Tony Hendricks

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Tony Hendricks

Tony Hendricks

@TonyHendricks0

Arizona

United States Katılım Şubat 2015
299 Takip Edilen385 Takipçiler
Arizona Cardinals
Arizona Cardinals@AZCardinals·
Thank you, @DavePasch Since joining the organization as play-by-play announcer in 2002, your voice has become synonymous with the Arizona Cardinals. We wish you the best in your future endeavors
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Sammy
Sammy@scibulka3·
Now from a sheer STORYLINE standpoint: - he was “Mr. Arizona” in HS - stays in AZ goes to U of A! - he could be a HOMEGROWN star - he’s a PERFECT fit for PHX - comes from a successfully athletic family - he is the “chip on your shoulder” player from this draft Cmon 10/10 pick
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Patrick McDonald
Patrick McDonald@pmcdonaldCBS·
Come up short on No. 10 and this is what you’re left with. Light work for Cam Smith but won’t be for others.
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Nick Novinsky
Nick Novinsky@NickNovinsky·
This is wild
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Tappy Gilmore
Tappy Gilmore@HappysBurner·
Love it when you have to make a shot 145 in and had to hit a low hook to this pin
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SleeperNFL
SleeperNFL@SleeperNFL·
Jacoby you better get back bro… Carson might take this 😭
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Tyler Drake
Tyler Drake@Tdrake4sports·
Jeremiyah Love 🏃‍♂️💨
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Game 7
Game 7@game7__·
Gary Woodland is the anti-Tiger Woods in every possible way. Allow me to explain why. Gary Woodland just won the Houston Open by five shots. Two and a half years ago, doctors cut a baseball-sized hole in his skull to remove a brain lesion. He spent two nights in the ICU. There was a real chance he would wake up paralyzed. This is the best comeback story in golf right now and it's not even close. The full story behind today is insane. In 2019, Gary Woodland won the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. He finished 13-under and beat Brooks Koepka by three strokes. At that point, Woodland had four PGA Tour wins including a major, and was ranked 12th in the world. Then everything slowly fell apart. After the 2023 Masters, Woodland became consumed by fear. Not regular nerves. Actual, debilitating terror. He was afraid he was going to die. Afraid something was going to happen to his kids. Afraid of falling to his death in his sleep. At the Memorial Tournament in June 2023, he woke up in his hotel room and clung to the mattress for an hour. He was convinced that if he let go, he would fall. His hands were trembling. He had no appetite. Spasms would jolt him awake at night. He was losing focus over putts. Forgetting what club he was holding mid-swing. An MRI finally revealed the cause. A lesion was growing on his brain. It was pressing directly on the part of his brain that controls fear and anxiety. Think about that. The thing responsible for every irrational terror he was experiencing had a physical, medical explanation. His brain was literally being pressed into a constant state of fear. In September 2023, Woodland had a craniotomy. Surgeons removed as much of the lesion as they could, roughly half, because it was pressed against the optic tract of his left eye. They cut off blood supply to the rest to try to stop it from growing. He walked out of the hospital two days later. Started putting again two days after that. He came back to the PGA Tour in January 2024 at the Sony Open. But he was nowhere near the same player. In 26 starts during 2024, he had three top-25 finishes. His best was a tie for ninth at the Shriners Children's Open. For a former U.S. Open champion, those are survival numbers. And nobody knew the full extent of what he was dealing with. Because on top of the brain surgery and the recovery, Woodland had been diagnosed with PTSD. He kept it hidden for over a year. He described being hypervigilant on the course. A walking scorer once got too close from behind and startled him so badly that his vision went blurry and he forgot where he was. He would go into bathrooms between holes and cry. He would break down in the scoring trailer after rounds. He would sprint to his car in the parking lot just to hide it from everyone. He said he felt like he was living a lie. Spending so much energy pretending to be okay that he had nothing left for the actual golf. On March 9, three weeks before this Houston Open, Woodland finally told the truth publicly. He sat down with Golf Channel's Rex Hoggard and revealed everything. The PTSD. The crying. The fear. All of it. He said after that interview it felt like a thousand pounds had been lifted off his back. Then he showed up at Memorial Park. He opened with a 64. Then a 63. Then a 65. Then a 67 on Sunday to close it out. 259 total. A tournament record. 21-under par. Five strokes clear of Nicolai Højgaard. Wire to wire. Led every single round. His first win since the 2019 U.S. Open. Nearly seven years between victories. Brain surgery, PTSD, two years of hiding in bathrooms between holes, and a thousand pounds of weight he was carrying that nobody could see. This is a guy who was a basketball player first. He grew up in Topeka, Kansas, won state basketball titles at Shawnee Heights High School, and played a year of college basketball at Washburn before he realized golf was his future. He won the Courage Award from the PGA Tour in 2025. The seventh player to ever receive it. And now, at 41 years old, with titanium plates holding his skull together, he walked into Memorial Park three weeks after telling the world the truth about what he had been going through and played the best golf of the entire field for four straight days. The full breakdown of Woodland's career, the surgery, the PTSD, and how he got to this point is here: itsgame7.com/news/gary-wood… There is a reason this one hits different. Comeback stories in sports usually involve torn ACLs or shoulder surgeries. Things you can see. Things that heal on a timeline. Woodland's comeback was from something that rewired his brain. Something that turned his own mind against him. And the hardest part of his recovery wasn't physical. It was admitting to the people around him that he wasn't okay. Three weeks ago he said the words out loud. Today he won a golf tournament by five shots.
Rick Golfs@Top100Rick

Gary Woodland just hit 196 ball speed on the golf course. 360 yard drive. Thats 5MPH faster than Bryson’s “Beefcake” year average when he added 40 pounds to get longer. Gary is doing this at 42 without looking noticeably different than he ever has.

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🌵 Mr. Az
🌵 Mr. Az@MrAzSports·
Christian Kirk favorite restaurant: Tutti Santi
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Monday Q Info
Monday Q Info@acaseofthegolf1·
Reminder that a Monday Q changed Cam Young’s life. Had no status, Monday Q’d into a KFT event in Nebraska, finished 11th, got him into next event, finished 14th that week, earned another start, finished 6th, earned another week, finished 2nd, earned membership and has never looked back. Now a Players Champion. It all started at a Monday Q in Nebraska.
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Jamie Kennedy
Jamie Kennedy@jamierkennedy·
The difference between pros and amateurs.... Sepp Straka has hit 21-of-36 greens this week. Of the 15 greens he's missed, he is one-under par. He's gotten up-and-down 14 times. The other time, he chipped in for birdie. These guys are good.
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Tony Hendricks
Tony Hendricks@TonyHendricks0·
@scibulka3 Cam Young will have something to say. But Ludvig is awesome
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Theo Mackie
Theo Mackie@theo_mackie·
Michael Bidwill on why he has not hired a team president: “I am the team president. I am the team president. Next question.”
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The Golf Engineer
The Golf Engineer@engineeringolf·
Jim Nantz announced on the broadcast yesterday that Pebble Beach plans to restore the 2nd cypress tree to the 18th fairway. The "other" tree in the background of iconic moments like this one from Tiger in 2010. The tree was lost in a storm in 2014. Good, bad, or don't care?
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Tony Hendricks
Tony Hendricks@TonyHendricks0·
Bijan Robinson might be the greatest to ever do it.
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Tony Hendricks
Tony Hendricks@TonyHendricks0·
There’s no way that was real
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