuff like that that I just didn’t put any emphasis on making a Ryder Cup Team until you make one, and then you never want to be off one again,” McIlroy said.

“I think that’s sort of the crux of it. So I love being a part of this team. My most enjoyable moments in my career have been being a part of European Ryder Cup teams. I’m still very, very proud and probably proudest of the things I’ve done as an individual, but nothing — nothing beats this week.”

–Field Level Media

PGA News: Justin Rose touts ‘open-door policy’ as Europe’s most veteran player

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Father Time has not caught up to Justin Rose just yet.

The Englishman may say he wishes he were 10 years younger, but he’s still spry enough to win on the PGA Tour, as he did in February at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Rose’s world ranking (No. 37) is smaller than his age (43), and at the Ryder Cup this week at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club near Rome, he’s the oldest player on either team.

Rose is filling an elder statesman’s role for Team Europe vacated by the absence of countrymen Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood, Spain’s Sergio Garcia and Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell, none of whom were considered for the Ryder Cup after they defected to LIV Golf.

Those players are largely responsible for helping Europe win seven of the past 10 Ryder Cups, including a home winning streak that dates back to 1997.

“I think that when you look at like in our team room … (at) people that are still connected to the European Team, and I would say invested in the European Team, there’s still a lot of winning culture around what we do,” Rose said Wednesday, pointing to captain Luke Donald of England, vice captain Thomas Bjorn of Denmark and others.

“So obviously in life and in business and everything, there’s obviously transition phases where you need to look to new leaders, and what would be great is if you can kind of slip through that period of transition unaffected, and you know, you start to look to the next generation obviously to come through and to start to kind of have that winning culture.”

Despite being well into his teens when teammates such as Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland and Jon Rahm of Spain were born, Rose said he feels “like one of the boys and one of the team members” this year. He’s also marveled at the ability of Europe’s four rookies: Robert MacIntyre (Scotland), Sepp Straka (Austria), Nicolai Hojgaard (Denmark) and Ludvig Aberg (Sweden).

“I think my job as one of the experienced players on the team is to have an open-door policy,” Rose said. “If I just make them feel comfortable enough that they want to ask a question, let’s hear it and I’ll do my best to give some type of perspective. But I think until that point just let them roll, and I think that’s what they bring to the team, and that’s why they are a very important aspect to the team, and I think this team has a beautiful blend to it because of that.”

Straka was asked Tuesday what advice he’s asked of Rose or McIlroy this week.

“Yeah, a typical question like ‘What do you on the first tee box when you can’t feel your arms?’ kind of thing,” he cracked.

Rose will play in his sixth Ryder Cup, just one fewer than McIlroy’s seven, and he has an overall record of 13-8-2, including 7-2-1 in foursomes play. But he didn’t make the cut for the 2021 Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin, leaving him missing the competition and his teammates.

“I think the emotions are when you do miss a team, it’s an opportunity to look inward and go, ‘OK, well, clearly I wasn’t valued enough or I wasn’t playing well enough, and I don’t like that feeling, so I need to do something about that,'” Rose said. “You know, not looking at I should have been picked or they did me wrong. It’s, ‘OK, well, you’ve got to start right here,’ you know what I mean. Take things in my own hands. That was very much my mindset coming into this one.

“But the job starts Friday. Job’s not done by making the team.”

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: NC State edges Virginia on last-second field goal


Brayden Narveson kicked a game-winning field goal from 33 yards out on the final play as North Carolina State pulled out a 24-21 victory against Virginia in the Atlantic Coast Conference opener for both teams on Friday in Charlottesville, Va.

Wolfpack quarterback Brennan Armstrong threw for two touchdowns against his former team.

Kevin Concepcion caught both scoring passes from Armstrong, who was a Virginia starter the past three seasons. The graduate-student QB completed 15 of 30 passes for 180 yards with one interception for NC State (3-1, 1-0 ACC).

Virginia quarterback Anthony Colandrea’s second touchdown pass to Malik Washington went for 3 yards with 36 seconds to play in regulation, and then he tossed a tying two-point conversion pass to Malachi Fields.

The tying drive for Virginia (0-4, 0-1) covered 66 yards in 11 plays and took 2:53. An unsportsmanlike-conduct penalty on the Cavaliers assessed on the kickoff allowed NC State to move 33 yards in five plays to set up the winning field goal.

The Wolfpack’s defense came up with interceptions on back-to-back Virginia possessions in the fourth quarter to cling to the lead. The second of those pickoffs came after the Cavaliers reached the NC State 26-yard line.

After scoring its last touchdown, NC State punted on its next three possessions to give the Cavaliers chances.

Colandrea finished 18-for-30 for 271 yards.

