WGT Golf News

  • Play Ready-Go's On Closest-To-The-Hole Courses

    14 Aug 2012

    You can now play Ready-Go tournaments on closest-to-the-hole golf courses on WGT, including...

    • Bali Hai
    • Bethpage Black - CTTH Ready-Go currently running
    • Cabo del Sol
    • Chateau Whistler
    • Celtic Manor - CTTH Ready-Go currently running
    • Congressional - CTTH Ready-Go currently running
    • Edgewood Tahoe - CTTH Ready-Go currently running
    • Harbour Town
    • Hilversumsche
    • Kiawah Island
    • Oakmont
    • The Olympic Club - CTTH Ready-Go currently running
    • Pinehurst #8
    • Royal St George's
    • St Andrews - CTTH Ready-Go currently running
    • Wolf Creek

    With the fast 9-shot CTTH (closest-to-the-hole) format, the new CTTH Ready-Go tournaments close just 3 hours after the last entry.

    Enter for 50 or 100 WGT credits, and the top 30 of 50 players earn credit prizes, with 6X credits for first place.

    See New CTTH Ready-Go's

    Ready-Go's are paid online tournaments on World Golf Tour. There's always a Ready-Go tournament available on different courses, that change every few weeks, for entry fees from 50 to 1,000 WGT credits.

  • Ryder Cup 2012 Team Europe Golf Players

    13 Aug 2012

    The 2012 Ryder Cup features the world's best PGA and European Tour players in a head-to-head battle at Medinah Country Club in September.

    The following professional golfers from Europe should qualify on 8/26/12 to represent Team EUROPE in the 2012 Ryder Cup...

    POS

    PLAYER

    POINTS

    1

    Rory McIlroy

    4,050,288.10

    2

    Justin Rose

    2,602,910.21

    3

    Graeme McDowell

    2,375,790.52

    4

    Paul Lawrie

    2,088,718.02

    5

    Francesco Molinari

    2,062,525.67

    6

    Peter Hanson

    2,022,431.76

    7

    Luke Donald

    1,885,170.56

    8

    Martin Kaymer

    1,871,797.49

    9

    Nicolas Colsaerts

    1,735,223.95

    10

    Lee Westwood

    1,692,029.78

    European golfers on the bubble who could be selected as the two potential coach's picks by Jose Maria Olazbal include...

    POS

    PLAYER

    POINTS

    11

    Gonzalo Fdez-Castano

    1,613,602.38

    12

    David Lynn

    1,547,127.76

    13

    Sergio Garcia

    1,502,772.60

    14

    Rafa Cabrera-Bello

    1,462,896.55

    15

    Alvaro Quiros

    1,377,894.58

    16

    Marcel Siem

    1,355,364.99

    17

    Ian Poulter

    1,290,985.55

    18

    Thomas Bjorn

    1,178,359.61

    19

    Joost Luiten

    1,103,691.44

    20

    Jamie Donaldson

    1,096,895.04

     

    Other past Team Europe Ryder Cup players include: Miguel Jimenez, Padraig Harrington, Peter Lawrie, Ross Fisher, Edoardo Molinari, Martin Laird and Darren Clarke.

    See more at official Team Europe Ryder Cup website

    Team USA

  • Ryder Cup 2012 Team USA Golf Players

    13 Aug 2012

    The 2012 Ryder Cup features the world's best PGA and European Tour players in a head-to-head battle at Medinah Country Club in September.

    The following professional golfers from America qualified on 8/12/12 to represent Team USA in the 2012 Ryder Cup...

    POS

    PLAYER

    POINTS

    1

    Tiger Woods

    6,014.184

    2

    Bubba Watson

    5,815.054

    3

    Jason Dufner

    5,697.302

    4

    Keegan Bradley

    5,551.206

    5

    Webb Simpson

    4,635.500

    6

    Zach Johnson

    4,491.544

    7

    Matt Kuchar

    4,448.942

    8

    Phil Mickelson

    4,233.108

    American golfers on the bubble who could be selected as the four potential coach's picks by Davis Love III include...

