WGT Golf News

  • Potter Hotter In Greenbrier Playoff

    09 Jul 2012

    Contributed by GlobalGolfPost

    With the U.S. Open champion in the final group with the contenders not too far removed from the Web.com Tour, you’d think that the result would be all too predictable.

    At the Greenbrier Classic, it was anything but. While Webb Simpson faltered down the stretch, PGA Tour rookie Ted Potter Jr., came away with the title on the third hole of a playoff.

    Potter won his first Tour event over fellow Web.com Tour traveler Troy Kelly and, in the bargain, both Potter and Kelly made it into the Open Championship at Royal Lytham and St. Annes next week.

    Potter finished regulation with his second-consecutive 64, including an eagle-birdie finish to come from nowhere into the playoff with Kelly, who took the lead on the back nine on Sunday over Simpson. Both players finished 72 holes at 16-under 264 on the par-70 Old White Course at the Greenbrier Resort.

    Potter had a chance to win the playoff on the par-5 17th, the second hole of the playoff when he missed a five-footer for birdie while Kelly made a 22-footer for par. Then on the par-3 18th, the third playoff hole, Potter hit his tee shot to four feet and made it for the victory.

    Potter had missed six of his previous seven cuts, including his last five in a row. Potter, who won twice on the Web.com Tour last year and finished second on the money list, tied for 13th at the Sony Open in Hawaii in January but had made only five other cuts in 15 starts prior to the Greenbrier.

    Kelly, who finished 11th on the Web.com Tour last year, had only made six cuts in 14 previous starts and his best finish was a tie for 37th at the Mayakoba Golf Classic in Mexico in February. Kelly shot an 8-under 62 in the third round to get into the final pairing with Simpson, who led after 54 holes at 14 under.

    But it was Simpson who faltered down the stretch, making four bogeys on the final nine to fall from the lead to a tie for seventh at 11 under. The Greenbrier is the personal graveyard for Simpson, who shot 73 on Sunday. Simpson stumbled on the final nine on the final day last year to lose to Scott Stallings.

    Another unheralded Tour rookie, Charlie Beljan, shot 62 in the second round and finished tied for third at 14 under with Charlie Wi, who fired 65 in the final round, while Beljan posted 67. Daniel Summerhays posted 64 on Sunday to finish fifth at 13 under.

    Photo: AP

  • Choi Realizes Dream At Women’s Open

    09 Jul 2012

    Contributed by GlobalGolfPost

    Fourteen years ago, a young Na Yeon Choi watched Se Ri Pak win a major championship on television, and hatched the idea that she could do the same one day.

    This weekend – playing in the same tournament and at the same venue – Choi posted an historic third-round 65 to take charge, then gutted her way through a potentially disastrous moment Sunday to make good on that dream.

    Choi won the 67th U.S. Women's Open at Blackwolf Run, the first major victory for the 24-year-old South Korean pro who already was firmly established as a legitimate heiress to Pak's Hall of Fame legacy.

    The victory came by four strokes ahead of countrywoman Amy Yang, and earned Choi $585,000. It followed So Yeon Ryu's win in this event last season, and was the fourth in five years for a South Korean player at America's national championship.

    Choi’s score of 1-over on Sunday left her at 7-under 281 for the tournament at the steamy and occasionally breezy Pete Dye course. Yang's 3-under 285 was the only other 72-hole total that beat par, and was three strokes better than Sandra Gal.

    South Korean players now have 12 LPGA major victories since 2001, two more than U.S. players in that span.

    By the mid-point of Sunday's final round, it seemed as if Choi was on her way to a coronation. Her lead on Yang was five strokes – only because Yang had just birdied No. 9 – and there was no sign of trouble.

    But she pulled her drive drastically off the tee at No. 10. A 15-minute episode unfolded as Choi, caddie Shane Joel, tournament marshals and even USGA president Glen Nager attempted to find the ball or make a ruling on where she should play from.

    As she returned to the tee, a sense of vulnerability seemed to materialize from out of the Wisconsin wind. A score of triple-bogey 8 resulted, and Choi's lead suddenly stood at two.

    But a bounce-back birdie on No. 11 helped her stabilize things. Then she drained a pair of putts for scrambling pars after flirting with water and weeds on Nos. 12 and 13, and birdies on Nos. 15 and 16 brought a little bit of comfort back to her triumphant day.

