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TROON, Scotland —  said turning down an opportunity to captain next year’s U.S. Ryder Cup team was a difficult one, but one he had to make because of myriad other commitments.

a two-time Ryder Cup player, will when it faces the European team at the Bethpage Black Course in Farmingdale, New York, on Sept. 26-28, 2025.

Tiger Woods: Too many commitments to be Ryder Cup captain

“Well, the decision was very difficult for me to make,” Woods said Tuesday at Royal Troon Golf Club as he prepares for the Open Championship. “My time has been so loaded with the tour and everything and what we’re trying to accomplish. I’m on so many different subcommittees that it just takes so much time in the day, and I’m always on calls.”

Woods, 48, is vice chairman of the board of directors of PGA Tour Enterprises and a member of its transaction committee, which is handling day-to-day negotiations with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund about a potential multibillion-dollar investment. Woods is a player director on the PGA Tour’s policy board as well.

Woods and  also are the front men for TGL presented by SoFi, a tech-infused golf league that is scheduled to begin its inaugural season on Jan. 7.

“I just didn’t feel like I could do the job properly,” Woods said. “I couldn’t devote the time. I barely had enough time to do what I’m doing right now, and add in the TGL starts next year, as well as the Ryder Cup. You add all that together and then with our negotiations with the PIF, all that concurrently going on at exactly the same time, there’s only so many hours in the day.

“I just didn’t feel like I would be doing the captaincy or the players in Team USA justice if I was the captain with everything that I have to do.”

Woods said he hasn’t talked to Bradley about being one of his vice-captains.

“I think Keegan is going to be a great leader,” Woods said. “He’s very passionate about what he does. He’s very passionate about the event. I think that this is going to be probably a turnover year for us for the captaincies, whether it’s the captain itself and his vice captains. I think this is the natural progression, one we’ve been looking forward to, and I think it’s that year.”

Woods hasn’t ruled out becoming a Ryder Cup captain in the future. The 2027 event will be played at the Golf Course at Adare Manor in Ireland, which is owned by his friend, JP McManus.

It will be Woods’ first tournament at Royal Troon since he tied for ninth at the 2004 Open Championship. He missed the 2016 tournament while recovering from a back injury.

Woods will play the first two rounds with PGA Championship winner Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay. They’ll tee off in the first round at 9:37 a.m. ET Thursday; they start the second round at 4:25 a.m. ET Friday.

The 15-time major champion has finished only nine competitive rounds on tour this season. He was forced to pull out of February’s Genesis Invitational after one round because of illness. At the Masters, he set a tournament record with his 24th consecutive made cut and finished 60th. He missed the cut in his past two starts at the PGA Championship and U.S. Open.

“I’ve been training a lot better,” Woods said. “We’ve been busting it pretty hard in the gym, which has been good. Body’s been feeling better to be able to do such things, and it translates [to] being able to hit the ball better. Can’t quite stay out there during a practice session as long as I’d like, but I’m able to do some things that I haven’t done all year, which is nice.”

When Woods was asked how long he’ll keep playing, he said: “I’ll play as long as I can play, and I feel like I can still win the event.”

Earlier this week, Scottish golfer told The Times of London that it was time for Woods to retire from competitive golf.

“Aren’t we there? I’d have thought we were past there,” Montgomerie said. “There is a time for all sportsmen to say goodbye, but it’s very difficult to tell Tiger it’s time to go. Obviously, he still feels he can win. We are more realistic.”

Woods was asked about Montgomerie’s remarks Tuesday. Woods noted that as a three-time winner of the Claret Jug, he is eligible to play in The Open until he is 60. Montgomerie was a five-time runner-up in the majors but never won one of the big four.

“Well, as a past champion, I’m exempt until I’m 60,” Woods said. “Colin’s not. He’s not a past champion, so he’s not exempt. So, he doesn’t get the opportunity to make that decision. I do.”

Tiger Woods 14 over at Open, misses another major cut

TROON, Scotland — Tiger Woods‘ major championship season ended with another missed cut in the 152nd Open Championship on Friday, and golf fans won’t see him again on the PGA Tour this season.

Woods carded a 6-over 77 in the second round at Royal Troon Golf Club, leaving him with a 36-hole total of 14-over 156. The cut line was 6 over.

Woods has now missed the cut or withdrawn in six of his past seven majors.

