Day: August 28, 2019

The top golf equipment stories of the 2018-19 PGA TOUR seasonThe top golf equipment stories of the 2018-19 PGA TOUR season

Since the PGA TOUR’s 2018-19 season wrapped up, we wanted to celebrate by recapping the top equipment stories of the season. There was controversy, surprise switches, big-time players making big sponsor changes, and of course, Tiger Woods was in the spotlight for his equipment. The stories below are listed in no particular order, but they all had a significant impact and intrigue in their own right. Enjoy the look into the past season of equipment, and we look forward to seeing you back on the Equipment Report once the Fall season begins in just a few short weeks. Thanks for a great season! Spieth switches irons before The Open Jordan Spieth has used Titleist AP2 model irons throughout his professional career, but that changed right before the 2019 Open Championship. Instead of using AP2 irons, Spieth put Titleist’s new T100 irons in play at Royal Portrush Golf Club. While it may have seemed like odd timing to put new irons in play the week of a major, Spieth actually had a hand in the creation of the T100 irons. See what Spieth’s role was in the design of the irons, and what made him switch.  Rickie Fowler changes up his golf ball Fowler shocked the equipment world when he announced that he was signing a golf ball deal with TaylorMade, instead of staying with the Titleist Pro V1 line of golf balls that he had been using since even before he turned professional. As part of the announcement, Fowler spoke with PGATOUR.COM to explain what made him switch, and which TaylorMade golf ball he’d be using going forward. Get the full Q&A with Fowler here. Xander fails CT test at The Open, and J.T. speaks out Before competing in the 2019 Open Championship, Schauffele’s driver was deemed illegal after random testing conducted by the R&A. Schauffele responded publically, calling the testing “unfair.� Fellow competitor Justin Thomas later spoke out on the matter, giving his opinion on who should be to blame and how to tackle the issue going forward. Check out the full stories regarding each player below: Xander’s comments  Thomas’ comments  Justin Rose signs with Honma While Rose had been a TaylorMade staffer throughout his long career, rumors began swirling at the end of 2018 that he’d be making a sponsor switch. While most speculated that he would eventually sign with Honma, Rose put the rumors to rest with an official announcement on New Years Day. On the same day, Rose also unveiled the “Rose Proto� Honma irons that he continues to use currently. Here’s more on the equipment deal and the prototype irons. Molinari wins in first event as a Callaway staffer After going on a tear in 2018 as an equipment free agent, there was major speculation whether Molinari would sign a deal, and if he did, which company he would go with. Molinari made the announcement that he signed with Callaway at the 2019 Arnold Palmer Invitational, where he sat down with PGATOUR.COM to explain why. Funny enough, Molinari went onto win that very same week. In the interview with PGATOUR.COM, Molinari also explained how his extremely rare prototype irons came about, and just how rare they are. Check out the full Q&A here. The young guns sign equipment deals Matthew Wolff, Viktor Hovland and Collin Morikawa came onto the PGA TOUR with some of the highest expectations from rookie golfers in recent years. With golfers such as Brooks Koepka having success as an equipment free agent, equipment fans wondered whether the new young guys would follow his lead. As it turned out, each of them signed deals. PGATOUR.COM went in-depth about each their equipment setups in the stories below: Wolff in-depth Morikawa Hovland Ping club designer makes the cut at the PGA using equipment he designed There was no one at the 2019 PGA Championship who knew his equipment better than Marty Jertson. That’s because Jertson, who competed and made the cut at Bethpgae Black, worked as a Senior Design Engineer at Ping in recent years. Jertson currently works as the President of Fitting and Performance at Ping, and following his PGA Championship performance, he spoke in-depth with PGATOUR.COM on a number of topics, ranging from the difficulty of Bethpage to designing equipment. Don’t miss the full interview here. The Great One’s red putter Hall-of-fame hockey player Wayne Gretzky competed this year in the Pebble Beach Pro-Am alongside Dustin Johnson, who’s engaged to Wayne’s