Golf.com https://golf.com en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.9.1 https://golf.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/cropped-favicon-512x512-1-32x32.png viktor hovland – Golf https://golf.com 32 32 https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15492991 Sat, 10 Sep 2022 23:32:42 +0000 <![CDATA[3 storylines heading into the BMW PGA Championship final round]]> The BMW PGA Championship will be only three rounds, but there's no shortage of storylines. Here's three we're watching in the final round.

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https://golf.com/news/bmw-pga-championship-three-storylines-watch-final-round/ The BMW PGA Championship will be only three rounds, but there's no shortage of storylines. Here's three we're watching in the final round.

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The BMW PGA Championship will be only three rounds, but there's no shortage of storylines. Here's three we're watching in the final round.

The post 3 storylines heading into the BMW PGA Championship final round appeared first on Golf.

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After an eventful week featuring the continued bickering between the PGA Tour-DP World Tour and LIV Golf, and the death of a monarch, it’s a Scandinavian duo who find them themselves atop the leaderboard heading into the final round of the shortened BMW PGA Championship.

Denmark’s Soren Kjeldsen and Norway’s Viktor Hovland are tied at 12-under after Saturday’s second round of the DP World Tour’s flagship event and lead by one over three golfers, including Rory McIlroy.

The event was shortened to 54 holes after play was suspended Thursday and canceled Friday following the death of Queen Elizabeth II.

Here are three storylines we’re watching heading into the third and final round:

Scandinavian success

Hovland opened the tournament with a 64 Thursday, before play was suspended, and was tied for the lead when the second round began Saturday morning. A 68 has him tied with Kjeldsen, whose scores were flipped with Hovland, opening with 68 and then climbing up the leaderboard with a 64 Saturday.

His 8-under round was the second-best of the day, only bettered by Min Woo Lee’s 62, and he even bogeyed the first. He quickly made up ground, picking up four strokes in four holes, on four through seven, and then making five birdies on the inward nine.

“I made a few more putts today,” Kjeldsen said. “I putted decent on Thursday, but I putted well today, so there was the four shots.”

He nearly made one more putt, after leaving himself 10 feet for eagle at Wentworth’s par-5 finishing hole. But his putt just stayed high.

“It’s a game like that, isn’t it?” Kjeldsen asked. “If you only focus on the ones you miss, you’re going to have a pretty miserable time so it’s better to spend time thinking about the ones you make. I certainly try to do that.”

Hovland, meanwhile went 32 holes, this week before making his first bogey, which came on the 15th hole Saturday.

How did he rebound? Birdies at 16 and 18 to finish off his day and stay tied with Kjeldsen.

The world No. 9 credited his consistent play to his iron play, as he’s also ranked ninth this week in greens in regulation.

“My irons have been really good this week,” he said. “I think I’ve only missed a handful of greens in total for the two rounds, and that obviously alleviates a lot of pressure.”

While neither player is British, Kjeldsen has spent a lot of time over his life in the UK.

With no play taking place Friday and the tournament only being played over 54 holes following the Queen’s death, the Dane spoke to the uniqueness of the past two days.

“It was very special,” he said. “Obviously being a foreigner, but having lived here, it’s quite overwhelm to go actually feel what the queen has meant to the British people, so I was sort of taken back by that. She was obviously incredibly loved and did a great job. It was a special moment.”

LIV golfers lurking

Before the suspension of play Thursday, headlines this week were dominated by the drama that has come with the meeting of LIV Golfers and other pros. Several have held their own.

On the leaderboard, LIV golfers Talor Gooch and Adrian Otaegui find themselves firmly in the hunt, just two back of the leaders at 10-under-par.

Joining Gooch and Otaegui in contention is Justin Harding, two shots further back, at 8-under.

McIlroy one back

The PGA Tour’s biggest proponent, meanwhile, is just a shot back, at 11-under. McIlroy tied his lowest round at Wentworth on Saturday with a bogey-free 65 to vault into a share of third.

Should he come back to claim one of the DP World Tour’s biggest titles, he could set himself up to be just the second player to win both the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup and the DP World Tour’s Race to Dubai. Henrik Stenson pulled off the feat in 2013. McIlroy is on top of the Race to Dubai standings this season, but Viktor Hovland could overtake him with a win.

McIlroy has found himself at the forefront of the LIV vs. PGA Tour debate, and has been one of the most outspoken critic of the Saudi-backed league. He said winning at Wentworth would help make his season even more special then it already has been.

“We lose a lot more than we win, so every win is big,” McIlroy said. “But with everything that’s going on around our game, everything that’s happened in this country over the last couple days, it would certainly be up there as one of most memorable.  But it would be hard to put in context where it would sit alongside the other achievements that I’ve had.”

He also took the chance to point out the irony in circumstances of the shortened event. LIV Golf, you see, plays 54 holes.

“I’m excited about tomorrow,” McIlroy said. “I haven’t played one of these events, so it’s going to be interesting to see how it feels.

“54 holes?” a reporter asked what he was referring too.

