WGT Golf News

  • Play WGT Kiawah Championship With New Hole Locations

    03 Aug 2012

    Kiawah is the host of the upcoming 2012 PGA Championship, so get ready for the real-life golf tournament by playing in the WGT Kiawah Championship hosted on World Golf Tour.

    Post your first round score by Sunday 8/12 and the top 50% of scores will qualify for 2 championship rounds the following week, with the top 3-round combined score winning an amazing golf trip for two people to Kiawah! There's also a $500 gift card sweepstakes prize for one of the qualifiers regardless of their final score.

    Play Kiawah Championship

    The qualifying round of the WGT tournament features 18 new hole locations on Kiawah, giving you all new approach shots and putts to master.

    There are also extra hole locations on WGT's Bethpage, Oakmont and St Andrews golf courses as well. And when you play strokeplay on these courses, you'll automatically get a mix of the new and old hole locations for a new challenge -- or you can play just the new holes by selecting that option in practice rounds on each course.

    Thanks to top WGT Player YankeeJim who created the images below that show the exact locations of the new Kiawah pins...

    Kiawah Front 9

    Kiawah Back 9

  • Kiawah Pins, Speed-Up Boosts, Slow Meter Balls and more

    01 Aug 2012

    We've added lots of recent improvements to World Golf Tour for players to check out, including new Kiawah pins, a new Putting Course, and CTTH games available in Ready-Go tournaments, as well as new Speed-Up boosts, Slow Meter balls and a new Tour Legend tier for our very top players.

     

    New Hole Locations on Kiawah

    Experience all new pin locations on Kiawah, one of the most popular strokeplay courses on WGT. Try all the new approach shots and putts!

     

    New "Best Of" Putting Challenge

    Take 9 putts on different WGT golf courses in this all new closest-to-the-hole "Best Of" course. Play the new August Putting Sweeps free tournament.

     

    New Closest-to-the-Hole Ready-Go Tournaments

    Play in faster Ready-Go tournaments with the new 9-shot closest-to-the-hole format. Like other Ready-Go's, the top 30 of 50 players win WGT credits. See the new CLOSEST-TO-THE-HOLE tab on the Ready-Go Tournaments page.

     

    New Speed-Up Boosts

    New option to make the ball display faster in the game, enabling you to play more games in less time. Especially helpful in multi-player games. See the new Speed-Up Boosts in the Pro Shop.


    New Slow Meter Balls

    Slow down the WGT Swing Meter on all your shots with the new Callaway Tour i(z) virtual golf balls. They make WGT easier to play for players at all skill levels. These new Callaway balls unlock at Level 1 and Level 34.


    New Fan-Choice Avatars

    As voted for by WGT fans on Facebook, our new "funky" pink male and female avatars are a bold choice as your golfer in the game. See all avatars.


    New Tour Legend Tier

    There's a new tier on WGT beyond Legend. The very best WGT players will start to qualify for the new Tour Legend tier. As that group grows, there will be new tournaments, Ready-Go's, prizes, challenges, and recognition for our most skilled players.

     

    TaylorMade R11S 3 Wood

    For top WGT players, the new R11S 3 Wood is now available at Level 95, providing more forgiveness and distance, and pairs perfectly with the R11S Driver that now unlocks at Level 94.

     

    Practice Putting at Tournament Speed

    Top players will also be interested in the new option to select Tournament green speed in practice rounds, so you can practice putting on fast greens used in WGT tournaments. 

     

  • Divot.com Deal of the Day: Nike SQ MachSpeed STR8-FIT Driver Golf Club

    31 Jul 2012

    Today only, save over 75% on the Nike SQ MachSpeed STR8-FIT Driver golf club for only $69.99 (suggested retail $300.00).

    Visit WGT partner Divot.com for daily deals on golf equipment to help improve your game out on the golf course. There's a new deal every day, so be sure to check back for updates.

    See Today's Deal

    *Offers subject to Divot.com terms and conditions. Shipping only within United States, US Territories, and Military APO addresses.

  • Couples Closes In Style At Turnberry

    30 Jul 2012

    Contributed by GlobalGolfPost

    In his first attempt at the Senior Open Championship, Fred Couples achieved what he could not on the PGA Tour – he takes home a claret jug. It’s not the same jug that Ernie Els won two weeks ago, but it’s the next best thing.

