May 16
Bradley fires a 60 at the Byron Nelson
Despite carding a pair of bogeys, Keegan Bradley fired a 10-under 60 on Thursday to grab a 3-stroke lead after the opening round of the Byron Nelson Championship.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Despite carding a pair of bogeys, Keegan Bradley fired a 10-under 60 on Thursday to grab a 3-stroke lead after the opening round of the Byron Nelson Championship.

Two marshals say Tiger Woods never said anything to them about whether Sergio Garcia had played his shot. Two other marshals disputed that account, one of them saying he told Woods that Garcia had already hit on the second hole at the TPC Sawgrass.
Dottie Pepper is returning to golf broadcasting, signing a deal with ESPN that she calls a perfect fit of TV work and promoting junior golf.
Guan Tianlang is one of five amateur players being honored this week for the Byron Nelson International Junior Golf Awards.
The Byron Nelson Championship is set to make a move to a course that still has to be built.
Circumstances have changed dramatically for Stacy Lewis since last year's Mobile Bay LPGA Classic, and that tournament might have been an impetus to her career surge.

Keegan Bradley shot a 10-under 60 for a course record even with consecutive bogeys in the middle of his opening round at the Byron Nelson Championship on Thursday.

When Australian golfer Marc Leishman heard about the December shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School, he immediately went to his computer to look at a map.
Jim Simons, sportswriters observed during those four days that forever defined him, looked like Huck Finn.

Tiger Woods has faced more scrutiny that any other golfer from his generation. Maybe ever.
The LPGA Tour will have two tournaments in Alabama again starting in 2014.

On a night of celebration, one of the embarrassing moments at the World Golf Hall of Fame induction ceremony was early in the program, when Hall of Fame members in attendance were recognized. The introductions didn't take very long.
We had a great development in sports over the weekend. Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia did for golf what Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan once did for figure skating.

Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus have never had a conversation longer than a couple of minutes, and rarely about golf. Maybe it's because they already think along the same lines when it comes to winning tournaments.
It started during Saturday's rain delay at the Players Championship. Sergio Garcia agreed to an interview with NBC, and basically threw Tiger Woods under a bus.

One bad tee shot made Tiger Woods appear vulnerable. One clutch par putt and a critical birdie made him look invincible.
Dufner hung on for a 1-stroke win, which was his second in four weeks on the PGA Tour. He has not won since, and doesn't have a top-10 finish on the PGA Tour this year.
With the LPGA Tour off last week, Hiromi Mogi and Lee-Anne Pace won the biggest women's events played over the weekend and both made big moves in the women's world rankings.

A weekend filled with sharp words between Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia came down to one last showdown Sunday in The Players Championship, this one staged across the water in a tiny, terrifying section of the TPC Sawgrass.
Hiromi Mogi fired a 4-under 68 on Sunday to secure a victory at the World Ladies Championship Salonpas Cup.