“Yeah, exactly,” McIlroy responded.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15491784 Mon, 22 Aug 2022 23:17:18 +0000 <![CDATA[Viktor Hovland drove 22 hours and set a course record in the Arctic Circle]]> Most pro golfers wouldn't drive 22 hours to play golf during their weeks off, but Viktor Hovland wanted to see Lofoten Links. He played well.

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https://golf.com/travel/viktor-hovland-lofoten-links-norway-course-record/ Most pro golfers wouldn't drive 22 hours to play golf during their weeks off, but Viktor Hovland wanted to see Lofoten Links. He played well.

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Most pro golfers wouldn't drive 22 hours to play golf during their weeks off, but Viktor Hovland wanted to see Lofoten Links. He played well.

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Lofoten Links is the stuff of dreams.

The golf course is situated 95 miles above the Arctic Circle in a remote area of northern Norway. In the winter, the sun barely rises. In the summer, it never sets. And in those few glorious months, there’s a 24-hour-a-day opportunity for one-of-a-kind golf.

The scenery is ridiculous. Lofoten is craggy, rocky, rugged. It hangs over the edge of the Norwegian Sea. It’s the sort of place that golf adventurers travel across the world to play, paying between $50 and $150 for the chance to play under the midnight sun. Occasionally, professional golfers do the same.

Enter Viktor Hovland.

Fresh off a T4 finish at the Open Championship in late July, Hovland headed home to Norway. Then he headed north.

“Yeah, it was amazing,” Hovland said at this week’s BMW Championship, when asked about the trek he made with three golfing buddies. “I had never been further north in Norway than Trondheim, which is about a six-hour car ride from Oslo, where I’m from, and we drove 22 hours straight up north.”

That got them to the Lofoten Islands, specifically Gimsøya, and even more specifically the farmstead named after its owner, Frode J. Hov, also the course’s founder and owner. Hov, meet Hovland. No wonder he felt at home.

“It’s amazing how they can build a golf course in such a remote area and still have the golf course be really good I thought,” Hovland said. “It was in great condition, and we didn’t have the best of weather, but just to have a golf course there in the middle of nowhere, it’s pretty special.”

Only one problem: Hovland didn’t have his golf clubs. They hadn’t arrived from the Open yet, and Lofoten is a demanding course off the tee; flat grassy stretches aren’t overly abundant in this craggy part of the world. On a windy, chilly first day, that meant a proper challenge.

“So I used my buddy’s clubs, and the first day it was blowing 35, and the fairways are pretty narrow, so as soon as you miss the fairways it’s just a re-tee,” Hovland said. “So I think I shot 83.”

Things were calmer the next day. A video of Hovland on the first tee shows a hint of blue sky, and he roped one over the edge of the sea, covering the rocky beach and flying it onto the green. According to the folks at Lofoten, he made the putt for eagle. It was on. He birdied 2, 8, 11, 13, 15 and 17, logging six birdies plus that eagle and 11 pars for a round of 8-under 63.

Hovland described the round as “quiet, perfect conditions.” That meant he was lucky. And good.

It’s not the first time Hovland has proven himself a local legend. After his tee time booking went viral last summer, several hundred Norwegians showed up to watch Hovland play with fellow pro Andreas Halvorsen, surprising the unsuspecting groups who teed off just before them. He’s beloved in his home country. Sports Illustrated put it this way: Hovland is already by far the best golfer Norway has produced. No one is in second place.

Nor is this Hovland’s first road trip. Early in golf’s post-pandemic return, Hovland drove…everywhere. From Fort Worth to Hilton Head. From Hilton Head to Hartford. From Hartford to Detroit. From Detroit to Columbus. He listened to heavy metal the entire way.

Hovland’s journey is admirable and enviable for obvious reasons. How many pros would use their off week to take a mega-road trip to remote Norway with three buddies? It’s the sort of venture that would poll near 0% on the PGA Tour but near 100% for fans at home — so it’s fun to see Hovland do the golf-nerd thing.

I just would have made someone else in charge of music.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15489427 Sat, 16 Jul 2022 21:32:55 +0000 <![CDATA[More structure, less curve: How Viktor Hovland went from good to great]]> Hovland is eyeing victory at the 2022 Open Championship at St Andrews. His coach, GOLF Top Teacher Jeff Smith, explains how he got there.

The post More structure, less curve: How Viktor Hovland went from good to great appeared first on Golf.

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https://golf.com/instruction/viktor-hovland-coach-jeff-smith-2022-open-championship/ Hovland is eyeing victory at the 2022 Open Championship at St Andrews. His coach, GOLF Top Teacher Jeff Smith, explains how he got there.

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Hovland is eyeing victory at the 2022 Open Championship at St Andrews. His coach, GOLF Top Teacher Jeff Smith, explains how he got there.

The post More structure, less curve: How Viktor Hovland went from good to great appeared first on Golf.

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Welcome to Play Smart, a column to help you play smarter, better golf from Game Improvement Editor Luke Kerr-Dineen (who you can follow on Twitter right here).