    "I had the triple-bogey on 10, and after that I tried to forget it," said Choi, who moved to No. 2 in the world rankings. "And then I had a really good bounce-back on 11, and I had a really good save for par on 12. So I got some momentum from 11 and 12 and then I kept it going until the 18th hole."

    Saturday's 65 had put Choi in control in the first place. While second-day leaders Suzann Pettersen, Michelle Wie and Cristie Kerr all tumbled from the top of the leaderboard, Choi compiled the third-best round in Open history, behind Helen Alfredsson's 63 in 1994, and a trio of 64s in 1999.

    It gave her the best 54-hole advantage since Amy Alcott led by eight strokes heading into the final day of her 1980 Open victory.

    "That was one of the best rounds that I've ever seen, and I've seen some good ones out here," said Choi’s Saturday playing partner Nicole Castrale.

    In her last outing in a major, last month's LPGA Championship, Choi had a much less memorable moment. She was in contention for the first two days at Locust Hill CC near Rochester, N.Y., but struggled with a final-round 74 to earn a T19 finish.

    She didn't even get to count that on her record, however, after leaving the event without signing her scorecard. The resulting disqualification also cost her nearly $30,000 in winnings.

    The beginnings of Choi's career have been much more reflective of the example set by Pak, her idol. She was second to Yani Tseng in Rookie of the Year voting in 2008, earned her first LPGA win in '09 at the 20-player Samsung World Championship, then was the tour's money leader in 2010.

    Her previous best at a U.S. Women's Open was a T2 (with Pettersen) in 2010 at Oakmont CC behind winner Paula Creamer. She was competing on the level that Pak allowed her to dream about.

    "Before Se Ri Pak, my dream was just being a professional golfer (in South Korea)," Choi said. "But after watching her, she really inspired me for being an LPGA player. I really appreciate Se Ri Pak. She is a legend in Korea."

    At the end on Sunday, there was Pak with a collection of other South Korean players, waiting with bottles of champagne off the green at No. 18.

    Choi got drenched in the celebration, and then further payoff came in the form of a hug from the woman who inspired her.

    "I really like that I can continue that feeling from 14 years ago, what Se Ri did," Choi said. "I think I'm pretty proud of myself."

    Photo: Reuters

  • WGT Congressional Championship Winners Announced

    06 Jul 2012

    Last weekend during the AT&T National at Congressional, we hosted the WGT Congressional Championship. Open to Pro-Legend tier players, it was an unlimited stroke play tournament that pulled in some great competition – some winners decided by only single strokes.

    Full leaderboard

    The top three players in each tier won an Amazon gift card as a prize. Congratulations to all of our winners!

    Thank you to everyone who played, and make sure to join the rest of our special tournaments as part of our Summer Tournament Series for more chances to win great prizes.

    Winners listed by tier...

    Pro Tier

    1. phanbrandon
    2. Flyersorange
    3. BetsyBraddock

    Tour Pro Tier

    1. Dathoang95
    2. iamawgtmaster
    3. ap1forthewin

    Master Tier

    1. haiau00
    2. MarcelDionne
    3. sandsman

    Tour Master Tier

    1. K1ngM1chael
    2. savethetatas
    3. IePkrwd

    Legend Tier

    1. BolloxInBruges
    2. Win1Soon
    3. Buckthebuck
  • Reflections from 2011 Virtual U.S. Open Champion: mrenn29

    03 Jul 2012

    As last year's Virtual U.S. Open Champion, WGT golfer mrenn29 got to enjoy his Grand Prize trip a few weeks ago up to San Francisco to experience the 2012 U.S. Open Championship at The Olympic Club. His week included a round of golf with some WGT employees, a happy hour to meet a few more, and then attending the U.S. Open as a special guest of the USGA – to see all the professional action first-hand.

    After returning home and getting some time to reflect on this awesome trip, mrenn29 had this to say...

    First off, let me say thanks to WGT and the USGA for the opportunity to attend the U.S. Open at Olympic club this year. Definitely was a memory that will last a lifetime. The trip started off with a very nice gesture on WGT's part by taking us out for a round of golf at Claremont Country Club. Even though I didn't really play all that well (got a few meter glitches lol) it was a great time playing with a few of the guys at WGT on a very nice, private country club. Pete, Rich, thanks again, you guys went above and beyond for me and I thank you! After the round of golf we all went to an Irish Pub in San Francisco for some happy hour fun. Getting to meet the folks behind the scenes of WGT and discuss the game over a few beers was priceless. Everyone at WGT was very welcoming and I had a great time.