Virginia got field goals from 21 and 36 yards from Will Bettridge in the third quarter to close within 14-13.

Sean Brown and Aydan White made the interceptions for NC State’s defense. Brown grabbed his pick after teammate Bishop Fitzgerald batted the ball away from the intended receiver. White’s snatch came at the 1-yard line.

Concepcion racked up 116 receiving yards on six catches. His second touchdown play came with 11 seconds remaining in the third quarter as he cut through Virginia’s defense for the final 27 yards of the 48-yard play.

NC State’s rushing attack was held to 139 yards in its first game since running back Jordan Houston opted to leave the program.

Armstrong threw to Concepcion for a 12-yard touchdown for the game’s first points on the first play of the second quarter.

Virginia got even on its next possession with Colandrea throwing 8 yards to Washington.

The Wolfpack went back ahead when Delbert Mimms III ran in from 1 yard out with 28 seconds to play in the first half.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Wisconsin ground game piles up 4 TDs in rout of Purdue


Tanner Mordecai and Braelon Allen rushed for two touchdowns apiece as Wisconsin pulled away for a 38-17 win over Purdue in a Big Ten Conference opener for both teams on Friday in West Lafayette, Ind.

Mordecai completed 17 of 27 passes for 174 yards and one interception in addition to gaining 58 yards on the ground for Wisconsin (3-1, 1-0 Big Ten). Allen finished with 16 carries for 116 yards.

Hudson Card completed 21 of 38 passes for 202 yards but threw two interceptions for Purdue (1-3, 0-1). Card and Tyrone Tracy Jr. scored one rushing touchdown apiece for the Boilermakers.

Wisconsin jumped to a 14-3 lead in the first quarter and never looked back.

The Badgers struck first on a 14-yard quarterback keeper by Mordecai early in the first quarter.

Mordecai scored again, this time on a dive to the front left pylon, to make it 14-0 with 3:26 to go in the first quarter. The 6-yard run was the senior’s eighth career rushing touchdown.

Purdue pulled within 14-3 in the final minute of the first quarter on a 34-yard field goal by redshirt freshman Julio Macias.

Wisconsin carried a 21-3 lead into the half thanks to a 14-yard rushing touchdown by Allen.

On the first possession of the second half, Nathanial Vakos connected on a 38-yard field goal to increase the Badgers’ lead to 24-3.

The Boilermakers cut the deficit to 24-10 on Tracy’s 19-yard rushing touchdown with 8:42 left in the third quarter. Tracy cut toward the right sideline and evaded a defender for the score.

Vakos kicked another field goal, this time from 22 yards, to make it 27-10 with 3:54 to go in the third quarter.

Card helped Purdue pull within 27-17 on a 6-yard rushing touchdown as time expired in the third quarter.

Vakos drilled a 48-yard field goal to make it 30-17 with 12:52 to go.

Wisconsin capped the scoring on Allen’s 4-yard rushing touchdown with 3:35 remaining. Mordecai caught a pass from Will Pauling on a trick play for a two-point conversion.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Notre Dame vs Ohio State: Preview, Prop Pick & Prediction


Notre Dame quarterback Sam Hartman, a transfer from Wake Forest, could very well be the final piece to a College Football Playoff puzzle for the Irish.

The patchwork approach of the past few years failed to reach the title-contending bar, but things are rolling in South Bend since Hartman arrived.

A huge early-season test awaits Notre Dame, which hosts perennial power Ohio State for the college football marquee game of the week.

Both schools have found little resistance over the season’s first few weeks. The Irish have scored at least 41 points in their four victories while the Buckeyes have allowed a total of only 20 points in their three mismatches against Indiana, Youngstown State and Western Kentucky.

We have news, trends and quotes — along with our spread pick and a prop pick for good measure.

–Kickoff: 7:30 p.m. ET
–Television: NBC
–Location: Notre Dame Stadium, Notre Dame, Ind.
–Point Spread, Total: Ohio State -3, Total 55.5

QUICK PICK
Buckeyes coach Ryan Day did not settle on his QB1, junior Kyle McCord, until after Ohio State’s second game this season, and it wasn’t a particularly ringing endorsement.

Day underscored the importance of McCord being a solid game manager. McCord will have to make a few plays to find success Saturday night. It should help Ohio State that the Buckeyes have the best playmaker on the field, receiver Marvin Harrison Jr.

Harrison’s ability to run precise routes and draw multiple defenders could yield wide-open looks for McCord and his secondary targets.

The decisive matchup is on the other side of the ball: Hartman and the Fighting Irish offense against the Buckeyes’ powerhouse defense.

Ohio State provided a convincing audition by stifling the active FBS career leader in passing yards, Western Kentucky’s Austin Reed, holding him to 207 yards with one TD and one interception.