By this time on Sunday afternoon, we may be witnessing the highest point of Viktor Hovland’s career so far. But you can’t fully appreciate the good without remembering the bad. And for Hovland, the lowest ebb of his career lives long in the memory.

It came during his first semester at Oklahoma State, when he made the trip across the pond only to find himself playing with the best college golfers in the country.

“I was really struggling,” Hovland said earlier this year, at the Players Championship. “I was hitting hitting really low slices off the tee. I couldn’t hit a 3-wood off the deck, I couldn’t get it airborne, it was so frustrating because I would watch my peers and they would just hit these high draws off of the ground onto the green on par-5s.”

The humble Hovland is probably selling himself slightly short. As all good competitors do, he made the tools he had work: He qualified for three college events that fall, finished in the top 20 of each, and shot three rounds in the 60s along the way.

Still, Hovland wasn’t where he wanted to be, and he knew it. Even when he turned pro in 2019, he saw areas he needed to improve. That drive to get better pushed him down a path that eventually led to meeting GOLF Top 100 Teacher Jeff Smith.

The pair joined forces in early 2020, and they’ve been on a rocket ship ever since: Hovland has won three times on the PGA Tour since then, twice more in Europe, made his first Ryder Cup team and risen as high to third in the OWGR.

Now, he’ll head into Sunday at St Andrews tied Rory McIlroy at 16 under, and eyeing his first major championship.

Together, Hovland and Smith have accomplished that rarest of feats in sports: Making a player who was already unquestionably good even better.

Here’s how they did it.

1. Controlling the curve

Viktor Hovland had always been a golf swing nerd, and had worked closely with Denny Lucas, along with a variety of others. It meant that by the time Hovland landed firmly in Smith’s stable, his swing was already in good shape. The task, Smith says, wasn’t overhauling. It was tweaking and refining what he already had.

“We haven’t made any drastic changes to his swing,” Smith says.

But they did address a lingering issue in Hovland’s game: His natural left-to-right shot shape that would occasionally curve too severely, which stemmed from his technique.

“His tendency was to aim too far right, shift his lead arm out in transition and hit big pull-fades,” Smith says. “We’ve worked to neutralize that move so he can work the ball both ways and hit more of a straight ball as his stock shot.”

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A post shared by Jeff Smith (@radargolfpro)

2. More practice structure

Making those small, technical tweaks in his full swing allowed Hovland more versatility. His good shots flew straighter, and he had greater command when the time came to hit different shots.

That’s when Smith’s task became helping Hovland implement it. Doing that meant providing more structure to what, and how, Hovland would practice. Hovland’s routine had been so fluid before, there were times he wouldn’t even practice chipping or bunker shots before his round.

Under Smith, who strongly believes in the benefits of structured practice, that was about to change.

“There was an opportunity to get better with wedges, so we began doing Trackman wedge combines on Tuesdays [at tournaments],” he says.

“During practice rounds, we’d identify high Green In Regulation holes, and low Green In Regulation holes,” Smith adds.

“On high GIR holes, we’d play competitive putting games and drills around the potential hole locations. On low GIR holes, we’d play up-and-down games on those holes.”

Add to that some changes in his putting — we’ll get to those — and Hovland was suddenly practicing smarter; more intentionally and focused. He’d soon reap the benefits of his new approach.

3. Working on the wedges

In golf and life, you can’t take the good without the bad.

Hovland’s golf swing technique features a strong trail hand grip, and he holds off the clubface during his release. It means Hovland’s clubface doesn’t rotate as much as other players (Ping actually measured this, and found Hovland has one of the lowest clubface closure rates of any golfer they ever measured). More than anything else, it’s what gives him such remarkable powerful consistency from tee-to-green.

But those technical elements in his golf swing also show up in shorter shots around the green. While delofting and keeping the clubface very stable through impact has transformed him into an elite ball striker, those same elements will occasionally cause him to bring the leading edge more into play around the greens. It means he’ll tend to catch the ball heavy or thin with his wedges, especially from unforgiving lies like the dry turf at the Old Course this week.

Excelling around the greens for Hovland requires learning, and perfecting, an opposite technique than what feels natural to him.

“Around the greens we spent countless hours refining his chipping and bunker action,” Smith says. “We’ve worked to get the club face in a less closed position so he can play with more loft and spin, and utilize the bounce of his club”

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A post shared by Jeff Smith (@radargolfpro)

4. Trying something new

Viktor Hovland’s wedge may remain a work in progress, and his elite ball striking the clear strength of his game. But in some ways, his recent success has been fueled by his improved putting. Hovland has been quietly piecing together the best putting season of his career, thanks in large part to adopting the AimPoint green-reading method, suggested by Smith at the start of the year.

“He has always had a good stroke,” Smith adds. “He’s become one of the best green readers in the world.”

That, too, found its way into Hovland’s practice structure. During his putting warmups, Smith says Hovland will “calibrate” his putting by hitting 12 putts from all around the hole: four putts from each of five, seven, and nine feet. Hovland will read each putt using AimPoint, and then check the read using a level.