    On to the Golf. First day we got to the course, we went straight to the grandstand and sat on hole 9. The amazing part of seeing the course live is that after playing WGT, you can really relate to how the course plays. Being from California, I know San Francisco can get pretty cold, however we were very fortunate to have perfect weather throughout the tourney until Sunday at about 2pm. After we watched some action on 9, we went up to the USGA hospitality tent. This was awesome due to the fact they had food and drinks with about 20 tv's covering the tournament while you were there. So I grabbed some food and headed outside the tent where there was a nice patio looking out to the practice facility. So it was great to be able to watch the pro's practice and have lunch without the crowd. Day 2 I wanted to go over to one of the more action packed holes so I decided to sit at 17. Sure enough Ernie Els goes right of the green about 20 yrds. He took his time on the chip up onto the green and drained the chip for eagle and the crowd including myself went crazy! After hole 17 we did a little walking around to various holes and see how the whole course.

    I really couldn't take many photos because technically you were not supposed to have a phone or camera at all inside. Well, I snuck my phone in to take a couple photos of the course and where I was seated. The final day I wanted to watch everyone play the long par 3 #3 which played 247 on the final day. I watched 23 groups come though and only 3 players made a birdie. It was also hard to follow the ball due to the fog that had rolled in. Adam Scott hit the closest shot out of all the players there. Tiger ended up making a double bogey. The course seemed to play fair and rewarding to the right shots. I have included a picture of hole 18 from where I was seated. Overall this was a trip to remember!

    Thanks again WGT and the USGA for putting this all together, the hospitality was outstanding!!

    Hole 18 at The Olympic Club. Photo by: mrenn29


    mrenn29 making an eagle putt at Claremont Hole 18 (Editor's Note: he shot an 81 at a very tough course...he's very modest!)

  • Red Storm Rising

    02 Jul 2012

    By Leonard Shapiro for GlobalGolfPost

    What if they held a PGA Tour event and nobody showed up to watch?

    That’s about what happened Saturday at the AT&T National at Congressional, when high winds Friday night blew down more than 40 trees and left a trail of broken limbs and piles of debris all over the course. Tournament officials, concerned about safety issues, decided to keep spectators and most volunteers away from the course on a day when Tiger Woods quietly made his move toward the top of the leaderboard, accompanied by the sound of silence most of the way around.

    Woods finished off that ascent on Sunday, when the fans were back in massive numbers, engaging in a thrilling duel down the back nine against first-round leader Bo Van Pelt. When Van Pelt bogeyed the 16th and 17th holes, Woods pounced on those mistakes and eventually claimed a two-shot victory when he made par on his final two holes.

    “I remember there was a time when people were saying I could never win again,” Woods said Sunday evening. “That was six months ago. Here we are.... A lot of media people didn’t think I could win again. I could see the pieces coming together. It’s just a matter of time. Just stay the course. Give me a little bit of time, and I feel like this is what I can do.”

    Van Pelt’s 50-foot birdie chip to tie at the final hole missed the cup by inches and he also missed the six-foot comebacker for one last bogey. He finished with a round of 71 and 6-under 278 that left him in solo second, a shot ahead of third place finisher Adam Scott (67-279).

    A shot off the lead after 54 holes, Woods had a final-round 69 and 72-hole total of 8-under 276 to become the PGA Tour’s only three-time winner this season. He also won his own invitational event for the second time (he prevailed here in 2009), adding that to the 2012 trophies from the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando and Jack Nicklaus’s Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village.

    More significantly, this was Woods’ 74th Tour triumph, one more than Nicklaus, his childhood idol who won his 73rd and last event at the 1986 Masters at age 46. Only Sam Snead, with 82 career wins, has more victories than Woods, now 36.

    Woods didn’t budge in the world rankings, where he remained No. 4. Van Pelt disagreed.

    “No offense to those other guys, but I think he’s the only guy to win three tournaments on Tour this year,” he said. “On three different golf courses and he was leading the U.S. Open after two days. So I’d say he’s playing the best golf in the world right now.”

