
Tommy Fleetwood was in joke on Tuesday during his press conference in front of the Tour 2025 tournament Golf Club in East Lake.
Fleetwood, who is still looking for his first PGA Tour victory, admitted on Tuesday that he was unaware of the competitive changes made to this week’s tour championship that eliminated the starting blows and had everyone to start at the same time. This means that anyone who plays the best over 72 holes in Atlanta this week takes two trophies home – the Tour and FedEx Cup championship trophy. The Englishman who exploded runs late To lose both championship FedEx St. Jewish And the passenger championship this year laughed at the idea of ​​taking two trophies home this week, given the conversation about his inability to win states.
“I think different tournaments have different meanings for you,” Fleetwood said on Tuesday. “There are so many incredible tournaments. I won’t be chosen for what I choose to have as the first.” That would be a good one.
“I think it would be very funny if I won this week and then get the FedEx Cup too. I think it would be funny.”
Tommy Fleetwood jumps back with Birdie at No. 16 in the Tour Championship
Fleetwood has played the best golf of his career, and this has continued through three rounds at Soggy East Lake. The Englishman opened with rounds 64 and 63 to enter the weekends associated with Russell Henley at the head of the manager. On Saturday, Fleetwood built a three-stroke lead in front of a double double in 15 without falling behind Patrick Cantlay, who was on the road to shoot his second consecutive six under 64 years old. Fleetwood responded with birds of birds at 16 and 17 to tie Cantlay and enter Sunday with a chance to get the last laughter and a $ 10 million check that would come with his first PGA Tour career.
Fleetwood has treated his latest disappointments as a professional. A optimisticFleetwood has claimed that although he turned out to be short in Memfis and Connecticut, those experiences were positive. He would deal with quarrels and lost by not being at all.
“I really work hard to make sure I do it all in a positive,” Fleetwood said on Tuesday. “Of course, I wouldn’t feed you lies and say, oh, memfis. I thought I did everything great, or travelers. I didn’t do anything wrong. Of course, I got things wrong in stretching, and that didn’t happen to me. But you just learn from those experiences, and I think, I think the shows are very positive.
“I’ve said every time I just want to put myself back there. I want to give myself another chance. I will finish it in a moment. I will take it well and take it right more than once. But as it is actually the hard part in a way.”
So, of course, Fleetwood will be there again on Sunday. He will enter Kazan seeking to overcome his latest slides and add a PGA Tour victory to an impressive international golf resume.
Sunday the Fleetwood The Force as he tries to overcome Cantlay while holding a package of contenders behind him, including Scottie Scheffler and Keegan Bradley, will be to put himself in the right mentality and stay in that positive space, no matter what day he throws in it.
For Fleetwood, who once again put himself in quarrel – in a position to learn and grow and probably finally succeed – that part should not be difficult. For Tommy Fleetwood, optimism is not just a tool to calm the wounds and dust itself.
Just who is he.
“I have been tied to my children, and I know what I would say to them, and I think it has to do with being very clear to what you are doing, having a great attitude, having an excellent frame of mind, make sure I am telling myself all the right things and just committed to those things,” Fleetwood said. “As I said alone, there are only 30 players this week. It can be 100, 150, whatever it is, but everyone who removes it wants to be in that final group on Sunday and are in quarrel. That’s what everyone wants.
“I’m lucky enough to be one of those guys, so I’m spending the time of my life there and I’m playing great and I have to enjoy it while it is happening. You never know. Tomorrow may be my time, may not be but I still have a good time doing it.”
Tommy Fleetwood, forever the optimist, knows no other way.