    POS

    PLAYER

    POINTS

    9

    Hunter Mahan

    4,082.228

    10

    Steve Stricker

    4,015.069

    11

    Jim Furyk

    3,369.616

    12

    Rickie Fowler

    3,313.338

    13

    Brandt Snedeker

    3,176.787

    14

    Bo Van Pelt

    3,152.315

    15

    Dustin Johnson

    3,040.020

    16

    Robert Garrigus

    2,604.580

    17

    Bill Haas

    2,546.017

    18

    Ben Curtis

    2,457.284

    19

    Scott Piercy

    2,416.346

    20

    Kyle Stanley

    2,341.219

    Other past Team USA Ryder Cup players include: David Toms, Nick Watney, Sean O'Hair, JB Holmes, Boo Weekley.

    See more at official Team USA Ryder Cup website

    Team Europe

  • Rory By The Shore

    13 Aug 2012

    Contributed by Brian Hewitt for GlobalGolfPost

    Rory McIlroy now has commandeered two major championships in the past two years by a combined total of 16 shots.

    Last year it was the U.S. Open at Congressional by eight. Sunday it was the PGA Championship by eight again.

    Remind you of anybody?

    “We all know the talent he has,” said Tiger Woods, who finished a distant T11.

    The previous biggest margin of victory at the season’s final major was seven. By a guy named Nicklaus in 1980.

    “That’s a nice record to have,” said McIlroy who closed with a 6-under 66 at the Ocean Course.

    His final round complemented two earlier 67s and more than offset a Friday 75 when the wind blew dogs off their leashes. McIlroy finished at 13-under 275.

    “It was all good,” added McIlroy, who led by three after 54 holes and set a goal of 12 under before beginning his last round.

    At the 2011 Masters he began Sunday with a four-shot lead and melted down with an 80.

    “I didn’t have a target score in mind at Augusta,” he said late Sunday. “It’s one of the things I should have done.”

    Little-known Englishman David Lynn carded a pair of weekend 68s for solo second at 5 under, one shot better than Justin Rose, Carl Pettersson, Ian Poulter and defending champion Keegan Bradley.

    Meanwhile, eight players are now assured of U.S. Ryder Cup berths next month near Chicago. Woods is one of them. American captain Davis Love III will name the other four in early September. The European side will become finalized later this month.

    Woods owned a share of the lead here after 36 holes, but skied to a front-nine 40 in the third round and never really threatened again. Where once he was “dominant,” now he continues to be merely “dangerous.”

    Speaking of danger, after a relatively calm first round, the full fury of the Ocean Course and the evil genius of its architect, Pete Dye, got unleashed Friday. Winds gusted up to 38 mph, the 36-hole cut ballooned to 6-over par and the second round scoring average for the field soared to 78.1.

    That latter number set an all-time one-day high for this championship and included a whopping 93 from club pro Doug Wade.

    Former PGA champion Padraig Harrington had his own theory on how Kiawah bared its teeth.

    “It’s not that the wind is that strong,” he said. “It’s that this is a really, really difficult golf course. When you have elevated greens ... and you are chipping downwind, it can be awkward. ... Most of my bogeys came on the downwind holes.”

    And to be fair to the overmatched Wade, he wasn’t alone. Former PGA champion Love bogeyed his last five holes Friday to miss the cut by a single shot. So did Japan’s Hiroyuki Fujita.

    Can’t imagine their dinners tasted very good. Austria’s Bernd Wiesberger, a winner earlier this year on the Euro Tour, bogeyed his last six holes to miss the weekend by a shot.

    “Nobody is used to winds like this,” said 36-hole co-leader Vijay Singh. Singh led the field in scrambling at the halfway mark, but couldn’t scramble an egg Sunday, posting a final-round 77.

