Tom Ricketts and his family put in the winning bid to purchase the Chicago Cubs back in January, but the details of their offer have yet to be finalized four months later, and Ricketts is looking to find some other investors to help back his $900 million offer for the team. He doesn't need the help with the $850 million he's raised with a loan and selling some shares in the family business, TD Ameritrade, but if you can get it, why not?Bill Murray had a day to forget at the TPC Tampa Bay course on Friday. A woman was hospitalized after being knocked to the ground by one of the actor's errant tee shots. Click through to see more photos of Murray's oddball antics at the Outback Pro-Am.
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Here, Murray pretends to swig a bottle of Hornitos tequila before golfing in the Hornitos Challenge during the Outback Pro-Am.
Tim Boyles, Beam Global / Getty Images
Homeowner Linda Petrovich wasn't hit by one of Murray's stray shots, but she was taken aback when Murray showed up at her course-side home and requested ice.
Tim Boyles, Beam Global / Getty Images
In between shots Murray also took some time to spread the love and hug a volunteer at the Hornitos Challenge.
Tim Boyles, Beam Global / Getty Images
Murray, who has played the Pro-Am numerous times in the past, said it wasn't the first time he hit a spectator with his shot. The 58-year-old comedian did not finish his round.
Tim Boyles, Beam Global / Getty Images

When it was announced that Rick Sutcliffe, fighting cancer, was well enough to resume his broadcasting career, we cheered a bit. He's always entertaining in the booth, drunk or sober, and anytime someone can win a fight with the disease it's reason to smile. The pitcher was still warming up when word spreads and a fan yelled, "Hey Sut, Murray just bet Steve Stone a case of beer you'll steal second!"
Standing on first base, Sutcliffe decided: Screw it. I'm going.
Sutcliffe took off running. All 6-7 of the Red Baron hauling ass for second base just to mess with Cubs announcer Steve Stone.
"I am gone," Sutcliffe said. "He comes down and looks over. Well I'm halfway to second. I'm going, 'Ah, he got me.' Well the dummy goes to home so now I've got to get going again. But there's still a play. That's how slow I am."
The throw. The slide. He's safe.Great story. Anyone else think Murray would be a massive improvement on Joe Morgan in the Sunday Night Baseball booth?
Did you know Bill Murray is a Cubs fan? I mean, it's not like that fact has been browbeaten into our heads recently or anything. No fewer than two sports pages of NL Central teams feature stories about Murray on their baseball webpages today (the Chicago Sun-Times and the Cincinnati Enquirer). The Enquirer story features Murray taking shots at Cincy while trying to decide whether or not to fly there for this weekend's season closing three game series: "I've never been to Cincinnati, and I was trying to keep that record intact," Murray said. "But I may have to go."
Murray hung out with the Cubs during batting practice before Thursday's game against the Florida Marlins. Murray said he's confident this is the year the Cubs will win the World Series - something they last did in 1908.
"I really feel this is going to happen," Murray said. "I feel very good about this team. I have all year."
If that's not a jinx, I don't know what is. Maybe I'm just jealous because I'm a Pirate fan and the biggest celebrities we get at games are Michael Keaton, Ben Roethlisberger, and Sidney Crosby, but celebrity fans grate on my nerves a bit and I'm never entirely sure why. I suppose Chicago should be thankful though; it could be Ben Affleck.
First thing is first: I love Bill Murray. Loved him when I posted these videos of him doing a Cubs broadcast with Steve Stone. Loved him when Wes Anderson took him from goofball comedy to a more subdued roll in Rushmore and The Royal Tennenbaums. Loved him in Ghostbusters; loved him in Scrooge.The Cubs' No. 1 fan hung out with the team during batting practice before Thursday's game against the Florida Marlins. Murray said he's confident this is the year the Cubs will win the World Series -- something they last did in 1908.See what I mean?"I really feel this is going to happen," Murray said. "I feel very good about this team. I have all year."
Wearing a Cubs cap backward, Murray had a bag of sunflower seeds tucked under his badly wrinkled shirt. He said his confidence in the Cubs went beyond cautious optimism.
"There is no time for being cautiously optimistic," he said. "That's for losers. [I'm] very optimistic. Look at how I'm dressed. Do I look cautious?"
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