    Couples closed out his final round with two consecutive birdies to break a tie with Gary Hallberg and win the Senior Open at Turnberry, site of many historic moments in major championship history.

    Couples now has his own. The victory was his eighth Champions Tour victory and his second major championship, having won the Constellation Energy Senior Players Championship last year. And the win is his second of the year on Tour.

    Couples broke a tie with Hallberg when he two-putted from 35 feet for birdie at the par-5 17th after Hallberg made a birdie of his own there to forge the tie. Couples hit the par-4 18th with a 3-wood and a sand wedge and needed but two putts to win. However, his putt from 30 feet found the center of the hole for the final margin.

    The winner shot a 3-under 67 in the final round to post 72 holes at Turnberry at 9-under 271, which included a 6-under 64 in the third round.

    Beginning the day at Turnberry, Couples found himself in the final pairing, one shot behind 54-hole leader Bernhard Langer. The whole tournament turned in one hole, the par-4 12th. Couples hit his approach in close for birdie, but inexplicably, Langer suffered a double-bogey and surrendered the lead for good.

    “That was a big swing and I looked at the board and Gary Hallberg was making a couple birdies so there was no time to relax,” Couples said.

    And, indeed, Hallberg was coming fast. Hallberg had led after 36 holes when he posted a 7-under 63, the best round of the championship. But he stumbled back in the pack after a third-round 73 and was four back of the lead coming into the final day. But he turned the outward half in 2-under 33 and birdied the 13th to get to 6 under. He temporarily tied Couples at the 17th with a two-putt birdie from about 30 feet.

    For the second straight senior major championship, Langer lost a final-round lead. At the U.S. Senior Open, he led by four in the final round only to lose to Roger Chapman. He led on Sunday after the front nine but went 5 over in a five-hole stretch starting with the double-bogey at the 13th and stumbled to a 75 in the final round.

    Photo: Getty Images

  • World Am Golf Tournament in Myrtle Beach

    26 Jul 2012

    Don't miss the 2012 World Am Golf Tournament in Myrtle Beach from August 27-31, 2012 for your chance to become the next world champion.

    As a WGT Partner, Myrtle Beach Golf Holiday is offering a special discount to WGT players who are interested in playing in the World Am, a real-world amateur golf tournament that includes 72 holes of net stroke tournament play on a different course each day.

    Join more than 3,000 golfers from all over the United States, plus 20 foreign countries in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina for the ultimate golf experience. In addition to a fun week of golf competition, enjoy nightly parties that include local food, drinks, live entertainment and more.

    The last day to register is August 7, so sign up today!

    Learn More About Event

    WGT players will receive a $75 discount when they register and enter the Promo Code: WGT12

  • WGT St Andrews Championship Winners Announced

    24 Jul 2012

    Last week during the British Open, we hosted the WGT St Andrews Championship on World Golf Tour. The free online golf tournament was a single-play, multi-round tournament with a special weekend cut line.

    Open to play all week, players posted their first round scores by Friday and the top 50% of those scores moved on to the weekend championship rounds. Second round scores were posted on Saturday and third round scores on Sunday, to finalize the leaderboard.

    Full leaderboard

    The Top 10 combined scores overall each won an Amazon gift card as a prize. Congratulations to our winners, and thanks to everyone who participated!

    There are still more chances to join our Summer Tournament Series with opportunities to win great prizes, so be sure to stay tuned for more information. 

    Here are the winners of the 2012 WGT St Andrews Championship tournament...

    1. dansamcam
    2. JCOlson
    3. DCI962B
    4. poldimaier
    5. Hanswurst72
    6. chrisironsbones
    7. BolloxInBruges
    8. jbooch09
    9. Solid1
    10. jimbean346
  • Major Emotion For Els

    23 Jul 2012

    Lewine Mair for GlobalGolfPost

    In the end, it was one of the most emotional Opens of them all. The 42-year-old Ernie Els, who won his second Open 10 years after his first, had laughed out loud when he holed a 12-footer on the home green to go to 7-under par. Perfect putt though it was, he could not believe his luck.

    When he left the green, he was hoping at best for a playoff. After all, his good friend, Adam Scott, had been six ahead of him at the turn and still had shots in hand.