    Pace of play in Friday’s gale slowed to a near standstill, at times upstaged in its turgidity only by the controversially glacial pace of the shuttle buses used to move fans, officials and media on and off this traffic-choked island all week.

    The championship began gaining momentum on the golf course Saturday only to have a vicious afternoon storm attack the area. Play was suspended with the leaders still on the front nine, with McIlroy charging and Woods fading. It didn’t resume until early Sunday morning.

    The only drama in the final round was the early charge mounted by Englishman Ian Poulter, who birdied the first five holes and briefly pulled to within one shot of McIlroy.

    McIlroy responded with birdies on the second, third and seventh and never really looked back. A 10-foot curler on the 12th stretched his lead to six. The rest was a good walk unspoiled.

    “He’s lapped the field twice now,” Harrington said of McIlroy’s two major wins.

    Meanwhile, it didn’t go unnoticed that McIlroy wore a red shirt Sunday. Previously that was a Woods’ tradition and a staked claim.

    McIlroy said he wouldn’t have worn red if he had been playing in the same group as Woods. But, he added without a trace of arrogance, “I might have to do it from now on. No wonder he won so much.”

    “You know,” said Poulter, “when he (McIlroy) plays golf like this, he’s very impressive to watch. Everybody should take note. The guy’s pretty good.”

    To be sure.

    And to be continued.

    Photo: Associated Press

  • WGT Kiawah Championship

    09 Aug 2012

    Play the WGT Kiawah Championship this week during the PGA Championship for your chance to qualify to win an amazing golf trip for two to Kiawah.

    Be sure to post your first round score by Sunday 8/12, and the top 50% of scores will move on to 2 championship rounds the following week, with the top 3-round combined score winning a golf trip for two people to the beautiful Kiawah Island Resort. There's also a $500 Amazon gift card sweepstakes prize for one of the qualifiers, regardless of their final score.

    Play WGT Kiawah Championship

    This free, unlimited stroke play tournament features a mix of old and new hole locations – just added to the course in WGT.

    Don't miss the exciting 2012 PGA Championship this weekend. Check the Golf Channel, TNT and CBS for your local TV listings or visit the official tournament site.

  • Flash and WGT

    08 Aug 2012

    For the past of couple weeks, online games that run in web browsers that use Adobe Flash have been experiencing display issues and crashes. Adobe has confirmed that these Flash issues were introduced in late July and is working hard on fixing the problems. See Adobe confirmed issues.

    This may be impacting your experience playing WGT, but the best solution depends on your web browser, so here’s what WGT recommends…

    Google Chrome – Chrome is the browser that WGT recommends for performance and because it automatically updates plug-ins like Flash, and the issues reported earlier in August appear to be addressed with the latest version:

    Microsoft Internet Explorer – IE appears to have avoided these Flash issues in the latest versions:

    Mozilla Firefox – Flash issues were reported in Firefox but appear to be addressed with the latest versions:

    Apple Safari – Safari appears to have fixed similar Flash issues with their latest:

    If you still have issues with the World Golf Tour game, please email us at members@worldgolftour.com and let us know which versions of the above web browser and Flash you're using so we can help you out.

    **FLASH UPDATE - 8/22**

  • Glory’s Toughest Test - PGA Championship Review

    08 Aug 2012

    by DAVE SHEDLOSKI of GolfDigestCanada

    Kiawah Island

    This week’s PGA Championship at Kiawah’s Ocean Course combines a very demanding layout with several name players out to make a major statement.

    Pete Dye has been visiting the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, S.C., every two weeks, on average, he says for the last two years to help prepare it for this week’s PGA Championship.

    “I don’t know if there’s a foot of ground that we haven’t looked at,” the alacritous octogenarian said with a knowing chuckle. “I think it’s as good as we can make it.”

    By “good” Dye means difficult. When he first designed the Ocean Course in preparation for the 1991 Ryder Cup, Dye said he put a great deal of thought into “figuring out ways to challenge the greatest players in the world.”

