News
Tour Rundown: Filled to the brim
Late May is that time of golf viewing season when we are filled to the brim with events, and forgetful of how brief a time it is. We languish during American football season, rekindle our hopes in far-off Pacifica in January and February, then work our way eastward and northward in March and April. May, at least in the northeast, is that time of year when the weather is still unpredictable, and 75-degree sunny days can be followed by rainy 45-degree ones. For the most part, the televised golf goes off with little delay, and we swing from any of the four PGA Tours to the LPGA, to the DP World, and stuff ourselves like Thanksgiving Day.
June and July come, and we get out to play, more and more. Suddenly, it’s August and the majors are behind us. Only the team cups await, and those fall events that matter, but not as much, to the couch residents. Let’s take a pause, then, on this Memorial Day, to remember those that served and sacrificed so much, and recall how fortunate we are to live in times of relative peace. Let’s take a second moment to look over the events below, and recognize that our viewing cup is full, and for that, we are also favored.
PGA Tour @ Charles Schwab: Griffin holds off unlikely Schmid at Colonial
The Colonial Country Club, in Fort Worth, for decades, was a revered place. Hogan’s Alley in the era of wooden heads and metal shafts was a shotmaker’s paradise. No one exemplified that brand of golf more than the route’s namesake, Ben Hogan. Since the arrival of composite shafts and the advent of alloy heads, Colonial has become more challenging to play. The narrow corridors and fairway bends demand curvature that is challenging to access with equipment designed to curve not at all.
This week, Ben Griffin won for the second time in less than a month. In late April, Griffin teamed with Andrew Novak to win the partner event in New Orleans. At Colonial, in an event where no one could pull away, Griffin held off himself and others to win by a shot over Matti Schmid. It would have been more, but Schmid had the temerity to hole a ridiculous recovery pitch from an inaccessible slope. Schmid’s approach bounded past the green at 18, managing to stay on dry land, steps from the pond that menaces the fairway and greenside left.
Griffin had reached 16 under early in the day, thanks to an eagle-birdie start, and he held steady at that number through the fifth hole. At six and seven, a pair of bogeys revealed fissures in the armor, and another pair on the inward half brought him fully back to the field. With gut-check sensors flashing on the dashboard, Griffin played short of the final green to avoid a flyer into the pond. He pitched to four feet, then maneuvered the ball into the cup for a one-shot win over the feisty German.
LPGA @ Riviera Maya: Welcome to the winners’ circle, Miss Chisato
Many of the LPGA’s top-ranked players eschewed a spot in the Riviera Maya Open this week. Charley Hull was in attendance, but not on her usual stellar game. Leona Maguire and Ruixin Liu were also there, but even farther astray. Both missed the halfway cut and headed to the beach.
The Mayakoba course at Playa del Carmen was feisty in its own way this week, and selected an unlikely winner from a group of unlikely challengers. In the mix at the end were Jenny Bae of the USA, Haeji Kang from Korea, Weiwei Zhang from China, and Linn Grant from Sweden. All four finished inside the top four at week’s end. but none was close to the woman from Japan, who ran away to a six-shot victory.
Saitama Prefecture occupies territory north and west of Tokyo, in Japan. Chisato Iwai hails from that province, and with all of 22 years of living behind her, emerged as a talent this week in Mexico. She was one of a group that led after a day-one 68, but fell off a bit on Friday with 74. Iwai returned to the top with another 68 on Saturday, then opened a well-wrapped gift box on Sunday with 66. Iwai posted seven birdies over her first 13 holes on day four, including a four-hole streak from three through six. A bogey at 14 threw some cold water on the coronation, but Iwai closed with four pars to win by six, over Bae.
PGA Tour Champions @ Senior PGA: Cabrera wins third of spring
In a season of featured horse races, a thoroughbred makes an occasional appearance and runs off with two or three of the Triple Crown events. This spring, that thoroughbred is Angel Cabrera. The two-time major winner on the regular tour has returned to professional golf with vigor. In two months’ time, the Argentine has matched both his regular and major wins on the PGA Tour. In April, Cabrera won the James Hardie Invitational by two shots. In May, Cabrera has thus far won in consecutive weeks, at consecutive major events.
Last Monday, Cabrera won the Traditon by one shot over Jerry Kelly. He made birdie on two of his final three holes in the rain-delayed event, to post 64 on the final day, for a come-from-behind victory. This week, Cabrera won from the front of the pack at storied Congressional Country Club. The Senior PGA Championship had seen different leaders amass at the end of each day. Day one saw Cameron Percy hold the solo lead at 67. On day two, Vijay Singh joined the Australian at 138. Day three saw both replaced by Cabrera and PGA Professional Jason Caron. Caron holds a full-time job at Mill River, on Long Island. Every so often, he plys his trade on the second-chance tour, with remarkable success.
On day four, Padraig Harrington threatened to pull a Cabrera and come from behind for victory. The Northern Irishman found seven birdies across the first 14 holes, to ten-under par. As Caron and Cabrera appeared stuck in neutral, the tournament was Harrington’s for the taking. Over the final four holes, he gave up the event. Double bogey at 15 was followed later by bogey at the last, and Harrington finished at minus-seven, tied with Thomas Bjorn. Caron had an up-and-down day with five birdies and three bogeys, and came to the 72nd hole a shot behind Cabrera. He and his Platense playing partner also made bogey at the last. Caron dropped to T4, two behind winner and one back of the runners-up.