“It’s really given me a system,” Hovland said earlier this year. “It’s a system that doesn’t work every time, but it at least gives me a framework that’s a lot tighter.”

Rises like Hovland’s don’t happen accidentally. They’re the product of working smarter, harder, and with more discipline.

Doing the boring stuff behind the scenes, and getting a little better each day along the way. That’s how a good player like Hovland gets even better. And on Sunday, he may have a new trophy to show for it.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15487354 Sat, 18 Jun 2022 17:11:34 +0000 <![CDATA[After stunning meltdown, Viktor Hovland won't play U.S. Open on weekend]]> After a string of miscues in his second round, Viktor Hovland won’t play the U.S. Open on the weekend at The Country Club.

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https://golf.com/news/with-stunning-meltdown-viktor-hovland-u-s-open/ After a string of miscues in his second round, Viktor Hovland won’t play the U.S. Open on the weekend at The Country Club.

The post After stunning meltdown, Viktor Hovland won’t play U.S. Open on weekend appeared first on Golf.

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After a string of miscues in his second round, Viktor Hovland won’t play the U.S. Open on the weekend at The Country Club.

The post After stunning meltdown, Viktor Hovland won’t play U.S. Open on weekend appeared first on Golf.

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BROOKLINE, Mass. — Airmailed irons. A shot that spun off the green. A three-putt. Chips that were lacking. Some misfortune. Not one thing led to Viktor Hovland’s nine-over-for-11-holes finishing kick on Friday at the U.S. Open. The struggles didn’t discriminate. 

In the end, Hovland missed the weekend at The Country Club, after an even-par 70 in the first round, and a 77 in the second. You just never saw that coming. If you do the simple math, he was two-under through 25 holes, and he was sitting in seventh and playing to keep an impressive streak going — Hovland had never missed a cut at a major championship in 10 starts.

Then he teed off on 17. 

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“This has just been a disastrous run,” announcer Shane Bacon said on broadcast. 

Indeed. 

364-yard, par-4 17th. Bogey. Hovland drops to one-under. 

The drive is good, down the right side of the fairway on the dogleg left. The setup for the second shot is good; Hovland is 100 yards out and has a wedge in his hand. Things look good for a second, his ball landing about 15 feet from the hole — until it spins off the green. 

“Big mistake with a wedge in his hand,” analyst Trevor Immelman said on the broadcast.

449-yard, par-4 18th. Bogey. Hovland drops to even.  

Some bad luck here. Hovland hits his tee shot left, and it’s heading toward a fairway bunker, only to finish maybe a yard short of it and settle into the deep fescue. He muscles out his second shot, only for his ball to wind up toward the top of a greenside bunker. 

496-yard, par-4 1st. Bogey. Hovland drops to one-over. 

Another nice drive, 317 yards down the left side of the fairway on the dogleg left. But from 165 out, Hovland hits a short iron over the green. 

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217-yard, par-3 2nd. Bogey. Hovland drops to two-over. 

Hovland begs his iron to “go, go hard.” It doesn’t, he’s 54 feet away, and he three-putts. 

496-yard, par-4 3rd. Bogey. Hovland drops to three-over. 

Hovland’s again in the fairway after a nice tee shot, and he again airmails his iron, the ball dropping on the back left portion of the green, where it trickles off. “Yikes, that’s not where you want to hit it, though,” analyst John Wood says on the broadcast. His third shot is a below-average chip. 

490-yard, par-4 4th. Bogey. Hovland drops to four-over. 

This one stings. Hovland is deep down the fairway, has a nice angle in — and dumps a wedge into a greenside bunker. At four-over, he’s now below what would be the cutline. 

165-yard, par-3 6th. Bogey. Hovland drops to five-over. 

Hovland is right off the tee, hits a chip that leaves him 15 feet for par and can’t convert. This is maybe a good spot to list some of the stats from the second round — Hovland was 134th in Strokes Gained: Approach; 134th in SG: Around the Green; and 122nd in SG: Putting.

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547-yard, par-5 8th. Bogey. Hovland drops to six-over. 

This one is an all-around struggle. Hovland misses the fairway to the right off the tee. He hits left of the green and into the tall stuff on his second shot. He advances his third shot a few feet. He pitches his fourth shot over the green. It’s here where Bacon calls it all “a disastrous run.”

421-yard, par-4 9th. Bogey. Hovland drops to seven-over.  

Hovland, with a fairway metal, misses the fairway right with his tee shot, hits over the green and into a greenside bunker with his second shot, and he bogeys one more time. 

That’s 11 holes, nine bogeys, two pars and no birdies. 

And no weekend. 

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15478148 Wed, 13 Apr 2022 20:00:17 +0000 <![CDATA[Viktor Hovland’s short-game struggles explained in revealing new light]]> In today's Play Smart, we're learning more about Viktor Hovland's short game from his GOLF Top 100 Teacher Jeff Smith.

The post Viktor Hovland’s short-game struggles explained in revealing new light appeared first on Golf.