The opening number posted before the season had Ohio State by a touchdown, but Hartman and the Irish have opened the eyes of the betting public and this matchup figures to be worthy of wide viewership and plenty of popcorn.

Ohio State is 2-1 against the spread, having covered as a 29.5-point favorite last Saturday against Western Kentucky in a 63-10 rout.
Notre Dame is 3-1 against the spread, narrowly failing to cover as 34.5-point favorites in a 41-17 win over Central Michigan.

Ohio State hosted Notre Dame in last season’s opener, winning 21-10 as 17-point favorites.

With the Buckeyes a field-goal choice this week, Notre Dame had 66 percent of spread bets according to VegasInsider.

The bet here is that Ohio State contains the Notre Dame offense just enough to capitalize on an advantage in the trenches with Harrison creating offensive opportunities.

The pick: Ohio State 30, Notre Dame 24

THE NEWS
Sam Hartman, with touchdown throws of 76 and 75 yards against Central Michigan last Saturday, is tied for seventh with former Oklahoma quarterback Landry Jones on the FBS all-time list with 123 touchdown passes.

After five seasons at Wake Forest, Hartman faces a critical test in his 50th career start.

“It’s a clash of two football greats that, growing up, you think about and look at those games of Ohio State and all the other big ones that you’d be like, ‘That would be a cool game to play in,'” Hartman said.

“It’s exciting. It is a big game. To shy away from that is foolish, but like every week, it’s about us executing at the highest level.”

Ohio State leads the series 5-2 with five consecutive wins since 1995. Notre Dame’s last win was 7-2 in South Bend in 1936. The Buckeyes won 21-10 in Columbus last season.

THEY SAID IT
“I think it’s a factor. Kyle’s been around. He hasn’t played a whole bunch of football, but he has been around. He’s seen it. … I think experience does play a part of it. It’s not the No. 1 thing overall. There’s a lot of other things that come with it, but I do think it’s significant.”

— Ohio State coach Ryan Day on the experience disparity at the respective starting QB positions.

PROP PICK

While the Irish should benefit from an early adrenaline boost at home, the Buckeyes defense won’t let things get out of hand. We’ll boost the total to 60.5 and bet the under, combined with an Ohio State outright victory.

The prop: Ohio State to win, parlayed with the under 60.5 (+165 at BetMGM).

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Report: Sun Devils to start QB Drew Pyne vs. No. 5 USC


Injury-depleted Arizona State will start Notre Dame transfer Drew Pyne at quarterback Saturday against No. 5 Southern California, ESPN reported Friday.

Jaden Rashada started the first two games and Trenton Bourguet was under center last week for the Sun Devils (1-2, 0-0 Pac-12), but both have been ruled out against the Trojans (3-0, 1-0) due to injuries.

Pyne, slowed by a hamstring injury in camp, came on in relief in last Saturday’s 29-0 home loss to Fresno State and completed 5 of 13 passes for 52 yards with two interceptions in his ASU debut.

Pyne had to leave that game with an injury and was replaced by true freshman walk-on Jacob Conover.

Pyne completed 64.6 percent of his passes for 2,021 yards with 22 touchdowns and six interceptions in 11 games last season with the Fighting Irish.

He completed 23 of 26 passes for 318 yards with three touchdowns and one interception in Notre Dame’s 37-28 loss at USC on Nov. 26, 2022.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: UCF brings top offense into Big 12 debut with Kansas State


Coming off its first loss of the season on a 61-yard field goal on the final play, Kansas State returns home Saturday to Manhattan, Kan., for its Big 12 opener against conference newcomer UCF.

The Wildcats (2-1) are still stinging from the defeat at Missouri, which dropped them from 15th in the AP Top 25 poll to third among unranked teams.

“It’s been a tough couple of days around here,” Kansas State coach Chris Klieman said. “The message to the guys is, ‘We can’t let Missouri beat us twice.'”

Especially against UCF (3-0), which will bring plenty of offensive firepower. The Knights compiled 600 yards of total offense while limiting Villanova to just 228 yards, 190 of those in the second half, in a 48-14 victory in Orlando, Fla.

Timmy McClain threw for 321 yards on 20-for-28 accuracy, with a pair of touchdowns. Kobe Hudson set a career high with 147 yards on six catches, a week after his previous best yardage (134) at Boise State.

UCF leads the nation in total offense at 617.7 yards per game. Defensively, the Knights are one of just 10 teams from the Power 5 and one of two in the Big 12 to hold opponents to 16 points or fewer in every game this season.

“Offensively, I thought we did some good things,” UCF coach Gus Malzahn said. “It was really good for Timmy to be out there. He hadn’t started a game in two years, and I thought he was really good. There were a couple things early I know he’d like to have back, but there’s nothing like experiencing it.