    He has never stopped trying, and when the 156 players in the 94th PGA converge on the barrier island 15 miles south of Charleston for the first major championship in South Carolina, they’ll discover a layout that will give them as much comfort as sand in their pants. And don’t be surprised if a few of them get exactly that as they tack along the coast on a par-72 course measuring 7,676 yards, the longest in tournament history, and replete with ever-present threats of sand and water. The Ocean Course was ready but rough in 1991. Now it’s refined and maybe not quite as rough as a shot making test—though that’s only if the wind doesn’t blow. If, however, breezes begin to strafe the landscape, there won’t be anything except the good graces of Kerry Haigh, the PGA’s setup man, to save them from dune and gloom.

    “The golf course is unbelievable. I think it’s going to be very difficult, especially if the wind picks up,” said defending champion Keegan Bradley, who joined Francis Ouimet and Ben Curtis as winners in their first major start. “I’m interested to see how the PGA sets up the golf course because they can set it up a million different ways.”

    “It was interesting … it’s two different nine holes. The front nine is a really nice, playable golf course, and then the back nine is not. It’s very severe,” said Adam Scott, who will be looking to bounce back from his disappointing finish in the British Open, where he bogeyed the final four holes at Royal Lytham & St. Annes and allowed Ernie Els to sneak by him. “There are good scores out there in good weather, but if the wind blows, it’s just going to be very difficult, even if they move tees forward and stuff like that. It’s an extreme penalty for a miss. It’s certainly going to need some ball striking.”

    More to the point, drivers could be more integral to success at Kiawah than in the year’s three previous major championships.

    “I don’t think there’s any question that you’re going to have to drive it great,” Dustin Johnson said. “Length is going to be a huge advantage—if you can keep it in play.”

    “It’s going to be long,” said Tiger Woods, a four-time PGA winner. “It’s going to be close to 7,700 yards, and that’s a big ballpark. It’s going to take a little bit of getting used to. Being seaside, the wind can change. The wind comes out of different directions. There’s so much room out there, but as soon as the wind starts blowing 20,30 miles an hour, there’s not much room.”

    Beating the course is only half the battle. Beating the field is another matter.

    The roster includes the top 108 on the World Ranking. All four reigning major champions will be in attendance, the first time since the Masters. Thirteen past PGA champions and 32 major winners are entered. This means very little nowadays, however, given that the last 16 majors have produced a different winner. Twelve have been first-timers, including the last three in the PGA: Bradley, Martin Kaymerand Y.E. Yang.

    Glory’s Last Shot represents the last chance for Woods and Rory Mcllroy to engage in a head-to-head ‘ major battle this season. A rivalry was anticipated— and given commensurate media hype—after each captured a victory in Florida, Mcllroy at the Honda Classic and Woods at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

    What has happened? Woods, 36, had his chances at the U.S. Open and British Open, though he fizzled down the stretch in each. Mcllroy, 23, billed as Tiger’s success or, wasted less time being in consequential, his T-40 at the Masters being his best finish. He missed the cut in his U.S. Open title defense. At the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, Woods, who has risen to No. 2 in the world, might have found a solution to his sketchy putting after the second round. “Found some alignment, some posture things and got my feel back,” Woods said after a third-round 68 at Firestone CC. “My blade was releasing properly again, and it felt really comfortable.”

    Mcllroy also looked more comfortable at Firestone, getting in the mix after bogeying three of the first four holes of the tournament. “It’s getting there, it definitely is. I’ve worked hard to get it back,” the Ulsterman said. “Obviously, my expectations every time I tee it up are pretty high and not to live up to my own expectations is not nice, but I feel like I’m definitely moving in the right direction.”

    Of course, they are not alone in seeking to salvage the season and apply salve to some scar tissue.

    Graeme McDowell played in Sunday’s final pairing in the last two majors and came up empty. Jim Furyk had a second U.S. Open title in his hands until a late stumble at Olympic Club, his disappointment every bit as deep as Scott’s. The only difference is the freshness of the wounds.

