Ronaldo tops Forbes’ list of highest-paid athletes again, Rahm second | Football News

Former Manchester United and Real Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo is named highest-paid athlete for a fourth time.

Cristiano Ronaldo topped Forbes’ list of highest-paid athletes for the fourth time in his career while Spanish golfer Jon Rahm moved up to second following his sensational switch to Saudi-backed LIV Golf.

Ronaldo became the world’s highest-paid athlete after his move to Saudi Arabian side Al-Nassr and Forbes said the 39-year-old footballer’s estimated total earnings were in the region of $260m, an all-time high for a football player.

His on-field earnings amounted to $200m while his off-field earnings were $60m, thanks to sponsorship deals where brands make use of his 629 million Instagram followers.

Twice major winner Rahm joined LIV Golf in December in a big-money move that sent shockwaves through the sport after media reports said the current world number five would be paid at least $300m.

Apart from that guarantee, Rahm has earned $218m and joins Ronaldo as the only two athletes to earn over $200m.

Third on the list is record eight-times Ballon d’Or winner Lionel Messi, who made a lucrative switch to Major League Soccer side Inter Miami, helping the Argentine World Cup winner earn $135m.

The 36-year-old has earned $65m in on-field earnings but $70m off it thanks to deals with major sponsors such as Adidas and Apple.

Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James is fourth at $128.2m and although the 39-year-old, the first NBA player to score 40,000 career points, is nearing the end of his career, the American is set to have one last crack at the Olympics.

Fellow NBA star Giannis Antetokounmpo ($111m) of the Milwaukee Bucks rounds out the top five while France soccer captain Kylian Mbappe has dropped down to sixth ($110m).

Mbappe announced he would be leaving Paris Saint-Germain after seven years in the French capital where he became the club’s all-time leading scorer and the 25-year-old is expected to join Spanish giants Real Madrid in the close season.

Former PSG star Neymar, who also moved to the Saudi Pro League to join Al-Hilal, is seventh ($108m) despite sitting out the majority of the season with a torn ACL.

French striker Karim Benzema, who also moved to Saudi Arabia, is eighth ($106m) on the list followed by Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry ($102m).

Lamar Jackson is the only NFL player on the list in 10th place ($100.5m) thanks to the signing bonus that was negotiated in his new Baltimore Ravens contract last year.

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Trans golfer Hailey Davidson wins women’s tournament, increasing chances to LPGA qualifier

A transgender golfer with dreams of making it to the LPGA tour has won a women’s tournament in Florida, which improved her chances of earning herself a spot in a qualifying tour.

Hailey Davidson, 30, came out on top at the NXXT Women’s Classic on Jan. 17 at the Mission Inn Resort and Club, 35 miles northwest of Orlando, after shooting one-over-73 and ending the three-round tournament +4.

Davidson, a Scottish native residing in Florida, won after being 3-shots behind with two holes to go before forcing a playoff following her play on the 18th hole, according to Davidson’s Instagram post celebrating the victory.

NXXT Golf is a professional women’s golf tour focused on “elevating women’s golf.”

“The Tour’s mission is to prepare the world’s best young women professional golfers for a successful career on the LPGA Tour,” according to the Epson Tour’s website.

The win propelled Davidson to the top of the NXXT tour’s leaderboard where she boasts a total score of 1320, a whopping 150 points ahead of the woman in second place.

Out of the five tournaments held in the league since November, Davidson has placed in the top-2, twice, along with a 7 and 9 place finish.

Hailey Davidson poses with the trophy she won after winning the NXXT Women’s Classic on Jan. 17, 2024, in Howey-In-The-Hills, FL. haileydgolf/Instagram
Davidson won the tournament after being 3-shots behind with two holes to go before forcing a playoff following her play on the 18th hole. haileydgolf/Instagram

Along with a trophy and the 500 league points given to the winner, Davidson was awarded $1,576.51, increasing her season total to $4,206.84, with a current career total of $5,801.89 over 8 events.

At the end of the tour’s schedule, 10 exemptions will be awarded to the top five points leaders to participate in the Epson Tour.

