After it was confirmed a few days ago that Xander Schauffele will miss The American Express, as well as the Farmers Insurance Open, there were immediately rumors about the nature of his injury. His team confirmed that it was a matter of 'medical issues',
Scottie Scheffler injured his hand on Christmas while making homemade ravioli. He then had to have surgery, which forced him to withdraw from the season-opening event at The Sentry. Scheffler then withdrew from The American Express,
Xander Schauffele is dealing with a right rib injury that has affected him since late last season, according to Golf Channel's Todd Lewis. The discomfort began towards the end of 2024, and while Schauffele played through the pain at the Sentry,
Xander Schauffele will be out more than just one tournament. Schauffele withdrew from this week’s American Express in La Quinta, California, with his manager citing a “medical reason.” Now, Schauffele will miss his first Farmers Insurance Open since making his debut at Torrey Pines in 2016 as a Korn Ferry Tour member.
The $9.2 million Farmers Insurance Open is scheduled to begin Wednesday at Torrey Pines Golf Course, short of some of its star power by injury and illness.
World No.2 Xander Schauffele receives positive injury update as he nears PGA Tour return. PGA tour star Xander Schuaffele has received a positive injury update but still remains out of competitive action, according to a report.
The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am begins Thursday, January 30, at its historic home at Pebble Beach Golf Links in California.
It may be the dead of winter where you are right now, but this might warm you up: It's golf season somewhere! Believe it or not, the 2025 PGA Tour is well underway, having concluded tournaments far from the snow in Hawaii and California already.
There's one active PGA Tour player climbing the all-time list of consecutive cuts made and he's showing no sign of slowing down.
Greg Norman has outlined his immediate plans after his tenure as the chief executive and commissioner of LIV Golf came to an end.
Scottie Scheffler felt frustrated sitting at home for two tournaments he normally plays while recovering from glass puncturing the the palm of his right hand while making ravioli. A big part of him was thankful the injury wasn't worse.
Lackluster fields, slow play and zero buzz have been the Tour's story so far in 2025, but the ingredients are in place this week to change the narrative.