News
Q and A With Wilhelmina 7 Women
We know that the W7 are athletic, intelligent, and exceptional ambassadors for the LPGA and women’s golf. Each has been playing the game of golf for many years, some starting in early childhood and others through college. The group represent women from around the globe and I’ve selected some interview questions to highlight their unique personalities and experiences:
Stacy Prammanasudh:
Q. Was it frustrating or satisfying to finish one career victory short of beating University of Tulsa alum Nancy Lopez‘s record for college tourneys won?
A. It was not frustrating at all to have one less win than Nancy. She is a legend in golf and to be mentioned in the same context as her is a privilege
Q. Who is the best drinker in the W7?
A. The best drinker? Well we all can chug H20 with the best of them!!
Mikaela Parmlid :
Q. What were the first thoughts that went through your mind when you were notified that you had been chosen for the W7?
A. I was very excited; I have tried to find an agency like Wilhelmina for several years that is going to help market women’s golf in magazines and media beyond the traditional golf population. I am thrilled to be part of it and cannot wait to see what will happen in the future.
Q. How long did it take you to say yes?
A. I had already thought about it when they asked me, so for me it took no time at all.
Q. Where do you want this whole W7 journey to take you?
A. To fun and exciting experiences outside the golf course with a group of really great girls. It has just started so I do not really know where it is all heading. We have received lots of media exposure and have done some fun photo shoots. I want the group to be extremely competitive but at the same time help each other out on and off the golf course.
Q. How young were you when you started playing? What was the most fascinating part of the game at first?
A. I was probably around 6 and in the beginning it was just a fun game me and my brother and some friends were playing in the backyard. We made golf courses with golf holes around the neighborhood yards. The game was played with plastic balls so we did not smash windows because we had to cross and zigzag between the houses. It was all a really fun game to me for a long time and I did not take it seriously until I was around 14 and started to play competitively and with the Swedish National team. I was busy with many other sports when I was really young like tennis, table tennis, soccer, and team handball to mention a few.
Sandra Gal:
Q. What were the first thought that went through your mind when you were notified that you had been chosen for the W7?
A. Well, I have been talking to Wilhelmina even before the whole W7 concept was being discussed. I liked the agency and their different approach and opportunities they present. When Wilhelmina told me about the W7 I thought it was a pretty cool idea that could have a positive impact on women’s golf.
Q. Where do you want this whole W7 journey to take you?
A. Besides golf the W7 will open up different opportunities for me, which are challenging and will also be fun. I was always interested in design and painting and believed that fashion may be the field I could engage in. With respect to endorsements I believe I can promote a company’s product and bring it to their specific target market.
Q. How young were you when you started playing? What was the most fascinating part of the game at first?
A. I was six years old when I first held a club in my hands and swung it. But I didn’t take it serious until I was about 14. I always liked to bomb my Driver.
Q. How competitive are you on a scale of 1 to 10?
A. I am actually very competitive, probably 8-10. I want to become the best I can be in my sport, but that doesn’t mean I am focused on beating other players. I am focused on beating the course and challenging myself.
Johanna Head:
Q. Why did you sign up with Wilhelmina?
A. I have found as an English player on an American tour it is hard to get representation, so when I heard about Wilhelmina I was really impressed that they wanted to represent international players, not just Americans. I really like their concept of getting seven girls together as a team. It widens the market on and off the golf course, as we can endorse products together or separately.
Q. What was your reaction when you were invited to join?
A. I was very excited. I wanted to be part of this concept.
Q. What does it mean to you to be part of the group?
A. The seven of us have all taken on board that we are a team. We play for ourselves, but also look out for each other to do well, as it will help us all.
News
Pro’s must-see putter grip at the PGA Championship
When it comes to the PGA Championship, we get some first-timers. With that, there are great stories and experiences about the players that arrive. This week has been the first trip to the PGA Championship for Bryce Fisher. Bryce plays out of Arrowhead Golf Club in Molalla, Oregon, and qualified for this week’s event through the PGA Professional Championship at Bandon Dunes, where he finished in a tie for 10th, battling the wind and links conditions. Certainly, he trusted his clubs when it came to the event at Bandon, especially when it came to holing the final putt. Some of the GolfWRXers had a grip on things from GolfWRX PGA Tour Photographer Greg Moore’s photos this week of Fisher’s golf bag.

When it comes to Bryce’s bag, we see a Titleist GT3 driver with a Graphite Design Tour AD VF-7 shaft and Golf Pride Tour Velvet Align grip. For fairway woods, Titleist GT2 three and GT3 five woods, the hybrid is a GT2 21 degree with a Graphite Design Tour AD VF-hybrid 95-X.

