WGT Golf News

  • 2012 Virtual U.S. Open Championship Update: Round 1

    19 Jun 2012

    The 2012 Virtual U.S. Open Championship Round is now being played on World Golf Tour. Round 1 is underway and qualified players can play and post their final score through Wednesday 6/20.

    With the Qualifier Round Cut Line at 57 there were 199 players who made the cut as of Sunday night, meaning they posted a score of 57 or better (including ties) in the qualifying round.

    But while 57 was the qualifying score, only two scores currently posted in the Championship Round are better than that. Unlike the Qualifier Round, this Championship round is single-play as opposed to unlimited play, adding more pressure to each shot and making it significantly harder to score well.

    Only 123 of the eligible 199 players have posted scores so far, so it's still too early to tell how everything will end up, but here's a look at how the leaderboard looks today:

    •  tinybo – current solo leader with a score of 56
    • TheLighterDark – sits in second place, matching the Cut Line score of 57
    • JayJensen – the top qualifier, tied for third place with Aahna with scores of 58
    • mrenn29 – the 2011 Virtual U.S. Open champ is currently in 11th place posting a 60 and within striking distance

    Two Grand Prize trips to next year's U.S. Open at Merion will be awarded, one to a sweepstakes winner from the Qualifier and one to the final Champion. In addition, all 199 of the players who qualified for this Championship round will receive a USGA 1-year membership and U.S. Open hat. See prize details and country eligibility.

    The Championship Round 1 ends Wednesday 6/20, and then our champions put everything on the line in Round 2 which ends Sunday 6/24 as the final test of their skills.

    Good luck to all of the players! 

  • MisterWGT: U.S. Open Sunday Summary

    19 Jun 2012

    WGT President and Co-Founder, MisterWGT, was lucky enough to attend the 2012 U.S. Open at The Olympic Club this past weekend. He shares his thoughts and photos of his unique experience below. Enjoy!

    "In leaving... I took one last walk through the locker room. What a special place this Olympic Club. I cannot say enough how honored I was to be a part of it."


    U.S. Open -- The Sunday Summary By MisterWGT

    Well my friends… what a week!  The U.S. Open is now over and who would have ever predicted Webb Simpson hoisting the championship cup on the final green?  I certainly didn't.  Then again, it's become somewhat of a tradition for the U.S. Open to introduce to the world a new major winner.  Think about it... Geoff Ogilvy, Lucas Glover, Angel Cabrera, Graeme McDowell... all first time champions.  Heck, even Rory hadn't won a major prior to the U.S. Open last year!

    And what about the course itself?  The Olympic Club's Lake Course, once again, challenged the legends only to see them come up one stroke short.  Now Graeme McDowell and Jim Furyk have walked those same steps as Hogan, Palmer, Watson and Stewart… not only exhausted after ascending that hill from the 18th green to the clubhouse, but mentally and emotionally spent after battling those 72 holes.  I was standing in the hallway of the clubhouse when Furyk's daughter greeted him after leaving the media room.  He leaned down to hug her and she said, "Daddy, would you like me to get you an ice cream?" as she held her own.  Jim's eyes were glassy and then his whole family leaned in for a group hug.  Believe me, I thought about taking a picture of that moment… but that moment was theirs.  He was spent.  He could have had it… but alas, it wasn't meant to be.

    In the end, this week and this course holds a special place for me.  I will admit, after spending so much time at Bethpage, St. Andrews, Kiawah or even the dramatic Wolf Creek… I didn't think Olympic would stand out.  Sure, I loved the cypress pines and the elevation changes, but what else would make this place memorable?   Little did I know that each hole would soon hold a new memory.  It started with the first day of the shoot – aerial photography day – when the pilot literally quit while we were attempting to photograph the tricky doglegs of #04 and #05.  I wanted the proper angle from the tee box to the fairway, but he absolutely did not like the proximity of the trees with the heli.  Needless to say, I talked him into finishing. But when I watched Lee Westwood lose his ball on Sunday to the tree on #05… I was not at all surprised!  I was trying to maneuver a helicopter around that very tree!