The league is the official LPGA qualifying tour and has produced over 600 members who have gone on to play in the largest and most prestigious female golf organization in the world.

Five events have already been completed in the tour’s schedule, with eight more to go, all ending with the NXXT Tour Championship in Ocala, FL. from March 25 to 27.

The win propelled Davidson to the top of the NXXT tour’s leaderboard where she boasts a total score of 1320, a whopping 150 points ahead of the woman in second place. haileydgolf/Instagram
Davidson made history prior to joining NXXT Golf, as she became the “World’s first transgender person to win a professional golf tournament,” a record she boasts about in her Instagram bio. haileydgolf/Instagram

If Davidson were to be awarded two of the ten exemptions to the Epson Tour, she had to earn approval from the LPGA while she was transitioning from male to female.

She allegedly began talking with the tour in 2016 but wasn’t deemed eligible to compete until 2021, when, at that time, she had been on Hormone Replacement Therapy for 5 years and 8 months.

She also had full gender reassignment surgery by that time, according to a post on social media dated Oct. 2022.

Davidson also claims she lost 15 mph of “club head speed” as a result of her transition.

The average PGA Tour golfer’s club head speed is 114.2 mph while the average driver swing speed on the LPGA Tour is approximately 94 mph, according to analytics company GraffGolf.

Davidson allegedly began talking with the tour in 2016 but wasn’t deemed eligible to compete until 2021, when, at that time, she had been on Hormone Replacement Therapy for 5 years and 8 months. haileydgolf/Instagram

Davidson made history prior to joining NXXT Golf, as she became the “World’s first transgender person to win a professional golf tournament,” a record she boasts about in her Instagram bio.

Her goal of making the LPGA has been defended by Caitlyn Jenner, with the Olympic gold medalist supporting the transgender golfer to compete in the tour.

“I’ve been very consistent with how I’ve tried to approach these transgender athletes. It really depends on the sport. Every sport is different,” Jenner said in August 2022.



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Rory McIlroy would consider playing LIV if it turns into ‘IPL of golf’ | Golf News

McIlroy has softened his stance on LIV Golf and says he has accepted it as ‘part of our sport now’.

Rory McIlroy says if LIV Golf was modelled like cricket’s Indian Premier League (IPL) and staged over two months, then he would consider playing in it.

The 34-year-old Northern Irishman has been a vocal opponent of the Saudi Arabia-funded LIV Golf, once saying he would retire rather than play in it “if it was the last place to play golf on earth”.

However, he has toned it down of late – especially after his friend, fellow Ryder Cup star and formerly a stringent critic of LIV Jon Rahm decamped and is reportedly set to earn upwards of $566.4m.

Attracting some of world cricket’s top stars with bumper salaries, the IPL helped make Twenty20 hugely popular, attracting hundreds of millions of viewers.

LIV’s circuit is based around team events with its 48 players split into 12 teams.

“I would love LIV to turn into the IPL of golf,” McIlroy told the Stick to Football Podcast.

“They take two months of calendar. You go and do this team stuff and a bit different and is a different format.

“If they were to do something like that I would say ‘yeah that sounds like fun’ because you are working within the ecosystem.”

McIlroy previously accused some of those who jumped ship as being duplicitous, but he is beginning to mellow and says it is no longer his job to fight the battle.

“I think at this point, I was maybe a little judgmental of the guys who went to LIV golf at the start, and I think it was a bit of a mistake on my part because I now realise that not everyone is in my position or in Tiger Wood’s position,” the former world number one said.

“We all turn professional to make a living playing the sports that we do, and I think that’s what I realised over the last two years. I can’t judge people for making that decision.”

‘Part of our sport now’

McIlroy said he had “accepted” that LIV is “part of our sport now”, but he takes issue with the huge sums being paid to players when that could be used to invest in the sport.

“The thing I have come to realise is if you have got people, or a sovereign wealth fund, wanting to spend money in your sport – that is ultimately a good thing,” McIlroy said.

“But you just want to get them to spend it the right way and spend it on things that are important in the game.

“Instead of giving someone $100m, why don’t you put $50m into grassroots programmes for the R&A or USPGA? Spending that money to actually grow the game and not just buy talent would be a way better way.”