Keep working with me here.
Titleist T100 irons, 5 through pitching wedge, Vokey wedges, all black setup with custom hand stamping on the wedges with black Dynamic Gold S400 shafts. Very sleek! All from the years 2024 and 2025.

We get to the putter, an Odyssey White Hot XG Marxman. A putter that was released in 2007! With a putter in play from 2007, my radar is up for some nicely played golf in this period.


Bryce is no stranger to playing golf at a high level. He played at Scottsdale Community College, where he was a part of two national championship teams. He then finished his college career at Oregon State University from 2001 to 2004. After college, he played events on the Gateway Tour, Spanos Tour, and the Nationwide Tour, aka the Korn Ferry Tour today. Around 2006 he wrapped up golf to raise a family and in 2015 began to get back to tournament golf, fast forward to today, this week he is playing in the PGA Championship at 46 years old.
Piecing together this timeline, if Bryce got this putter brand new, this is right after the Tour days. Now I do realize this could have been a gift or anything else, as we know, acquiring putters is a world of its own.
Then it gets better. Take a look at this grip, doesn’t get much more game-used than this. The tennis wrap was layered up so much it would make Scott Verplank proud. It is truly incredible that the original grip is buried under the wraps with the butt end of the grip worn down to the steel!


This putter alone got some good reactions on the GolfWRX Forum. “MikuTheGolfer” states ‘I got sick looking at that putter grip. “Cmb71 says, “I feel like that putter grip requires surgical gloves.”
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These are reactions of emotion, this to me shows that the putter and especially the grip are a work of art. Art evokes emotion as well.
Layers of tennis wrap, a grip worn through to the shaft. If the putter has been in the bag off and on since 2007, Fisher has literally made miles of putts with it. The thing I like about the whole setup is that we have all-new clubs in the bag, and the tried-and-true putter that has seen it all and been there for everything. How fitting to be at the PGA Championship this week.
News
5 Things we Learned: Saturday at The PGA Championship
There is precedence for an Alex Smalley triumph on Sunday at Aronimink. The Shaun Micheels, the Fuzzy Zoellers, the Lou Grahams, the Ben Curtis of the world all won major championships in the most unlikely, unheralded of fashions. The way that Alex Smalley disproved my third point (see below) was the stuff of unexpected brilliance. If someone repeats what Smalley did, on Sunday, he will most likely find himself liftening heavy Wannamaker Trophy with a notoriously-loose top. If Smalley gets the job done, I’ll serve myself a hearty portion of crow in this column on Sunday evening.
Until we know the denouement of the 2026 PGA Championship, an unbridled success in every aspect of its execution, we can subsist on the five things that we learned this day, in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania. Join us at the table, please.
At his Friday press conference, Rory McIlroy said something along the lines of a major championship course should give the chance to establish a big lead, and that is why he did not view this week. Layout through that Lenz. Rory better count his lucky stars, because after being out of it on Thursday, he sits just three strokes off the lead after three rounds. If there’s one thing we love about the Ulsterman, he speaks his mind. He isn’t always correct and he isn’t always accurate, but he is sincere. Don’t fret, Rory. There’s magic yet to come. Just ask Hideki.
Second, the drivable par four hole
Fourth, Ben Kern, the one in twenty
And your winner-to-be is…
It’s time to make a selection for the winner of this year’s PGA championship. One of my favorite writers was a golf Weak guy named Ron Balicki. They used to call him wrong Ron, because he never failed to pick the wrong person to win a tournament. I miss Ron, and in his honor, I’m going to keep my true selection to myself. I don’t wish to jinx the lad. I’m going to go with a different golfer, one that we all know, and one that will give us two legs up on this year‘s grand slam. Shinae Koch just got a lot more difficult for Rory McIlroy, because he wins a PGA championship tomorrow, for his third wanna make a trophy.
News
5 Things we Learned: Friday at the PGA Championship
The PGA Championship is the unfortunate victim of its legacy. The legacy is that of match play, and for some inconceivable reason, there will always be golf people that believe that a professional major title should be contested using match play. I’m an advocate for the return of match play to the professional men’s game, without doubt. Thanks to the conditions, set-up and talent at Aronimink, we will see our own version of MMMP (multiple man match play) play out over the next two days at Aronimink.