    One of the first holes we shot on the ground was #17.  It was big, wide and even if we moved slowly with our new local crew, the golfers would never catch-up to us.  Little did we know, mother nature had a different schedule.  We finished half the hole when suddenly the California sun vanished into London fog.  So we stopped and waited.  And waited.  And waited.  "Oh well, let's just wrap & clean-up," I radioed to our producer.  But then the weather turned on a dime and again the skies were clear.  Only now… golfers were on #15!  LET THE RACE BEGIN!  The crew went from relaxed and training on the job into full attack mode.  It was a great effort from the team and it set the pace for the rest of the shoot.  Fast-forward to Friday's Round 2…  watching Tiger, Phil & Bubba play #17, it was almost refreshing to see this "easy birdie hole" show golf's biggest names it's pesky little personality.  

    Although it's time to look ahead, I am still in denial this U.S. Open has come to an end.  Watching this course test these guys, being in the midst of all these past, present & future champions… to be perfectly honest, I was rooting for a playoff round on Monday!  I simply loved it.  I cannot thank the USGA and The Olympic Club enough for granting us this privilege to share this course with the world.  I hope you all enjoy it as much as I have.

    Come to think of it... I think I'll enjoy another virtual round.  Care to join?

    Continue the discussion and see more photos on our Forum

    Sunday's tee box on #03 (not played from the tips)

    Woods is done for the day. Not his week. Not his major.

    I had lunch with Matt Kuchar! What a great guy... all smiles coming off his Sunday round. After his performance at Augusta, he's ready to win a major.

    Furyk explains what happened on #16.

    I got goosebumps standing on the green... and I was only holding an iPhone!

    Notice Simpson's stretch from #07 - #10. Brilliant golf there & the true reason he won.

    Photos by MisterWGT

  • Webb Simpson's Weekend To Remember

    18 Jun 2012

     

    By Brian Hewitt for GlobalGolfPost

    Webb Simpson said he had "a peace all day" Sunday.

    Now he owns a large piece of golf history.

    By scorching a nails-tough Olympic Club layout with a pair of weekend 68s, the 26-year-old Wake Forest grad from Charlotte, N.C., won the 112th U.S. Open by a shot ahead of little-known American Michael Thompson and Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell, the 2010 U.S. Open champion.

    "One of my thoughts on the back nine," Simpson said, "was 'I don't know how Tiger's won 14 of these things.' "

    But an important part of the "peace" he mentioned clearly came from swing work he had done after missing the cut at The Memorial in May, his last start. Then, last week, Simpson went on a buddy’s golf trip to Pinehurst to clear his mind in advance of the Open.

    It all worked.

    In the end, McDowell needed a 25-footer to force an 18-hole Monday playoff on the 72nd hole and missed it left. Third-round leader Jim Furyk, playing in the final pairing with McDowell, also arrived at the final hole needing a birdie to tie Simpson. He bunkered his second and made bogey to drop into a five-way tie for fourth with David Toms, Padraig Harrington, John Peterson and Jason Dufner.

    "Nerve-wracking," said Simpson when asked what it was like watching McDowell and Furyk on their final hole.

    Playing in his second U.S. Open, Simpson became the 15th different player to win in the past 15 majors.

    Furyk held at least a share of the lead throughout the final round until he snap-hooked a drive on the par-5 16th and had to settle for a bogey that dropped him one behind the charging Simpson, whose four birdies in a five-hole stretch in the middle of his Sunday proved to be the difference.

    "This course," Simpson said of Olympic, "is so hard."

    The tipoff on how difficult Olympic was going to play last week came Thursday afternoon when the grouping of Luke Donald, defending champion Rory McIlroy, and Westwood combined to shoot 19-over par.

    Donald, McIlroy and Westwood are the Nos. 1, 2, and 3 players in the world rankings, respectively. Neither Donald nor McIlroy survived the cut that came at 8 over par.