    Out on the course, Scott had just made the kind of birdie on 14 – he holed from 15 feet – to suggest he soon would be holding the Claret Jug. All day he had been careful with his putts rather than aggressive but he had rammed this 15-footer into the hole and it was precisely what the crowd wanted to see. This was the stuff.

    The Australian could afford to drop a shot at the 15th but he could not accommodate so easily what happened at the next. Though Gary Player had talked on Saturday of how the long putter is unfair in the way it takes nerves out of the equation, Scott missed from three feet.

    His lead was cut to two and the massive roar that greeted Els’ holed putt at the 18th came as no less of a blow. Scott composed himself to crack a good drive from the 17th and as Steve Williams, his caddie, marched out with his long and confident stride, there was the feeling that the two of them were going to be all right.

    Then came what Scott would describe as the killer blow; a second that he turned over to leave himself chipping out of the heavy stuff to the left of the green The recovery was pretty good in the circumstances but he dropped a third shot in a row to mount the 18th tee on the same 7-under tally as Els.

    At this point, Els was standing on the practice putting green having turned down the R&A’s invitation to watch Scott’s finish on television. He ate a sandwich, he talked to his wife on the phone and, throughout, he looked shocked and bemused in turn.

    As he settled down to practice his putting – his caddie, Ricci Roberts, had arranged a circle of six-footers for him – so news came of how Scott had driven into sand at the last.

    It was one more of those Lytham bunkers that, earlier in the day, had served only to interrupt the flow of play and drain the afternoon of much of its excitement. All Scott could do was to exit the trap and hit for the green with his third. He was bang on target but left himself with a 10-footer to force a playoff.

    Once again, his long putter let him down. He went down on his knees as the ball missed and shook his head at what might have been.

    Back on the putting green, Els and Roberts had a brief hug but, thrilled though Els was for himself, he was shaken to the core by what had happened to Scott.

    At the prize-giving, he talked about the importance of Nelson Mandela in his life, but first he addressed his “buddy,” Adam.

    “Scotty,” he said, “you’re a great player, a great friend. You’re going to win many of these things with your talent.”

    Afterwards, Els would add that he had seen everything in his 23 years on tour and had been on the losing end rather more than he had been on the winning end.

    “I just hope,” he said of Scott, “that he doesn’t beat himself up as I have done to myself in the past. Thankfully, he’s young enough, at 32. I’ve won four majors but he can win more.”

    Back in 1996, Scott had shed tears as he watched on TV as his great hero, Greg Norman, collapsed down the stretch against Nick Faldo at Augusta. On Sunday, Scott did not cry. Norman, he said, had always been as admirable in the way he handled himself in defeat as much as victory: “He set us a good example.”

    In his post-round interview, Els touched on the degree to which he had been affected by his 10-year-old son’s autism.

    “Emotionally and mentally, I’m in a better place, now,” he said. “Coming out publicly helped.”

    He and his wife, Liezl, have raised in the region of £10 million for their Els for Autism Foundation and are shortly to open a new centre in Florida.

    Els said he made lots of his putts – he had four birdies in his inward 32 – with Ben in mind.

    “He likes the flight of the ball and the sound,” said the winner. “He would have been getting very excited and I wanted to make him really excited.”

    Sheryl Calder, the sports scientist who has been working with Els on his hand-eye coordination, with particular reference to his putting, was another to get a special mention. The two of them had spent endless hours on the green, with Calder giving him “a whole new outlook.”

    His fellow players laughed at him for going to such lengths “but to come through and make the kind of pressure putts I was making today was the whole goal.”

    Graeme McDowell came to grief at the 11th where he hit into a copse. As he was driven back in a buggy to hit his fourth, he thought to himself, “There goes my Open.” 

    Afterward, he could only console himself with the thought of how much he had learned, both in fading in the last round both in the US Open and at Lytham: “It’s the kind of education you can’t buy.”

    Yet on Sunday, his own disappointment was tempered by what happened to his playing companion, Scott. “What can you say? I told him that he’s going to be a great champion but, for now, he’s heartbroken.”

