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January 12, 2024

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Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Travelers Championship: Full $20M Payout as Keegan Bradley Shocks World
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Travelers Championship did not disappoint as the Signature Events are officially over for 2025. Sunday at the Travelers saw many big-time names battling for a spot on the first page of the leaderboard. Fans wanted to see this from a Signature Event, and boy, did it deliver as the hometown player came out on top. Keegan Bradley made the right decision on the 18th for his approach and sank the five-foot birdie putt to win by one shot. This victory was his eighth career PGA Tour title. Bradley could be on the verge of Ryder Cup history as he continues to make his own case for becoming a playing captain. CROMWELL, CONNECTICUT - JUNE 22: Keegan Bradley of the United States celebrates with the trophy after his winning putt on the 18th green during the final round of the Travelers Championship 2025 at TPC River... CROMWELL, CONNECTICUT - JUNE 22: Keegan Bradley of the United States celebrates with the trophy after his winning putt on the 18th green during the final round of the Travelers Championship 2025 at TPC River Highlands on June 22, 2025 in Cromwell, Connecticut. More Photo byTommy Fleetwood crumbled on Sunday as he did not make the right choice on his final approach shot. After a last-minute club change, it ultimately cost him the victory. He battled back from a rough start to his Sunday round and led until the final three holes, where he made two bogeys to fall short once again. It is his 28th top-5 finish and sixth runner-up on the PGA Tour. With this win, Bradley will take home $3.6 million and move up to No. 8 in the FedEx Cup standings with this week's 700 points. CROMWELL, CONNECTICUT - JUNE 22: Keegan Bradley of the United States reacts to his birdie putt on the 18th green during the final round of the Travelers Championship 2025 at TPC River Highlands on June... CROMWELL, CONNECTICUT - JUNE 22: Keegan Bradley of the United States reacts to his birdie putt on the 18th green during the final round of the Travelers Championship 2025 at TPC River Highlands on June 22, 2025 in Cromwell, Connecticut. More Photo byFleetwood's six-foot miss on 18 cost him well over a million dollars. This loss will sting for a while as the Englishman had the win in the bag before going 2-over in his last three holes. He earned $1,760,000 since he and Russell Henley tied at 14-under overall. Henley may have self-reported a penalty earlier in the week, but his good sportsmanship did not go unnoticed. The former Georgia Bulldog tied for second after he made an incredible chip-in from the greenside rough on 18. Harris English and Jason Day tied for fourth to win $880,000 each. Rounding out the top six were World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and World No. 2 Rory McIlroy, who tied for sixth. They each earned $695,000. No cuts were made this week in New England, so everyone will receive a piece of the $20 million purse. How much did the rest of the field win in the final PGA Tour Signature Event? Travelers Championship 2025 Payout: 1. Keegan Bradley (-15): $3,600,000 T2. Tommy Fleetwood, Russell Henley (-14): $$1,760,000 T4. Harris English, Jason Day (-13): $880,000 T6. Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy (-12): $695,000 8. Brian Harman (-10): $620,000 T9. Harry Hall, Justin Thomas, Lucas Glover (-9): $540,000 T12. Patrick Cantlay, Denny McCarthy (-8): $440,000 T14. Byeong Hun An, Ben Griffin, J.J. Spaun (-7): $360,000 T17. Ryan Fox, Robert MacIntyre, Matt Fitzpatrick, Maverick McNealy, Sam Burns, Aaron Rai, Nick Taylor, Wyndham Clark (-6): $252,562 T25. Bud Cauley, Kevin Yu, Davis Thompson, Austin Eckroat, Taylor Pendrith (-5): $154,500 T30. Adam Scott, Andrew Novak, Alex Noren, Hideki Matsuyama (-4): $125,375 T34. Luke Clanton, Stephan Jaeger (-3): $108,750 T36. Gary Woodland, Ludvig Åberg, Rickie Fowler, Max Greyserman, Joe Highsmith, Jhonattan Vegas (-2): $90,500 T42. Collin Morikawa, Daniel Berger, Michael Kim (-1): $72,000 T44. Tom Kim, Shane Lowry, J.T. Poston, Sepp Straka, Sam Stevens, Tom Hoge, Christiaan Bezuidenhout (E): $54,285 T52. Cameron Young, Jacob Bridgeman (+1): $46,500 T54. Akshay Bhatia, Ryan Gerard, Max Homa (+2): $45,500 T57. Adam Hadwin, Matthieu Pavon, Cam Davis, Davis Riley (+3): $43,750 T61. Xander Schauffele, Sungjae Im (+4): $42,250 T63. Min Woo Lee, Thomas Detry (+5): $41,250 65. Mackenzie Hughes (+7): $40,500 T66. Nick Dunlap, Tony Finau (+11): $39,750 WD: Jordan Spieth, Si Woo Kim, Eric Cole, Viktor Hovland, Matti Schmid Next week, the PGA Tour will head to Michigan for the Rocket Classic. Who will come out on top? More Golf: Tiger Woods' TGL League Shows Promise for Golf Future as Season 1 Comes To A Close


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Travelers Championship 2025 prize money payouts for each player at TPC River Highlands
Keegan Bradley rules the northeast once again. This year's U.S. Ryder Cup Captain won the 2025 Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut on Sunday. Bradley made birdie on the 72nd and final hole while Tommy Fleetwood, who held the lead all day, made bogey — a most costly of two-shot swings for the Englishman, who will have to wait another day for his first victory on the PGA Tour. The Travelers was the Tour's final signature event of the season, meaning there was lots of cash up for grabs. Here's how much prize money each player is taking home after Sunday's action in New England. Travelers Championship 2025 prize money payouts

Travel Weekly
3 hours ago
- Travel Weekly
Hawaii visitor satisfaction remains high, but Canadians might stay away
Christine Hitt A new study finds that while Hawaii visitor satisfaction remains high, recent Canadian visitors are less likely to return, due in part to the political climate. The Hawaii Department of Business, Economic Development & Tourism released its visitor satisfaction study for the first quarter of 2025. The results come from a survey of recent visitors from eight markets, including U.S. West, U.S. East, Japan, Canada and Europe. Hawaii received satisfactory marks, with most visitors in all markets rating it a 7 out of 8. Trip expectations also saw positive movement, with increases of "exceeded expectations" selections seen in the markets of U.S. West, U.S. East, Canada, Oceania, Korea, China and Europe. The report found that repeat visitors from U.S. West gave higher satisfactory scores compared to first-time visitors from the same market. Also, travel party size among visitors from U.S. East made a difference: Travelers in groups of three or more people gave higher scores than those traveling alone. Repeat visitors from U.S. West, U.S. East, Oceania and Japan were more likely to return to the state than first-time visitors. The study also found that traveler with higher incomes and education in U.S. West markets were more likely to return. Canadian visitors less likely to return When visitors were asked whether they are likely to return to Hawaii in the next five years, the number of Canadian visitors had the largest differential. Only 55% of Canadians said that they were "very likely" to return, compared to 68% in the first quarter of 2024. Compared to the last 10 years, 2025 ranks the lowest. Last year, Canadians' top reason for not returning was that it is "too expensive" (60%). This year, Canadians' responses include political climate (45%), high cost of travel (30%), long-distance travel (12%) and travel restrictions or relations (12%). "High cost of travel" remains a top reason for not returning for U.S. West (48%), U.S. East (42%), Japan (34%), Oceania (48%), Korea (57%) and Europe (40%) markets.