daughter Paulina. Wayne was spotted using an all-red Scotty Cameron putter during the event, and PGATOUR.COM caught up with “The Great One� to get the full story behind the putter (it’s worth the read). Aaron Rodgers uses “That’s what she said� wedge NFL superstar quarterback Aaron Rodgers of the Green Bay Packers has quite the sense of humor, and he expresses it on his TaylorMade wedges. PGATOUR.COM caught up with Rodgers at the Pebble Beach Pro-Am to get the story behind his hilarious wedge stampings, which includes a tribute to The Office. Gary Woodland’s butter knife The days of players using long irons made with a blade construction are waning, but fresh off his 2019 U.S. Open win, Gary Woodland used a Wilson Staff blade 2-iron that could send chills down the spine of nearly any golfer. As you’ll see in the story, PGATOUR.COM took photos of what the 2-iron looks like from address. Look at your risk. Tiger Woods switches to P-7TW irons (and so does Fleetwood), and Woods later reveals more info After using TaylorMade TW-Phase 1 prototype irons for much of 2018, equipment fans were eager to see if there would be a new iron for 2019. Speculation picked up when Tommy Fleetwood was spotted using “P-7TW� irons at the Abu Dhabi HSBC. Surely the “TW� wasn’t a coincidence. Woods did in fact switch into P-7TW Milled irons, but they looked a bit different than Fleetwood’s version. Later in the year, PGATOUR.COM spoke with Woods in-depth about his equipment, where Woods revealed more telling information about those very irons. Here’s the full Q&A with Woods. Tony Romo uses hand-me-down clubs from Tiger and Spieth Romo sent the equipment world into a frenzy when he was spotted by PGATOUR.COM using golf clubs at the 2019 Pebble Beach Pro-Am that were once used by Jordan Spieth and Tiger Woods. We also got the scoop on exactly how those clubs ended up in his bag. Here’s the full story on Romo’s hand-me-down clubs.

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Superlatives for PGA TOUR’S 2018-19 seasonSuperlatives for PGA TOUR’S 2018-19 season

It was certainly fitting that on the final Sunday of the 2018-19 PGA TOUR season, Brooks Koepka and Rory McIlroy found themselves in the thick of a fight for the FedExCup. The two were among the top performers this season, both ultimately winning three times. While McIlroy claimed his second FedExCup title along with winning THE PLAYERS Championship in March, Koepka’s body of work included winning a major and a World Golf Championships — and he was no worse than fourth in all four majors. Although these two superstars were part of many highlights this season, they weren’t the only players deserving of plaudits. We’ve dissected the entire season and present to you without further ado: The best of the best. BEST WINS Tiger Woods at the Masters We had been given a taste of Woods’ ability to return to greatness when he won the TOUR Championship at the end of the 2017-18 season, but it was still incredible to see the 43-year-old turn back the clock for a vintage display at Augusta National. Woods used his guile and experience to hang tough on Sunday while others faulted and held off the likes of Koepka and Dustin Johnson down the stretch. It was PGA TOUR win No. 81 and major win No. 15, breaking an 11-year-drought in majors. The iconic image of him hugging his kids just off the 18th green, years after he hugged his dad after the first of his five green jackets, was incredible. Said Tiger: “Just unreal. The whole tournament has meant so much to me over the years. Coming here in ’95 for the first time and being able to play as an amateur; winning in ’97, and then come full circle, 22 years later, to be able to do it again… This has meant so much to me and my family, this tournament, and to have everyone here, it’s something I’ll never, ever forget.â€� Rory McIlroy at THE PLAYERS Championship McIlroy was one of eight players who tasted the lead during a wild final round at TPC Sawgrass. But what might have been forgotten since he was the man to ultimately triumph was his recent struggles on Sunday, failing to win from the final group in his previous nine attempts. While he wasn’t in the final group at THE PLAYERS either, there was no doubting the lack of closing was on his mind in Florida. McIlroy fought back from an early double bogey, producing a brilliant birdie on the 15th hole to take the lead before making clutch pars on 17 and 18 for the win. It was the first of three wins on the season, the last coming at East Lake. Said McIlroy: “I hit a 6-iron out of the fairway bunker on 15 at THE PLAYERS on Sunday, sort of curved it around a tree, got it up there to 15 feet, and holed the putt for birdie. I think that basically set up me going on and winning THE PLAYERS Championship. If I don’t win THE PLAYERS, I don’t know what happens after that and where the season might go.