    "There's an 80 lurking," said Masters champion Bubba Watson, who opened with a 78 and also missed the weekend.

    The usual player carping was mostly muted. But there was enough to elicit a rare non-conciliatory response from USGA executive director Mike Davis.

    "We made it very clear," Davis said in a moment of frustration. "Some don't like it, I guess they can tune out by this week or not file an entry if you're a player."

    Earlier, Davis had described the purposed inconsistency of the lies in the rough as being a "little bit like an Easter egg contest."

    Davis also went the extra mile during a post-round TV interview between Simpson and announcer Bob Costas. When an interloper attempted to run into NBC's shot, Davis grabbed him and yanked out of the camera's reach.

    Later, McDowell said he enjoys tough tests. But, he added, "I'm not sure you can have your 'A' game on this course. It’s just impossible. It beats you up."

    Tiger Woods looked for all the world like a winner the first two days and was tied with Furyk after 36 holes. Alas for him, his driver, iron game, and putter deserted him Saturday on the way to a 75. When he bogeyed the first two holes and doubled the third Sunday his bid to join Bobby Jones, Jack Nicklaus, and Willie Anderson this year as the only men to have won four U.S. Opens died aborning.

    Woods closed with a 73 and a 7-over total of 287. It was good for a tie for 21st.

    Phil Mickelson celebrated his 42nd birthday Saturday and little else at the major championship he still hasn't won. His 72-hole total of 296 was a whopping 16-over par and left him tied for 65th.

    The feel good story of the week was the performance of 17-year-old amateur American Beau Hossler. Just four shots back of the leaders after 54 holes, Hossler hung on with a Sunday 76 to gain second-low amateur honors. Jordan Spieth was low amateur.

    In the end, there was the wait. "I did not want to play in a playoff for a lot of reasons," said Simpson, who watched in the locker room with his wife, Dowd, as the final drama unfolded.

    All he really wanted to do this year, he said, was to continue to get better. "I don’t care if I make a million dollars as long as I keep getting better," he said.

    Better, for now, for Webb Simpson, is best.

    Photo: USGA

     

  • U.S. Open Highlight - Round 4 - Fowler and Cantlay Eagles

    17 Jun 2012

    While not in contention at the 2012 U.S. Open, young guns Rickie Fowler and Patrick Cantlay had the highlights of the day. The pair were playing in the same group in Round 4 on Sunday, and both drove the green at the par 4 hole 7, and then both made their putts for two eagles on the same hole. 

    Watch Rickie Fowler and Patrick Cantlay Drive Hole 7 on the Golf Channel

    You can play any hole on The Olympic Club free online at World Golf Tour. Try the shots the pros are taking.

    Play Hole 7 at The Olympic Club on World Golf Tour

     

    Photo Credit: Golf Channel

  • Webb Simpson wins the 2012 U.S. Open

    17 Jun 2012

    Webb Simpson won the 2012 U.S. Open, coming from behind to overtake leaders Jim Furyk and Graeme McDowell for only his third PGA victory and first major championship.

    U.S. Open Round 4 Highlights

    • Webb Simpson shot 72-73-68-68 for +1, with birdies on 6, 7, 8 and 10, and only 2 bogeys on the day.
    • Graeme McDowell shot 69-72-68-73 for +2, birding 17 and just missing a putt on 18 that would have forced a playoff.
    • Michael Thompson shot 66-75-74-67 for +2, with the most birdies of any other players and only a missed putt on 17 kept him out of a playoff.
    • Jim Furyk shot 70-69-70-74 for +3, with the least bogies of any player until the Back 9 holes where he had 3 bogeys to let the tournament slip away.
    • Tied with Furyk were 4 other players at +3, including David Toms and Padraig Harrington who both battled back on Sunday, as well as rookie John Peterson and the tour's hottest player Jason Dufner, and then Ernie Els at +4.

