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Tour Rundown: 4 for Burns

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Today is Memorial Day across the United States of America. Nearly 25 places across the country lay claim to the day’s origina, but one thing is clear: it is a day to honor those lost in the defense of country. It is a somber holiday, especially given recent events across the nation. For that reason, unlike Labor Day, no tournament finishes on Monday. This week, tournaments were played in Texas, Illinois, Nevada, and Michigan, along with a splendid event in Holland. It is our pleasure to run down the five champions, in this week’s installment of Tour Rundown.

PGA Tour’s Schwab to Burns for number four

Sam Burns isn’t the guy yet, but he’s edging closer. He’s edging closer to one of two things: a major title or the unwanted moniker of best golfer to not win a major. Burns won his second tournament of the 2022 season, and for the second time, had to go to extra holes to settle matters.

In March, Burns won his second-consecutive Valspar Championship in overtime, against non-winner Davis Riley. This time around, the scenario had altered just a bit. Instead of a young, unproven opponent, Burns would face the world number one, the current Masters champion, and a home-state hero, all wrapped up in Scottie Scheffler. We’ll get to how the dust settled … when the dust settles.

There was a lot of nervous play on Sunday. Harold Varner III dropped 23 spots with a 78. Previous to that, he had looked like a winner. Beau Hossler, in search of his first, tour title, went belly-up with a 73-74 weekend and dropped 12 spots on his own. Chris Kirk descended a 10-spot with a 74. And then there was Burns.

The Shreveport native opened with 71, then got better each day. He had 68, followed by 67, but needed a heck of a finish and some help, to have a shot. Despite two bogeys on the day, Burns posted seven birdies around Hogan’s Alley and came home with 65. It wasn’t the low round of the week, but to do it on Sunday was pure magic.

Scheffler could not find a single birdie on day four. He played well enough to shoot plus-two, but needed plus-one to win outright. Brendon Todd, Scheffler’s final-round partner, had two bogeys coming home to the post-prom celebration by one. Burns and Scheffler returned to the 18th tee. Each had a putt at birdie, with Burns going first. Some forty feet past the hole, in the fringe, Burns’ effort never wavered and found the bottom of the hole. When Scheffler missed from closer in, the Schwab had a champion.

LPGA Match Play to Ji over Furue

Match play isn’t the predominant, USA high-school format that it once might have been, at least in the northeast. Golf fans see it once each two years in the Solheim Cup, but its visibility on the LPGA circuit has been missing until now. Bank of Hope, the sponsor of the Las Vegas event, signed all-in on the head-to-head format. Where better to have high-stakes, one-versus-one matches than the casino capital?

Sixty-four players began play in round-robin format, in sixteen brackets. Each of those sub-divisions featured three matches per player, then yielded one golfer to the knockout state of events. Players like Tiffany Chan, Andrea Park, Paula Reto, Allisen Corpuz, Emma Talley, Hye-Jin Choi, Caroline Masson, and the biggest name ~ Moriya Jutanugarn, advanced to the group stage, but said farewell in the round of sixteen.

The round of eight saw Eun-Hee Ji, Lilia Vu, Ayaka Furue, and Andrea Lee, advance to the semifinals. None of the four golfers had lost a match, but only Vu had emerged with an unblemished, five-and-oh record. Makes sense, after all. If you snooze and lose, you get the boo-hoos (and go home.) The penultimate round saw Ji take down Lee by 4 & 3, while Furue toppled the unvarnished Vu by 2 & 1. A talented Korean golfer would take on a skilled Japanese athlete in the final.

In the final match, each player came out nervous or tired, or perhaps a bit of both. Holes were won with pars, until the eighth. Finding herself one-down, Ji snagged three consecutive holes with birdie-eagle-par, to jump ahead by two. Furue came right back with birdie at the 11th to halve the margin, but made bogey at the 12th to give it back. From that point one, the golfing malaise returned. Ji played par golf and won the 16th with yet another one, to claim the match by 3 and 2.