It was Woods’ worst score to par after the first two rounds in 23 starts at The Open; his previous worst was 9 over after 36 holes at St. Andrews in Scotland in 2022.

It was his second-worst score to par after 36 holes in a major — he was 16 over in two rounds at the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay in University Place, Washington, during the only other stretch in his career when he has missed the cut in three straight majors.

The fifteen-time major champion was tied for 149th when he walked off the course, ahead of only four of the 153 other golfers competing in the last major of the season.

“Well, it wasn’t very good,” Woods said. “I made a double there at 2 right out of the hopper when I needed to go the other way. Just was fighting it pretty much all day. I never really hit it close enough to make birdies and consequently made a lot of bogeys.”

Woods, 48, said he won’t compete again until the Hero World Challenge, an unofficial event he hosts in the Bahamas, Dec. 5-8. He also plans to compete in the PNC Championship — another unofficial event — in Orlando, Florida, with his son, Charlie, Dec. 19-22. Woods was able to compete in each of the four majors this season but didn’t get the results he was hoping for. After setting a Masters record with his 24th consecutive made cut and finishing 60th at Augusta National Golf Club in April, he missed the cut at the PGA Championship, U.S. Open and The Open.

“I loved it,” Woods said. “I’ve always loved playing major championships. I just wish I was more physically sharp coming into the majors. Obviously, it tests you mentally, physically, emotionally, and I just wasn’t as sharp as I needed to be. I was hoping that I would find it somehow, just never did.”

Woods competed in just one other PGA Tour event this season, the Genesis Invitational outside Los Angeles in February, and he had to withdraw in the second round there because of illness.

“I’d like to have played more, but I just wanted to make sure that I was able to play the major championships this year,” Woods said. “I got a lot of time off to get better, to be better physically, which has been the case all year.

“I’ve gotten better, even though my results really haven’t shown it, but physically I’ve gotten better, which is great. I just need to keep progressing like that and then eventually start playing more competitively and start getting into kind of the competitive flow again.”

After posting an 8-over 79 in the first round, Woods wasn’t much better Friday. He made a double bogey on the par-4 second after missing a 4-foot bogey putt. After draining a 22-foot birdie on No. 6, Woods picked up another bogey when he missed a 5-footer on No. 9.

After making the turn at 3-over 39, Woods made three more bogeys on Nos. 12, 14 and 17. He missed a 3½-foot par putt on the par-3 14th.

Over two rounds, Woods was 7 over on the par-3s, which ranked next-to-last in the field. He lost 3.77 strokes to the field in putting and 4.19 on approach.

“Yeah, anytime being out with Tiger is great,” said  who played with Woods and PGA Championship winner  in the first two rounds. “He’s a great competitor and fun to be with. We had a great pairing, especially having my buddy Xander in the group. The three of us had fun.”

Cantlay, who was 1 under after carding a 3-under 68 on Friday, was asked whether he had any sympathy for Woods’ plight since returning to competition after serious injuries he suffered in a car wreck in February 2021.

“I wasn’t out on tour [in the] early 2000s,” Cantlay said. “I’m sure those guys don’t have any sympathy after going through what they went through. I’m always pulling for him, as I think the rest of the world of golf is.”

 

Venue: Royal Troon Dates: Thu 18-Sun 21 July

Coverage: Live radio and text commentary on BBC Sport website, with video clips each day. Daily highlights programme on BBC Two from 20:00 BST.

A jaded Tiger Woods arrived at Royal Troon after a sleepless flight, caused by the attempted assassination of former US president Donald Trump.

Woods watched coverage of the incident while on his flight from Florida on Saturday.

And rather than turning up fresh for a practice round on Sunday, before this week’s 152nd Open Championship at the Scottish links, the 48-year-old told BBC Sport: “I didn’t accomplish a lot because I wasn’t in the right frame of mind.

“It was a long night [because of the assassination attempt] and that’s all we watched the entire time on the way over here.

“I didn’t sleep at all on the flight, and then we just got on the golf course.

Woods hits back at Montgomerie

Tiger Woods missed sleep over Trump assassination attempt

Woods has the same mantra this week that he has adopted throughout his career. If he is turning up, he believes he has a chance of winning.

The statistics paint a different picture. He missed the cut at both this year’s US Open and US PGA Championship, and while he played all four rounds at the Masters, he finished in 60th – and last – place.

