Latest news with #USGA
Yahoo
17 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Tiger Woods supports son Charlie as he tries to make cut on Day 2 of U.S. Junior Amateur
Tiger Woods is riding the highs and lows from the course this week as his son Charlie competes for a junior golf national championship. Woods a 15-time major champion and one of the most popular golfers of all time, was at Trinity Forest Golf Club in Dallas on July 22 for Charlie's second round of stroke play at the U.S. Junior Amateur Championship. It's back-to-back days for Woods, who underwent surgery for a torn Achilles tendon in March, to walk the course in support of his son. Charlie Woods faced long odds to make the cut after shooting 81 (11-over) in Monday's opening round. The projected cut line was 2-over. U.S. Junior Amateur: 3 Palm Beach County golfers in contention to reach match play The U.S. Junior Amateur Championship is the United States Golf Association's national championship for boys junior amateur golfers. This is Charlie's second consecutive year competing in the event. Tiger Woods has frequented his son's junior golf tournaments this summer. On June 24, Woods walked the course at Tequesta Country Club in Palm Beach County as Charlie competed in the 41st Nicklaus Junior Championship. On June 5, the legendary golfer watched from a golf cart as his son played in Florida's Amateur Championship. Eric J. Wallace is deputy sports editor for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at ejwallace@ This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Tiger Woods supports son Charlie at U.S. Junior Amateur Championship


NBC Sports
21 hours ago
- Sport
- NBC Sports
St. Andrews to host next World Golf Hall of Fame induction
Padraig Harrington recalls his career milestones and thanks his family and everyone else who helped him during his golf career during his induction speech at the World Golf Hall of Fame. St. Andrews will be hosting The Open for the 31st time in 2027, a week that will include another World Golf Hall of Fame induction. The shrine is now located at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina, where the USGA has a second headquarters. Padraig Harrington led the induction class at Pinehurst in 2024. The next induction will be at St. Andrews, which previously held a Hall of Fame ceremony in 2015 when Mark O'Meara, Laura Davies and David Graham were among those inducted. Davies missed out when her flight from the U.S. Women's Open was delayed. She at least arrived in time for the reception. 'There is no better connection to golf's rich history and the origins of the game than at St. Andrews,' said Mike Trostel, director of the World Golf Hall of Fame. 'We are thrilled to celebrate the next class of golf's greatest figures at the home of golf and are grateful for the collaboration with our partners at The R&A.' The Hall of Fame induction is now every two years. It will return to Pinehurst in 2029, when the USGA has the U.S. Open and U.S. Women's Open in consecutive weeks.
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Tyler Mawhinney rallies on back nine to reserve a spot in U.S. Junior Amateur match play
Tyler Mawhinney of Fleming Island was getting uncomfortably close to the projected cut for match play in the second round of the U.S. Junior Amateur on July 22. But the rising senior at Fleming Island High School and Vanderbilt commit birdied three of his last five holes at the Brook Hollow Golf Club in Dallas and, at even-par 141, reserved a spot in the field of 64 players who will begin match play on July 23 at the Trinity Forest Golf Club. Mawhinney (73) tied for 24th after dipping as low as a tie for 36th and joins Miles Russell of Jacksonville Beach (72 at Brook Hollow) in match play. Russell shot 2-under 139 to tie for eighth. Russell will play Jackson Ormond, a resident of Webster, N.Y., who has verbally committed to the University of Florida, at 9:40 a.m. on July 23. Russell committed to Florida State on June 30. Mawhinney's first match will be against Lapossapon Heras-Gomez of Thailand, beginning at 11:10 a.m. Tyler Mawhinney has rough start Mawhinney, who shot 68 in the first round at Trinity Forest, began his round at Brook Hollow on the 10th hole, was 5-over for the day and 2-over for the tournament through his first 12 holes. He parred the par-3 fourth hole, then got his first birdie of the day on a 6-foot putt at No. 5 Mawhinney then drained a 27-footer for birdie on the next hole, and bounced back from a bogey at No. 7 with a closing birdie, on a roll of 23 feet. Mawhinney already has one USGA national championship this season. He and future Vanderbilt teammate Will Hartman won the U.S. Amateur Four Ball on May 22. Russell, who shot 67 in the first round, was 2-over through five holes in the second, then stopped the bleeding with a birdie at the par-3 eighth hole. He bogeyed Nos. 11 and 13 but played his final five holes at 1-under with no additional blemishes on the card, with a birdie at the 615-yard, par-5 15th. Four other area players failed to qualify for match play: Phillip Dunham of Ponte Vedra Beach and Jackson Byrd of St. Simons Island, Ga., (7-over, tied for 105th), Lucas Gimenez of Jacksonville (11-over, tied for 166th) and Brady Dougan in St. Johns (15-over, tied for 212th. Did Charlie Woods qualify for match play? Charlie Woods, the son of 15-time major champion and two-time Players champion Tiger Woods improved on his first-round 81 at Brook Hollow but his 74 in the second round at Trinity Forest wasn't nearly enough and he finished at 14-over-par 155 and in a tie for 196th. Tiger Woods followed his son all 18 holes for the second day in a row. Woods won the U.S. Junior Amateur three times, then added three U.S. Amateur titles and three U.S. Opens for nine USGA championships in his career. Among Charlie Woods' next appearances is scheduled to be the Junior Players Championship, Aug. 28-31, at the TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course, where his father won the 2001 and 2013 Players Championships, as well as the 1994 U.S. Amateur. This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: Tyler Mawhinney, Miles Russell reserve spots in U.S. Junior Am Match Play