    Photo: Reuters

  • Play Edgewood for Tahoe Golf Trip

    19 Jul 2012

    This week during the American Century Championship Tahoe Celebrity golf tournament, play the free WGT Edgewood Championship virtual golf tournament for your chance to win a golf trip to Edgewood Tahoe.

    One lucky sweepstakes winner will win a golf trip for two people to the Edgewood Tahoe golf course, including air, two nights at the Edgewood Tahoe lodge and two rounds of golf. Enjoy this beautiful golf course located on Lake Tahoe and close to Nevada casinos and entertainment.

    This is an unlimited play, closest-to-the-hole free tournament with one sweepstakes grand prize, open now thru Sunday, 7/22. Don't miss out!

    Play Free WGT Edgewood Championship

    Celebrity golfers competing at the annual Tahoe Celebrity golf event include Charles Barkley, Michael Jordan, Oscar De La Hoya, Aaron Rodgers, Dan Quayle and many others. Check the Golf Channel and NBC for your local TV listings or visit the official tournament site: http://tahoecelebritygolf.com/.

    See WGT tournament rules for eligibility and prize details.

  • WGT St Andrews Championship during British Open

    17 Jul 2012

    The WGT Summer Tournament Series continues with the WGT St Andrews Championship tournament this week during the British Open.

    This special tournament is a single-play, multi-round, free online golf tournament with a special weekend cut line. Post your first round by Friday, 7/20 and the top 50% of scores will advance to the weekend rounds. Qualifiers will need to post their second round on Saturday, 7/21, and third round on Sunday, 7/22.

    The Top 10 combined scores overall will win Amazon Gift Cards.

    Play St Andrews Championship

    And while you're playing, don't miss all the 2012 British Open action, played at Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club this weekend. Check the Golf Channel, ESPN and ABC for your local TV listings or visit the official tournament site: http://www.theopen.com/.

    See WGT tournament rules for eligibility and prize details. Good luck!

     

  • Local Boy Makes Good

    16 Jul 2012

    Contributed by GlobalGolfPost

     

     

    A hometown hero's welcome was ringing across the 18th green Sunday for Iowa native and presumptive winner Zach Johnson when he heard a sudden, competing wave of cheers one hole back.

    A dramatic 60-foot eagle by third-round leader Troy Matteson would set up an eventual playoff, but Johnson would produce a stunning shot of his own on the second extra hole to win the John Deere Classic.

    Bunkered on the left side of the fairway for the second time in a row on TPC Deere Run's 463-yard par-4 18th, Johnson drilled his 6-iron approach shot 194 yards to within a foot of the hole.

    “I think we’re stating the obvious,” Johnson said. “That was really good. That was my shot of the week.”

    His tap-in birdie gave him his ninth PGA Tour victory, courtesy of his best career comeback. He trailed Matteson by four strokes to start the final day, and by overcoming that deficit he bested the three-stroke comeback he used to win the 2007 AT&T Classic in Atlanta ... also over Matteson.

    His second title of 2012 (after winning at Colonial in May) yielded an $828,000 payday and resulted in a jump to second place in the FedEx Cup standings, just 32 points behind leader Tiger Woods.

    "It is (very emotional)," he said of winning his "hometown" event, for which he serves as a board member. "This tournament means a lot to me, a lot to my family. And it means a lot to the PGA Tour."

    For Matteson, there was one very tangible consolation prize. By reaching the playoff he earned the final spot in the field for this week's Open Championship at Royal Lytham & St Annes.

    Scott Piercy was third at 18 under, and Aussie John Senden was another stroke back in fourth place.

    Johnson birdied Nos. 13 and 14 to get to within a stroke of Matteson, then picked up the lead when the seventh-year pro made double-bogey on his 15th hole.

    His 15-foot putt from the fringe on No. 18 would have placed him at 21 under and avoided the playoff, but it slid inches to the left.

    Both players had found water and made double-bogey on a back-and-forth first playoff hole.

    It was the first playoff at the event since 2008, which also was the last time any player other than Steve Stricker had won at Quad Cities. Kenny Perry used two extra holes that year to beat Jay Williamson and Brad Adamonis.

    Stricker was in contention on the final day, but struggled on the back nine and shot 1 under to finish at 16 under overall in a fifth-place tie with fellow University of Illinois alumnus Luke Guthrie.

     

WGT Golf Archives

Subscribe to WGT News