Connect with us

Sports

Viktor Hovland Wins FedEx Cup With The Best 2 Weeks Of His Career

Published

on

hovland

ATLANTA, Ga. – Viktor Hovland knew he was playing the best golf of his life. With a six-shot lead in the Tour Championship on Sunday, he reasoned that a steady diet of fairways and greens, with lots of pars, would be the most certain path to winning the FedEx Cup.

Xander Schauffele forced him to alter his ideas.

The 25-year-old Norwegian sensation then outperformed himself.

Hovland didn’t back down from Schauffele’s unrelenting challenge, matching birdies from start to finish at East Lake until he closed off the best two weeks of his career with his biggest prize — a FedEx Cup title and the $18 million bonus.

He closed with a 7-under 63, the lowest winning score in Tour Championship history, and won by five strokes over Schauffele.

“The game plan was to try to play as boring as possible — to play it like Tiger back in the day when he would post a 69 or 70 in a major championship and walk away with the victory,” Hovland explained.

hovland

Viktor Hovland knew he was playing the best golf of his life.

This was far from boring golf, with Hovland shooting 63 and Schauffele shooting 62. On the back nine, a six-shot advantage was reduced to three shots when Hovland hammered in a 25-foot par putt on the 14th hole, making an already steep hill impossible for Schauffele to ascend.

“What he was doing today was very special,” remarked Hovland. “It made this day a lot more stressful than it should have been.”

So ended a season in which Hovland won the Memorial for the first time in the United States, had a multiple-win season, and then capped it off with two weeks of superb golf in which he won the BMW Championship at Olympia Fields and the Tour Championship at 36-under par.

“It’s pretty surreal to be standing here right now,” Hovland said as he accepted the FedEx Cup trophy in silver. “I basically played my best golf in the last two weeks, and it couldn’t have happened at a better time.”

Schauffele forced him to work for the $18 million by shooting at flags from the opening hole. He was within three shots of the lead with seven holes to go and had momentum on his side. Then, on the 14th hole, Hovland ended the suspense with a 25-foot par putt, and on the 16th, he put Schauffele away with a 10-foot birdie putt.

Schauffele and Hovland put up a fantastic performance. They achieved the top scores of the day despite playing in the last group on a day that was delayed by over two hours due to thunderstorms. The next highest score was 65 by players with little chance of winning.

“I thought 62 would have let me get close to him,” said Schauffele. “He played incredibly well.” He made crucial putts and played like a champion.”

Hovland entered the Tour Championship with the No. 2 seed, which meant he began the tournament at 8-under par. Hovland finished with a 19-under 261 — the same total as Schauffele, who began the event as the No. 15 seed at 3 under.

It was the second time in four years that no one scored higher than Schauffele, and he departed Atlanta empty-handed. Such is the essence of the FedEx Cup finals and the significance of a great season and a strong showing in the two postseason events preceding the Tour Championship.

hovland

Viktor Hovland knew he was playing the best golf of his life.

“I’ll hold my head up high,” Schauffele added. “It was the most fun I’d had losing in a long time.” It’s a strange sensation. I shot 62. I came up short by five points. Hovi deserves nothing but praise. He played incredibly well in the previous few weeks to get himself into this situation and to put the icing on the cake for himself and his club.”

Schauffele did everything in his power. He was six strokes back as he departed East Lake on Saturday evening, knowing his only chance was to put as much pressure on Hovland as he could during the first nine holes.

Schauffele made 30 shots. After a two-hour delay caused by thunderstorms that significantly softened the East Lake turf, Hovland nearly matched him birdie for birdie, carding a 31 that included a crucial 15-foot par save on No. 2.

Despite his California cool, Schauffele was eager for the fight regardless of the odds.

He birdied the par-3 11th hole from 18 feet and then the 12th from 12 feet, trimming the advantage to three strokes with seven holes to play. Given Schauffele’s brilliantly playing and Hovland’s three missed birdie opportunities from 10 feet or closer on the back nine, the margin felt even narrower.

