
10 things to know about Ben Griffin, including his stint as a mortgage loan officer
Ben Griffin is on a serious heater.
Unless you're a golf fan that has been living under a rock for the last month, you probably know that he's won twice – Zurich Classic of New Orleans with Andrew Novak and the Charles Schwab Challenge – and finished T-8 at the PGA Championship, his best result In a major. He enters the final round of the Memorial in Dublin, Ohio, one stroke back of Scottie Scheffler and suddenly he is looking like a serious contender for the U.S. Ryder Cup team. That's one of the many good reasons why it's about time you get to know Griffin.
Mortgage-loan officer stint
Griffin, 28, is best known for stepping away from his career as a professional golfer to become a mortgage loan officer in his native North Carolina.
'I'd lost my motivation and love for golf. The stress of playing with $15,000 of credit-card debt was agony, so I quit,' he told Golf Digest. But he resurrected his career in 2021 and has banked more than $11 million in 94 Tour starts.
'It provided me with a reset button,' Griffin tellsGolfweek. 'Doing something completely different is good for getting a fresh headspace.'
Traveled the junior golf circuit solo
Griffin grew up playing golf with his dad and grandpa. By the time he was 16, he was driving to tournaments solo and staying in hotels because both of his parents were working. 'I'd tell the front desk, 'Look, my dad is coming to check us in, don't worry. He's on a call and running behind. I just need a room key.' It worked every time.'
Bleeds Tarheel Blue
Both his parents went to the University of North Carolina and he grew up in Chapel Hill, practicing at the University of North Carolina Finley Golf Course. Once he started going to college there, his teammates complained that qualifying wasn't fair. 'I knew every break on those greens,' he said. 'It was a very easy transition for me.'
Get rid of the yardage book
Griffin suggests an unique solution for slow play – allow rangefinders (which the Tour is currently testing) but ban the yardage book.
'I think it would actually speed up play. Play the course how it looks. I know it's old school but do that and make it new school with a rangefinder,' he said.
Maxfli Man
A year ago, Griffin was testing golf balls. His caddie suggested he try Maxfli, the once popular brand in the 1970s and '80s, which has become a Dick's Sporting Goods house brand. He'd never used it before. 'I was shocked by the ball speed numbers,' he said. Griffin said he gained 2 miles per hour off the tee without sacrificing anything from a spin standpoint. He began using it in Tour events before he negotiated a deal to represent the brand.
The story behind his Aviator-style sunglasses
Like Corey Hart in the '80s classic song, Griffin doesn't wear his sunglasses at night but he's been wearing sunglasses on the course since the 2024 RBC Canadian Open last June, where he finished second, due to seeing floaters. Since that first week with a designer knockoff brand he happened to have in his bag, he's relied on U Swing sunglasses. 'It hasn't affected my vision – I still see floaters – but they darken things and make the floaters less defined,' he said. 'I think they also help me with reading greens and seeing slopes better.' For the full story on why he Venmo-ed $20 to pro CT Pan for the pair he wears, click here.
The genesis of his lethal short game
After winning the Charles Schwab Challenge in May thanks to an assortment of tidy up and downs, Griffin was asked how he developed such a reliable short game. His eyes watered and his voice cracked as he explained how his parents endured some tough times financially during the 2008 recession. Griffin's family had to downsize their home and give up the country club membership. There wasn't much money to spend on golf, let alone range balls. But his parents made sure there was a public golf course for him to use. "I would chip and putt all day," he said. "I would hit maybe a half bucket of balls for $5 or whatever it was, and my parents, they always considered themselves middle to upper class, but I knew there for a little bit when we lost our house, when we lost everything. I know they sacrificed a lot for me."
The silver lining for Griffin? He became a short-game magician.
He appreciates a good lawn
Griffin moved last month from St. Simons Island, Ga., to Jupiter, Florida, and one of the benefits will be having a lawn in his backyard, where as a kid he liked to do some chipping. Griffin has a sponsorship deal with TruGreen, an official PGA Tour partner, and participated in the brand's marketing campaign alongside Patton Kizzire and Jason Day.
"It was a very Hollywood experience," said Griffin, who is looking forward to getting the full TruGreen experience at his new pad. "I trust myself on a course, I've got to trust them with my lawn."
Lifestyle change
Griffin stopped drinking alcohol during the season and adopted a vegan diet at the suggestion of his girlfriend.
'Some people treat food like entertainment, but food is fuel. I eat for energy. Research says veganism helps with inflammation. I've never felt better,' he told Golf Digest. 'I needed to stop drinking during the season. I didn't have a drinking problem, but I was drinking like I was still in college. When you drink consistently, you think you feel good, but you don't. Now I feel incredible.'
