Entertainment
How Xander Schauffele influenced Justin Thomas’ putting improvement
Thomas snapped three-year winless drought at RBC Heritage with lengthy playoff birdie
Prior to Sunday, Justin Thomas hadn’t made a putt of significant length to win a PGA TOUR event. He changed that with a winning 21-foot birdie on the first playoff hole at the RBC Heritage, also snapping a winless drought that dated to the 2022 PGA Championship.
“Been fortunate to have a bunch of tap-ins, but I’ve never made a putt (of length), and that was pretty cool,” Thomas said afterward. “That was as fun as I thought it would be.”
Thomas is amidst a putting renaissance in 2025, so it’s fitting that his drought-busting title at Harbour Town Golf Links included a heroic putt to win. Thomas ranks No. 24 this season in Strokes Gained: Putting, a significant improvement from No. 174 in 2024 and No. 135 the year prior. Thomas’ ball-striking numbers have remained strong throughout the winless drought, but it’s hard to win on TOUR without gaining strokes on the greens.
Enter Xander Schauffele. Last fall, Schauffele spent two to three hours with Thomas on a practice putting green, asking a series of questions that pushed Thomas to reconsider his overall attitudes to putting. Schauffele wasn’t necessarily coaching Thomas on putting technique; he was more so a putting therapist.
Schauffele’s questions resonated with Thomas. The Kentuckian was trying too many different things, he realized, and hadn’t spent ample time focusing on the fundamentals that unlock elite putting. In his winner’s press conference on Hilton Head Island, Thomas was asked to explain the recent statistical uptick on the greens. He quickly launched into a monologue that credited Schauffele, a fellow two-time major winner and longtime U.S. Team teammate at the Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup.
“I called Xander at the end of last year because I think he’s one of the best putters in fundamentals and not just putting but everything and I was just like, ‘Can I just pick your brain for like two or three hours, just talk to you about putting?’” Thomas said Sunday evening. “So he came out with me, and he just was asking me a bunch of different questions. … He doesn’t leave any box unchecked. Like he said that day, he’s like, ‘If it has anything to do with you potentially improving in golf, I’ve probably done it or tried it.’
“So I just was talking to him about this process and how he reads greens and how he sees things and his practice and everything, and it honestly was just being with him, and he would kind of ask something and I was like, ‘Yeah, I used to do that’. And then he was like, ‘Well, how about something like this? Like, I used to use the string line here.’ Okay. The more I was talking, I’m like, ‘I don’t do any of the things that I used to do in my best putting years.’ (In) 2017-18, I was very, very regimented of the things that I did, and how he said it is: I had a home base and I had no home base. I had things that I did, but it was a very vague bag of thingsf and there was no consistency to it. I feel like I used to have a very good home base of fundamentals and things that I did.
“So it honestly, while he helped, it was more of the questions he asked me made me realize that I’m trying basically too hard and I’m trying too many different things versus I think it’s a serious, serious, serious skill to continue to work on the things that you do really well and not doing it differently, and I think that’s been more of what it is. I have my fundamentals and things that I do and checkpoints, and I’m sticking to them.”
The results have validated the process. Thomas ranked third at the RBC Heritage in SG: Putting, gaining roughly 5.5 strokes on the field across the week, and he’s pacing toward the best putting season of his decade-long PGA TOUR career.
If Thomas is rekindling the putting prowess from his early years as a pro, it could spell trouble for his peers. He ranked inside the top 50 on TOUR in SG: Putting in both 2017 and 2018, winning seven times across that span. Since then, he hasn’t ranked inside the top 80 for a full season, bottoming out at No. 174 in 2024.
Schauffele knew what an improved Thomas on the greens could mean. He decided to help anyways – perhaps at his own risk.
“I’m very artistic and feel-based in all of my game, and I think once I got to putting and the putting green, I turned into way too mechanical and robotic,” Thomas said, “and that’s not me.
“I’m better off, I call it ‘pro-am putting,’ when it’s like I obviously want to make a putt that I’m hitting in a pro-am, but I’m not grinding on read and thinking about all these different things. I’m pretty much stepping up, give it a look and go, and how often I make putts. It was probably more up here (mentally) than it was anywhere else.”