  • WGT Congressional Championship This Weekend Only

    28 Jun 2012

    As the first leg of the new WGT Summer Tournament Series, World Golf Tour is running a special online tournament on Congressional Country Club this weekend only.

    The WGT Congressional Championship is a free tournament for WGT players at the Pro thru Legend tiers so players can compete other players of similar ability. Players can play as often as they want from Thu 6/28 thru Sun 7/1 and post your best 18-hole score on Congressional. 

    The top three scores in each Tier (Pro thru Legend) will all win Amazon Gift Cards: $100 first place, $50 second place, $25 third place. Check tournament rules for eligibility.

    Play Free WGT Congressional Championship

    Congressional Country Club was the host of the 2011 U.S. Open and this weekend is hosting the 2012 AT&T National event on the PGA Tour. The event benefits the Tiger Woods Foundation and honors military veterans with the support of the Wounded Warrior Project.

    And don't miss the action at the AT&T National this weekend on Golf Channel and NBC, as the tournament features host Tiger Woods, defending champion Nick Watney, as well as Jim Furyk, Dustin Johnson and other top PGA players. Learn more on Golf Channel.

     

  • Latest Release from WGT

    28 Jun 2012

    World Golf Tour has just launched a number of new features and improvements to our golf game based on the continued feedback from all our great players!


    New - Country Club Improvements

    WGT Country Clubs can now set-up Multi-Round Tournaments and use Cut Lines in their private Country Club tournaments. There's also a new option for owners to email their club members...and, of course, an option for members to unsubscribe from those new Country Club emails if they want. Plus, Country Clubs can now set-up tournaments on The Olympic Club, site of the 2012 U.S. Open.

    If you're not in a Country Club, you're missing out on a popular way to always have online friends to play a game with, or to compete in private tournaments with just club members sharing the credit prizes. Create or join a Country Club today!


    New - Match Play Records

    Multi-player Match Play Games are very popular on WGT. When you're joining a game, you have been able to see the Level, Tier and Average Score of the other player. However, we've also added their Match Play record statistics against players at every tier, to help you decide if it's going to be a fair match.

     

    New - Free WGT Credits for International Players

    We've added even more ways to earn free WGT Credits, especially for players outside the United States. Check-out the new More Offers tab to see the new offers available in your country, including watching videos, online signups and shopping discounts. There are currently lots of new offers for players in Europe and other countries.

     

    New - Country Flag Avatars

            

    New Australian and Italian flag avatars join the existing American, Canadian and United Kingdom flag avatars. Show off your national pride with the new Oz and Italia male and female golfers in the Pro Shop.

    ...and stay tuned for a Facebook Poll to help WGT pick the next country avatars...France, Germany, Ireland, New Zealand, Scotland, South Africa...which country will be next?

     

    New - TaylorMade R11S Driver and 3 Wood at Level 40-41

    The latest R11S technology from TaylorMade hits longer than the original R11, and is now available to more WGT players, with the R11S Driver unlocking at Level 40, and the R11S 3 Wood unlocking at Level 41.

     

    New - TaylorMade Ghost Manta Putter at Level 30

    This beautiful new TaylorMade Ghost Manta Putter unlocks at Level 35 and offers more precision at a lower level, plus new Swing Meter increments (20, 40, 60, 80, 100, 300 feet) to help you select the right power to drain more putts.

     

  • StoneColdKiller is 2012 Virtual U.S. Open Champion

    26 Jun 2012

    In the largest and most competitive Virtual U.S. Open ever, with over 2 million rounds played, it was StoneColdKiller who came from behind to post the low round 55 on Sunday evening to win by 2 shots over TheLighterDark

    As the 2012 Virtual U.S. Open Champion, StoneColdKiller and a friend will be going to Merion next year to experience the 2013 U.S. Open as a special guest of the USGA. Congratulations! 

    StoneColdKiller outlasted a strong field of 199 top WGT players, just beating TheLighterDark and RUNWME who shot 57 and 56 in the final round to edge-out first-round leader tinybotallAcePaul and defending champ mrenn29. Here are the top finishers...