Distance gain is for real
Griffin not only dropped the booze but started taking creatine. 'You still got to work really hard. I'm doing it more from the standpoint of muscle recovery, gaining muscle mass. You still have to work out if you're going to gain strength. It's not like the supplement is going to fix everything,' he said. 'But I would say on Tour probably 60 or 70 percent of guys are taking that substance."
It's working. He's averaging 176 mph ball speed this year, up from 172 in 2024, and has gained about 17 yards off the tee.
"The last three, four months, I really kind of locked in on that, trying to gain speed -- trying to still maintain flexibility and mobility. I mean, it's important. I'm on the road every week, I'm flying, I'm driving cars, none of it is good for my body.
"My kind of goal has been to swing harder, get, like, a mile-per-hour faster or so every week or two. And I've just been on this nice trajectory right now. I'm trying not to push it too much, but definitely conscious of trying to hit it a little bit further. And I think I swing better when I hit it harder. It's weird, I feel like when I'm swinging hard I'm actually like hitting it kind of straighter. It's funky. Golf's a weird sport, but here I am. I guess I'm an athlete now," he said.
Griffin pointed out that it was his hard work in the gym and not creatine, which has keyed his new-found length off the tee.
'I'm taking a bunch of different things. I passed my last drug test. I'm not doing anything illegal here from two weeks ago. I'm just trying to do the right things to take care of my body," he said. "I'm working out harder than I ever have, so I got to make sure I'm consuming a lot of protein. And, yeah, I feel like I'm doing the right things, just got to keep plugging along, and I'll keep taking creatine.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Emma Raducanu hires ‘best coach in the world'
Emma Raducanu has scored a coaching coup by making an agreement with Francis Roig, a former top-60 player who was part of Rafael Nadal's coaching team for 17 years. Raducanu's long roster of previous coaches includes a number of highly respected names, but no one who has spent so much time working alongside a tennis legend. A 57-year-old from Barcelona, Roig has not coached on the WTA Tour before. After ending his time with Nadal in 2022 – because, in his own words, 'I felt like I needed a new challenge in my life' – he spent the best part of a year with former Wimbledon finalist Matteo Berrettini. The fact that Roig has signed up with Raducanu for the rest of 2025 speaks for the potential that he must see in her. According to sources, the pair began talking about a collaboration during this summer's Wimbledon, and then did a coaching trial before Raducanu entered the US hard-court swing. Raducanu is well known for being a keen student of the game, and for having a knack for picking up new skills quickly. As a result, she should benefit from working with a man who – according to Nadal's biographer Christopher Clarey – 'is an excellent swing doctor, adept at fixing glitches in strokes.' In the same recent book on Nadal – which is entitled The Master – Clarey quotes the former Spanish No 2 Feliciano Lopez, who describes Roig as a uniquely skilled observer. 'Technically I think he's the best coach in the world,' Lopez said. 'He doesn't use that much video analysis, but he sees things that the rest of the coaches don't see. He's able to see things in Rafa's forehand or movement that no other guys would notice, and it allowed them to be very specific and precise.' As Clarey's book goes on to explain, 'Roig provided Rafael with another voice on tactics and technique for nearly 20 years, helping him in particular with his volleys and slice backhand.' Roig is understood to have recently joined Raducanu in Cincinnati, where she is scheduled to play in the final build-up tournament before the US Open. The concluding grand-slam event of the tennis year – which she famously won in 2021 – is set to begin in three weeks' time. While Raducanu's path has been a bumpy one in recent seasons, she is showing signs of improving her consistency, both in terms of fitness and form. Since teaming up with long-time associate Mark Petchey in Miami in March, she has won 20 of 24 matches against opponents ranked outside the top 10, and generally avoided the sort of niggling injuries that have dogged her progress over the past four years. The problem has been her inability to defeat the elite, as demonstrated by her 0-6 record against those in the top 10 during that time. This is where Roig's input could be particularly useful. While consistent and disciplined from the back of the court, Raducanu is not as physically imposing as most of the leading players, and often lacks the weight of shot to trouble them. Nevertheless, her ranking now stands at No 33 in the world – the highest it has been since the points from her US Open triumph dropped off in September 2022 – and a strong campaign in Cincinnati could potentially earn her a seeding at Flushing Meadows this year. Her form across the Atlantic has been promising so far, with three wins in Washington and two in Montreal, although she was given a 6-2, 6-1 schooling by this year's Wimbledon runner-up Amanda Anisimova in her most-recent match. Raducanu had previously been working with Petchey for much of this season, but their arrangement had been constrained by his long-standing broadcasting arrangements. Petchey made it clear that would not sacrifice his commentary career in order to become her full-time coach. Before that, Raducanu had spent the 2024 season with Nick Cavaday – formerly the director of tennis at her childhood academy in Orpington – before he was forced to step down in February due to chronic health issues. The full roll-call of coaches from her professional career now features at least eight names, and includes Nigel Sears, Andrew Richardson, Torben Beltz, Dmitry Tursunov and Sebastian Sachs. There was also a brief interlude in Indian Wells this year where Vladimir Platenik sat in her player box while she lost a first-round match against Japan's Moyuka Uchijima. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.


