Connect with us

News

Tour Rundown: Solheim, Procore, Irish, and more

Published

on

The brief, but exciting, season of international team play began in Virginia this week. The top ladies of Europe and the USA did battle at Robert Trent Jones golf club, and the men of the world and the USA will convene in Montreal for another team tilt this week. The PGA Tour restarted after a brief, post-playoff hiatus, while the DP, Tour Champions, and Korn Ferry continued their respective marches toward conclusion.

True, American Football might dominate the headlines of September, but the girls and boys of summer still have quite a bit to say about how the best golf is played. This week’s Tour Rundown will offer five bits of evidence to the affirmative.

Solheim Cup: home team USA wins third consecutive cup

The RTJ Golf Club hosted the inaugural Presidents Cup, in 1994, and repeated on three subsequent occasions. If it knew how to do one thing, it was host an international team event. Well, perhaps the intervening two decades softened the collective memory. Shoddy bus service soured the morning matches on day one, as a majority of paying customers were unable to arrive to witness the beginning of glory. The responsibility for the snafu is uncertain, but the players soon drew attention away from jilted jitney riders.

Friday morning began with foursomes, a match play format that is seemingly over before it begins. Four players share two golf balls, and one bad shot can cost the hole, lickity-split. For some reason, the European squad has always been associated with successful foursomes, but truth be told, it’s always a coin flip. This year, Team USA flipped the script with three successful contests. 3 & 2 wins in matches 1, 2, and 4 outshined a European 2 up victory in match three. In the afternoon, fourballs (also known as better ball) was the flavor, and the outcome was eerily similar. Three conquests by the home squad gave Team USA a 6-2 advantage after day one.

Day two saw each side win four matches, two each in foursomes and fourballs. The pivotal match was the first of the day. Carlota Ciganda and Emily Pedersen held a two-up lead at the turn, but could not preserve a win nor a tie. They fell to Allisen Corpuz and Emily Korda, by one down. The remaining matches were all lopsided, so this was Team Europe’s shining opportunity to whittle away at their deficit.

On Sunday, Charley Hull decimated Nelly Korda in the  day’s first match, but once again, it was Pedersen and Ciganda who were not up to the challenge. Pedersen fell by 6 & 5 to Megan Khang, while Ciganda lost by 6 & 4, to Rose Zhang. Team Europe could afford precious few miscues, and those two quick decisions were more than it could manage. The order of the day was five wins for the visitors, four decisions for the homebreds, and three halved matches. In the end, it was Team USA by 15.5 to 12.5 over Team Europe.

PGA Tour @ Procore Championship: Patton down the hatches!

In 2017 and 2018, Maxie Patton Kizzire won at Mayakoba and SONY. Six years would pass before the Tuscaloosa native would find victory number three on the PGA Tour. Kizzire is the sort who would not be bothered by such a delay. Despite growing up in the shadow of the University of Alabama, Kizzire took his talents to Auburn, where he enjoyed a stellar collegiate and amateur career.

At Silverado Resort in Napa, California, Kizzire stared down challenger after challenger as the week wore on. He posted 66 in round one, followed it with 65 on day two, and put an emphatic exclamation point of a gritty day three with 67. His lead was four over David Lipsky, so nothing was determined as day four dawned. Only two golfers in moved into the top ten with rounds in the 60s on Sunday. Kizzire merely had to keep Lipsky and the pursuers at length, and he did just that. He gained a stroke over the final 18 holes, and won by five shots over David Lipsky.

DP World Tour @ Irish Open: Irish eyes aren’t smiling 🙁

It hasn’t been the gentlest of years for Rory McIlroy. The Northern Irish lad lost by a whisker to Bryson DeChambeau at the US Open. Although he had two wins on the PGA Tour, the big ones eluded him. McIlroy ventured to that most Northern Irish of courses, Royal County Down in Newcastle. Located a mere 54 minutes from his home club, it seemed the perfect venue to put a bit of salve on a season of wounds. Despite four rounds under par (the only player in the field to do so) McIlroy was chased down once more, by an unexpected adversary.

Rasmus Hojgaard was born mere minutes after twin brother Nicolai. Both have achieved great success as Danish amateurs and professionals, but Nicolai was the one named to the 2023 European Ryder Cup side. Rasmus has fallen a wee bit off his brother’s professional pace, but that might all have changed, thanks to a Sunday 65 at County Down. Eight birdies and two bogeys gave this great Dane the second-low round of the week. Only a 64 by Paul Waring (12th spot) eclipsed his work. Hojgaard had much more on the line.