DP World Tour @ Soudal Open: Reitan emerges from playoff cauldron
Once upon a time, Kristoffer Reitan was the It Guy in Norwegian golf. Then came a lad named Viktor Hovland, who captured the hearts of Norway’s golf faithful. Reitan continued to grind on the world’s tour, and this week in Belgium, at last became a winner.
It wasn’t easy. It never is. Reitan set himself up for another nice payday over 54 holes. On Sunday, he tore the cover off the pot and mixed ten birdies into a 62 stew. Suddenly, he was at thirteen under par, and near the head of the field. Darius Van Dreiel of Holland joined Reitan at 13 deep. DVD had just completed a mini-run of his own. Birdies at the final three holes elevated him from nice paycheck to maybe just maybe in the space of an hour. Neither fellow would have mattered if 54-hole leader Ewen Ferguson had managed a par at the last. He did not, and the trio returned to the arbor-infested 18th for overtime.
After three pars guaranteed a return to the final deck for a third playing, the trio all faced birdie putts of makeable distance at OT hole, the second. After DVD and Ferguson missed by inches, Reitan was good from fifteen feet for an inaugural DP World Tour win.
Korn Ferry Tour @ Visit Knoxville: another northern European closes the door
Perhaps drawing from the success of his Norwegian neighbor, Sweden’s Pontus Nyholm earned a career-changing win across the Atlantic in Tennessee. Nyholm and everyone else began day four chasing S.H. Kim, who threatened to break every speed limit in the Volunteer state, by racing to 19-under par through three rounds. Highlighting his ascent was a day-two 61, featuring ten birdies. On day four, Kim’s timing belt came off the pulleys, and he coughed his way home to 75. He tumbled to a tie for sixth, four behind the leaders.
With hope emerging from the clouds, Nyholm and Johnny Keefer took full advantage. They made up nine and ten shots, respectively, on the 54-hole leader, and finished one shot clear of a pair at minus-18. Their playoff was brief. Golf’s version of Tormund from Game of Thrones ripped two mighty shots beyond the fairway at the par-five 18th. His putt from across the green slowed and sped, wobbled and turned, until it finally gave one last revolution, into the bottom of the cup.
For a tour that is, arguably, the second-best in the world, the KFT has a remarkably empty YouTube presence. It’s every week, it seems, that a search through alternate social media is required to gather video to celebrate the win. New life goal for you, Korn Ferry Tour: polish the video game.
Electricity in Knoxville ??
Pontus Nyholm can now call himself a winner on the Korn Ferry Tour ? pic.twitter.com/LNbclxxGBI
— Korn Ferry Tour (@KornFerryTour) May 25, 2025
PGA Tour Americas @ Inter Rapidisimo: Lamb chops in Colombia
Each season, there are unfortunate teams of planners, directors, volunteers, and officials who watch helplessly as nature reduces their months of efforts to a turn of the card, a roll of the dice, a hope and pray weekend. Such was the nature of the Inter Rapidisimo this week, north of Bogota. The rains came early, then they came again, and the decision was made to finish 36 holes and celebrate a winner.
Davis Lamb of the USA had opened with a preposterous five-birdie, three-eagle round of 61. He took a four-shot advantage into the second and final round. Of the chasers, only Argentina’s Abel Gallegos could keep pace. Lamb posted 68 on day two, a fine number, but Gallegos was better. He had a putt for 64 at the last, to tie Lamb. The putt stayed out, and Lamb had a wet win on the PGA Tour Americas circuit.
All in a days work ?
Davis Lamb posts 15-under and goes bogey-free thru his 36 holes today. Now he waits… pic.twitter.com/e6d7U4oH6w
— PGA TOUR Americas (@PGATOURAmericas) May 25, 2025
News
GolfWRX’s Father’s Day Gift Guide (2026)
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.
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.
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.
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!
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.
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.
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.
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.
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!
- GolfWRX may earn a commission for purchases made through links on this page, at no extra cost to you.
Tour Photo Galleries
Photos from the 2026 OccuNet Classic
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
- Ryan Palmer – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Mahanth Chirravuri – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Josh Creel – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Phichaksn Maichon – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Brandon Berry – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Ryan Burnett – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- James Song – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Andrew McLauchlan – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Ian Gilligan – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Alvaro Ortiz – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Russell Knox – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Ian Holt – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Mitchell Meissner – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Travis Trace – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Bryce Lewis – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
Pullout Albums

Luke Potter’s custom Cameron putter – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
News
From the GolfWRX Classifieds: Scotty Cameron GOLO 6 with BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition
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.
-
Equipment6 days agoMemorial Tournament Tour Report: Rory McIlroy, Cameron Young switch up drivers, and more
-
News1 week agoRussell Henley’s winning WITB: 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge
-
Whats in the Bag3 days agoJ.T. Poston’s winning WITB: 2026 Memorial Tournament
-
Equipment3 days agoBest irons 2026: Best irons overall, most forgiving irons, and more
-
Equipment1 week agoDetails on Jason Day’s latest prototype Avoda iron setup
-
Equipment3 weeks agoCJ Cup Byron Nelson Tour Report: Koepka and Kim’s newest putters finally get hot
-
News2 weeks agoCharles Schwab Challenge Tour Report: MacIntyre, Åberg and Spaun all switch putters, TaylorMade launches new Spider
-
Equipment2 weeks agoDetails on J.J. Spaun’s surprise putter switch
