Between personal observation and some internet rumblings about the quality of the technology employed by the new tech-driven indoor golf league he co-founded with Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy decided recently to put TGL’s simulator through his own test.
Rory McIlroy said there’s space for different golf products but expressed concern for the game becoming overexposed.
Tiger Woods has returned to professional golf, though not in the PGA Tour. Since it launched earlier this month, Woods has been taking part in his own TMRW Golf League (TGL), which he founded in partnership with fellow major champion Rory McIlroy.
You can only imagine how the TGL technicians felt when Rory McIlroy walked into his 90-minute practice session last week with two launch monitors from his personal collection. The four-time major champion and TGL co-founder needed to put his concerns to rest before he debuted in the league: Is the simulator used for golf’s new indoor league accurate?
TGL gave golf fans a taste of its new overtime format as the finale to the matchup between Tiger Woods' Jupiter Links and Rory McIlroy's Boston Common.
In an interview with BBC Sports, Rory McIlroy listed 3 things on his to-do list for the rest of his career. And yes, one of them is a green jacket.
McIlroy said Woods was as intense as ever for their Week 4 match, the first close one so far in the indoor sim league.
Boston’s TGL debut produced its best match so far: Boston Common Golf, led by Rory McIlroy, may have lost to Tiger Woods’ Jupiter Links Golf Club team in overtime on Monday, but the newly-launched TMRW Golf League (TGL) was probably the real winner amid the best match of the inaugural season so far.
TGL gave golf fans a taste of its new overtime format as the finale to the matchup between Tiger Woods' Jupiter Links and Rory McIlroy's Boston Common.
Rory McIlroy is sharpening his focus for a "pivotal" 2025 campaign amid continuing uncertainty over "what the landscape of golf looks like going forward." McIlroy acknowledged that he's making his plans in a climate of continuing uncertainty.
Rory McIlroy believes the PGA Tour has a schedule problem with the product being diminished and he has called on bosses to scale back the number of tournaments per season