The four-time major winner said he hoped the divisions sparked by the breakaway would be healed but he feared there was a lack of will to do so.

“I hope everyone comes back together,” he said.

“You have got guys on both sides that don’t want it to happen.

“The LIV guys don’t want to come back to play on the PGA Tour because they don’t think they have been treated very well.

“Some of the PGA Tour guys don’t want to see those other guys.

“People need to put their egos and feelings aside and come back together and we all move forward because that would be a good thing for golf.”

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Rory McIlroy calls Patrick Cantlay a ‘d–k’ after Ryder Cup drama

Golf is known as a gentleman’s game, but Rory McIlroy’s feelings towards Patrick Cantlay certainly wouldn’t fit that criteria. 

In a candid interview with Paul Kimmage of the Irish Independent, McIlroy called Cantlay a “d–k” and revealed details about a dustup that occurred at the Ryder Cup earlier this year.

The incident at the Ryder Cup, held at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club, involved Cantlay’s caddie, Joe LaCava.

LaCava wildly waved his cap on the 18th hole while McIlroy was lining up his shot in response to the European fans riding Cantay for not wearing the US team cap during the tournament.

It did not sit well with McIlroy, whose caddie said something to LaCava that later led to a confrontation in the parking lot. 

“Here’s what angered me,” McIlroy said in the Irish Independent interview. “My relationship with Cantlay is average at best. We don’t have a ton in common and see the world quite differently.”

Rory McIlroy called Patrick Cantlay a d–k in an interview with the Irish Independent.
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The footage of the parking lot incident quickly went viral as it showed McIlroy having to be restrained by teammate Shane Lowry after he crossed paths with several Americans, including Justin Thomas’ caddie, Jim “Bones’’ Mackay. 

“And they’re trying to defuse the situation, but I start having a go at them,” McIlroy said. “‘Joe LaCava used to be a nice guy when he was caddying for Tiger, and now he’s caddying for that d–k he’s turned into a … I still wasn’t in a great headspace.”

McIlroy shared that he and Cantlay have and average-at-best relationship.
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Europe ended up defeating the U.S. 16.5 – 11.5 to reclaim the Ryder Cup.

McIlroy said that golf star Tiger Woods had reached out and was trying to get in touch with Mcllroy after the incident. 

“I sent him a quick message,” McIlroy added.  “‘It will be fine … long day … just want to go to bed.’”

Tiger Woods
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McIlroy acknowledged that it wasn’t his “finest moment.”

While McIlroy seemed ready to turn the page from the September incident, it doesn’t appear that McIlroy, Cantlay or LaCava will be sharing a beer anytime soon.

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Tiger Woods may look finished after Masters, but don’t count out

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Tiger Woods understands how the visuals came across on social media and TV. He looked completely broken in Saturday’s relentless rain, as if all the injuries and surgeries were conspiring against him in that very moment, leaving him no choice but to walk away.

Only Woods didn’t exactly walk out of Augusta National after the storms suspended play. He staggered off the course, moving like a man nearly twice his age. At 47, Woods was smart enough to tell his cornermen that he couldn’t answer the bell for the next round against a heartless opponent — a hilly, 29-hole Sunday at the Masters, which was heavily favored to deliver the knockout.

But man, that decision had to hurt him to the core. It’s one thing to withdraw from the PGA Championship, which Woods did last year. It’s quite another to withdraw from the Masters, the Super Bowl of golf.

Last April, 14 months after what a moderator in Tiger’s Tuesday presser called “that horrific accident,” Woods somehow made the cut, an achievement equal to any of his five tournament titles. And yet in that same presser, Woods maintained that his severely damaged right leg “aches a little bit more this year than last year,” a truth hammered home by Sunday morning’s announcement that Tiger was going, going, gone.

“I am disappointed to have to WD this morning due to reaggravating my plantar fasciitis,” Woods tweeted. “Thank you to the fans and to @TheMasters who have shown me so much love and support. Good luck to the players today!”