After a few hours with Schauffele, that message crystallized in Thomas’ head – and it could spark spirited battles between the two for years to come.
Entertainment
Scottie Scheffler’s son Bennett steals the show at WM Phoenix Open
Scottie Scheffler’s son Bennett steals the show at WM Phoenix Open
At TPC Scottsdale ahead of the 2026 WM Phoenix Open, the biggest cheers weren’t reserved for World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler or his pro-am partners Travis Kelce and Brooks Koepka—they were for his toddler son, Bennett Scheffler.The nearly 20-month-old, born in May 2024, turned heads during Wednesday’s practice round and pro-am festivities. Armed with a blue plastic club, Bennett took swings on the fairway while Scheffler’s caddie Ted Scott knelt beside him, dramatically tossing grass to check the wind and delivering a mock “yardage.” After a miss and a determined second swing, Bennett made solid contact, prompting an eruption from the crowd as if a pro had holed out from 40 feet Videos of the wholesome moment quickly went viral, with clips amassing tens of thousands of views on social media. One observer noted, “Not Ted Scott giving Bennett a yardage and him proceeding to hit the ball—learning from dad well.” Bennett also joined his father at the pre-tournament press conference, sitting nearby as Scheffler discussed his focus amid the rowdy Phoenix atmosphere While Scheffler, a two-time champion here (2022, 2023), prepares to chase a third title starting Thursday, the early storyline belongs to his mini-me. Fans are already joking about Bennett’s future as the 2045 Masters winner. In golf’s most party-like venue, family charm stole the spotlight.
Entertainment
Lindsey Vonn is trying to achieve the seemingly impossible: Win gold with a ruptured ACL
Lindsey Vonn’s mental coach didn’t need to be at her side after her most recent crash. All the way from Sacramento, and watching the race on TV, he knew what her disposition would be.
“I knew the minute she crashed that she would race [in the Olympics] if there was any opportunity to race,” said Armando Gonzalez, who has worked closely with the ski-racing legend since 2020.
On Friday, a week after that World Cup accident, she completed her first downhill training run. On a day when fog delayed competition at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre in Cortina, Vonn completed the course in 1 minute, 40.33 seconds, putting her in ninth place through 15 competitors and less than a second off the leader.
She wore a brace to protect her injured left knee. The ACL acts as a stabilizer in the knee, preventing it from buckling and keeping the tibia from moving too far forward. It’s essential to rotational stability, which plays a role in sudden movements and jumping. Downhill ski racers are not running backs or point guards, however, and don’t make those same jolting lateral moves and therefore, experts say, are better able to compensate for a torn ACL.
Still, Vonn has a remarkably high pain threshold.
“Her ability to overcome injury, to push through, her mental attitude, her resilience, it’s amazing,” said Shawna Niles, her massage therapist.
At an Olympics news conference this week, Vonn said her knee felt stable, not swollen, and that she will be ready to compete Sunday in the women’s downhill. She has been in intensive therapy this week, posting videos of her squatting, jumping and moving laterally in a knee brace.
Even some fellow Olympians are astonished.
“She appears to be quite superhuman at times, and she is that right now,” said Brazilian ski racer Lucas Pinheiro Braathen, who said Vonn “has been an inspiration for me ever since I was introduced to skiing.”
In an interview with The Times, Gonzalez said the latest comeback “isn’t about proving anything to anyone.”
Gonzalez and Niles were made available to The Times by FIGS, the official scrubwear of the USA medical team at the Olympics.
“It’s about defying the odds,” Gonzalez said of Vonn, “and being the competitor who always finds a way.”
Vonn, a three-time Olympic medalist, is attempting an astounding comeback after almost six years removed from racing and a partial titanium knee replacement in 2024. She had 84 World Cup wins in 21 seasons, making her among the most decorated ski racers in history.
“Unfortunately, in my career, I’ve had a lot of challenges,” she told reporters. “I have always pushed the limits and in downhill, it’s a very dangerous sport, and anything can happen. And because I push the limits, I crash and I’ve been injured more times than I would like to admit, to myself even.
“But those are the cards I’ve been dealt in my life, and I’m going to play my cards the best way I can.”