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https://golf.com/instruction/short-game/viktor-hovlands-short-game-struggles-explained%ef%bf%bc/ In today's Play Smart, we're learning more about Viktor Hovland's short game from his GOLF Top 100 Teacher Jeff Smith.

The post Viktor Hovland’s short-game struggles explained in revealing new light appeared first on Golf.

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In today's Play Smart, we're learning more about Viktor Hovland's short game from his GOLF Top 100 Teacher Jeff Smith.

The post Viktor Hovland’s short-game struggles explained in revealing new light appeared first on Golf.

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Welcome to Play Smart, a game-improvement column that drops every Monday, Wednesday and Friday from Game Improvement Editor Luke Kerr-Dineen (who you can follow on Twitter right here).

How could your biggest strength also create your biggest weakness?

It’s the kind of maddening, fascinating question only the game if golf is capable of posing, and a problem one that World No. 4 Viktor Hovland is currently trying to solve.

“I suck at chipping,” he said in 2020. “I definitely need to work on my short game.”

It’s been an ongoing work in progress, and it’s getting better every day. Hovland has established himself as a one of the best players in the world even since that admission, and this week, Hovland’s coach, GOLF Top 100 Teacher Jeff Smith (who you can and should follow on Instagram right here) shared some fascinating insight about the process.

Smith describes Hovland’s challenges in a nutshell:

Jeff Smith

“Many people wonder, how could an absolute world class player like Viktor Hovland possibly struggle with the short game?,” he says “The pattern and match-ups in his swing that make him an elite-level ball striker, make it more challenging to produce consistent results around the greens.”

Hovland’s golf swing features many of elements that modern day golf instructors adore. Specifically, a flexed lead wrist (think Dustin Johnson), and minimal clubface rotation through the ball. There’s no one or perfect way of swinging a golf club, but Hovland’s new school move works phenomenally well for him: He currently ranks 12th in SG: Driving and 3rd in SG: Approach this season.

But those same elements pop up in the shorter swings required around the green, and it can make life difficult. Whereas in his closed clubface-and-hold swing, which relies on lots of body rotation and very little wrist action, works masterfully from tee-to-green, it can bring the leading edge more into play around the greens. It leads to a tendency for Viktor to chunk chips, when things go really wrong.

Shots around the green call for the clubface to be more open, along with more active wrists to bring the club’s bounce into play. They’re opposite to the movements that makes Viktor so great from tee-to-green, and requires him to make adjustments to his technique that don’t always feel natural.

But that’s what the dynamic coach-player duo are working on. Making small adjustments that will help Hovland’s performance and boost his confidence while perceiving Hovland’s golf swing “DNA,” Smith writes.

It’s a good reminder for the rest of us: That the tendencies you have in your golf swing will often show up in other areas of your game — for better or worse. It also goes to show that pros work on their technique too, and that it’s not always easy. Especially when the same things that help you play better in one area, can make life difficult in another.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15477613 Sat, 09 Apr 2022 12:48:46 +0000 <![CDATA[Viktor Hovland's secret to Augusta's 12th hole? He calls it the 'Oklahoma shot']]> Viktor Hovland played college golf at Oklahoma State, where he taught himself how to play well in the wind.

The post Viktor Hovland’s secret to Augusta’s 12th hole? He calls it the ‘Oklahoma shot’ appeared first on Golf.

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https://golf.com/instruction/viktor-hovlands-12th-hole-masters/ Viktor Hovland played college golf at Oklahoma State, where he taught himself how to play well in the wind.

The post Viktor Hovland’s secret to Augusta’s 12th hole? He calls it the ‘Oklahoma shot’ appeared first on Golf.

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Viktor Hovland played college golf at Oklahoma State, where he taught himself how to play well in the wind.

The post Viktor Hovland’s secret to Augusta’s 12th hole? He calls it the ‘Oklahoma shot’ appeared first on Golf.

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AUGUSTA, Ga. — It took two different players hitting three shots into the water on the 12th hole for Viktor Hovland to call upon his secret weapon.

“I have a good Oklahoma shot,” he says. “I saw Jordan spin one up in the air and hit it in the water. Xander kind of did the same thing.” 

Hovland’s Oklahoma Shot is effectively an more severe knockdown shot. Whereas for a traditional knockdown he pairs a ball back in his stance with an abbreviated follow through, for his Oklahoma Shot, he adds two extra components: A stronger grip, and much more forward shaft lean. He’ll try to keep his right shoulder even lower through the shot, too. It all allows him to “manufacture” a ball flight that’s lower and less spinning than a traditional knockdown.

“I show a couple more knuckles on my left hand and really lean the shaft hard,” he says. “It basically doesn’t put any spin on the ball. It just goes straight through the wind.”

Hovland said he taught himself the shot in college. Freshman year he learned he needed to add that shot to his arsenal, and by sophomore year he had perfected it.

“I was really good at hitting it low,” he said.

He’s hit the Oklahoma Shot just twice this week, both on the 12th hole. On Thursday his shot ended less than a foot from the hole for a tap in birdie. On Friday, he was the only player in his group to avoid the creek, leaving his ball 20 feet past the hole for a stress free par.