â€� Corey Conners at the Valero Texas Open Conners had to survive a six-for-one playoff in Monday qualifying, after an early double bogey, just to get into the main field. Once he did that, he knew he had nothing to lose. He’d already finished in the top five of the Sony Open of Hawaii after getting though a Monday pressure cooker, so the Canadian was confident. Conners figured he could win, even if no one else was expecting it. With Si Woo Kim leading after 18, 36 and 54 holes, Conners positioned himself nicely in behind. He then turned the unthinkable into reality, shooting a closing 66 for a two-shot win. He was the first Monday qualifier to win since Arjun Atwal in 2010. Said Conners: “No more Monday qualifying. That’s the best deal from this. Amazing. It’s a dream come true. I won’t be as stressful on Mondays.â€� Shane Lowry at The Open Championship With the Open back in Northern Ireland for the first time since 1951, it was phenomenal to see Lowry, who grew up just a few hours away in Ireland, take the Claret Jug. As top local hope Rory McIlroy just missing the cut after a sizzling second round following his disasterous opener, Lowry positioned himself into a tie for the lead through 36 holes. It had the fans daring to dream. Lowry then produced a 8-under 63 in the third round (see below) to take command with a four-shot lead heading to Sunday. By the end of it all 24 hours later, he’d won by six. The jubilant crowd scenes will live forever. BEST ROUNDS Xander Schauffele’s 62, final round at the Sentry Tournament of Champions After an opening hole bogey on Sunday at the Plantation Course at Kapalua, Schauffele sat six shots off the lead. An ultimate underdog. Just how he likes it. He then played his last 16 holes in 12 under par with two eagles and eight birdies for a course record tying 11-under 62. He had an 11-foot eagle putt on the last to break it that slid by. But little matter. It was enough for a one-shot win. Said Schauffele: “This is the stuff you sort of dream about. This is why everyone works hard and does the right stuff. But to actually pull it off it feels awesome.â€� Rory McIlroy’s 61, final round at the RBC Canadian Open How do you ensure you turn a 54-hole co-lead into victory? Go out and shoot a 9-under 61 in the final round certainly helps. In his first trip to the RBC Canadian Open at Hamilton Golf & Country Club, McIlroy came out all guns blazing on Sunday. Five birdies in his opening seven holes set the tone. Four more in a row from 11 through 14 had everyone hoping for a sub-60 round. A bogey on the 16th seemed to have put paid to that but a bounce back eagle meant a final hole birdie would make 59. That wasn’t to be … and even a final hole bogey couldn’t sour a special round and a huge win. Said McIlroy: “By the time I got to the 14th tee I wasn’t really thinking of winning the tournament. I was thinking of trying to shoot 59. I had to reassess my goals a little bit in the middle of that back nine. This is what I feel I can do. I’ve been able to do it before. It was nice to get back to that feeling.â€� Shane Lowry’s 63, third round at The Open Championship Fairytales don’t always come true but at Royal Portrush, one most certainly did. Lowry had already produced two good rounds to earn a share of the halfway lead but his Saturday effort is what really helped him realize a Claret Jug dream. Eight birdies, no bogeys. A tremendous 8-under 63 to set up a four-shot buffer over Tommy Fleetwood and be six or more clear of anyone else. He rode the energy of a raucous crowd the whole way. Said Lowry: “Honestly, that’s the most incredible day I’ve ever had on the golf course. I honestly can’t explain what it was like. I said to Bo walking off the 17th tee, we might never have a day like this on the golf course again. So let’s enjoy this next half hour. You know what I mean? And that’s what I did. The crowd was incredible. I just can’t believe what it was like.