    1 StoneColdKiller 57-55=112 
    2 TheLighterDark 57-57=114 
    3 RUNWME 59-56=115 
    4 TallAcePaul 58-58=116 
    4 tinybo 56-60=116 
    6 mrenn29 60-57=117 
    6 LuisCraveiro 59-58=117 
    6 Aahna 58-59=117 
    9 poolmaniac6 61-57=118 

    See Full 2012 Virtual U.S. Open Leaderboard 

    StoneColdKiller has been a WGT player since 2010. He's a Level 95 Legend with an average score of 58.77 and career earnings of $7,500. He's a member of the Deviations Country Club and also won the 2011 Virtual British Open, making him the first back-to-back winner of a WGT major championship. 

    While the Deviations took top honors with places #1-3 and #6 with mrenn29, the other top spots are all from different WGT country clubs which are giving the Deviations a serious run for their money in these championships. 

    However, it wasn't just the elite players who won this year, as WGT and the USGA awarded both Leaderboard and Sweepstakes prizes, giving everyone a chance to win. Here are all the prize winners... 

    Championship - Trip to 2013 U.S. Open

    • Leaderboard: StoneColdKiller 

    Qualifier - Trip to 2013 U.S. Open

    •  Sweepstakes: PENDING 
    • Qualifiers: 199 qualifiers won a USGA hat and membership packet 

    Back 9 Challenge - USGA $500 Gift Cards 

    • Leaderboard: PENDING 
    • Sweepstakes: PENDING 

    Front 9 Challenge - USGA $500 Gift Cards 

    Also, over $3,000 in Amazon Gift Cards were awarded to 15 WGT players who competed in special tiered tournaments for WGT NATION members for Pro thru Legend players. 

    Thanks to everyone who played in this year's tournament, and don't miss the WGT Summer Tournament Series, featuring special tournaments on championship golf courses. Stay tuned on the WGT Tournaments page!

  • Divot.com Deal of the Day: Adams Idea Tech V3 Hybrid golf club

    26 Jun 2012

    Today only, save over 50% on the Adams Idea Tech V3 Hybrid golf club for only $79.99 (suggested retail $199.99).

    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.

  • Leishman Waits To Win Travelers

    25 Jun 2012

     

    By GlobalGolfPost

    Marc Leishman sat in the clubhouse for a couple of hours, wishing on the one hand, knowing on the other. He had, after all, shot 62 in the final round of the Travelers Championship and had the clubhouse lead a 14 under par. But he was certain that someone, anyone on the leaderboard would go at least one better before the day was out.

    One by one, the contenders dropped from the leaderboard, and at the end of the day Leishman’s total was good enough for his first PGA Tour victory.

    "I said to my caddie on the range this morning that we would probably have to get to 15 under to have a chance," Leishman said after the long wait. "When we finished at 14 (under), I was pretty confident it wouldn't be (enough). It's really a funny game."

    Not so funny to Charlie Hoffman, who had gotten to 16 under with five holes to play and had a two-shot lead on Leishman, three ahead of assorted others. But Hoffman, who has one PGA Tour victory, hit his tee shot in the water at the par-4 17th and made double-bogey. And he followed that with a bogey at the home hole to fall back to 13 under, one back of Leishman.

    Leishman, a 29-year-old Australian, finished 72 holes at 266 on the par-70 TPC River Highlands course just outside Hartford, Conn. Although the Travelers was Leishman's first PGA Tour victory, he is no stranger to winning. He has won four times worldwide, including three wins in Australia. And he has a victory on the Nationwide Tour.

    But to win on the big Tour, it took a big day. Leishman began Sunday's final round tied for 20th at 6 under. He went out in 5-under 30, including four birdies in a five-hole stretch, beginning at the par-4 second.

    He made back-to-back birdies at the par-5 13th and par-4 14th but didn't make birdie at the drivable par-4 15th. A birdie at the 17th capped off his 8-under round and started the long wait. 

    A number of players had chances to catch Leishman but all came up short. Former champion and Masters winner Bubba Watson finished one shot back but only made one birdie on the final nine, that at the reachable 13th.

    Tim Clark was another shot back at 12 under but failed to birdie the 13th or the 15th and missed a short par putt at the 17th. And if Brian Davis had managed to make a couple of short putts that he missed coming home, he'd have his first PGA Tour victory. Instead, he made bogey at the par-5 13th and another at the 10th to finish two back of Leishman.

     

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