Sports
Golf Glance: Scottie Scheffler defends at Bay Hill; LPGA, LIV in Asia
Feb 13, 2025; San Diego, California, USA; Scottie Scheffler hits his tee shot on the second hole during the first round of The Genesis Invitational golf tournament at Torrey Pines. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images Field Level Media’s Golf Glance provides weekly news and storylines from each of the major North American golf tours.
PGA TOUR
LAST TOURNAMENT: Cognizant Classic (Joe Highsmith)
THIS WEEK: Arnold Palmer Invitational, Orlando, Fla., March 6-9
Course: Bay Hill Club & Lodge (Par 72, 7,466 Yards)
Purse: $20M (Winner: $4M)
Defending Champion: Scottie Scheffler
FedEx Cup Leader: Ludvig Aberg
HOW TO FOLLOW
TV: Thursday-Friday: 2-6 p.m. E.T. (Golf Channel); Saturday-Sunday: 12:30-2:30 p.m. (GC), 2:30-6 p.m. (NBC, Peacock)
Streaming (ESPN+): Thursday-Friday: 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m. ET; Saturday-Sunday: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
X: @APInv
NOTES: This is the fourth of eight limited-field signature events, featuring an increased purse and 700 FedEx Cup points. It’s also one of three player-hosted events, with sponsor invites given to Rafael Campos, Mackenzie Hughes, Min Woo Lee and Justin Rose. The 72-player event will be cut to the low 50 players and ties along with any additional players within 10 strokes of the lead after 36 holes. … The field features 38 of the top 40 players in the Official World Golf Rankings and 47 of the top 50. … Auburn sophomore Jackson Koivun is in the field on the Arnold Palmer Cup Exemption. … The event has not been decided by a playoff since 1999, although 13 of the 25 champions since have won by a single stroke. … Payne Stewart holds the tournament scoring record of 264 set in 1987.
BEST BETS: Scottie Scheffler (+320 at DraftKings) won by five strokes last year, the largest margin of victory at Bay Hill since Tiger Woods won by five in 2012. It was one of four signature event victories by Scheffler last year on top of The Players Championship and the Masters. … Rory McIlroy (+750) won at Bay Hill in 2018 and has played in the event every year since his debut 2015. … Ludvig Aberg (+1600) is coming off his second victory in 40 career PGA Tour starts. Along with a win at the Genesis, he finished T5 at The Sentry and was leading the Farmers until becoming ill. … Xander Schauffele (+1800) returns from a rib injury to make his first start since a T30 at The Sentry. … Tommy Fleetwood (+3000) is 10th in the world rankings while coming off a T5 at the Genesis.
THIS WEEK: Puerto Rico Open, March 6-9
Course: Grand Reserve Golf Club (Par 72, 7,506 Yards)
Purse: $4M (Winner: $720,000)
Defending Champion: Brice Garnett
HOW TO FOLLOW
TV: Thursday-Friday: 10 a.m.-1 p.m. ET; Saturday-Sunday: 2:30-5:30 p.m. (All times Golf Channel)
X: @PuertoRicoOpen
NOTES: The winner will receive 300 FedEx Cup points, the standard two-year PGA Tour exemption and a spot in next week’s Players if not otherwise qualified. … This is the first of four events for players to earn points towards the Aon Swing 5 for entry into the next signature event at the RBC Heritage. … The course will reverse the nines this year, with the final two holes behind a 236-yard par-3 and a 450-yard par-4. … Blades Brown, 17, will make his third start on a sponsor exemption. He finished T34 at the Mexico Open after missing the cut at The American Express.
