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FedEx Standings: Who’s on the Bubble & Who We are Shocked Didn’t Make the Cut

The BMW Championship was full of some truly great golf. Bryson almost achieved the rarely seen 59, missing it my one shot. Not a bad score for the leader of most of the tournament, but we were all hoping to see him sink that putt.
Now, the Tour Championship is all set with the top 30 players in the FedEx Cup standings. Competition is fierce with an eye-popping $15 million for the top spot. Of course, last place doesn’t get a bad payout either fetching a cool $395,000. All 30 golfers will also receive exemptions that could come in handy down the line.
Here are some golfers who were close to the bubble:
1. Daniel Berger
Winning the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in January, Daniel Berger looked to be one who would manage to grab one of the top spots. He finished the BMW Championship at 13 under which tied him for 26th in the tournament.
2. Sergio Garcia
Sergio Garcia played well over the weekend and finished tied for 6th place at 20-under. Considering he was number 44 in the standings before last week’s tournament, his performance gave him and impressive bump up to number 28.
3. Billy Horschel
Horschel wrapped up his final round at Caves Valley with no bogeys and 5-under par. He is projected to lock in the 29th on the leaderboard. He was the 2014 FedEx champion, so he is likely to put up a fight to recapture the title.
4. Erik van Rooyen
Van Rooyen won his first PGA Tour title at the beginning of this month, but don’t count him out of the top 30. With no bogeys in his final round in the BMW Championship and ended in 5th place for a 20-under. He is currently projected to come in 27th in the standings.
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We are Surprised These Golfers Didn’t Make it to the FedEx Playoffs
Playoffs kicked off a couple of weeks ago and there are a few familiar faces that didn’t make the cut. While this year looked a little different due to pandemic restrictions causing the PGA Tour to reschedule thirteen events in 2020, we are still a little surprised we won’t be seeing them competing this year.
1. Henrik Stenson
Playing just five qualifying events during his time on the Tour, Stenson may not be the most shocking name on this list. He does play on both the PGA and European Tours so his FedEx Cup standings have taken a hit as a result. He was at number 201 at the beginning of playoffs, which gave him a longshot at the FedEx Cup this year.
2. Jim Furyk
At 50 years old, Furyk is a Ryder Cup Captain and still a force to be reckoned with on the PGA Tour Champions. He is also still technically defending runner up at the Players championship due to some of the scheduling changes, so we are a little disappointed he didn’t get a shot at some more points.
3. Matt Wallace
Last year, Wallace was near the top 25 in the standings after having an incredible performance to tie for third at the 2019 PGA Championship. More recently, he finished tied for 4th at the Memorial Tournament, but it wasn’t enough for him to make the cutoff for playoffs.
4. Charl Schwartzel
Back in 2020, Schwartzel grabbed two top-5 finishes making him the most shocking player who didn’t make the cut this year. However, he did have some disappointments by missing another seven cuts out of ten events.