Korn Ferry Tour’s NV5 sees a 3H finish

Harry Hall and Nick Hardy were not separated by much this week. When Hardy opened with 64, Hall was at his heels with 65. When Hardy followed with 68, Hall edged him by one with 67. On the weekend, the Englishman and the American posted four rounds of 65, to finish atop the leaderboard with 22-under par. Jimmy Stange and Christopher Petefish had played some fine golf of their own, to reach 19-deep. Those scores earned each a tie for third spot, but the attention was on H and HH.

Hardy had jumped ahead by two on Sunday’s front nine, but Hall reeled him in with a five-under effort coming home. Each had made birdie in regulation at the par-five closer, so it wasn’t a surprise when they twice traded birdies in daylight-savings time. Needing a change, the playoff moved to the par-three 17th hole, and it was there that Hall ended matters with a 12-feet putt for a deuce. The victory was Hall’s second on the Korn Ferry in less than twelve months. Perhaps this one will bring a years-end promotion to the PGA Tour.

Champions Tour crowns first major titleist of 2022

Steven Alker didn’t appear from nowhere, but try telling that to the Hollywood agents. Well, there may not be many, as senior tour professional golf doesn’t play that well on the big screen. If there were any, they’d be swarming the New Zealand pro like bees ’round the hive. Alker banged around the world’s tours for nearly three decades. He won on the Korn Ferry Tour, the Australasian Tour, and the Canadian Tour. What he never did, was win in Europe or America on the top tour. Guess good things come to those who wait (and persevere and grind.)

Alker has won four times since last November, capping his run with a nine-birdie effort on Sunday at the Senior PGA. The move shot him past the Canadian duo of Steven Ames and Mike Weir, three shots clear of the runner-up. Weir fell back with 72, into a fourth-place tie, four shots behind the leader. Ames held steady with 70, but he needed the magic of the first three rounds to keep pace with Alker. Bogey at the 17th ended Ames’ dream for this week, but he did secure second position with a closing par.

In third alone was the ageless wunder, Bernhard Langer. In first alone was a fellow who few knew a year ago. The victory catapulted the champion $800K ahead of Langer on the money list, into first place for the Schwab Cup, year-long chase. What’s left to do for the amazing Kiwi? Win everything else, pretty much sums it up. Steven Alker shows no signs of slowing down. It never got this rough for the champion, but we suspect he would have flinched not a bit.

DP World Tour sees Víctor Pérez win a second tour title

Víctor Pérez (the Frenchman with the Spanish name who lives in Scotland) entered the final round of the 2022 Dutch Open in a first-place tie with Englishman Matt Wallace. Neither golfer had made a career of closing the deal, so the potential for an upstart chaser to steal the show was potential, if not probable. Fortunately for the duo, the chaser contingent consisted of a slew of non-winners. The day was an arduous one for Wallace, who could not resurrect the birdie bunches that dotted his card over the first two days. Wallace posted six birdies on each of Thursday and Friday, but could only reach that number again by combining totals from Saturday and Sunday. Wallace posted even-par on day four and tied for fifth with Sebastian Soderberg.

Víctor Pérez fared quite a bit better than his English counterpart. The Frenchman posted a fine 69 on day four and reached the clubhouse at 13-under par. At that juncture, he should have been content with a second-place finish. Up ahead, New Zealand’s Ryan Fox had scorched the Bernardus Golf layout for 17 holes, setting four birdies and one eagle against zero bogeys. All that stood between Fox and a third DP World Tour title was a relatively-benign par five hole. Fox proceeded to unplay it, and made a double bogey to give Pérez life.

Fox’s drive went right, into a water hazard that should not have been on his radar screen. Why not? Fox was 15-under at that point, three shots clear of anyone else. His third shot reached pin high right, but he chunked a pitch into a bunker. It rained and it poured all at once for Fox, and he was fortunate to reach extra time with Pérez. The two golfers went at it on the 18th hole three times, with each finding two birdies and one par. They moved to the par-three 17th, where Pérez had made deuce two hours prior.

The magic was still in the air for the Frenchman, and he made another two to clip Fox’s wings.

Ronald Montesano writes for GolfWRX.com from western New York. He dabbles in coaching golf and teaching Spanish, in addition to scribbling columns on all aspects of golf, from apparel to architecture, from equipment to travel. Follow Ronald on Twitter at @buffalogolfer.