The crucial putt came on the 14th hole, East Lake’s most difficult. Hovland came up around 100 feet short of the green, about 100 feet from the flag, and his pitch could have been better, stopping just inside 25 feet of the hole.

hovland

Viktor Hovland knew he was playing the best golf of his life.

He poured it into his heart and fist-pumped harder than he had all day. The deciding shot was another perfect short iron to 10 feet on the 16th for birdie. The engraver then began work on the silver FedEx Cup trophy.

“It was huge for momentum when that putt went in.” “Two shots with four holes to play is not the same as three shots, especially with 15 holes to go,” Hovland added, alluding to the par-3 to a peninsula green. “After that, I just felt really relaxed.”

He finished with three consecutive birdies that were important for the margin of victory.

Now, it’s up to his peers to assess his season. The PGA Tour player of the year was expected to be a two-man contest between Masters champion Jon Rahm and his four wins and Scottie Scheffler, who had two wins and the No. 1 position due to his incredible consistency.

Hovland finished the season with victories at the Memorial and two FedEx Cup playoff tournaments, including the most important.

Wyndham Clark, the US Open champion, won the B-Flight, finishing with a 65 to finish third, 11 strokes back. That equated to a $5 million incentive. Rory McIlroy finished fourth and earned $4 million, while Patrick Cantlay (66) finished alone in fifth and earned $3 million.

The next time Hovland and Schauffele meet will be for no monetary reward — the Ryder Cup in Rome in a month.

SOURCE – (AP)

Kiara Grace is a staff writer at VORNews, a reputable online publication. Her writing focuses on technology trends, particularly in the realm of consumer electronics and software. With a keen eye for detail and a knack for breaking down complex topics, Kiara delivers insightful analyses that resonate with tech enthusiasts and casual readers alike. Her articles strike a balance between in-depth coverage and accessibility, making them a go-to resource for anyone seeking to stay informed about the latest innovations shaping our digital world.

Continue Reading

Celebrity

Scottie Scheffler Arrested Outside PGA Championship, Then Returns And Climbs Leaderboard

Published

on

scheffler
AP News - VOR News Image

Darlington said police pulled Scheffler out of the car, pushed him up against the car and immediately placed him in handcuffs.

“Scheffler was then walked over to the police car, placed in the back, in handcuffs, very stunned about what was happening, looked toward me as he was in those handcuffs and said, ‘Please help me,’” Darlington said. “He very clearly did not know what was happening in the situation. It moved very quickly, very rapidly, very aggressively.”

Scheffler was released by police and returned to the course at 9:12 a.m. Around 9:30 a.m., he arrived at the practice area to the cheers of fans; one yelled “Free Scottie!” and more followed later wearing “Free Scottie” T-shirts.

Scheffler seemed normal, relaxed, sharing a few laughs on the driving range.

“I was never angry. I was just in shock,” Scheffler said. “I was shaking the whole time. I was shaking for like an hour. It was definitely a new feeling for me.”

scheffler

AP – VOR News Image

Scottie Scheffler Arrested Outside PGA Championship, Then Returns And Climbs Leaderboard

He could see from a TV in the jail that tee times were pushed back 1 hour20 minutes because of the traffic situation, and realized when an officer knocked on the door and said, “Let’s go,” that he had a chance to play.

He made birdie on his first hole of the day after sticking his approach shot to 3 feet.

Darlington, the ESPN reporter, said police were initially unsure who Scheffler was. He said an officer asked him to leave, and when he identified himself as being with the media, he was told, “There’s nothing you can do. He’s going to jail.”

Darlington said another police officer later approached with a notepad and asked if he knew the name of the person they put in handcuffs.

Scheffler said he never told police who he was except to say, “I’m sorry, I’m just trying to get to my tee time.”

scheffler

AP – VOR News Image

Scottie Scheffler Arrested Outside PGA Championship, Then Returns And Climbs Leaderboard

Louisville police have attracted negative national attention in recent years after the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor in 2020 and a federal investigation into its policing practices.

A Department of Justice report released last year said Louisville officers use excessive force and conduct searches based on invalid warrants. The report said Black motorists in Louisville were more likely to be searched during traffic stops, and officers used neck restraints, police dogs and Tasers against people who posed no imminent threat.

