Scottie Scheffler hopes to begin his PGA Tour season at the 2025 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, but he is still is not confirming his place in the field for the second signature event of the year. Sidelined the first month of the season due a right hand injury and subsequent surgery,
Scottie Scheffler revealed the ravioli-related origin of the hand injury that forced him to undergo surgery in December ahead of the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
We’ve turned the sports page on the 2024 calendar, which can only mean one thing – it’s time to look ahead to what awaits in 2025.
After starting with 12 teams, the College Football Playoff has reached the ... up the crowd at Bills vs Ravens game Caitlin Clark, Scottie Scheffler, NFL Draft, ASU: Looking ahead to 2025 sports ...
Where in the world is Scottie Scheffler? The post Rugged Scottie Scheffler Leaves Injury Woes In the Dust After Massive American Express Upset appeared first on EssentiallySports.
Three weeks into the season and the Masters can’t get here soon enough. Scheffler and Schauffele surely will be back by then.
Bowl season culminates with the College Football Playoff National Championship, which will crown the first champion of the new 12-team playoff on Monday, January 20. Next up in deciding the two teams that will ultimately play in that championship game are the CFP semifinals.
Days after Scheffler, 28, and Rory McIlroy topped LIV Golf’s Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau in a Las Vegas Showdown, it was revealed the world’s No. 1 golfer “sustained a puncture wound to the palm of his right hand from a broken glass” during Christmas dinner preparations.
From Charlie Hoffman's comeback to the likely location for the Genesis Invitational, here are the top storylines as the Tour heads into a big stretch.
Now that it’s all over and the Ohio State Buckeyes are the college football national champions, it can be definitively said: Expanding the College Football Playoff worked.
Related-ish: The NCAA finally approved women’s college basketball tournament “units,” or payouts to conferences based on their participation and performance in March Madness. But the disparity between women and men — now $25M vs. $250M, rather than $0 vs. $250M — remains a farce.