USA Today
10 hours ago
- USA Today
Never too early to plan: Oak Hill already preparing to host U.S. Women's Open in 2037
The Oak Hill Country Club in Pittsford will host the 92nd edition of the U.S. Women's Open in 2037. Having previously hosted seven men's majors, including three U.S. Opens and the 1995 Ryder Cup, this event will mark the first time a major women's tournament has been played at the club. It will also be the seventh to be hosted in New York. "Major championship golf is in the DNA of Oak Hill, and we are thrilled to bring the U.S. Women's Open tothe club for the first time," said the U.S. Golf Association chief championships officer, John Bodenhamer, in a press release. "Oak Hill has long been a proven stage for some of golf's biggest moments, and we are proud to add the U.S. Women's Open to its storied history." Oak Hill has witnessed some of the most historic scenes in recent golfing history. From legend Arnold Palmer paying a visit, Curtis Strange becoming the first player to win back-to-back championships since 1950 following his win in '89, and the presence of a modern star and local fan favorite, Rory McIlroy, just two years ago during the 2023 PGA Championship. The club was founded in 1901 before moving to its current location in 1926. The course was restored in 2019 by Andrew Green. Rodrigo Feijao is an intern for the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, focusing on sports-related stories and local music. He can be found on Instagram @rfeijao_777 and can be reached at RFeijao@
Yahoo
11 hours ago
- Yahoo
Is Rory McIlroy playing this week to start PGA Tour's FedEx Cup playoffs?
Rory McIlroy found a loophole in the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup playoffs, and it has become an awkward subplot this week when golf's version of the postseason begins at the 2025 FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis. The 2025 Masters champion said months ago he wanted to play less in 2025, and even hinted at the unorthodox move he might make to follow through on that promise. "I'll probably not play the first playoff event in Memphis," McIlroy told The Telegraph in November 2024. "I mean, I finished basically dead last there this year (tied for 68th in a 70-man field) and only moved down one spot in the playoff standings.' McIlroy has appeared in just 14 PGA Tour events this year after playing in 19 tournaments in 2024, but still ranks No. 2 behind Scottie Scheffler in the FedEx Cup standings. Since he began playing extensively on the PGA Tour in 2009, McIlroy has averaged 16 events per year. So did he follow through on his decision to not start the FedEx Cup playoffs in Memphis? Here's the latest on McIlroy's status heading into the FedEx Cup playoffs and the 2025 FedEx St. Jude Championship: RYDER CUP RANKINGS: New PGA Tour winner Cameron Young moves up in latest U.S. team standings Is Rory McIlroy playing at FedEx St. Jude Championship? No. McIlroy was not included on the official field list for the 2025 FedEx St. Jude Championship, beginning Thursday, Aug. 7 at TPC Southwind in Memphis. His decision to skip the tournament means the field will be set at 69 golfers instead of 70. The top 50 golfers advance to the next round of the FedEx Cup playoffs at the BMW Championships in Owings Mills, Maryland on Aug 14-17. The PGA Tour also eliminated the stroke advantage for the Tour Championship that concludes its FedEx Cup playoffs this year. Instead of giving golfers with the most FedEx Cup points an advantage in the Tour Championship, all golfers will start from even par. In the past, the stroke advantage had made the first two FedEx Cup events more important because they helped determine starting position at East Lake. Why is Rory McIlroy not playing? In September, when McIlroy initially told reporters he wanted to decrease his playing schedule, he noted that he "hit a wall" during the 2024 season. He wound up skipping notable PGA Tour events like The Sentry, the RBC Heritage and Jack Nicklaus' Memorial Tournament this season. "It's been a long season, and I'm going to just have to think about trying to build in a few extra breaks here and there next year and going forward because I felt like I hit a bit of a wall sort of post-U.S. Open, and still feel a little bit of that hangover," McIlroy said last September. He noted at the time that he planned to play 18 to 20 tournaments in 2025. By November, McIlroy had pinpointed the first playoff event in Memphis as one of those additional breaks. He also leads third-place Sepp Straka by more than 800 points in the FedEx Cup standings and already clinched a spot in the BMW Championship next week. Contributing: Jonah Dylan, Memphis Commercial Appeal This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Is Rory McIlroy playing this week at FedEx St. Jude Championship?