The two shots meant Hovland picked up a stroke-and-a-half over the field, which averaged the hole in 6.5 strokes over the two days. By day’s end on Friday, he had made the cut on the number. His play on those two holes — along with his ability to call on a shot few others have perfected — ultimately proved decisive.

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15474012 Sun, 06 Mar 2022 17:20:44 +0000 <![CDATA[2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational purse: Payout info, winner's share]]> We've reached the final round of play at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Here's everything you need to know about tournament money.

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https://golf.com/news/2022-arnold-palmer-invitational-purse/ We've reached the final round of play at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Here's everything you need to know about tournament money.

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We've reached the final round of play at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Here's everything you need to know about tournament money.

The post 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational purse: Payout info, winner’s share appeared first on Golf.

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After three days of play at Bay Hill Club and Lodge, we’ve reached the final round of play at the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Below, find everything you need to know about tournament money, including purse, payout information and winner’s share.

2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational final round preview

Viktor Hovland enters Sunday’s final round a handful of strokes off the lead, but there’s no doubting he’s the most dangerous player within striking distance at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. The 24-year-old Norwegian pro enters Sunday’s final round just one stroke off the lead set by Talor Gooch and Billy Horschel, but that comes after a see-sawing Saturday that saw him once holding a four-stroke lead.

On Sunday, Hovland will look to claim his fourth PGA Tour win and second professional win in 2022 (next to the Dubai Desert Classic in February). But to do so, he’ll have to ward off a group of big names led by Rory McIlroy. The four-time major champ sits three strokes back of Hovland and four off the lead heading into Sunday.

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Gary Woodland, the 2019 U.S. Open champ, enters Sunday’s final round in 5th, three strokes off the lead. And Scottie Scheffler — fresh off his first-ever PGA Tour win — enters in 4th, just two strokes back of the leaders.

Below is everything you need to know about the Arnold Palmer Invitational’s $12 million purse, including payout info and winner’s share; you can catch the action all afternoon on NBC.

Arnold Palmer Invitational payout info, winner’s share

  1. $2,160,000
  2. $1,308,000
  3. $828,000
  4. $588,000
  5. $492,000
  6. $435,000
  7. $405,000
  8. $375,000
  9. $351,000
  10. $327,000
  11. $303,000
  12. $279,000
  13. $255,000
  14. $231,000
  15. $219,000
  16. $207,000
  17. $195,000
  18. $183,000
  19. $171,000
  20. $159,000
  21. $147,000
  22. $135,000
  23. $125,400
  24. $115,800
  25. $106,200
  26. $96,600
  27. $93,000
  28. $89,400
  29. $85,800
  30. $82,200
  31. $78,600
  32. $75,000
  33. $71,400
  34. $68,400
  35. $65,400
  36. $62,400
  37. $59,400
  38. $57,000
  39. $54,600
  40. $52,200
  41. $49,800
  42. $47,400
  43. $45,000
  44. $42,600
  45. $40,200
  46. $37,800
  47. $35,400
  48. $33,480
  49. $31,800
  50. $30,840
  51. $30,120
  52. $29,400
  53. $28,920
  54. $28,440
  55. $28,200
  56. $27,960
  57. $27,720
  58. $27,480
  59. $27,240
  60. $27,000
  61. $26,760
  62. $26,520
  63. $26,280
  64. $26,040
  65. $25,800

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15472776 Sat, 19 Feb 2022 14:46:03 +0000 <![CDATA[The 1 thing that would make pros abandon the PGA Tour for the Saudi league, according to a rising star]]> A storm's brewing between the PGA Tour and upstart Saudi league. On Friday, Tour backer Viktor Hovland revealed what would make him switch sides.

The post The 1 thing that would make pros abandon the PGA Tour for the Saudi league, according to a rising star appeared first on Golf.

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https://golf.com/news/1-thing-pros-abandon-pga-tour-saudi-league/ A storm's brewing between the PGA Tour and upstart Saudi league. On Friday, Tour backer Viktor Hovland revealed what would make him switch sides.

The post The 1 thing that would make pros abandon the PGA Tour for the Saudi league, according to a rising star appeared first on Golf.

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A storm's brewing between the PGA Tour and upstart Saudi league. On Friday, Tour backer Viktor Hovland revealed what would make him switch sides.

The post The 1 thing that would make pros abandon the PGA Tour for the Saudi league, according to a rising star appeared first on Golf.

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The winds are swirling in the world of professional golf. With the rumored upstart Saudi golf league threatening an imminent storm on the PGA Tour’s shores, division among players is starting to bubble up to the surface, and star pros are starting to take sides.

So far this week we’ve heard from six-time major champion Phil Mickelson, whose no-holds-barred criticism of the PGA Tour — as well as revelations about his close ties to the Saudi league reported by Alan Shipnuck — catalyzed other pros to speak. It seems Adam Scott and Lee Westwood are on Phil’s side. Perhaps Joaquin Niemann, too.