â€� BEST SHOTS Russell Knox at the Valspar Championship There had never been an albatross at the Valspar Championship before until Knox took dead aim with a 3-wood from 275 yards out on the par-5 11th. The Scotsman had one of three long-range albatrosses on the season, along with Lucas Glover (255 yards at John Deere Classic) and Harris English (236 yards at THE PLAYERS). Tiger Woods at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play At the Match Play in his battle against Brandt Snedeker, Woods found himself under a bush near the 10th green and in trouble. That was until he played a shot left-handed, club hooded, from his knees to 3 feet. In his match against Patrick Cantlay, Woods was in the midst of overtaking his younger opponent when he holed out for eagle from 83 yards to really stick the knife in and advance to the final 16. Tiger Woods at the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship Woods found himself blocked out from the green in a fairway bunker on the right side of the fairway. Nevermind. With a whip-like swing, he cut the ball a mile out of the sand from 132 yards to 10 feet. Incredible stuff. Tiger Woods at the Masters With the tournament still in the balance Woods stepped up to the par-3 16th hole at Augusta National and promptly hit the near-perfect shot. The traditional pin allows players to suck the ball down the slope and perhaps even jag an ace. Woods’ ball did everything but find the cup as it settled past the hole to a foot and provided a clutch birdie. Jhonattan Vegas at THE PLAYERS Championship The par-3 17th island green has long given us highlights. And so it was late Sunday this season when Vegas dropped a 70-foot birdie bomb across the length of the putting surface. From the low point on the green, up and over the rise and around the corner to the traditional Sunday pin. It was brilliant. Gary Woodland at the U.S. Open Chasing his first major championship and with the intimidating Koepka coming after him, Woodland faced a dilemma on the 71st hole, the 17th at Pebble Beach. He’d found the fringe of the putting surface on the iconic par 3 but was on the complete wrong side of the enormous green. Instead of defensively putting across the expanse Woodland stood up and chipped the ball. He could have thinned it or chunked it but instead clipped it perfectly and almost holed it. A hole later he was national champion. Said Woodland: “Fortunately I had the same shot earlier in the week, so I already executed it once. I was just trying to fly it over the ridge. You’re trying to take your medicine a little bit. And 4’s not going to be the end of the world. So it came off beautifully, and I thought it had a chance to go in there. But that’s definitely one — it gave me a little cushion on the last.” BEST COMEBACKS Rickie Fowler at the Waste Management Phoenix Open The final round at TPC Scottsdale went from looking like a Fowler procession to a serious test of his mental mettle. Five shots clear after the front nine, Fowler was giving the raucous crowds reason to get the party started early. Then what followed was diabolical. The saga began when Fowler’s approach to the 483-yard par-4 11th hole came up short. He got too aggressive with his third, which skidded through the rain-soaked green, trickled down the hill behind it, and tumbled in the pond. Fowler took a drop at water’s edge and walked up the hill to look at the green. With the rain intensifying and Fowler having turned his back, the ball that was at rest rolled down the hill and into the water. A one-shot penalty. He dropped again, chipped his sixth shot onto the green, and rolled in a 17-foot putt for 7. After a bogey on 12, Fowler was now one behind the lead. It would be enough to rattle anyone and you figured Fowler would bomb out of the race from there. Instead he bounced back with two clutch birdies and ultimately won by two. A brilliant display of mental fortitude coming after a series of mental, and unlucky, errors. Said Fowler: “It really wasn’t fun there for a couple holes. The nice thing about going in with a 54-hole lead and having a bit of a cushion, it allows for mistakes. And to step up after that, I feel like I played the last five holes pretty well… Just had to find a way to get it done. It wasn’t very fun. It will be fun now, and it will be well worth it. Good learning experience. But, yeah, I don’t want to have to go through that again.