logo
Tom Hoge had the perfect pedigree for Saturday's windy round at Valero Texas Open

Tom Hoge had the perfect pedigree for Saturday's windy round at Valero Texas Open

Yahoo06-04-2025
SAN ANTONIO — For those familiar with the resume of Tom Hoge, it's not a huge surprise that the 35-year-old would pull out of the pack Saturday on a wicked day at the Valero Texas Open.
After two days of balmy temperatures, Saturday had a completely different feel at TPC San Antonio, winds whipping and temps about 30 degrees cooler than they were before the event's cut. With slow greens and gnarly rough, those who bombed their way to the top in the first few days had to play a different style of game in the third round.
Enter Hoge. Raised in North Dakota and a former member of the PGA Tour Canada, Hoge's game is based more on feel and accuracy than sheer distance, where he lags near the bottom of the Tour statistically.
And although he's comfortable with playing in uncomfortable weather, Hoge also has plenty of Texas pedigree, as he resides in Fort Worth after a successful collegiate career at Texas Christian University.
On Saturday, it took a bit, but Hoge hung tough through the front nine with nine straight pars and then got hot down the stretch, posting four birdies and no bogeys on the back to catapult himself near the top of the leaderboard after 54 holes.
"It was tough. Totally opposite wind than we've had the last two days, so made a little more thought off the tees to figure out the new golf course, so to speak," Hoge said. "Even the downwind holes, they were a challenge because the ball was bouncing out so much. You know, I just tried to battle and fight and knew I had to make a lot of those six-, seven-foot par putts in there, which I did off the start, and that kind of kept me in things."
Although he's still behind Andrew Novak and Brian Harman, Hoge will play in the final few pairings on Sunday and he's hoping to do something similar to what he did in his last start at TPC Sawgrass when he jumped into a T-3 finish by virtue of a 66 in the final round of The Players Championship.
And things are going to turn even chillier on Sunday, as wind chills could be in the 20s at the beginning of play. His recent practice has helped prepare Hoge for just such an opportunity.
"I just think that I've played in a lot of wind," he said. "I've been at home in Fort Worth, Texas, the last few weeks here, it's been really windy, so I certainly felt comfortable in these conditions.
"Just know everyone's going struggle with it, so just hang in there the best I can."
This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Tom Hoge stars on windy day at 2025 Valero Texas Open
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lucas Glover on LIV golfers returning to the PGA Tour: 'I don't think they should be back'
Lucas Glover on LIV golfers returning to the PGA Tour: 'I don't think they should be back'

USA Today

time6 hours ago

  • USA Today

Lucas Glover on LIV golfers returning to the PGA Tour: 'I don't think they should be back'

Ask anyone interested in the PGA Tour and/or LIV Golf and that person is likely to have an opinion. That goes for Tour veteran Lucas Glover, who hosts a SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio show in his free time. On Tuesday night, the discussion ventured into those rival-league waters, specifically, the lingering stalemate in negotiations that might unify the two circuits. Glover was quite direct with his stance. I don't want to play with them, me personally. I don't think they should be back here. I don't want them here. They made their decision. I don't blame any of them. They made a decision, I don't care, but they also went away from this tour and chose to. As a PGA Tour player and somebody that dreamed of playing on the PGA Tour, and have poured my heart and soul into this Tour and game for 21 seasons now, I don't want somebody that chose another path and a path of least, or, less resistance. I don't want them back here competing and taking part of my pie and these kids' pie that are trying to make it now. He went on to say if the top five or six LIV golfers were still on the PGA Tour, "it would benefit all of us because out TV deal in 2030 would be great" but added "does it behoove us as Tour members, who have equity now, to grow our sport by bringing some of those guys back? I'm having a hard time with it." You can hear the full exchange here: Stalled negotiations have led to a stalemate in reunification talks in men's pro golfLucas Glover says he's 'having a hard time with it" and grapples with the different perspectives on what's next for the PGA TOUR on "The Lucas Glover Show:"📻: Glover hosts the hour-long "The Lucas Glover Show" throughout the PGA Tour season on SiriusXM Radio.

Max Homa 'didn't hit one crazy shot' in career-best opening-round score on PGA Tour
Max Homa 'didn't hit one crazy shot' in career-best opening-round score on PGA Tour

NBC Sports

time8 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

Max Homa 'didn't hit one crazy shot' in career-best opening-round score on PGA Tour