NEXT TOURNAMENT: The Players Championship, Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., March 13-16
LPGA TOUR
LAST TOURNAMENT: HSBC Women’s World Championship (Lydia Ko)
THIS WEEK: Blue Bay LPGA, Hainan, China, March 6-9
Course: Jian Lake Blue Bay Golf Course (Par 72, 6,712 Yards)
Purse: $2.5M (Winner: $375,000)
Defending Champion: Bailey Tardy
Race to the CME Globe Leader: A Lim Kim
HOW TO FOLLOW
TV/Streaming: Wednesday-Friday: 11 p.m.-4 a.m. ET; Saturday: 11 p.m.-5 a.m. (All times Golf Channel, streaming on NBC Sports App, golfchannel.com)
X: @LPGA
NOTES: The 108-player field will be cut to the top 65 and ties after 36 holes. The field includes 83 LPGA Tour players, 20 CGA players and five sponsor invites. … Rolex Rankings No. 2 Jeeno Thitikul is coming off a T2 last week for her second consecutive top-3 finish to begin the season. She also won last month’s PIF Saudi Ladies International on the Ladies European Tour. … Tardy set the tournament scoring record of 19-under 269 in winning by four shots last year.
NEXT TOURNAMENT: Ford Championship, Chandler, Ariz., March 27-30
LIV GOLF LEAGUE
LAST TOURNAMENT: LIV Golf Adelaide (Individual: Joaquin Niemann; Team: Fireballs GC)
THIS WEEK: Hong Kong, March 7-9
Course: Hong Kong Golf Club at Fanling (Par 70, 6,711 Yards)
Individual Purse: $20M (Winner: $4M)
Team Purse: $5M (Winners: $3M)
Defending Champions: Individual: Abraham Ancer; Team: Crushers GC
Season Leaders: Individual: Adrian Meronk; Team: Legion XIII
HOW TO FOLLOW
TV/Streaming: Thursday-Saturday: 11 p.m.-4 a.m. ET (FOX, LIV Golf Plus)
X: @livgolf_league
NOTES: This is the third of 13 events on the 2025 schedule, which will be followed by the Team Championship. … The field consists of 13 four-player teams competing in daily shotgun starts over 54 holes.
NEXT TOURNAMENT: Singapore, March 14-16
PGA TOUR CHAMPIONS
LAST TOURNAMENT: Chubb Classic (Justin Leonard)
THIS WEEK: Cologuard Classic, Tucson, Ariz., March 7-9
Course: La Paloma Country Club (Par 71, 6,856 Yards)
Purse: $2.2M (Winner: $330,000)
Defending Champion: Joe Durant
Charles Schwab Cup Leader: Ernie Els
HOW TO FOLLOW
TV: Friday: 7-9 p.m. ET (Golf Channel, Tape Delay); Saturday: 5-7 p.m. (GC); Sunday: 5-8 p.m. (GC)
X: @CologuardGolf
NOTES: La Paloma hosts the event for the second time after the first nine years were contested at the Omni Tucson International. … The 54-hole event features a 78-player field, including World Golf Hall of Fame members Els, Bernhard Langer, Retief Goosen and Padraig Harrington.
NEXT TOURNAMENT: Hoag Classic, Newport Beach, Calif., March 21-23
–Field Level Media
Sports
Yankees to honor late broadcaster John Sterling with uniform patch
May 4, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees wear “JS” stitched on their hats honoring radio play-by-play announcer John Sterling during the game against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images The New York Yankees will honor longtime radio announcer John Sterling, who died on Monday at the age of 87, with a patch on their uniforms for the reminder of the season.
The Yankees will continue to wear caps with the initials “JS” on the back through May 17. The team will switch to the patch as their tribute to Sterling on May 18, when the Yankees’ next homestand begins.
Yankees manager Aaron Boone approves of the tribute.
“I think it’s appropriate, certainly,” Boone told the New York Times after the Yanks’ 7-4 victory over the Texas Rangers. “(I’m) glad we’ll be able to honor his legacy throughout the rest of the season.”
The patch will feature Sterling’s name, as well as a microphone with the Yankee logo on a pinstriped background.
Sterling passed away from complications of heart failure on Monday, the Times reported. Sterling was honored prior to Monday’s game with a ceremony that featured a moment of silence and a video of some of Sterling’s most iconic radio calls.