Birdies at four of the closing five holes brought Hojgaard from a three-shot deficit to a one-shot victory. McIlroy was helter skelter over the finishing stretch. He undid two birdies with two bogies, and lost what seemed like a certain victory. Is McIlroy the Greg Norman of his generation? I wouldn’t wish that on anyone.

Korn Ferry Tour @ Simmons Bank: Peterson gets work done

The playoffs have commenced on the KFT. As expected, there are a billion and one story lines. Morgan Hoffman continued his unlikely return from muscular dystrophy, tying for third at minus-eighteen. Other challengers sought returns to the PGA Tour, security for 2024-2025, and many other perquisites. In the end, it was Paul Peterson, whose opening rounds of 64 and 63 gave him enough of a cushion to close with 67 – 66 and win. It wasn’t easy.

Nearly corraling Peterson was the USA’s Matt Atkins. Atkins posted 63-61 in the middle rounds to jump to second spot. Ryan Gerard had the lead through 54 holes, thanks to 65-63-64. On Sunday, he would falter just enough to let Atkins and Peterson slide by. Gerard’s closing 70 featured a plus-two back nine, including bogey at the par-four closer. Both Atkins and Peterson made gritty pars at the watery 18th, and the victory, his first on the KFT, fell to Paul Peterson.

PGA Tour Champions @ Sanford: Steve breaks through

Never thought we’d be talking about Steve Freaking Stricker breaking through again. 2024 has belong to two other Steves (Alker and Ames) while the great cheesehead from Wisconsin had yet to drink from victory’s vessel. That all changed this week. A number of unlikely challengers filled the top three through two rounds, but all fell away on Sunday.

As expected, Steve Stricker jumped at the chance to claim something that no one else seemed to want. Stricker and Richard Green reached eight-under par, one ahead of the ageless Bernhard Langer. The pair went down four overtime fairways before Stricker was able to rip an approach from the rough to three feet. He converted, while Green missed a longer birdie putt. Just like that, Stricker had a third consecutive Sanford title, and fourth of his career.

 

 

Ronald Montesano writes for GolfWRX.com from western New York. He dabbles in coaching golf and teaching Spanish, in addition to scribbling columns on all aspects of golf, from apparel to architecture, from equipment to travel. Follow Ronald on Twitter at @buffalogolfer.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

News

Testing Lorem Ipsum

Published

on


What is Lorem Ipsum?

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry’s standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsum.

Why do we use it?

It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy. Various versions have evolved over the years, sometimes by accident, sometimes on purpose (injected humour and the like).

Continue Reading

News

2026 PGA Championship betting odds

Published

on

Scottie Scheffler leads the betting ahead of the second major championship of the year, with the World Number One a +345 favorite to get his hands on a second PGA Championship.

Rory McIlroy who won the Masters back in April is a +800 shot to complete half of the calendar slam at Aronimink Golf Club this week, while Jordan Spieth can be backed at +5900 to become a career grand slam winner.

Here is the full betting board for the 2026 PGA Championship courtesy of DraftKings.

Scottie Scheffler +345 – (Check 0ut his WITB here)

Rory McIlroy +800 – (Check out his WITB here)