Taylor, a 26-year-old Black woman, was shot by officers who had come to her apartment with a warrant that federal officials later said was falsified.

PGA of America, which runs the PGA Championship, offered sympathies for Mills’ family and said, “As it relates to the incident involving Scottie Scheffler, we are fully cooperating as local authorities review what took place.”

scheffler

AP – VOR News Image

Scottie Scheffler Arrested Outside PGA Championship, Then Returns And Climbs Leaderboard

Scheffler has won four of his last five tournaments, including his second Masters title. He has been home in Dallas the last three weeks, waiting for the birth of his first child, a son born May 8.

Scheffler is trying to become only the fifth player since 1960 to win the first two majors of the year.

SOURCE – (AP)

Continue Reading

Sports

NASCAR planning in-season tournament in 2025, with opening race in Atlanta

Published

on

nascar
AP News - VOR News Image

ATLANTA  Following the NBA’s lead, the NASCAR Cup Series plans a five-race, bracket-style tournament in the middle of the 2025 season, beginning with a night race at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

The competition, which features a $1 million reward for the winner, is part of a new media rights agreement that includes TNT.

The Atlanta-based cable network will air all five races in the tournament, beginning with a 400-mile race in its home market on June 28, 2025.

“Next year, having $1 million on the line, that’s for sure going to be a goal before the season starts and something that you and your team strategize around,” Larson said. “I am looking forward to it. The summer months get boring. It’s not dull, although it does become repetitive. “You lose some excitement.”

nascar

AP – VOR News Image

NASCAR planning in-season tournament in 2025, with opening race in Atlanta

Atlanta will host the inaugural tournament event, which has produced some of NASCAR’s most dramatic races since the circuit was reconfigured with more banking. The rest of the 36-race program will be released later.

Brandon Hutchison, president and general manager of the Atlanta track, stated that the venue was ready to offer racing after dark after being slated for two-day events this season. Receiving the first event of the new in-season tournament was a bonus.

“We have heard our fans loud and clear,” Hutchison stated. “We understand they wanted the night race back. We were overjoyed to even be able to consider giving it to them. Then, with TNT as a hometown broadcast partner, a home track, and the first season of the in-season bracket tournament in NASCAR history, we believe that June 28, 2025, will be a very exciting moment to be at Atlanta Motor Speedway.”

This season, the NBA introduced a competition that is based on in-season tournaments held by soccer leagues all over the world. The Los Angeles Lakers won the first event in December, defeating Indiana in a championship game hosted in Las Vegas.

nascar

AP – VOR News Image

NASCAR planning in-season tournament in 2025, with opening race in Atlanta

The NASCAR tournament will include the top 32 drivers from three seeding races, which will be staged soon before the Atlanta event and aired on Amazon Prime.

The drivers will be paired in head-to-head contests based on seeding, with the victors moving on to the next round in a bracket-style similar to the NCAA basketball championships.

The number of competitors will be decreased to 16 for Race 2, followed by the quarterfinals in Race 3, the semifinals in Race 4, and the final in Race 5.

“There has never been a better time to be a motorsports fan, and this new, first-ever in-season tournament will add a new competitive dynamic to NASCAR’s summer race weekends,” said Craig Barry, executive vice president and chief content officer of TNT Sports.

Hutchison stated that the Atlanta track will continue to hold two races in 2025; however, the full calendar is still pending.

This season, the 1.54-mile oval in suburban Hampton hosted the second points race of the year on Feb. 25 — a week after the Daytona 500 — with Daniel Suarez edging Ryan Blaney and Kyle Busch in a three-way photo finish.

The NASCAR playoffs will begin with Atlanta’s second race in 2024 on September 8. Next year, the race will be moved to the in-season tournament rather than the playoffs.

nascar

AP – VOR news Image

NASCAR planning in-season tournament in 2025, with opening race in Atlanta

Denny Hamlin described the competition as “such a win for our sport and drivers” in a post on X, the social media platform that replaced Twitter. He playfully continued, “I’ll collect my $1 million royalty next season.”

Larson believes the tournament will be a much-needed pick-me-up during the summer slump.