Given the alarming optics — Tiger could barely walk to his golf bag before exiting stage left — and the fact Woods conceded that every Masters could be his last Masters, it’s natural to figure he is done as a competitive force. And that would be largely true, as Woods has permanently reduced his annual schedule to the four majors and a couple of carefully handpicked tournaments in between them, and has started talking about using a cart — he calls it “a buggy” — to play the Champions Tour at age 50.


Tiger Woods will not resume his third round at Augusta National on Sunday.
ZUMAPRESS.com

It was long assumed that Woods would retire when he could no longer compete on the PGA Tour, and that he would find no satisfaction in riding a cart while beating the graybeards he pounded in their primes.

But now Woods is making concessions to the forces of gravity and time. A spinal fusion surgery on top of the leg-saving surgeries on top of all the other injuries and procedures over the years have largely reduced Woods to an ambassador and tournament host. He’s not yet Arnie & Jack in their golden years, but close enough.

“The joy is different now,” Woods said. “I’ve been able to spend more time with my son, and we’ve been able to create our own memories out there. And to share some of the things that … I experienced with my dad, the late-night putting or practice sessions that we did at the Navy Golf Course, I’m doing with my son. It’s incredible, the bonding and the moments that come because of this sport.”

Though it is good to hear the former terminator talk in humanizing tones, Woods can’t be ruled out as a threat to break his tie with Sam Snead for all-time PGA Tour victories (82) and to win his 16th major championship, two shy of Jack Nicklaus’ record. Just like 52-year-old Phil Mickelson can’t be ruled out winning another big one after his stunning Sunday climb up the leaderboard.

When Woods missed the U.S. Open cut at Shinnecock in 2018, a year after his Hail Mary fusion surgery and disturbing middle-of-the-night roadside arrest, I absorbed heavy pushback for writing that he would likely still win a 15th major title. Woods nearly won the British Open and PGA Championship the next two months, won the Tour Championship in the fall, and then won the green jacket for the fifth time.

Four years later, Woods is more fragile than he’s ever been. He might need another Hail Mary surgery to strengthen his leg like the fusion strengthened his back, but if anyone in the history of the sport can overcome massive physical hurdles to win again, it’s Tiger Woods. And if there’s any future arena that would accommodate that …

“It’s here,” Woods said at Augusta National, “just because I know the golf course.”


Tiger Woods hits from the fairway on the 18th hole during the weather delayed second round of the Masters.
AP

And he knows how successful older, lesser lights (Fred Couples, Bernhard Langer) have been here. And he knows that a 58-year-old Nicklaus nearly won for the seventh time here in 1998 with a deteriorating hip that was months away from being replaced.

“I’ve been stubborn and driven to come back and play at a high level,” Woods said.

Is that competitive spirit strong enough to beat the longest of odds?

“I wouldn’t be sitting here if I didn’t believe that,” said his longtime caddie Joe LaCava, who told The Post before the tournament that his “biggest fear” was the grim weather forecast and the prospect of Woods playing 27-plus holes in one day. That fear was realized.

“Everything would have to go right for him to win another major,” LaCava said, “but I can see that Tiger still believes he can do it.”

And despite what we all saw Saturday, that’s good enough for me.

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New York-area golfer Cameron Young in Masters hunt after first round

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Cameron Young, the pride of Fordham Prep in The Bronx, was in the middle of a dream British Open run last summer at St. Andrews when a reporter asked him about his “improbable journey from the streets of New York.”

Young could have played along on his way to finishing second to Cameron Smith at the birthplace of golf, if only in the name of never letting the facts get in the way of a good golf story.

Instead as an honest son of the Westchester ’burbs, the 25-year-old product of a leafy prep-school campus refused to package and sell a counterfeit hardscrabble tale.

He called the reporter’s premise “a stretch” and pointed out that he lived at Sleepy Hollow Country Club, where his father was the head pro for more than two decades.

It’s still an interesting backstory, by the way, as the greater metropolitan area isn’t known for producing young golfers who are ranked 14th in the world.

But it will become much better copy if Young actually wins a tournament. And if he makes that first victory worthy of a green jacket, his journey will belong to legend.