After Monday’s game, Sterling’s signature call of “Thuuuuuuuuuuh Yankees WIN!” was played over the PA system at Yankee Stadium, followed by Frank Sinatra’s “Theme from New York, New York.”
Both manager Boone and Yankees captain Aaron Judge called for making that combo a permanent tradition. But Sterling’s call was not part of Tuesday’s post-game victory celebration, and it was unclear if the team intends to continue it, the Times reported.
Count Jazz Chisholm Jr. among those who feel the patch is a good way to honor Sterling this season.
“He was here for a long time,” said Chisholm. “He represented the Yankees well. We all, in our childhood, have that John Sterling call rising in our ears. I think it’s pretty cool that we, as a team and organization, get to recognize him for all the great things that he’s done here.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
MLB Panic Meter: Mets, Red Sox, Angels Among Biggest Early Concerns
The season isn’t one-fourth complete, meaning it’s relatively early by MLB standards.
But it’s also time for concern for a spate of underachieving teams and players to be calibrated against the potential for a rebound.
Here’s our look at some particularly worrisome slow starts around the game.
1. The New York Mets
David Stearns’ nonsensical off-season overhaul — dumping a spate of franchise icons all in the name of improving the defense by signing or moving a bunch of people to positions they’d never played — left the Mets in a much more vulnerable position than any team should be with a $352 million payroll. But it shouldn’t be going THIS badly, even with Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor playing just seven full games together due to their calf injuries.
At least the Mets no longer have the worst record in the bigs after winning three of four from the Los Angeles Angels and Colorado Rockies. But when you’ve got to win three of four from the Angels and Rockies just to escape the basement.
2. The Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Phillies
The 2-for-1, you-both-got-your-managers-fired deal here. As with the Mets, the off-season should have provided more of a hint that the Red Sox (who didn’t re-sign valuable veteran leader Alex Bregman) and Phillies (who re-signed every aging veteran this side of Steve Jeltz) might stumble out of the gates. A 4-0 start under interim manager Don Mattingly served as a reminder the Phillies have an immeasurable edge of the Red Sox in terms of postseason-tested players and, especially, competent upper management. Boston’s geniuses apparently thought it’d be a good idea to toss Triple-A manager Chad Tracy into a locker room filled with angry players. Hard to believe “chief baseball officer” Craig Breslow actually played in the majors.
3. The Los Angeles Angels
We should all be immune to being disappointed by the Angels, who have the longest playoff drought in the majors as well as the longest streak of consecutive sub-.500 finishes despite employing both Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout from 2018 through 2023.
But the American League is a mashup of mediocrity and Trout is enjoying a renaissance season, so it wouldn’t take much for the Angels to at least hover around the fringes of contention. So of course they’ve lost 13 of 15 to fall to 13-23, which is the worst record in the bigs and puts the Angels on pace to lose 100 games for the first time ever. So there is that.
4. Willy Adames and Rafael Devers, San Francisco Giants SS/1B
Buster Posey’s weird plan to construct a contender around a bunch of singles hitters was always contingent on Adames, the one Giants position player star who chose to play in hitter-unfriendly Oracle Park, and Devers, a blockbuster trade addition last year, providing the token bit of power.
But the duo have combined for just five homers and rank 161st and 163rd, respectively, in OPS at .579 and .572 as the Giants have started 14-21. Adames’ poor strikeout-to-walk ratio — he’s struck out 45 times while drawing just six walks — is a big red flag after he increased his walk total each of the previous three seasons.
5. Andrew Abbott, Cincinnati Reds P
Abbott outperformed his peripherals (a 2.87 ERA but a 3.66 FIP) while making the All-Star team for the first time last season. But the market correction has been unforgiving for Abbott, whose 5.97 ERA is seventh-worst in the NL amongst pitchers who have thrown at least 30 innings. He is also striking out just 6.2 batters per nine innings, easily the lowest figure of his career and a concerning trend as the Reds bank on a bounce-back.