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Other pros have come out strongly in favor of the PGA Tour, such as Justin Thomas, who pilloried Mickelson’s remarks as “egotistical,” Collin Morikawa who mocked the proposed new league, and Pat Perez. They joined previous PGA Tour backers Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm and Tiger Woods, the last of whom shared his own thoughts on the controversy on Wednesday.

Presumably many of those players siding with the Tour have been offered huge sums of money to join the Saudi league and turned them down, so the guaranteed cash is clearly not a motivating factor for them. But that reality begs one important question as we await the official announcement and schism among pros: what would it take for a player who backs the PGA Tour to switch sides and join the Saudi league?

Rising star Viktor Hovland provided some insight into that tricky question on Friday at the Genesis Invitational. Following his second-round 64, Hovland faced reporters and predictably fielded questions about the Saudi league. He made it clear from the start that he’s on Team PGA Tour. For now.

“Yeah, it’s obviously a lot going on and I just started out playing professional golf. If I I had my wish, I would just keep playing the PGA Tour. But we’ll see what happens.” Hovland said. He added later, “Obviously money is good, it’s nice to make money, but that’s not what gets me up every day in the morning… A tournament like this at a course that — Riviera and all the past winners, it’s a really cool history. Just to be a part of that, that means something to me, being a PGA Tour winner. And yeah, winning these historical events, I think that’s very cool.”

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Hovland’s response was not without caveat, which invited the next logical question: what would change his mind?

“I mean, if everyone else goes, I’m kind of –,” Hovland said before a reporter cut in. Then he continued, “I just want to play against the best players in the world. Everyone goes over there, kind of leaves me with no choice, but I would like to play the PGA.”

This is likely the thought that has kept PGA Tour officials up at night frequently over the past two years. The key to the new league’s success — and the biggest threat to the PGA Tour — has always been attracting the best players and biggest stars in the game. If they jump ship, then many other players will have their hands forced, no matter where they’d prefer to play.

But so far, the evidence suggests the new Greg Norman-led league has had little luck doing that, as Hovland noted on Friday.

“Hunches doesn’t really matter too much, it’s about what people do, but it seemed like a lot of good players are voicing their support for the PGA Tour, so that’s certainly going to be a tall task for other leagues if the best players don’t want to go.”

For now, the biggest stars (Tiger, Rory, Rahm, Thomas, Spieth) and the best young players (Morikawa, Hovland) are sticking with the PGA Tour. But anything can happen over the next few weeks, months and years. Hovland said it best on Friday, “we’ll see what happens.”

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15472742 Fri, 18 Feb 2022 22:16:57 +0000 <![CDATA[A Riviera cheat code? Pro defends hack, but analysts are dumbfounded]]> Viktor Hovland, during the Genesis Invitational, defended his Riviera Country Club cheat code. But analysts were dumfounded.

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https://golf.com/news/a-riviera-cheat-pro-hack-analysts-dumbfounded/ Viktor Hovland, during the Genesis Invitational, defended his Riviera Country Club cheat code. But analysts were dumfounded.

The post A Riviera cheat code? Pro defends hack, but analysts are dumbfounded appeared first on Golf.

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Viktor Hovland, during the Genesis Invitational, defended his Riviera Country Club cheat code. But analysts were dumfounded.

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The scorecard reads pars, so, in the end, the route to get there was really neither a success, nor a failure, but just a couple of fours. But oh, the place where Viktor Hovland’s ball went after his tee shots on the 15th at Riviera

How best to describe the play that saw the young star turn his entire body to about a 1 o’clock angle on the tee box during the first and second rounds of the Genesis Invitational? Advantageous? Perhaps, and that was his thinking — the 15th played as the tournament’s hardest hole on Thursday, with a tree-lined driving window, and fairway bunkers to the left, and by taking it down the adjacent 17th fairway, Hovland opened things up a bit. Of course, knowing that the only time a player’s ball usually ends up that way is through an unintentional hook or slice made Hovland’s plan of attack seem, well, strange.  

And when Hovland hit right of the 17th fairway on Friday, it seemed even more so. Consider: His playing partners were not only more than 150 or so yards to the left of him on their second shots, they were also closer — Hovland was 175 out, while Rory McIlroy was 156 and Hideki Matsuyama 137. 

“It takes some courage to take a crazy line like that,” analyst Mark Wilson, also a former player, said on the PGA Tour Live broadcast. “And when you do it, you better pull it off. And if you go ahead and hit it farther to the side of the dogleg than you were intending to, wow, it can be a mess. And then you got to say hi to some other groups that come through. Just could be awkward.” 

“Really not an advantage at all unless he just really hates the tee shot here on 15, but I don’t understand why with his ball shape — that he likes to fade it a little bit left to right — all he has to do is, even if he hits it in the left-hand rough, he actually has a decent angle to this hole location today,” analyst Daniel Chopra, also a former player, said on the broadcast. “So I really am struggling to understand the logic behind this play. And like I said, I just don’t think there’s going to be another player in the field who’s going to go that route today because it doesn’t make the hole any shorter. If anything, it makes it a good 20 yards longer by playing it down 17. All you’re getting is a better angle to a left hole location.”