Maverick McNealy was poised to cradt a four-shot (or more) lead, midway through the outward half (his second nine) at Donald Ross’s Philadelphia gem. McNealy made two bogeys over his stretch run, and found himself in a tie for first with Alex Smalley, one shot clear of six pursuers. On Saturday afternoon, McNealy and Smalley will have themselves a match, for certain, but they will also play individual matches against the others in the top fifteen. In true match play, the majority of the field would have been eliminated by now, with just eight golfers remaining. 22 golfers sit between minus-one and minus-four, with another seven at even par. That’s nearly 30 golfers within five shots of the lead. Match play does not afford more than a third of them a shot at glory. Is it better viewing for us, you bet.
After the final grass clippings settled, the under-par total of the leader was precisely one shot better (minus-three to minus-four) than the day before. No one is running away with this playing of the PGA Championship. Most important is the number of top players with a chance. Take a quick glance at the made-cut list, and you’ll see former PGA winners, former major winners, current major title-holders, and a legion with the pedigree to enter the major championship circle. We can only focus in on five items, so let’s take a look at a quick quintet of things that we learned on Friday at the PGA Championship.
First, Chris Gotterup
If there is tantalizing name among the leaders at Aronimink, it’s Chris Gotterup. The powerful striker from neighboring New Jersey worked his way into contention with a potent 65 on day two. Gotterup was nearly pefect, with just one bogey (at the second hole) marring his otherwise-unblemished card.
Gotterup did the thing that needed to be done: hit fairways. With a variety of clubs, Gotterup found the short grass off the tee, time after time. The ability to control spin on approach shots is tantamount to finding the proper section of each green. When he did miss a putting surface, as happened on his fifth hole (number 14) CG demonstrated short-game accumen with a deft flip from a steep, grassy, sidehill lie above the front-right bunker…he saved his par.
Second, Rory McIlroy
Only one player in the field has a shot at the 2026 grand slam of golf, and it’s the two-time Masters titleholder. After 18 holes, the cut was more important than the win for McIlroy. Had he replicated his opening 74, he’d have made the cut on the number. Anything worse, and down the road. Instead, McIlroy found a 67 of his own on Friday, and now sits within five shots of the untested leaders. McIlroy has a pair of Wannamaker trophies, given to the winner of this event, on his trophy shelf, and is now poised to make a trifecta.
Rory McIlroy found fairways and greens with relentless regularity on Friday. He posted three birdies and fifteen pars, and scarcely looked as if he might make bogey. He has no wiggle room over the next 36 holes…his 74 on day one saw to that. The consistent driver and the calm putter will be his wingmen as he seeks to earn a second major trophy this campaign.
Third, Min Woo Lee
Min Woo Lee’s even-par 70 is not the sort of round that will be discussed by writers and talking heads … until he wins. Lee 1.0 would have found a way to turn that 70 into a 76. He would have still made the cut, but would have been seven shot distant of the lead. Instead, he is one shot back, playing his game, in position to make a statement over the next 48 hours.
Lee missed a brief attempt at par on his ninth hole of the day, then drove under a tree on ten, resulting in a second straight bogey. Undeterred, he flagged his approach on 11 for a birdie, then posted a series of pars before closing one-under over his final four holes. For Lee, the 15th club, the one between the ears and behind the ribs, will determine the week’s outcome.
Fourth, Scottie Scheffler
Similar to Min Woo, Scottie had every opportunity to go away, after the game he brought to Aronimink on Friday. Bogeys on three of the first four holes erased all of his good, red ink from Thursday. His role as defending champion meant something to the lad from Texas (by way of New Jersey) and Scheffler sucked it up. He played minus-two golf the rest of the way, signed for 71, and finds himself in ideal position to defend his 2025 PGA Championship trophy.
For Scheffler, the two shots that turned the tide were the approach putt on 14, and the iron into 17. On the heels of a three-putt, Scheffler nudged aseventy-feet putt to within the circle of trust at 14, then holed the ensuing 30-incher for par. On 17, he was finally able to punch an approach (in this case, the tee ball on the par three) to within birdie range, and his putter again came through.
Fifth, Ludvig Aberg
Ever since he finished runner-up at his first Masters, Aberg has been the name on everyone’s Next list. He’s tall, athletic, charming, good-looking, and has the game to win often. He hasn’t won a major, and he has claimed fewer professional events than many might have anticipated. As we’ve learned from others in the recent past, sometimes it takes just one breakthrough win, to open the gate to many more. Aberg didn’t sizzle as loud as Gotterup on Friday, but he was close. His minus-four 66 brought him from made-cut to in-contention stature. His day-two fireworks were highlighted by a run of four birdies in five holes on the back nine.
We’ve seen Aberg in this position before, and it was the big stick that took him out of contention. His task over the next 48 hours will be to determine which club to hit in driving situations, and then (so eimple!) commit and execute. If his putter remains as steely and deadly as it was on day two, watch out.
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