“I think this bracket, or whatever you want to call it, is going to add a lot of excitement and more storylines,” he stated. “So I love it.”

SOURCE – (AP)

Continue Reading

Sports

Simone Biles Is Stepping Into The Olympic Spotlight Again. She Is Better Prepared For The Pressure

Published

on

biles
AP News - VOR News Image

Spring, Texas – Simone Biles isn’t “cured.” Let’s start there.

A cure indicates finality. The ultimate and final victory.

If the gymnastics superstar had learned anything in the three years since those odd, unsure days in Tokyo when she prioritized her mental health and personal safety over her chase of additional Olympic gold, it is that the battle to defend oneself never truly ends. Only partially won.

It’s a lesson she learned in front of the entire world in Japan when Biles arrived as the face of the Summer Games only to withdraw from many competitions, including the team final because her body just stopped doing what her brain told it to do.

At that moment, Biles blamed “the twisties.” On the surface, she was correct. However, they emerged from something deeper and more difficult to define.

“She can’t even explain it (and) the doctors she sees probably can’t either,” said Laurent Landi, who has been coaching Biles with his wife Cecile since 2017. “It was a traumatic event that occurred at a horrible moment for her, and she was unable to deal with it. It’s as simple as this. She couldn’t function. “She couldn’t be a gymnast at the time.”

She can now, but the journey to this point — Biles will compete for the first time in 2024 at this weekend’s U.S. Classic — has been rough. It has taken a new perspective, at times a literal mother’s touch, and ongoing attention to work on herself, which she now realizes has no expiration date.

Biles tried to take all of the extra attention before Tokyo in stride. She portrayed a sense of normalcy. It was only a facade. Her pent-up emotions and aggressions eventually drove her to “crack.”

Biles was in therapy before Tokyo but had interrupted treatment before traveling abroad. With millions watching, she went off the floor at the Ariake Gymnastics Center after a misplaced vault in the women’s team final and contacted her family, who had stayed from home in Texas because of COVID-19 restrictions imposed for the games.

biles

AP – VOR News Image

Simone Biles Is Stepping Into The Olympic Spotlight Again. She Is Better Prepared For The Pressure

Nellie Biles answered the phone and heard her daughter exclaim through tears, “Mom, I really cannot do this.” “I’m lost; I can’t do this.”

So she didn’t. Biles withdrew from a few finals before returning to win bronze on the balance beam, a medal she considers one of the most meaningful of her career. As terrible and frightening as the experience was, it was necessary because it taught Biles that mental health is something she cannot ignore.

“I couldn’t run away from it, you know,” Biles told The Associated Press. “I just acknowledged it and stated, ‘Hey, this is what I’m going through. This is the assistance that I am going to receive.”

Help has driven Biles back to the top of her sport, with another Olympics on the horizon. Help manifests itself in various ways and often from unexpected locations

Biles is confident she is in a better place this time, thanks partly to weekly Thursday meetings with her therapist, which have become an immovable part of her schedule.

Biles went into a practically empty arena last fall in Antwerp, Belgium, for podium training before the world championships, her first team competition since Tokyo. Something about the scene triggered, as Nellie Biles describes it, “a PTSD moment.” Biles dashed off the floor to gather herself after being triggered by an unexpected event.

There were more tears. Increased anxiety. More calls. More reassurance.

“She almost didn’t go back out there,” Nellie Biles explained.

After being “a little bit hesitant,” Biles pushed through, thanks in part to the decision to meet with her therapist, which she rarely did close to competitions before commencing practice for the U.S. Classic in Chicago last summer

The US women were given the afternoon off, and some went to a chocolate factory. Biles opted to remain behind and FaceTime her therapist instead.

“I know how important it is for me to stay present, mindful and not be too anxious,” she stated. “So yes, we will keep that up.”

There were other home comforts in Belgium. Specifically, her family.

Every day, Nellie Biles went to Simone’s hotel room and braided her daughter’s hair for 30-45 minutes, which was a first.

“My daughter is (27) and I know (she) can braid her hair,” Nellie Biles remarked. “But it’s just that touch and closeness. It is that connectedness. It was just what she needed, and it worked.