    Final U.S. Open Leaderboard

    The star of the U.S. Open was The Olympic Club course, which challenged players unlike any recent U.S. Open venue. The Top 2 players in the world, Luke Donald and Rory McIlroy, didn't even make the cut, and favorites Tiger Woods finsihed at +7 and Phil Mickelson finished at +16.

    While there were many memorable holes, like the longest-ever 670 yard hole 16, the most important was hole 18, where Simpson saved his par, McDowell missed his birdie, and Furyk hit two bunkers to end his day. One of the most beautiful finishing holes in golf, with majestic cypress trees surrounded by San Francisco fog, framing a classic clubhouse, and lined with tens of thousands of golf fans. Play it yourself online and see if you can make the putt that Graeme McDowell missed.

    Play Hole 18 Free Online on World Golf Tour

    And of course, all 18 challenging holes of The Olympic Club, and other championship golf courses, are available for anyone to play free online on World Golf Tour

  • Last Day to qualify in the Virtual U.S. Open

    17 Jun 2012

    A big day today...the last day of the Virtual U.S. Open Qualifier on World Golf Tour, plus the last day of the 2012 U.S. Open, and it's Father's Day in many countries.

    WGT wishes all the fathers out there the very best. Be sure to play WGT today and earn 50% more XP so you can level-up faster and unlock more virtual equipment.

    On the Virtual U.S. Open leaderboard, the Cut Line is currently at 57, meaning that anyone at 57 or better should advance to the Championship Rounds next week to compete for the 2012 title and the grand prize trip to next year's U.S. Open.

    There are 4 players at the very top of the leaderboard posting scores of 53, including JayJensen, Ffudd, genorb and Win1Soon, so they're players to keep an eye on in the championship. But there are another 13 players just 1 stroke behind at 54, including former champion BolloxInBruges. And last year's champion mrenn29 who has safely qualified at 55. In fact, mrenn29 is in San Francisco this weekend enjoying his grand prize trip to this year's U.S. Open...sweet!

    Remember, the Championship Rounds are single-play rounds, and the pressure increases significantly, so keep practicing on Olympic while you have the chance.

    The top 156 scores (plus ties, which is currently 195 players) in the Qualifiier will not only qualify to play in the Championship Rounds, but all will receive a USGA 1-year membership and U.S. Open hat. See prize details and country eligibility.

    And new this year, another player, regardless of their qualifying score, will be selected at random to win the grand prize trip to next year's U.S. Open, to be announced next week. So if you can't break par on Olympic, don't worry and have fun, as you've still got a chance to win!

     

  • U.S. Open Highlight - Round 3 - Peterson Hole-in-One

    16 Jun 2012

    John Peterson stunned the golf crowd at The Olympic Club with an amazing hole-in-one on the par 3 hole 13. Peterson hasn't earned his PGA Tour card yet, but qualified for his first U.S. Open and is now at +3, only 4 shots behind the leaders.

    Watch Peterson's hole in one at usopen.com

    You can play hole 13 on World Golf Tour. No signup and no downloads. How many tries will it take before you ace it? Depending on the wind, we recommend a 4 or 5 iron with a little backspin. But be careful with your chest-bump celebration!

    Play Hole 13 Free on World Golf Tour

    If you like that hole, then be sure to play all 18 holes at The Olympic Club in the Virtual U.S. Open. This free online golf tournament ends Sunday 6/17 and over 2 million rounds have already been played. Play and have a chance to win a golf trip to the 2013 U.S. Open as a special guest of the USGA.

    Sign Up Free and play the Virtual U.S. Open

    U.S. Open Scoring Update

    Meanwhile, at Round 3 of the U.S. Open, two former U.S. Open Champions, Graeme McDowell and Jim Furyk, are tied for the lead with solid rounds at -1, followed by Frederic Jacobsen at +1 and four players at +2 including Lee Westwood and Ernie Els.

    Most surprising today was Tiger Woods, who never got it going, missed a lot of putts and had 6 bogeys with only 1 birdie, shooting a 75 to finish at +4.