Sports
Should the Celtics Blow It Up? Analyzing Every Major Option
Everyone seems to have an opinion on how to “fix” the Celtics.
You’ll probably not be surprised to hear I have a few myself. OK, more than just a few.
Raising a 7-foot bar on a bunch of wishful thinking among Celtics fans and senseless knee-jerk reactions among the unfaithful, here’s where I stand on some of the more popular suggestions:
Fire Brad Stevens.
Let’s get the most ridiculous one out of the way.
Stevens was NBA Executive of the Year this year for a reason. He did the seemingly impossible (or so Golden State tells us) … He got rid of a bunch of overpaid veterans, remained competitive even without Jayson Tatum for the most part, and restructured a roster that should be able to compete for Eastern titles for most of the next decade.
Fire him? I say: Reward him.
Fire Joe Mazzulla.
He did such a great job during the regular season, he set himself up for a hard fall in the playoffs. And even at that, you have to wonder what might have happened had Tatum not contracted a case of Embiid-itis.
Did he mismanage the Philadelphia series? Sure. The Pistons would have fired their coach if he’d done that. Maybe even the Knicks and Cavaliers. But they haven’t won a title, made the Finals twice and been a perennial contender for the better part of a decade.
Based on the improbable regular season alone, Mazz deserves the benefit of the doubt. But don’t let it happen again.
Trade Derrick White.
On the surface, this one makes sense. As the 76ers series demonstrated, the Celtics could use a Robert Williams III type more than a White type. But that’s what Stevens, in a rare blunder, thought when he exchanged Anfernee Simons for Nikola Vucevic.
Look at the Eastern Conference. When Joel Embiid isn’t playing – which is most of the time – the top players are almost all guards: Cade Cunningham, Jalen Brunson, Donovan Mitchell, James Harden, Tyrese Haliburton … You need somebody to slow them down.
Yeah, the Celtics could move Jaylen Brown fulltime to the backcourt, but that likely would force Tatum to actually have to guard somebody. Giving Brown the tough frontcourt assignments allows Tatum to freelance, grab cheap rebounds and stay fresh for his late barrage of missed 3-pointers. Wait, that was supposed to be a positive.
Trading White maybe gets you Wendell Carter Jr., but does that make you better? I say: Just bigger.
Trade Jaylen Brown.
Let’s be honest: Breaking up the Brown/Tatum tandem would take a lot of guts. But after watching the Celtics play without Tatum for two-thirds of last season, it’s at least worth considering.
So which one gets shopped? That depends what type of team you want.
We’ve seen what the Celtics look like without Tatum – energetic, defensive-minded and all-inclusive on offense. And that’s without whatever high-level player or players you would get by trading Tatum.
You turn Brown into, say, Naz Reid and Terrence Shannon Jr., and you improve defensively on the interior and offensively on the perimeter. But you lose what made the Celtics so fun to watch this season – the team’s best defender and emotional leader.
I’d keep Brown.
Trade Jayson Tatum.
It might take just one call to turn the Celtics into the Eastern frontrunner again …
Stevens: If we give you Tatum for Giannis, how many first-round picks would you want?
Bucks GM Jon Horst: Let me get back to you on that.
If the response is anything you can count on one hand, the Celtics’ off-season is complete.
Tatum has done a lot of good things for this team, but he’s not in Giannis’ league. Few players are.
The Celtics would get their interior force, a runner who would allow the team to pick up the pace and another elite shot-blocker who would make Boston the most well-rounded defensive force in the league, with White shadowing star little guys, Brown locked onto mid-sized scorers and Giannis pitching a tent in the middle.
Stop dreaming? OK, then I’d settle for Domantas Sabonis and De’Andre Hunter.
Stand pat.
Stevens earned a nice, long vacation. Maybe he should take one.
No phones. See you in October with the same pieces that made the Celtics the favorite in the Eastern playoffs. Even with Tatum at less than 100 percent.
After all, it ain’t broke.
Unless, of course: Brad, this is Horstie getting back to you …