    Unfortunately for them, Dye’s salty Ocean Course awaits.

    Photo: Golf Digest/Steven Szurlej

     

  • PGA Championship Preview of Kiawah on WGT

    07 Aug 2012

    world golf tour kiawah

    It's PGA Championship week and the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island is one of the most popular golf courses available on World Golf Tour.

    Let's take a look at the three closing holes that the pros will face this week. Anyone can play any of the holes at Kiawah free online on World Golf Tour. No signup required. Just visit the Kiawah golf course pages, pick your hole and tee off.

    Play Kiawah free on WGT

    world golf tour kiawah hole 16

    Kiawah - Hole 16599 yards

    The last Par 5 at Kiawah, the 16th hole involves a drive over water to the left to an undulating fairway. If the drive is long enough and positioned on a flat lie, players can navigate the dunes to try and reach the green in 2 shots. However, the dunes and deep bunkers can quickly turn a birdie attempt into a bogey or worse.

    Play Hole 16 free on WGT

    world golf tour kiawah hole 17

    Kiawah - Hole 17 - 220 yards

    When the wind is blowing, the 17th hole may be the hardest par 3 in the world. Players must carry their shot entirely over water. Too short and it's wet. Too long and it's a challenging chip from two deep bunkers back toward the green and water. Good luck here!

    Play Hole 17 free on WGT

    world golf tour kiawah hole 18

    Kiawah - Hole 18 - 478 yards

    One of the prettiest closing holes in golf, with the beach dunes and beautiful Kiawah clubhouse. Drive to the right side of the fairway to set up an approach for a birdie in front of the huge grandstands overlooking the ocean.

    Play Hole 18 free on WGT

  • Play WGT Games Faster With New Speed-Up Boosts

    07 Aug 2012

    Now play WGT games 2-4 times faster with new Speed-Up Boosts, available in the Pro Shop.

    These Boosts are great for when you don't have as much time to play, or to help make multi-player games move a little faster. Play more games in less time!

    Note: the Speed-Up Boosts only change how quickly the flight of your ball is displayed in the game – they don't affect your shot, distance or roll in any way.

    Visit Pro Shop

    New Speed-Up Boosts are initially available in a 100-hit option, and come in three different speeds:

    • Standard - 2X faster
    • Plus - 3X faster
    • Ultra - 4X faster

    Try out the new boosts in the WGT Kiawah Championship tournament, going on now. We just added new hole locations on the Kiawah virtual golf course for an added challenge. Remember to post your first round score by Aug 12 for your chance to qualify to win an amazing golf trip for two to Kiawah!

  • WGT Player, Willsstrs, Compares Real-Life Bethpage Black to Virtual

    06 Aug 2012

    One of our own WGT players, Willsstrs, recently played the real-life Bethpage Black golf course and lived to tell about it... Here's what he had to say about his experience and how it compares to the WGT version -- thanks for sharing, Willsstrs!

    the scene at 6:30 am when I'm on the tee...

    the scene at 6:30 am when I'm on the tee...

    WGT doesn't get enough credit for what they do...I just played the Black IRL and man, it was just like WGT! 

    Even down to the details! The mowing of the fairway is the same, with the one side downgrain and the other into the grain! And the green mapping was great too! The bunkers acted the same, the fescue, the rough, the fairway, the greens, and even wind!!!

    here's another cool part: On 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10 , 13, 14, 16, 17, 18 they had pins in similar spots and I used WGT knowledge to make the putts!

    And it certainly helped on tee shots to know exact carry yardages!

    the only difference is I shoot sub 60 pretty easily here but IRL I was thrilled with sub-90! And I have NO IDEA how people can play 7 as a par 4 (its a par 5 for normal play)! the long man in my group was 220 out and it was certainly a 3-shotter for me!

    And this is one of WGT's first courses...each one gets a little better done each time!

    Great job WGT, now we just gotta solve meter issues!

    the scene at 18 

WGT Golf Archives

Subscribe to WGT News