     

    Photo Credit: USGA

  • U.S. Open Highlight - Round 2 - Only Furyk Breaks Par

    15 Jun 2012

    At the 2012 U.S. Open golf championship at The Olympic Club, it was Jim Furyk who took the lead in Round 2, shooting a 69 and putting him at -1 thru 2 rounds. Furyk has 26 career wins on the PGA and is the 2003 U.S. Open champion. He's currently tied with Tiger Woods and David Toms who are still finishing Round 2.

    You can try to match some of Furyk's best shots on World Golf Tour where anyone can play any hole on The Olympic Club free without signup. Try these great golf shots from today...

    • Furyk makes a long birdie putt from off the green on Hole #3. Can you match Furyk's long birdie putt on Hole #3?
    • Furyk just misses a hole-in-one on Hole #15 for birdie. See how hard it is to make a hole-in-one on Hole #15.

    See Round 2 video highlights from Furyk, Graeme McDowell, Hunter Mahan and other players at usopen.com.

    Photo: USGA

  • Get 50% More XP During U.S. Open Weekend

    15 Jun 2012

    To celebrate U.S. Open Weekend*, we're giving you 50% more XP this Saturday and Sunday, 6/16-17.

    XP (Experience Points) are what advance your Level in WGT, and the higher the Level, the more virtual golf clubs and golf balls you can unlock, to help improve your game.

    So, play as much WGT as you can and Level-Up faster all weekend long…while you watch the U.S. Open on TV.

    More about earning XP...

    • Earn the most XP when you complete any multiplayer games, including multi-player strokeplay, matchplay, skins, alt shot and challenges
    • Earn more XP for completed strokeplay games than closest-to-the-hole games (because they’re longer)
    • You can earn bonus XP for winning awards during all game types 
    • Tournaments like the Virtual U.S. Open earn the same XP as ranked or practice rounds
    • Playing WGT consecutive days in a row will earn you more XP too, from 90 XP for 2 consecutive days up to 880 XP for 6 consecutive days

    We also want to wish a Happy Father’s Day to all the fathers on WGT, as Sunday is Father's Day in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom and many other countries with lots of WGT players!

    *Offer available only to WGT players who log into www.wgt.com 6/16/12-6/17/12, receive 50% more XP while playing World Golf Tour

  • U.S. Open Featured Pairings Struggle in Round 1

    15 Jun 2012

    The USGA paired some of the world's best players together in the opening rounds of the 2012 U.S. Open, but Round 1 went to the challenging Olympic Club golf course.

    The top American group was led by Tiger Woods, who was the only one under par...

    • Tiger Woods, 69, -1
    • Phil Mickelson, 76, +6
    • Bubba Watson, 78, +8

    The top European players, and also the top 3 ranked players in the world, struggled even more...

    • Lee Westwood, 73, +3
    • Rory McIlroy, 77, +7
    • Luke Donald, 79, +9

    Here are the tee times (Pacific) for Round 2 on Friday...

    • Westwood/McIlroy/Donald - 7:44am at Hole #9, watch on www.usopen.com live streaming and Golf Channel
    • Woods/Mickelson/Watson - 1:18pm at Hole #1, watch on NBC and Golf Channel

    For the cut, only the Top 60 players (plus ties) after Round 2 on Friday will advance, which is currently +5 to advance, so Woods and Westwood have the best chance to play this weekend, but the others will need to improve.

    Meanwhile, here are the leaders of the U.S. Open after Round 1, with their Round 2 starting times (Pacific)...

    • Michael Thompson, 66, -4, 12:52p at #9
    • Graeme McDowell, 69, -1, 7:55am at #9
    • Nick Watney, 69, -1, 7:59am at #1
    • Justin Rose, 69, -1, 8:10am at #1
    • David Toms, 69, -1, 1:40 at #1

    ...and top players at even par include Jim Furyk, Ian Poulter, Matt Kuchar.

    Photo: AP

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