Despite the injury that would sideline even elite athletes, Vonn called this Olympic opportunity “icing on the cake” of her storied career.
“I never expected to be here,” she said. “I felt like this was an amazing opportunity to close out my career in a way that I wanted to. It hasn’t gone exactly the way I wanted it to, but I don’t have any regrets.
“I’m still here. I think I’m still able to fight. I think I’m still able to try.”
Entertainment
Everything Emma Raducanu said after reaching final at Transylvania Open
Emma Raducanu has shared her thoughts after coming through a “proper battle” at the Transylvania Open to reach her second final at WTA Tour level.
The world No 30 fought her way to a 7-5, 3-6, 6-3 victory against 91st-ranked Ukrainian qualifier Oleksandra Oliynykova in a semi-final lasting two hours and 48 minutes.
Raducanu, whose father Ion is Romanian, was roared on by the crowd in Cluj as she recovered from being a break down at 1-2 in the deciding set.
The 23-year-old Brit will face Romania’s Sorana Cirstea, the world No 36, in the final at the WTA 250 tournament as she chases her second career title.
Here is everything Raducanu said in her post-match press conference.
Q. Your thoughts on this amazing win?
Raducanu: Yeah, I mean, what a match, it was a proper battle. Such a tricky opponent, just made so many balls, played in a way that isn’t very common, and you don’t face that very much. It’s such a challenge to play, especially as the balls get older and it gets a bit slower, it gets harder to put the ball away. And yeah, she’s incredibly crafty and what an athlete and competitor, so I’m really, really happy to have come through that.
Q. What do you think about the crowd that supported you so loud… did they help you win this match?
Raducanu: Yeah, I’d really say that, and I mean it because when I’m a break down in the third set, it’s very easy I guess if there was no one in the crowd and a dead atmosphere… you know, you don’t know how you’re gonna fight compared to when the whole stadium is kind of willing you on to fight for every point and that’s what I did really well in that moment. No matter how I was feeling, no matter how uncomfortable I was, I really just gave my best for every point so I could leave the court with no regrets. And I think the crowd helped me so much to do that and it was such a nice atmosphere. And I’ve said it all week, they’ve really helped through tough moments and it’s really felt like I’ve been playing at home.
Raducanu: Yeah, I mean, I think the key moment was… There were two. I think it was 3-1 in the second set where I was in control, and I played a bit of a sloppy game to return and she held. But if I’m 4-1 up there, you don’t know how the match is gonna go. And then the next one, I think, turning point, I mean for sure, the 2-1 game when I’d just been broken, I just felt like all the momentum was going her way. I think I lost eight points in a row and I just felt like I couldn’t put the ball anywhere because she was there and she was going to hit a winner or she was going to hit something that I didn’t know what to do with. So that was a really big break at 2-1, and it gave me a little bit of hope. And then I managed to hold serve and get new balls, and I really think the new balls helped in the third set because shots that she was making with the old fluffy ones, they were just a bit late and she was missing, and it was travelling a bit too far, so that helped as well.
Q. How much resilience did it take to win today?
Raducanu: I mean, today took, like, all my supply of resilience. I think for a while I need to recharge that tank. It was such a difficult match, I have to say mentally, emotionally, you’re facing something. It looks… the whole stadium’s probably watching it like and can’t believe what’s happening, and I’m the same, but you have to face what’s in front of you, and it’s so difficult to deal with, I think. Sometimes more difficult than if someone’s hitting the ball fast, and especially when it’s relentless every single time . It just doesn’t really happen on the tour. So for me to have overcome that, it took a lot of patience, it took a lot of mental strength, and really pleased.
Q. You took a medical timeout at the end of the first set… what was the problem and how are you feeling now?
Raducanu: Yeah, I mean, now, yeah, I feel pretty tired. Obviously, I played like three hours and really, really tough physical match, moved so much, but I think it’s, when you’re playing four matches in a row it’s not something that I’ve done much, but to be feeling your body, to be feeling the pain, I guess, of the sweet rewards of being in the final, I think it makes it worth it. It’s just a bit of wear and tear from playing back-to-back matches. So I’ll take it.
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