Zach Johnson joins Golf Today to discuss the John Deere Classic, if he feels old after turning 50, the future of his golf career, the PGA Tour FedExCup standings, Keegan Bradley's U.S. Ryder Cup backroom team and more. For a guy who said that his game wasn't 'particularly sharp,' Max Homa looked like the six-time winner he is, Thursday at the John Deere Classic. Homa, who didn't sound an optimistic tune — in relation to his form — in his pre-tournament presser, shot 8-under 63 in the opening round at TPC Deere Run. It was his career-best first-round score on Tour. 'I just did everything really solid. I made a ton of putts. Kept the driver in good spots. Got to take advantage of my iron play, my wedge play,' he said. 'I do feel like we found a little something with the driver, all the long clubs, and it was nice to do that for 18 full holes. I didn't hit one crazy shot today, so that was cool.' Homa made nine birdies and one bogey (on his final hole) to finish one back of clubhouse leader Doug Ghim. He gained strokes on the field off the tee, into the greens and with his putter (more than 3 shots, in fact, in the latter category). He also hit 10 of 14 fairways and 14 of 18 greens in regulation. His previous best opening-round score was a 64 in the 2023 Genesis Invitational, according to the Tour. That was also the year in which he recorded his most recent victory. After going winless last year, Homa notably made myriad changes — to his apparel, clubs, coaching, caddie and even social-media habits — into and throughout this season. He has yet to record a top-10 finish and has made only half his cuts. But Thursday's 63 was his best score of the year — in any round. He shot 64 Friday at the PGA Championship, then followed with 76-77 over the weekend. Asked if he thought his most recent play was sustainable, Homa replied, 'I mean, I don't see why not, but I'm not, I guess, worried about it being — it's not going to be my lasting thought as I leave here today. I played a good round of golf; every day is different.' Homa will be back at it at 2 p.m. EDT Friday in Silvis, Illinois, alongside Jake Knapp and Rickie Fowler. Knapp shot 68 in Round 1 while Fowler had a 6-under 65, thanks to a second-nine 29.

Max Homa goes low but Doug Ghim paces 2025 John Deere Classic after posting a 62
Max Homa goes low but Doug Ghim paces 2025 John Deere Classic after posting a 62

USA Today

time8 hours ago

  • USA Today

Max Homa goes low but Doug Ghim paces 2025 John Deere Classic after posting a 62

SILVIS, Ill. —The John Deere Classic typically yields some of the lowest scores of any event on the PGA Tour, and based on early results in Thursday's first round, the 2025 rendition won't be any different. Max Homa fired an 8-under 63, his best opening-round score since the 2023 Genesis Invitational. He joined Austin Eckroat in a tie for second early Thursday afternoon. "I played well," Homa said. "Holed a lot of putts, but still didn't feel like I did one thing that carried me. It felt like everything was really good. Kept it in front of me. Was rarely in a bad spot, whether it's off the tee or around the greens. Obviously having a hot putter helps. Even with that, I did a lot to shoot a low number." A low round to start the week is always a good thing, but Homa – who made headlines Wednesday when he used a choice word to describe the negativity of social media -- knows it'll take a lot more of what he did Thursday to hoist a trophy on Sunday. Twelve of the last 15 winners at the John Deere Classic have finished at 20 under or better. Davis Thompson won at 28 under last year. "Just have to keep playing," Homa said. "Patience is very important even when scores are really low. Look at a round like Rickie played today. He said a couple blips early and then found his swing again shot a really low number. So as much as it always feels like a track meet in your head, you look at that and it's important to stay within yourself and stay patient, because you can birdie any hole out here." Homa, Fowler and Jake Knapp played together Thursday (and will again Friday), starting on No. 10. Fowler made double-bogey on the 12th and bogey on the 14th before firing a 6-under 29 on the second nine to finish with a 65. Knapp shot 3-under 68. "I'm super lucky to have a group like that," Homa said. "Two of my closest buddies out here. I've known Rick and Jake forever. Three SoCal guys in the same group and everybody started making a lot birdies, so that was fun." But it was Doug Ghim who paced the morning wave with a 9-under 62 at TPC Deere Run – the lowest round of his seven-year career on Tour. The 29-year-old Chicago-area native is feeling comfortable just a few hours away from his hometown. "Any time I come to the Midwest in general it's the style I am used to," Ghim said. "I grew up playing tree-lined and bent rough, bent greens. It's always a welcome sight to come to Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan." It could have been even lower, too. His second shot on the par-5 17th ended up on a part of the green that required him to chip it over the edge of a bunker that juts out onto the putting surface. He ultimately made par. Ghim shot 5-under 30 on the outward nine, which included a hole-out eagle from 91 yards on the par-4 6th hole. He finished with a 32 on the back, culminating in a round void of bogeys that gave him the clubhouse lead just after noon on Thursday. "I had to chip it off a green on 17 so probably hurt the stats," Ghim said. "Didn't get it up-and-down because I had to come over the corner of the bunker. So obviously statistically it will look worse than probably it was. Honestly, hit it so close all day. I probably didn't gain much any time I tapped in for birdie. I two putted for birdie a couple times. That's just the way the stats go sometimes. Unlike Homa, who totaled 114 feet in putts made, Ghim shot 62 but made just 44 feet in putts. He was throwing darts all day, cashing in seven birdies, only one of which required him to make a putt longer than 10 feet. And of course, he didn't even need the flatstick on No. 6. "I hit it really well. Holed out a wedge. I mean, honestly, anytime you can shoot 9-under and not really make a putt it's always a good sign." Ghim, along with Ryan Palmer and Ryo Hisatsune, will tee off at 1:16 p.m. ET for Friday's second round at TPC Deere Run, while Homa, Fowler and Knapp will start at 2 p.m. ET.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store