Rahm’s victory, where we’ll see Tiger next, players on the move, more from Riviera

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Woods’ presence in the game remains insurmountable and all-consuming. The crowds this week and the attention he still garners proved as much. Yet as his career has entered a new stage, where his attendance in tournaments will be few and far between, the constant search for his heir apparent seems to have shifted into an appreciation for how his influence has created a level of depth that makes winning on tour harder than ever. It’s what makes Rahm’s season so far all the more impressive. Even the guy who nearly beat him Sunday, Max Homa, called him “Thanos.”

“I’ve been able to match a very small aspect of [Tiger’s career],” Rahm said. “And hopefully I can keep doing a lot of great things this year to put my name up there to one of his years.”

On Sunday, Rahm became the first PGA Tour player since Justin Thomas in the 2016-17 season to win three times before the month of March. His dominance goes beyond the numbers, too. There’s a sense that any time Rahm is in the field, he will buoy to the top of the leaderboard. With plenty more designated events and four majors on deck, Rahm’s game appears to be set up well to turn this historic year into something even greater.

There’s a chance golf fans could see Tiger Woods again in two weeks at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, which he has won eight times, or the Players Championship, the tour’s flagship event, the week after. But with Woods saying he only planned to play in the four majors and possibly two or three other events each season, it seems more likely that he won’t tee it up again on tour until the Masters on April 6-9.

“My intent last year was to play in all four majors,” Woods said. “I got three of the four. Hopefully, this year I can get all four and maybe sprinkle in a few here and there. But that’s it for the rest of my career. I know that and I understand that. That’s just my reality.”

Woods was able to play 72 holes for the first time in 10 months; he last did it at the 2022 Masters, which was his first official tournament back since he was seriously injured in a car wreck in February 2021. Woods said the walk at Riviera was probably more difficult than he let on. When asked if it was walking up hills, down hills or the overall wear and tear on his body, Woods responded, “Yep, all of the above.”

Woods said his recovery from round to round includes pretty much sleeping in ice and then reactivating his muscles the next morning.

“Yeah, I pretty much lay in ice pretty much all night,” Woods said. “It’s not fun, very cold all the time. And then treatment, then getting muscles activated and go back and hop in the cold again. The ebb and flow of that, it’s hard. It’s hard mentally, it’s hard physically.”

Moving up and down

Moving up

Harris English

English has been scrapping his way back after missing five months last season following surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right hip. He had six birdies and carded a bogey-free 65 on Sunday. He tied for 12th at 8 under.

Jason Day

The Australian continues to come on strong. He had 13 birdies in the final two rounds combined to finish at 9 under and tie for ninth. It was his fourth straight top-20 finish and he’ll move even closer to the top 50 in the world — and an invitation to the Masters, which he missed last season for the first time since 2010.

Gary Woodland

The 2019 U.S. Open winner has been struggling with his form for a while, but a tie for ninth is a step in the right direction. He had three straight rounds in the 60s before carding an even-par 71 on Sunday. Woodland said he’d been tweaking his swing and pressing too much in competition.

Matt Kuchar

Woods wasn’t the only aging golfer in his 40s who was trying to make a resurgence this week. Kuchar shot 66 in the first round and 67 in the fourth and finished solo eighth at 10 under. It was his second top-10 in his past four starts. Kuchar also didn’t play at Augusta National last season, the first time he’d missed the Masters since 2009.

Adam Svensson

Svensson, from Canada, hadn’t done much since picking up his first PGA Tour win at the RSM Classic in November. After back-to-back missed cuts, he finished tied for ninth at 9 under.

Moving down

Jordan Spieth

The Spieth roller coaster continued. After tying for sixth at the WM Phoenix Open, he missed the cut at Riviera. He lost more than a stroke to the field off the tee and about 3 strokes in putting. Not a recipe for success.

Hideki Matsuyama

Matsuyama could never figure out the poa annua greens at Riviera, which is why he missed the cut. He needed 61 putts in two rounds and lost more than 3 strokes to the field on the greens.

Justin Rose

Rose, who had won in his previous start at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, had made the cut in 11 of his previous 12 starts at Riviera. He hit only three of 14 fairways Thursday before hitting eight Friday.

Sam Burns

After back-to-back top-15 finishes, Burns wasn’t around for the weekend at Riviera. He has missed the cut in three of his five starts in the Genesis.

Matt Fitzpatrick

The reigning U.S. Open champion has missed the cut in two of his past three starts; he tied for 29th in the WM Phoenix Open. The Englishman, who tied for fifth in his previous start at Riviera, had only three birdies in 36 holes.

Best of the weekend

Best drive

Wave as you go by, Rory McIlroy.

Best tee shot

Tiger needed maybe three more rotations to record his first ace in an official PGA Tour event since 1997.

Best approach

It didn’t even bounce!

Best sand shot

Classic look, a classy shot from Keith Mitchell.

Best up and down

A fried egg in a wall for Homa.

Best putt

Way to use the backstop, Collin Morikawa.

Best break

Jon Rahm will probably never duplicate it again.

Best social media

Check that one off, indeed.

At least he’s honest.

Start ’em young.

The stars were out in L.A., from Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen to Rob Lowe.

Love somebody like Tiger loves JT.

Say what?

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