Cameron Young hits his tee shot on the fourth hole during the first round of the Masters.
AP

Young birdied the first three holes at Augusta National on Thursday en route to a 5-under 67, two strokes off the first-round lead shared by Brooks Koepka, Viktor Hovland, and Jon Rahm.

“I’m really happy with my start,” Young said. “I think I executed our plan quite well.”

His “our” includes his newly hired caddie Paul Tesori, the former longtime caddie of Webb Simpson’s and a man who has worked more than 20 Masters.

“I think he brings a lot to the table,” Young said. “I think it’s helped me personally let go of the bad stuff that happens out here. He’s just so positive and energetic.”

Young just finished second to Sam Burns in the SGC-Dell Match Play, giving him half a dozen runner-up finishes on tour since last year.

Before finishing third at the 2022 PGA Championship, he missed the cut at his first Masters.

“I was afraid to go hit the first tee shot last year,” Young said, “and this year it wasn’t at all the same. I’m just a lot more comfortable. Last year I didn’t understand how anybody made a birdie out here. This year I just got off to obviously a nice start and was really comfortable the whole day.”

“You’re standing on the first tee at [your first] Masters, it’s a different kind of thing than any other tournament. But the more you can approach it like it’s not different, I think, is a good thing.”

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Mike Trout teaming up with Tiger Woods for New Jersey golf course

Mike Trout is teaming with Tiger Woods to build Trout National – The Reserve, a championship golf course near where Trout grew up in southern New Jersey.

Woods’ golf course architecture firm, TGR Design, will design the course, which is set to open in 2025 in Vineland, N.J. Trout, the Los Angeles Angels’ three-time MVP outfielder, and his wife, Jessica, live in the region in the offseason.

“It’s pretty incredible having a chance to own your own golf course,” Trout said, per Sports Illustrated. “Getting Tiger to design it is crazy. If you had told me before that this would happen one day, I would have said you are crazy. It’s more than I ever thought possible.”

Trout told Sports Illustrated that he and Jessica talked about owning a golf course, pre-pandemic, and the idea evolved through the years as he met with a local developer. Eventually, Trout’s brother contacted TGR Design, and a partnership was born.


Mike Trout
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Tiger Woods
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“My favorite golfer growing up obviously was Tiger,” Trout, 31, told Sports Illustrated. “I thought it would be pretty cool to reach out. We reached out, got a positive vibe when we mentioned it and got his team down to the site. Once Tiger’s team came down to the site, they loved it. It’s surreal. I mean, it’s friggin’ Tiger!

“We talk now. I’m starting to get to know him. I talk to him over the telephone. It’s pretty crazy.”


Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim plays golf in left field with his teammates
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The course property also will include a practice range, clubhouse, restaurant, lodging and even a wedding chapel.

The price of the project has not been disclosed.



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Country club wife names tennis pro mistress in letter to members

She’s making quite a racket.

A woman who lives in the ultra-wealthy, celeb-studded Sherwood Country Club has sent a letter to all her neighbors warning them about a dangerous presence in their midst — a horny tennis pro.

The unidentified homeowner in a gated community that’s attached to the club — which is just north of Los Angeles and has claimed Mel Gibson, Caitlyn Jenner, Wayne Gretzky, Jack Nicholson, Will Smith, Sylvester Stallone and Justin Timberlake as members — wrote in the message seen by Page Six, “To my horror, I recently found out my husband had been romantically involved with one of our tennis club employees.”

The, er, highly strung woman gave the alleged mistress’ first name and the first letter of her last name, before adding, “I’m letting our community of respectable families and members of this HOME WRECKER who’s working among us.”

Will Smith is among the A-List members of the club, as are Justin Timberlake, Jack Nicholson, Mel Gibson and Caitlyn Jenner.
FilmMagic

She also complains that she has to see the Whore of Wimbledon at the local pub “and see her smug smile.”

“I’m trying hard to avoid her; keep her away from my children, but she’s there,” she seethes. “She has no respect for this community. I never expected this to happen. We engage and are friendly to employees that work here and this is what happened to our family.”

Speaking of which, she says, “My husband and I are working this out privately but I couldn’t remain silent.”