And since winning his 15th major at the 2019 Masters, which broke an 11-year drought in the game’s biggest events, he has either missed the cut, or withdrawn, in eight of the 13 championships he has entered. In the other five, he has not finished inside the top 20.

He has played just nine competitive rounds in 2024, yet he has still attracted the biggest crowds so far this week on the Ayrshire coast.

“I wish I had a little bit more under my belt but I’ve been battling some stuff physically,” he said.

“I want to save it for the majors. I don’t want to burn myself out pre-major and not be able to play.”

Woods, who has won all four majors at least three times, has lifetime exemptions for the US PGA Championship and Masters, and while he had to rely on an invite to play last month’s US Open, he can play The Open until he is 60.

It was a point he was keen to mention when asked about comments made by former European Tour great Colin Montgomerie last week.

The 61-year-old, who lived within a short walk of Royal Troon as a child and learned to play the game here, said: “There is a time for all sportsmen to say goodbye, but it’s very difficult to tell Tiger it’s time to go.

“Obviously, he still feels he can win. We are more realistic.”

In reply, Woods said: “Colin’s not a past champion, so he’s not exempt, so he doesn’t get the opportunity to make that decision. I do.

“So when I get to his age, I get to still make that decision, where he doesn’t.

“I’ll play as long as I can play and I feel like I can still win the event.”

Asked if that belief had wavered during his struggles with injury in recent years, Woods replied: “No.”

Montgomerie has since posted a response to Woods’ comments, writing on X: “If Golf writers want my thoughts on Tiger please ask me direct, rather than taking a quote from an interview out of context. Wishing Tiger an enjoyable and successful week.”

‘A simple hole with a severe price’

Woods played his first Open as a professional at Troon in 1997, just three months after winning the first of his major titles at the Masters.

Justin Leonard came from five shots back in the final round to claim the Claret Jug. Woods had started the day eight back and still had an outside chance of challenging when he walked on to the eighth tee.

The iconic 123-yard par-three ‘Postage Stamp’ is the shortest hole on the Open rota – and could be cut to 99 yards should the weather allow – but is arguably one of the most pivotal.

It was ruinous for Woods, who buried his ball in a bunker with his first shot and walked off with a triple-bogey six.

“It’s a simple hole but it doesn’t take much of a mistake to pay a severe price,” he said.

“No matter where you hit it outside of the green, it’s not going to be an easy shot to get it back on to the green.

“It doesn’t matter which bunker you’re in, all are difficult shots just to get the ball back in play and have a putt for par, more likely make a bogey, and get out of there.”

 

A man of Floyd Mayweather’s wealth and status never travels solo but the requirements of being part of his entourage are pretty mental.

To be part of Mayweather’s’ ‘The Money Team’ – one must go to extreme lengths to protect the 50-0 undefeated boxer and the upwards £250,000 sums of cash he regularly carries around with him when he’s out and about.

In fact, it’s said that when  utters the words “sick them” – his  some of whom are said to earn around $150,000-a-year, are expected to go on the attack.

ahead of their money-spinning boxing bout back in 2017.

The guards followed the command and promptly surrounded – with a scuffle ensuing on stage after McGregor’s team leapt to his defence.

As expected, the Irishman did not take too kindly to what happened when asked about the altercation.

“Juicehead fools,” said McGregor, as per

“I don’t know, man. I didn’t even see them until they were on top of me. I was like, ‘what?’ and then everybody was pushing and shoving. But, handbags, we call that back where I come from. It means it’s nothing, it’s just handbags. It’s just a term we use

“We’re having a good time, but I’ll tell you what, if those fucking juiceheads [do it again], I’ll slap the hell out of all of them. If something like that happens at the next one, something will have to happen.”

‘The Money Team’ are widely viewed as merely being Mayweather’s stooges but according to Rod Braswell, who has been friends with Mayweather since 1987, there’s much more to it.

“It’s a collaboration of entrepreneurial minded people that are highly-educated with good common sense,” Braswell told  in 2017.

“Floyd looks out for everybody and gives them an opportunity to go forward. Everybody is not meant to go forward, but he at least tries to put you in position to go forward.”

Featured Image Credit: Getty

The command Floyd Mayweather tells ‘The Money Team’ when ordering them to attack

Floyd Mayweather’s entourage is one of the biggest and most powerful in the game and there are slew of ridiculous requirements for joining.

