Taylor ranked fourth in strokes gained/approach the green as well as fourth in greens in regulation with his Titleist T100 irons. He was solid on the greens as well, ranking ninth in putts per green in regulation with his venerable TaylorMade Spider Tour Red putter.
The average golf fan probably doesn’t know too much about Taylor Dickson, but we’re here to help. He’s a PGA Tour rookie. He’s 32. He went to Winthrop University in South Carolina. He won two times on the Korn Ferry in 2024. Oh, and apparently he’s a huge Happy Gilmore fan. We learned this last Read more…
The family of Grayson Murray has launched a foundation to honour the late PGA Tour player, coinciding with the one-year anniversary of one of Murray’s greatest triumphs.
Nothing has come easy for Murray, who has battled addiction and depression, which makes coming out the other side successful even more dramatic than his winning putt.
The final round of the Sony Open in Hawaii was already sufficiently dramatic, when one of five co-leaders hit a second shot at the par-5 18th at Waialae Country Club that, well, mysteriously disappeared.
There are a lot of PGA Tour rookies making their debuts at this week’s Sony Open, and it’s possible one of them learned a very important rule on the opening day: the cameras are always rolling.
This is architect Seth Raynor’s original Redan, meaning the narrow green, flanked by bunkers short and behind, is angled from the tee with the back half of the putting surface running away from the player.
Kevin Na and Chris Kirk have very different struggles on the surface, but the psychological roots of what they’ve endured are nothing if not thematic.
Of note is Na’s driver, Callaway’s Great Big Bertha Epic. He has used the same driver for each of his past four wins dating back to the 2017 A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier.