The COVID-19 pandemic made it impossible to stage a tournament in Papua New Guinea until now, this week’s tournament serving as the beginning of the 2023-2024 season.
About five months before Marco Simone Country Club just outside Rome hosts the 44th Ryder Cup, the venue for this week’s Italian Open is doubling as the site of the latest meeting of the DP World Tour’s tournament committee.
The four-day teams matchplay event, being held for the first time at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco, pits multiple countries against each other in a tournament format unlike what you’ll find in the Ryder Cup or Solheim Cup… or any other in professional golf.
The debate over whether LIV Golf events should receive Official World Golf Ranking Points has been raging on Golf Twitter for about a year now, so why do we care about the latest installment on Monday? Because it involved Phil Mickelson and Colt Knost.
When you finish a round on the PGA Tour first in strokes gained/approach, second in SG/putting and fourth in SG/off-the-tee, you know you’ve had a special day.
For the second time this month Brooks Koepka finds himself in the middle of a rules question. Oddly enough, it was the announcers at LIV Golf who seemed incredulous at what they saw.
Walk down a PGA Tour driving range or meander around a practice green at a tour event and you’re bound to see all sorts of odd-looking training aids. Alignment sticks, beach balls, balls you wrap around your feet for better balance on putts (a real thing) and other assorted “Tin Cup”-like contraptions tour players have convinced themselves are helpful are all commonplace.
After a successful stop in Australia, the LIV Golf League quickly returns to action with the fifth event of its 2023 season in Singapore at Sentosa Golf Club. It’s the first time this year that the upstart Saudi-backed circuit is playing back-to-back weeks, coming to a course that has hosted several professional and amateur events over the years.