Tiger Wood has hosted his Hero World Challenge there several times.
AP

A source in the community tells Page Six the ritzy club is abuzz about the letter, while another source who works at the club says that management is aware of the matter and has launched an investigation — but so far has little information.

“We chose this community for many good and healthy reasons but it’s been a nightmare. I have to see her in an exclusive club I belong to,” the scorned wife writes.

“I’m so sad this happened in my own paradise.”


For more Page Six you love …


Jenner is said to play there most days.
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The club has a Jack Nicklaus-designed PGA course. Tiger Woods hosted his own tournament, the Hero World Challenge, there for several years, and Greg Norman’s event, the Shark Shootout, has also been held at the club.

We hope a similar note has gone around the tennis club’s staff room warning that there’s an unfaithful husband on the loose with a wife who has a printer and isn’t afraid to use it.

Racquet sports are quite the aphrodisiac, it seems. In 2021, we published a story about Barstool Sports CEO leaving her husband for her squash coach at a Connecticut country club.

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Golf odds, predictions, best bets

With The PLAYERS Championship done and dusted, the PGA Tour now begins its ramp-up towards The Masters, which begins on April 6 at Augusta National.

But there are three tournaments to go before we head down Magnolia Lane, including this week’s Valspar Championship at Copperhead Course in Palm Harbor, Fla. 

It is the last event in the Tour’s annual Florida Swing.

The Players Championship always features one of the deepest fields of the year and the Arnold Palmer Invitational usually attracts plenty of stars, so the entry list for the Valspar always seems a bit lacking because of its place on the calendar.

That said, we do have a few of the biggest names in the game making the trip to the Gulf Coast.

And the best news for handicappers is that neither Scottie Scheffler nor Jon Rahm are in town.

Scheffler and Rahm have combined for five wins in 2023 already.

With the top two players in the world sitting out, oddsmakers have installed Justin Thomas as the +1000 favorite with Jordan Spieth behind him at +1200.

Matthew Fitzpatrick and two-time defending champ Sam Burns are the only other golfers under +2000. 

With only a few of the elite players making the trip to Copperhead, the door should be open for a long shot to contend at the Valspar and that’s where I’m focusing this week:

Get the lowdown on the Best USA Sports Betting Sites and Apps

Akshay Bhatia (+10000, BetMGM)

It looks like Bhatia is going to be a popular long shot this week and for good reason.

The 21-year-old has an extremely high ceiling and looks like he could be on the cusp of a breakthrough.

After turning pro at this event at the age of 19, Bhatia has now earned temporary status on the PGA Tour thanks to his second-place finish at the Puerto Rico Open last month.

That’s a huge weight of the shoulders of a young player with high expectations.


Akshay Bhatia
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Bhatia has played a handful of Korn Ferry Tour events this year and the results have been what you’d expect from a young golfer trying to work his way to the big leagues.

Bhatia has two top-10 finishes and a couple of missed cuts, though he did make the weekend at the Honda Classic a couple weeks back. 

David Lingmerth (+12500, BetMGM)

It looks like Lingmerth is enjoying a bit of a resurgence on the PGA Tour.

His last win on the main stage came back in 2015 at the Memorial, but the 35-year-old Swede is in strong form to start 2023.

Lingmerth, who re-earned his PGA Tour card with a strong season on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2022, has four top-10 finishes in his last 10 starts including two of his last three outings.

Lingmerth is coming off a T6 showing at The PLAYERS, which suggests his game will play on this difficult Florida golf course.


David Lingmerth
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Ben Taylor (+15000, BetMGM)

Another youngster, Taylor is off and running in 2023 with a pair of top-5 finishes in seven starts.

His latest impressive showing came at the Honda Classic where he finished T5 on another difficult track.

Backing Taylor at this number may be a stretch in deeper fields, but this event should be wide open and he’s proven already that he has contender upside in this set-up.

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Ben Griffin gave up PGA Tour dream; it came true anyway

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — “I thought I was done,’’ Ben Griffin said.

Just two years ago at age 24, Griffin was finished with his life as a fledgling professional golfer. He had given it a go, trying to qualify for the PGA Tour and its minor league circuit, the Korn Ferry Tour, and he hadn’t been able to crack it.

So, he felt it was time to get on with his life, find a real job.

“I didn’t want to be a golfer anymore,’’ Griffin recalled Friday after he closed out the second round of his first Players Championship as the leader in the clubhouse at 6-under.

Yes, you read that right. Two years after giving up on his dream — temporarily as it turned out — Griffin has his PGA Tour card and, through 36 holes in the Tour’s signature event, is very much in contention to win it.

When play was suspended due to dangerous weather Friday evening, Griffin stood two shots out of the lead. The leaders, Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Adam Svensson, were at 8-under, but still have to finish their second rounds Friday morning.

In the spring of 2021, Griffin left pro golf behind, went through accreditation tests and became a loan officer at CIMG Residential Mortgage in Chapel Hill, N.C.

A true moment of fate changed that trajectory. So much for interest rates and mortgages.


Ben Griffin
USA TODAY Sports

Griffin met a man named Doug Sieg, the managing partner of Jersey City-based investment firm Lord Abbett. Griffin was paired up for a random nine holes with Sieg and his daughter, Taylor, at Sea Island Golf Club on St. Simons Island, Ga. Sieg had taken his daughter there during the COVID-19 pandemic to play some golf.

Sieg was so impressed with Griffin after those nine holes, he offered to back him financially to help him realize his PGA Tour dream. Griffin, his mind made up, politely told Sieg he was sticking to his desk job.

“If anything ever changes, let me know,’’ Sieg told Griffin.

Months later, Randy Myers, a Sea Island-based golf trainer who works with Griffin and was a graduate-assistant strength coach at Penn State when Sieg played football there, called Sieg and said, “Ben is coming back, and he’s going to be great.’’

Sieg then spoke to Griffin.

“Ben told me, ‘I can’t see myself doing anything else in the world but playing on the PGA Tour, and I want to go do it,’ ’’ Sieg told The Post on Friday. “I said, ‘Why don’t you come up [to New Jersey], and we’ll meet.’ He got in a car and drove up, and I took him out to Baltusrol. He was 3-over after three holes and birdied nine of the next 11 holes, and I was like, ‘OK, let’s do this.’

“I’ve never been around a guy who represents himself so well and dreams so big.’’


Ben Griffin
AP

On Friday, Griffin led the Players at 8-under and hadn’t bogeyed a hole in his second round before he double-bogeyed No. 18. Yet as he walked off the course, you’d have thought he had birdied the hole.

Sieg said: “The text he sent me right after the round said, ‘You can’t believe what a great round this was. I can’t wait for this weekend. At least I’m not going to sleep on the lead. I’ll be ready to go.’

“Nothing bothers him. He’s got such a great attitude.’’

Sieg had a similarly profound exchange with Griffin in October after the young golfer finished tied for third at the Butterfield Bermuda Championship after he had led the tournament with seven holes to play.

“About 20 minutes afterward he called me and said, ‘I wake up every day and go to a golf course. I’m the luckiest guy in the world,’ ’’ Sieg said. “His perspective from taking the time away, in my mind, just really allowed him to center himself and understand what was important.’’

The only thing that wiped the perpetual smile from Griffin’s face on Friday came when he recounted those who’ve helped make this all possible for him, beginning with Sieg and including two other angels in the fairway, Jesse Ahearn and Mike Swann.

Griffin met Ahearn and Swann while playing a Korn Ferry event in Springfield, Mo. Like Sieg, they were so moved by him that they, too, wanted to help. They paid for his Q School entry, and damned if he didn’t earn his PGA Tour card.

“They’re the only reason I’m playing golf right now,” Griffin said. “I will always have that perspective the rest of my PGA Tour career and it will benefit me going forward.’’

Griffin had tears in his eyes now.

When I relayed that poignant scene to Sieg, I could feel his emotion over the phone.

“It’s incredibly rewarding,’’ Sieg said. “We have 750 people at Lord Abbett who get the benefit of watching this incredible dream play out. He’s not afraid to dream big.’’

Now, they dream big together.

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