Chef Emily Brubaker from the Omni La Costa explains how you can achieve meat-and-potatoes bliss at home by focusing on four key details.
The post How to make the best steak frites you’ve ever had appeared first on Golf.
Chef Emily Brubaker from the Omni La Costa explains how you can achieve meat-and-potatoes bliss at home by focusing on four key details.
The post How to make the best steak frites you’ve ever had appeared first on Golf.
As the brutal Texas conditions battered the field on Saturday, Minjee Lee stayed patient and took control of the tournament in three holes.
The post As Minjee Lee took control of Women’s PGA, 1 word and 3 holes told story appeared first on Golf.
Canada's Myles Creighton carded a 59 Saturday, becoming the 15th player with a sub-60 round on the Korn Ferry Tour, and the second round of 59 in three days at this week's Wichita Open.
Oklahoma State junior Ethan Fang held off a late charge with a 5-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a 1-up victory over Gavin Tiernan of Ireland, becoming the first American in 18 years to win the British Amateur.
Semiretired Lexi Thompson is entering the weekend contending for her first major title in more than a decade, while Jeeno Thitikul extended her lead at the KPMG Women's PGA Championship.
The U.S. Open had everything: an iconic venue, thick rough, fast greens, weather chaos and a 72nd-hole putt to win it all.
But it didn’t have the one thing majors can usually count on: large viewership.
J.J. Spaun’s victory at Oakmont featured the longest made putt of the entire tournament, on the final hole, to win his first major.
Yet the 2025 U.S. Open final round drew just 5.4 million average viewers.
That’s the lowest Sunday audience for a U.S. Open since the COVID-disrupted 2020 tournament at Winged Foot.
We’re three majors deep into the 2025 season and “LIV versus PGA Tour” is still one of the most fun storylines in professional golf.
At Augusta, it was all about Rory McIlroy who captured his first Masters and completed the career Grand Slam. At Quail Hollow, Scottie Scheffler dominated again, claiming his third major. At Oakmont, J.J. Spaun stole the spotlight with a dramatic U.S. Open victory.
So how did the two sides fare at the 2025 U.S. Open?
Group | Players in Field | Made Cut | % Made Cut | Top 10s | Best Finish |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LIV Golf | 14 | 6 | 42.9% | 3 | T4 – Hatton, Ortiz |
PGA Tour | 142 | 60 | 42.3% | 7+ | 1st – J.J. Spaun |
LIV had a smaller group of players participating in the U.S. Open, yet they still had about the same made-cut percentage as the PGA Tour golfers. J.J. Spaun took home the win so we are now three majors in with no sign of an LIV champion in a major event for 2025.
Finding three LIV golfers in the top 10 is impressive.
Scottie Scheffler was comfortably in front until a double bogey on the par-4 17th and wound up tied with Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Thomas for the lead at the Travelers Championship.
Steven Alker, Tim Petrovic and Ricardo Gonzalez share the 2nd-round lead at Firestone in the PGA Tour Champions third major of the season.
I wasn't sure what to make of mini drivers. Then I saw the results, and the TaylorMade R7 Quad Mini Driver replaced my favorite club.
The post I was a mini-driver skeptic. Now, this model has replaced my favorite club | I tried it appeared first on Golf.
Collin Morikawa was missing his iron shots left at the Travelers Championship, so he employed what he described as a 'very weird' tactic.
The post ‘We’re crazy’: Collin Morikawa conducts ‘weird’ career-first experiment appeared first on Golf.
For a limited time on Fairway Jockey, a wide range of Callaway products — including irons, wedges, putters and golf balls — are on sale.
The post Shop Fairway Jockey’s limited-time Callaway sale today appeared first on Golf.
South Korea's Si Woo Kim withdrew from the Travelers Championship during second-round play due to a back injury.
Odyssey has a new chipper out and their calling this one their best yet. Here's what you need to know about the new Odyssey Chipper.
The post Odyssey releases new Chipper club | What you need to know appeared first on Golf.
The KPMG Performance Insights program is providing players with data and analytics to help them tackle the Fields Ranch East course.
The post New analytics at KPMG Women’s PGA provide players more data, insight appeared first on Golf.
When comedian Jake Adams published a video review of Boca Grove, in Florida, it led to a chain of events that triggered a $50 million suit.
The post How a comedian’s country-club review led to $50 million lawsuit appeared first on Golf.
Collin Morikawa's new Olson putter and Tommy Fleetwood's shaft changes highlight some notable gear changes at the Travelers Championship.
The post Collin Morikawa’s new Olson putter headlines gear changes at Travelers appeared first on Golf.
Odyssey is releasing a new Chipper next week and some of you probably don’t even realize that you should be excited about that.
Admittedly, his release doesn’t evoke the same fanfare as a new Odyssey Square 2 Square or Giraffe Beam release. However, this release has the potential to help a struggling golfer more than a new putter would.
The Odyssey Chipper won’t help you on the green but it will help you get to the green.
Do you alternate between chunking and blading shots around the green? If so, the Odyssey Chipper is something that you should look into. We did a deep dive about chipper use a few months back and the bottom line is that many golfers could restore some pleasure to their games by adding a chipper to their bags.
Do you need a chipper? How many times a round do you flub a chip? Have you bladed your first chip across the green, following up that shot with an overcorrected chunker?
Teaching pro Heather Angell's dream week at the 2025 KPMG Women's PGA came to a quick end when she was disqualified for a rare rules error.
The post Rare rules error leads to shocking DQ at KPMG Women’s PGA appeared first on Golf.
When Costco’s Kirkland Signature golf ball first hit warehouse shelves, it took the golfing world by storm. Here was a urethane-covered ball for less than $20 a dozen—something industry experts had deemed impossible until the retail giant made it happen. While the three-piece offerings that followed—now in their fourth generation—have never quite lived up to the performance of that legendary original, they’ve maintained a cult following largely because of their insane value proposition.
Costco’s legion of loyal followers knows the drill: grab a hot dog and a dozen golf balls for what most brands charge for four sleeves. It’s bulk buying at its finest and, for years, Kirkland has dominated the under-$20 urethane space almost unopposed—if only because virtually no one else was playing in that sandbox.
But now there’s competition in the warehouse aisles.
Recently, we published data showing how the new Kirkland Performance+ stacks up against the Titleist Pro V1. What we didn’t tell you is that at the same time, we tested another challenger: Sam’s Club Member’s Mark Pro Series 2 golf ball. Today, we’re comparing the performance of golf balls from the biggest names in bulk goods. How weird is that?
Since Costco’s launch, they’ve essentially owned the ultra-affordable urethane category. With Sam’s entering the fray, we wanted to see how this other warehouse ball compared to what has become the de facto gold standard in budget-friendly premium golf balls. Think of it as rotisserie chicken versus … well, other rotisserie chicken, but for your golf bag.
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