  • Jon Rahm +1300 
  • Cameron Young +1500
  • Bryson DeChambeau +1700
  • Xander Schauffele +1850
  • Matt Fitzpatrick +1950
  • Ludvig Aberg +2000
  • Tommy Fleetwood +2600
  • Collin Morikawa +3500
  • Brooks Koepka +3900
  • Justin Rose +4300
  • Russell Henley +4600
  • Si Woo Kim +4700
  • Justin Thomas +4800
  • Robert MacIntyre +5300
  • Patrick Cantlay +5300
  • Viktor Hovland +5400
  • Tyrrell Hatton +5500
  • Jordan Spieth +5900
  • Sam Burns +6000
  • Hideki Matsuyama +6200
  • Adam Scott +6400
  • Rickie Fowler +7000
  • Chris Gotterup +7400
  • Patrick Reed +7400
  • Min Woo Lee +7800
  • Ben Griffin +8000
  • Sepp Straka +8400
  • Shane Lowry +9000
  • Akshay Bhatia +9200
  • Maverick McNealy +9200
  • Joaquin Niemann +9200
  • Jake Knapp +9200
  • Jason Day +9600
  • Kurt Kitayama +10000
  • J.J. Spaun +10000
  • Harris English +10500
  • Nicolai Hojgaard +11000
  • Gary Woodland +11000
  • David Puig +11000
  • Michael Thorbjornsen +12000
  • Jacob Bridgeman +12000
  • Keegan Bradley +12500
  • Corey Conners +14000
  • Alex Fitzpatrick +15000
  • Sungjae Im +15500
  • Sahith Theegala +15500
  • Harry Hall +15500
  • Alex Noren +16000
  • Thomas Detry +16500
  • Marco Penge +16500
  • Kristoffer Reitan +17000
  • Alex Smalley +17000
  • Wyndham Clark +17500
  • Sam Stevens +17500
  • Keith Mitchell +17500
  • Daniel Berger +18500
  • Ryan Gerard +20000
  • Nick Taylor +20000
  • Rasmus Hojgaard +21000
  • Dustin Johnson +21000
  • Pierceson Coody +23000
  • Aaron Rai +24000
  • Jordan Smith +24000
  • Angel Ayora +24000
  • Bud Cauley +25000
  • Matt McCarty +26000
  • Jayden Schaper +26000
  • Brian Harman +27000
  • Taylor Pendrith +27000
  • Ryan Fox +27000
  • J.T. Poston +27000
  • Cameron Smith +29000
  • Ryo Hisatsune +29000
  • Michael Kim +29000
  • Max Homa +29000
  • Denny McCarthy +29000
  • Tom McKibbin +30000
  • Rico Hoey +32000
  • Matt Wallace +32500
  • Ricky Castillo +33000
  • Haotong Li +33000
  • Michael Brennan +34000
  • Max Greyserman +36000
  • Stephan Jaeger +37500
  • Christiaan Bezuidenhout +37500
  • Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen +39000
  • Aldrich Potgieter +40000
  • Andrew Novak +42000
  • Patrick Rodgers +42500
  • Daniel Hillier +42500
  • Max McGreevy +46000
  • Billy Horschel +48000
  • Chris Kirk +48000
  • Ian Holt +49000
  • Casey Jarvis +49000
  • William Mouw +50000
  • Steven Fisk +50000
  • John Parry +50000
  • Nico Echavarria +52500
  • Garrick Higgo +52500
  • John Keefer+55000
  • Matthias Schmid +57500
  • Austin Smotherman +57500
  • Sami Valimaki +60000
  • Andrew Putnam +60000
  • Lucas Glover +62500
  • Daniel Brown +62500
  • Jhonattan Vegas +75000
  • Emiliano Grillo +80000
  • Mikael Lindberg +85000
  • Adrien Saddier +100000
  • Bernd Wiesberger +100000
  • Elvis Smylie +110000
  • Stewart Cink +130000
  • Kota Kaneko +130000
  • David Lipsky +150000
  • Chandler Blanchet +150000
  • Andy Sullivan +150000
  • Joe Highsmith +180000
  • Adam Schenk +200000
  • Travis Smyth +200000
  • Davis Riley +225000
  • Martin Kaymer +400000
  • Brian Campbell +400000
  • Padraig Harrington +450000
  • Kazuki Higa +450000
  • Jordan Gumberg +450000
  • Ryan Vermeer +500000
  • Austin Hurt +500000
  • Tyler Collet +500000
  • Timothy Wiseman +500000
  • Shaun Micheel +500000
  • Y.E. Yang +500000
  • Michael Block+500000
  • Mark Geddes+500000
  • Luke Donald+500000
  • Bryce Fisher+500000
  • Jimmy Walker +500000
  • Jason Dufner +500000
  • Jesse Droemer +500000
  • Jared Jones +500000
  • Garrett Sapp +500000
  • Francisco Bide +500000
  • Zach Haynes +500000
  • Paul McClure+500000
  • Derek Berg +500000
  • Chris Gabriele +500000
  • Braden Shattuck +500000
  • Ben Polland +500000
  • Ben Kern +50000

Continue Reading

Tour Photo Galleries

Photos from the 2026 PGA Championship

Published

on

GolfWRX is on site for the second major of 2026: The PGA Championship from Aronimink in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.

The tournament’s location, just outside Philadelphia, and its status as a major championship mean GolfWRXers are in for a treat: WITBs from a strong field, custom gear celebrating the PGA Championship, and the rich culture of the City of Brotherly Love — we have noted a relative absence of cheesesteak-themed items thus far this week, but most of the rest of the usual suspects are well represented.

Check out links to all our photos below.

General Albums

WITB Albums

Pullout Albums

Continue Reading

Announcement

Our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use have been updated as of January 29th, 2026. Please review the updated policies here Privacy Policy | Terms of Use. By continuing to use our site after January 29th, 2026, you agree to the changes.

WITB

Facebook

Trending