From there, Hovland navigated his ball onto the green, dropping it over the pin, and two-putted for par. On Thursday, he hit the fairway — the 17th fairway — hit his second shot short of the green, chipped on and one-putted. Notable, too, during the first round was Thomas Pieters and Aaron Wise also played 15 via 17. 

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“That is weird. I’ve never seen anyone go — I mean, it’s an adjacent fairway,” analyst Frank Nobilo said on the Golf Channel broadcast.

“I talked to the marshal that’s marshaling the landing area for 17, and he said that Hovland was the third player today that’s done that. And I’ve never seen it,” analyst Curt Byrum said.  

“It’s a new way to play a classic golf course,” Nobilo said. 

Hovland’s thinking? After his round on Friday, Hovland said he also went right on 15 during the 2017 U.S. Amateur, the move takes away some trouble and it “just fits my eye.” When it hits the fairway.  

“Yeah, it was a bad shot today,” he said. 

Of course, the unconventional is nothing new in golf, and it also brought to mind a similar play from Lon Hinkle, who, on the 8th hole at Inverness at the 1979 U.S. Open, hit his tee shot left and onto the nearby 17th fairway, on his way to making birdie. Memorably, the USGA planted a tree on 8 to try to block the shot, though Hinkle tried it again. 

And the tree was named the “Hinkle Tree” going forward. (In 2020, it was uprooted by a storm.)

“I wonder if we’ll see a Viktor Hovland tree erected here to the right of 15th tee going into the weekend,” Wilson said on PGA Tour Live. 

“I don’t think they’re going to worry about it after the shot that Hovland hit,” announcer Lisa Cornwell said. 

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https://golf.com/?post_type=article&p=15471677 Thu, 10 Feb 2022 12:34:47 +0000 <![CDATA[Viktor Hovland has a new Ping G425 LST driver for a very good reason]]> Viktor Hovland's driver has been in the news, only this wasn't a case of the Norwegian needing a replacement for a busted big stick.

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https://golf.com/gear/drivers/viktor-hovland-wm-phoenix-open-ping-g425-lst-driver/ Viktor Hovland's driver has been in the news, only this wasn't a case of the Norwegian needing a replacement for a busted big stick.

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Viktor Hovland's driver has been in the news, only this wasn't a case of the Norwegian needing a replacement for a busted big stick.

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PHOENIX — It could be debated that no one is playing better golf than Viktor Hovland at the moment. Wins usually keep pros from tinkering with their equipment setup, but when Hovland arrived in Phoenix following a two-week stretch in the Middle East, he made it a point to stop by Ping headquarters for a G425 LST driver tuneup.

Hovland’s driver has been in the news a considerable amount over the last several months, only this wasn’t a case of the Norwegian needing a replacement for a busted big stick. Hovland’s recent speed gains revealed a decrease in spin rate to roughly 1,800-1,900 RPMs — a number that toes the line between being absolutely perfect and categorizing the 24-year-old as an “underspinner.”

“Viktor can wake up and cruise at 177 mph ball speed out here,” said Ping Tour rep Kenton Oates. “That used to be a number he’d hit when he was swinging hard. Now he can hit 180 without much additional effort. So his playable speed has gone up over about the last six months.”

This isn’t the first time Hovland has been dubbed an underspinner. During last year’s Memorial Tournament, Hovland asked Ping Tour reps to come up with a solution that allowed him to gain launch and spin with his i210 irons to handle the firm conditions at Muirfield Village.

In a move that somewhat mirrored the iron dilemma, Ping reps made slight modifications to combat the lower-than-comfortable spin rate and increase launch — it was 10 degrees with Hovland’s previous driver build — removing the shaft tipping from his Fujikura Speeder 661 TR TX shaft to soften the overall build.

“His coach, Jeff Smith, spoke to Fujikura about some solutions, and the first thing we decided on was removing the tipping,” Oates said. “Instead of being tipped 1 inch as it had been in the past, there’s no tipping on this one. But it’s still the same length.”

The loft also increased slightly from 8.4 degrees to 8.6 degrees and hot melt (three grams) was added to the toe to keep Hovland from overdrawing the ball since his path started moving more right.

Hovland removed the tipping from his Fujikura shaft in an attempt to gain spin. Jonathan Wall/GOLF

“All of those things are going to help him add spin,” Oates said. “When he was on the range, we saw 11-12 degrees of launch with about 2300 RPMs of spin.”

The changes all add up to a driver that allows Hovland to not worry about spin dropping to dangerous levels on the occasional mishit. (With the WM Phoenix Open being played at 1,300 feet above sea level, an increase in spin will be nice to have with less air density.)

It’s a driver build that makes Hovland that much better this week, which is a scary proposition for the competition.

Want to overhaul your bag for 2022? Find a fitting location near you at GOLF’s affiliate company True Spec Golf. For more on the latest gear news and information, check out our latest Fully Equipped podcast below.

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