The meet concluded in the same way that many others had during Biles’ decade-long reign at the top: with a fistful of medals packed in her suitcase for the return flight home, setting the stage for a potentially momentous Olympic year.

Before Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and Tokyo in 2021, the idea of Olympic history threatened to—and occasionally did—overtake her.

biles

AP – VOR News Image

Simone Biles Is Stepping Into The Olympic Spotlight Again. She Is Better Prepared For The Pressure

It does not anymore. Life has, thankfully, gotten in the way.

One year ago, Biles married Jonathan Owens, the current Chicago Bears safety. The two are constructing a home in the Houston suburbs that will be completed (hopefully) in late summer or early fall

In some ways, she resembles many other 20-something brides in Biles’ orbit. For example, former Olympic teammate MyKayla Skinner had a daughter last September. A part of Biles thinks, “That’s what I should be doing.”

Instead, she’s “still flipping out here,” still making her way to the Biles family’s gym, the World Champions Centre, and practicing with other Olympic hopefuls, many of whom are nearly a decade younger and grew up idolizing her.

Why does she keep putting herself through this? Well, that’s the most important issue of all.

“I think everything I’ve been through, I want to push the limits,” she stated. “I want to see how far I can get. I want to see what I’m still capable of so that when I retire from this sport, I can be fully satisfied with my career and say I gave it my best.”

She is well aware of what may happen this summer that the millions captivated by what happened in Tokyo — from the crowds who cheered her on to the social media haters who labeled her a quitter or worse — would tune in to see if she cracks again.

Those closest to Biles believe she is better prepared for whatever may arise

“She knows something like (Tokyo) can happen because it did happen,” Landi stated. “So it’s just like, ‘OK, I’m going to be careful, I’m going to follow the same protocol every time and then I’m going to avoid (the pitfalls)’ and that’s all you can do.”

Is it the last time? She will not say. That is too far ahead. She does not frequently use the phrases “Paris” or “Olympics” in her chats. This may appear to be purposeful, but it is not. It’s just something she does.

“It’s not like I think that ‘Olympics’ is a plague and I’m trying to avoid it or trying not to say it,” she stated. “I just think there are other things I have to get to before that.”

The U.S. Classic, which takes place this weekend in Connecticut, will feature 2020 Olympic champion Sunisa Lee and 2012 Olympic champion Gabby Douglas. The United States Championships are later this month, and the Olympic Trials start in late June.

biles

AP – VOR News Image

Simone Biles Is Stepping Into The Olympic Spotlight Again. She Is Better Prepared For The Pressure

One turn, routine, rotation, and encounter at a time. With all of her tools, including her therapist, at the ready.

“I feel very confident with where I’m at mentally and physically, that (Tokyo) is not going to happen again just because we have put in the work,” she stated.

There is also something greater at risk here: a message sent by Biles to others. It’s OK to not be OK. It is acceptable to make yourself vulnerable and to be open and truthful about the process, no matter how messy it becomes.

She says she’s lost track of how many people have told her, “Because of you, I’m getting the proper help that I deserve.”

It can be jarring in certain ways. She never intended to become the face of this movement, but it happened anyway.

If Biles retreats to Tokyo rather than face her troubles full on, those folks may lack the guts to ask for something they desperately need. That’s a blessing from the recent Olympics that far transcends any medal.

“As unfortunate as it (was) … it’s exciting because I know that by speaking out it’s helping other people,” Biles stated. “And that’s what I’ve always wanted to do, inside this sport and outside this sport.”

So, she’ll salute the judges on Saturday and return to the spotlight.

No, she has not been cured. She is better, though, even if she is still a work in progress, as are so many others who found the strength to say “me too” after witnessing the biggest star in the American Olympic movement open up about her troubles with so much at risk

This is the true lesson of Tokyo. It was vital, no matter how difficult it felt at the time.

“It’s good that it happened,” Biles stated. “Because I don’t think I would have got the proper help that I need (without it).”

SOURCE – (AP)

Continue Reading

Volunteering at Soi Dog

Download Our App

vornews app

Trade Gold

Trending