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GolfWRX’s Father’s Day Gift Guide (2026)

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A reminder from your friends at GolfWRX: Father’s Day is June 21. And as we do every year, we’re rounding up the best gifts for dad.

As we say every year, there’s no better golf-related Father’s Day gift than a round of golf with pops. Be it a country club or your favorite muni, take the time to get together to play 18 if you can.

Let’s get to the gifts.

Ghost Golf Qualifier Diamond Polo

We like the new polos that Ghost is offering, as the fabric and fit are so good. These new Qualifier Collection polos breathe well, are lightweight, stretch with your swing, and of course look great. You can wear them on the course, in the office, or just out at a casual event and they will fit right in.

Buy here.

STR8-Strip Grip Tape Remover

If your dad is an equipment aficionado and tinkers with his clubs, this tool works wonders. Removing grip tape has never been easier, just put a little head on the tape and the STR8-Strip peals it right off the shaft without any damage.

Buy here.

Why Golf: Putting Thing

When it comes to practice, it is good to have a purpose. This “Putting Thing” sure does it. We know from personal experience how challenging it can be and how rewarding it is on the practice green. This also provides some competition for your kiddo to see who will unload the dishwasher or do the next chore around the house.

Buy here.

OluKai Lae‘ahi Men’s Breathable Slip-On Shoes

Riding to and from the course in style and comfort is always a good thing. If you’re in a hurry, it’s a nice feature to slide into your shoes and get to the tee time. For the post-game shoe, at your locker or while putting your clubs away in the car. Nice to slide into a shoe that looks good anywhere. Pair that with meeting the family for dinner, no need to change!

Buy here.

Therabody Theragun Relief

A little wellness goes a long way. Keeping loose is a good way to go when it comes to the weekend game or treatment during the week. If there is a little ache or pain, the Theragun is there to help out. Help loosen up the back for a pre-game warm-up or cool-down. 

Buy here.

World Cup golf apparel

Something for the soccer dads. Embrace the World Cup fever this summer on the course with custom gear to support the nation of your choice.

Buy here.

FootJoy Pro SL spikeless golf shoes

Give the old man a break and save his feet with the Footjoy Pro SL Men’s Spikeless Golf Shoes for some added comfort on the course.

Buy here.

Bushnell Wingman 2 GPS speaker

Combine all the hits as well as some game improvement with the Wingman 2 Golf GPS Speaker by getting audible distance readings from 38,000+ courses worldwide through the Wingman 2 remote or speaker.

Buy here.

Personalized Titleist Pro V1 golf balls

The No. 1 ball in golf is a safe bet, and the Pro V1 fits the largest chunk of the bell curve if you don’t know what ball pops plays. Add personalization for a, well, personal touch!

Buy here.

 

  • GolfWRX may earn a commission for purchases made through links on this page, at no extra cost to you.

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Tour Photo Galleries

Photos from the 2026 OccuNet Classic

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With the PGA Tour across the border in Canada this week, GolfWRX Tour Photographer Greg Moore stayed stateside and headed to the OccuNet Classic presented by Amarillo National Bank in Amarillo, Texas.

It’s always interesting to see what the guys are playing on the KFT, and this week certainly hasn’t disappointed so far, with some incredible wedge stamping on display.

Check out links to all our albums below.

General Albums

WITB Albums

Pullout Albums

Luke Potter’s custom Cameron putter – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)

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From the GolfWRX Classifieds: Scotty Cameron GOLO 6 with BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition

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At GolfWRX, we are a community of like-minded individuals who all experience and express our enjoyment of the game in many ways.

It’s that sense of community that drives day-to-day interactions in the forums on topics that range from best driver to what marker you use to mark your ball. It even allows us to share another thing we all love – buying and selling equipment.

Currently, in our GolfWRX buy/sell/trade (BST) forum, @HuskerFlyer is sharing a Scotty Cameron GOLO with a BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition shaft. While the putter is certainly enviable, the Augusta-inspired shaft is equally noteworthy.

 

From the listing:

Scotty Cameron Golo 6 with BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition Scotty Headcover 34″ $375

To check out the full listing in our BST forum, head through the link. If you are curious about the rules to participate in the BST Forum, you can learn more here: GolfWRX BST Rules.

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