â€� Charles Howell III at the RSM Classic This is a comeback of a different sort — a comeback to the winner’s circle. It only took 11 years. Howell held of a storming Patrick Rodgers to finally produce PGA TOUR win No. 3. Rodgers shot 17 under on the weekend alone to force a playoff with Howell, but it was the Georgia native who would ultimately prevail. He dropped a 15-foot birdie in the second playoff hole to send his children into tears of joy. No surprise that he joined them. Said Howell: “It’s been 11 years since I’ve won a golf tournament and quite honestly, I didn’t know if I would ever win one again for the obvious reasons that I had come up short so many times and the fact of how the game is changing. I just spent 36 holes with Cameron Champ, who hits a 3-iron 290 yards off almost every tee and it gets your attention how golf’s changing. Every time one of these guys comes out like that, there seems another and another and another. Yeah, the fact I’m sitting here with this trophy, it’s still a bit of a dream.â€� Graeme McDowell at the Corales Puntacana Resort & Club Championship When McDowell opened the tournament with a 1-over 73 to fall seven shots off the pace in the Dominican Republic. you would have put your house on the fact he would not be ending a win drought that spanned back to 2015 on the PGA TOUR. Even after his 8-under 64 on Friday, the Northern Irishman was still three back. But he put up another 64 on Saturday to assume control of the tournament and then held it together on Sunday, making a clutch birdie on 17, to win his fourth PGA TOUR title. Said McDowell: “This is big for the people that stood by me. It’s been a grind for my whole family, my wife, my kids back home. It’s been a rough few years.â€� BEST ROOKIE PERFORMANCES Matthew Wolff at the 3M Open In just his third professional start and with his unique swing that has him marked as a “disrupter,â€� Wolff provided a phenomenal finish at the new 3M Open. With fellow rookie Collin Morikawa and Bryson DeChambeau pushing him all the way, Wolff stepped up in the clutch. On the final hole he sent his approach to the par-5 18th to the fringe of the green. From there, he buried the putt for eagle and ultimately the victory. It was a stunning “Here I amâ€� moment that we will likely look back on for years to come. Said Wolff: “I’m really not an emotional guy, but tears came to my eyes.â€� Collin Morikawa at the Barracuda Championship Just a few weeks removed from being beaten at the buzzer by Wolff in Minnesota, Morikawa kept his own hot streak going by clinching the Barracuda Championship. The modified stableford format proved to be perfect for the young star as he set about aggressively chasing birdies in Reno. On Sunday, when some youngsters would definitely feel the heat, Morikawa birdied four of the last five holes, including the last three, to take the trophy. Adam Long at the Desert Classic Talk about a long shot. In just his sixth start on the PGA TOUR, Long sat in a final round threesome including Phil Mickelson and Adam Hadwin. Mickelson had the 54-hole lead. Hadwin has a knack for the Desert Classic; he had shot a 59 the year prior. Meanwhile, Long was 20 over par in his previous five TOUR. But by the time they reached the 18th hole, Long had chipped in twice, and reeled int the three shots Mickelson started ahead. When he stood over a 15-foot birdie putt to win there was still a vibe he couldn’t possibly win… and then he nailed the putt. It took nine years as a pro to make the TOUR but less than nine starts to become a winner. Cameron Champ at the Sanderson Farms Championship The new wave of golfer arrived early in the season last October when the huge-hitting Champ destroyed the course and his opposition in Jackson, Mississippi. Through three rounds, Champ had looked like just that, setting up a four-shot lead. But the inevitable Sunday nerves hit and by the turn he was tied at the top. It was a sink-or-swim moment for the 23-year-old as he took a deep breath ahead of his last nine holes. He swam. Birdies on five of his last six holes returned his four-shot buffer and announced him as a player of the future. Sungjae Im’s 35 starts Although the Korean rookie didn’t win this season, he became the TOUR’s new Iron Man. His 35 starts were the most by any player; the next closest was Tom Hoge’s 32. Three times this season, he played six consecutive weeks. His 122 rounds played were 20 more than any other player. He produced seven top-10 finishes (just seven players had more this season) and used those high finishes to become the only rookie to reach the TOUR Championship. Oh, and if you’re wondering if he’s planning to slow down next season … well, he’s slated to play six of the first eight weeks. 

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