‘The Money Team’ are not only tasked with protecting the undefeated 50-0 boxer in public but also the substantial amounts of cash he regularly carries with him.

They are paid extremely well, with

The team also get to travel on a separate private jet as well as receive one or two pieces of jewellery.

But it’s not always an easy ride working for the 47-year-old as he expects his bodyguards to go on the attack as soon as he utters a command.

During the press conference with Conor McGregor ahead of their 2017 superfight, Mayweather shouted at his crew to ‘Form Voltron’.

It sounded like something out of a Marvel movie but 15-time world champion was demanding the TMT go on the attack and surround McGregor.

A huge fracas occurred when McGregor’s team also showed they were game for a scrap

Mayweather, who has had multiple altercations with YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, has also been known to yell “sick them” – which also means activating his mob into action.

One of Mayweather’s bodyguards, Alfonso Redick, stands at a ridiculous 7ft and is quite rightly nicknamed ‘Big Church’.

But another of his personal minders, Jizzy Mack – once labelled a “juicehead turkey” by McGrego

Mack previously fought on the undercard of Mayweather’s exhibition bout against Mikauru Asakura over in Japan.

He took on a much smaller opponent in kickboxer Kouzi but was finished off in the third round.

Kouzi put him on the canvas on multiple occasions and after a final flurry of punches, Mack was put to the sword when the referee waved away the contest.

Maybe he was waiting for the order from Mayweather, who won later on in the night and collected a cool £20 million

Patrick Cantlay knows exactly how to win the PGA Tour’s annual Player of The Year award, but his tally of one is a long way behind the crown’s record winner Tiger Woods

Patrick Cantlay was left humbled by the great Tiger Woods, after the American opened up on winning the PGA Tour’s Player of The Year award back in 2021.

Cantlay enjoyed his back season to date that year, winning three Tour events as well as the FedEx Cup title. In doing so, the American received the recognition of his fellow players too, after being voted Player of The Year by his peers at the end of the campaign.

The latest recipient of the prize was world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, who made it back-to-back wins, pipping LIV Golf’s latest signing Jon Rahm and current FedEx Cup champion Viktor Hovland for 2023.

READ MORE: Collin Morikawa delivers different perspective on LIV Golf and PGA Tour feud

On the back of Scheffler’s acceptance, Cantlay reminisced about his win back in 2021, opening up on a encounter with Woods, who has 11 Player of The Year awards to his name. Ahead of this week’s Sentry Tournament, Cantlay said: “I’ll tell you a story.

“I went over to Tiger’s house, I think to talk Ryder Cup after I had won Player of the Year [back in 2021], and it felt like a big deal to me at the time that I had got a Player of the Year, and they give you this little Jack Nicklaus bronze trophy.

“So we’re walking through Tiger’s house and we’re in the basement and he’s got like, 11 of ’em lined up right next to each other all in the corner of the basement — boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.” Jokingly, Cantlay then told Woods he was ‘catching up’ following his 2021 win, but he was soon shot down by the 15-time major winner.

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Patrick Cantlay won the Player of The Year award in 2021 

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“I go, ‘Hey, I’m catching up,’” Cantlay added. “And he looked at me and he goes, ‘You got a lot of work to do.’” The cutting comment summed up Woods’ competitive edge even at this stage – and reminded Cantlay exactly how much the icon has achieved.

In winning the 2023 award, Scheffler was able to equal one of Woods’ great records, becoming the first player since the 48-year-old to win back-to-back Player of The Year titles.

There was some controversy surrounding the vote though, with LIV’s latest coup, Rahm missing out on the award despite winning four times including last April’s Masters. Scheffler too enjoyed a great year, maintaining his spot at the top of the world rankings and winning both the Waste Management Phoenix Open and Hero World Challenge in 2023.

Consistency was key for the world No. 1, who finished outside the top-20 just three times throughout the year, and he believes this is what earned him the majority of the vote from his peers. “I just think it depends on what the guys kind of looked at for their vote,” he responded when asked if he was surprised by the vote at The Sentry.

“I guess this year they really kind of appreciated my consistency. Like I said, I was very proud of that. The way I played the entire year, I think I maybe only had one or two starts that were — that I would categorise as not great, but other than that I had a lot of starts where I just played really solid golf and to do that for an entire season out here I think is very difficult. I’m very proud of that aspect of my game