“I’m really happy with our team, the way they came out and responded and put these guys away early. Now it’s time for the real season with the Big 12.”

No matter who his team is facing, Klieman said the message is fairly simple.

“We have to come up with a good game plan, no matter who is lining up at quarterback, running back or linebacker,” he said. “The show goes on. We’ll have to continue to battle the adversity we’re facing.”

Among the Wildcats’ concerns is the health of starting quarterback Will Howard, who was clearly hobbled in the second half against Missouri. He didn’t practice Monday, was limited on Tuesday, and will be listed as questionable for Saturday’s game.

Running back Treshaun Ward is doubtful with an undisclosed injury, and Kansas State will be without sixth-year linebacker Daniel Green, who was lost for the season with a pectoral injury.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: After playing No. 1 team close, South Carolina awaits Mississippi St.


When Mississippi State lines up against South Carolina for the first time in seven years Saturday night in Columbia, S.C., each will be trying to rebound from losses, albeit different degrees of defeats.

Under new coach Zach Arnett, who took over for the late Mike Leach, the Bulldogs (2-1) were quickly an afterthought in their Southeastern Conference opener last week as they hosted then-No. 14 LSU. It ended in a 41-14 rout.

Most confounding after three games is the plight of quarterback Will Rogers, who has 11,181 passing yards and 87 touchdowns in a spectacular 38-game career in Starkville.

Through his first three games of 2021 and 2022, the Brandon, Miss., native threw for a combined 2,060 yards and 18 scores.

The senior has just 492 yards with five touchdowns and a 59.5 completion percentage in 2023.

“I know he missed some throws that he needs to be able to complete if they’re there,” Arnett said. “Obviously, he was not getting a whole lot of help in protection (against LSU). We did not hold up to their pass-rush very well.

“It’s not very fun playing quarterback when you’ve got a pocket collapsing on you. Maybe that affected him a little bit from a mental standpoint.”

The Gamecocks (1-2) have to get over the mental anguish of letting an 11-point halftime lead over No. 1 Georgia get away in a 24-14 road loss to start their SEC season.

Looking more like the defending two-time national champion in the second half, Georgia held quarterback Spencer Rattler to 6 of 24 passing for 104 yards.

Rattler, who was intercepted twice, finished at 22 of 42 for 256 yards with a touchdown pass to Antwane Wells Jr., and led the Gamecocks with 35 yards rushing on a soggy day when they managed just 53 on 16 carries.

In 2022, South Carolina started 1-2 and went on to win seven of its next 10 games.

“We know we have a good football team,” Gamecocks coach Shane Beamer said. “We’ve been here, unfortunately, 1-2. But there are no moral victories. No guys are patting themselves on the back because we played Georgia to a 10-point game.

“There’s a lot of disappointment because we gave ourselves an opportunity to win the game and didn’t get it done.”

South Carolina owns a 9-7 advantage in the series, winning seven of the past eight meetings.

–Field Level Media

NCAAF News: Minnesota, Northwestern rush to erase losses


Minnesota focused this week on shaking its first loss of the season.

The Golden Gophers visit Northwestern in a Big Ten Conference meeting on Saturday evening in Evanston, Ill.

The Golden Gophers (2-1, 1-0 Big Ten) are coming off a 31-13 loss on the road against then-No. 20 North Carolina last week. Minnesota pulled within 21-13 in the third quarter but surrendered the final 10 points of the game.

Northwestern (1-2, 0-1) is also regrouping. The Wildcats’ 38-14 road loss against Duke last week represent the most points allowed by the team this season.

“It’s OK for it to sting,” Northwestern interim coach David Braun said. “We’re going to play a much better brand of football Saturday.”

Minnesota head coach P.J. Fleck is hoping the same is true of his team.

Fleck expressed confidence in his players after watching film of the loss against North Carolina. He said they were in position to succeed and needed to execute better, particularly when it came to curbing big plays.

“We’re that close,” Fleck said, holding his thumb and index finger close together. “I’m not saying it’s not correctable, because it is. But this is part of the journey and the process of playing some young players.”

It has been an up-and-down start to the season for Minnesota quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis, who has completed 51.1 percent of his passes for 446 yards, one touchdown and three interceptions. He also has rushed for 41 yards and a touchdown.

Golden Gophers running back Darius Taylor has led the way on offense with 334 rushing yards and a pair of touchdowns.

Northwestern is led by quarterback Ben Bryant, who has completed 55.2 percent of his passes for 408 yards, two touchdowns and three picks. He also has one rushing touchdown.

Cam Porter leads Wildcats with 147 rushing yards. He is averaging 4.5 yards per carry.

–Field Level Media