When JJ Spaun stood over a 64-foot birdie putt on the 72nd hole of the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont, few could have predicted what would come next. The ball meandered across the slick green, trickling over every contour, picking up speed at the crest, and then—like it had GPS—dropped center cup. Spaun dropped his putter, raised his arms, and the crowd erupted. With that single stroke, he claimed his first major title in one of the most dramatic finishes in U.S. Open history.
But how does Spaun’s putt stack up against other legendary finishes in the tournament’s storied past? Let’s break down some of the most iconic moments and see where this one lands.
1. Payne Stewart – 1999 U.S. Open at Pinehurst
Perhaps the most iconic putt in U.S. Open history came from Payne Stewart, who nailed a 15-footer for par on the 18th to win by one over Phil Mickelson. The pose—fist pump and outstretched leg—has since been immortalized in a statue at Pinehurst. What made it legendary wasn’t just the putt—it was the context: Stewart’s final major before his tragic death just months later.
Verdict: Iconic and emotional. Spaun’s putt was longer, but Stewart’s was more poetic.
2. Tiger Woods – 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines
Woods drained a 12-foot birdie on the 72nd hole to force a playoff with Rocco Mediate—while basically playing on one leg. That tournament went to sudden death after an 18-hole playoff, and Tiger prevailed. This was peak Tiger drama, pain and all.
Verdict: Spaun’s putt was longer, but Tiger’s win was sheer willpower and mystique.
3. Jack Nicklaus – 1972 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach
With a 1-iron shot that hit the flagstick on 17 and a crucial birdie putt on 18, Jack sealed a dominant win. His precision and timing under pressure showed why he’s the GOAT.
Verdict: Not a putt for the win, but a signature finishing statement from Jack. Spaun’s was more electric in terms of pure putter drama.
4. Ben Hogan – 1950 U.S. Open at Merion
Hogan’s 1-iron into the 18th fairway and the par to force a playoff—just 16 months after a near-fatal car crash—remain legendary. He won the playoff and completed one of golf’s great comeback stories.
Verdict: Larger-than-life comeback. Spaun’s putt had more flair, but Hogan’s win was heroic.
5. JJ Spaun – 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont
Let’s not underestimate what Spaun accomplished. The pressure was immense. He wasn’t the favorite. And on the most treacherous greens in golf, he buried a 64-foot bomb—a putt most players would be happy to lag to within 5 feet—to win the U.S. Open outright.
Verdict: For distance, surprise, and drama, Spaun’s putt may be the most shocking winning stroke in U.S. Open history.
Final Thoughts
JJ Spaun may not have the résumé of a Nicklaus or Woods, but for one Sunday afternoon in June 2025, he created a moment that will live in golf lore forever. Spaun’s putt was longer than Stewart’s, more unexpected than Tiger’s, and more dramatic than any final-hole finish in recent memory.
In terms of pure clutch putting? It might just be the greatest walk-off in U.S. Open history.
Blog
The Zen of the Shank: Finding Inner Peace in Your Worst Shots
Find your inner peace even when you aren’t playing well.

Ah, the shank. That glorious, unpredictable misfire that sends your pristine golf ball screaming sideways, often directly into the unsuspecting shins of your playing partner, or perhaps, with a touch of poetic irony, into the very lake you’ve been trying to avoid all day. Most golfers, bless their earnest little hearts, view the shank as a catastrophic failure, a blight upon their scorecard, a testament to their inherent lack of coordination. They curse, they throw clubs, they contemplate a career in competitive thumb-wrestling. But not I. No, my friends, for I, Ty Webb, have found enlightenment in the humble shank.
You see, the shank is not a mistake; it’s a revelation. It’s the universe’s way of reminding you that control is an illusion, that perfection is a myth, and that sometimes, the most direct path to your goal is, in fact, a wildly indirect one. Think of it as a philosophical detour, a sudden, unexpected journey into the unknown. One moment, you’re aiming for the green, a paragon of precision and intent. The next, your ball is ricocheting off a tree, narrowly missing a squirrel, and landing, by some divine comedic intervention, closer to the hole than your perfectly struck drive ever would have. Is that not a miracle? Is that not a sign that the golf gods, much like life itself, have a wicked sense of humor?
The key, my dear apprentices of the links, is acceptance. Embrace the shank. Welcome it with open arms, like a long-lost, slightly inebriated relative. When that familiar, sickening thwack echoes through the air, do not despair. Instead, take a deep breath. Close your eyes. Feel the gentle breeze on your face. And then, with a knowing smile, open them and observe the chaos you have wrought. Is it not beautiful in its own chaotic way? Is there not a certain freedom in relinquishing control, in allowing the ball to choose its own destiny, however bizarre that destiny may be?
Some say the shank is a sign of poor technique. I say it’s a sign of a vibrant, untamed spirit. A golfer who never shanks is a golfer who has never truly lived, never truly explored the outer limits of their own golfing absurdity. They are content with mediocrity, with predictable trajectories and mundane outcomes. But you, my enlightened few, you understand that the true joy of golf lies not in the score, but in the story. And what a story a good shank can tell.

So, the next time you feel that familiar tremor of a shank brewing, don’t fight it. Let it flow. Let it be. For in the heart of every shank lies a lesson, a laugh, and perhaps, just perhaps, a path to a lower score you never saw coming. After all, as the great philosopher Basho once said, “A flute with no holes, is not a flute. A donut with no hole, is a Danish.” And a golf game without a shank? Well, that’s just not golf, is it?
Blog
Meet The Canadian Open Qualifier Tied To ClickIt Golf!
“This week was incredible,” he said. “A dream come true.”

Josh Goldenberg doesn’t plan to quit his day job. But he had a great time dabbling in his old career.

He gave up on pro golf, then qualified for his first PGA Tour event.
Read the full story here
https://golf.com/news/josh-goldenberg-rbc-canadian-open/?amp=1
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