USA Today
23-07-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Mason Howell wins medalist honors at 2025 U.S. Junior Amateur; match-play bracket set
It has been quite the two-month stretch for Mason Howell. The 18-year-old rising high school senior from Georgia qualified for the U.S. Open last month, winning his qualifier. Now, he has won medalist honors at the biggest junior event in the world. Howell finished at 7-under 134 Tuesday to earn the top seed for match play at the 2025 U.S. Junior Amateur. The top 64 players advanced to match play after two rounds of stroke play at Trinity Forest and Brook Hollow in Dallas, and for the first time since 2008, there was no playoff to whittle the field down to 64 players because that's how many finished at 3 over or better. 'It's just the first step complete,' Howell said. 'Looking forward to the rest of the week and seeing if I can take it deep into match play and hopefully win this sucker. I played really well today, and I really like this golf course.' All play moves to Trinity Forest for match play, which is hosting its first USGA event. Charlie Woods, the son of 15-time major champion and nine-time USGA victor Tiger Woods, finished at 14 over following stroke play to miss the cut. It was his second appearance in the U.S. Junior, a tournament his pops won thrice from 1991-93. Meanwhile, Howell's side of the bracket is loaded with many of the top juniors in the world, and his Round of 64 match is no slacker. He has Henry Guan, an Oklahoma State commit ranked 21st in Junior Golf Scoreboard. Also on the top half of the bracket: defending champion Trevor Gutschewski (No. 28 in JGS), Luke Colton (No. 2), Miles Russell (No. 1), defending runner-up Tyler Watts (No. 4), Michael Riebe (No. 5), Tyler Mawhinney (No. 36), Sohan Patel (No. 27), Rayhan Latief and Tomas Restrepo. Match play begins at 9 a.m. ET Wednesday.

Associated Press
23-07-2025
- Business
- Associated Press
Golf Enters a New Era: Artificial Intelligence Sparks Unprecedented Investment
Venture capital investment in AI companies surged to over $100 billion in 2024, with golf artificial intelligence platforms emerging as a specialized investment opportunity within the broader sports technology ecosystem that's experiencing unprecedented growth in both participation and technological adoption. The intersection of artificial intelligence funding records and golf industry expansion creates compelling investment dynamics that institutional investors are increasingly recognizing. Global venture capital funding for AI companies exceeded $100 billion in 2024, representing an 80% increase from $55.6 billion in 2023, with nearly 33% of all global venture funding directed to AI companies, making artificial intelligence the leading sector for investment capital. Golf industry fundamentals support this investment thesis with participation reaching record levels across multiple demographics. A record 47.2 million Americans played golf in some form during 2024, representing a 5% increase from the prior year and 38% higher than pre-pandemic levels, while 28.0 million people played on-course golf, the highest participation since 2008. The funding environment particularly favors specialized AI applications that can demonstrate measurable operational improvements. In 2024, the proportion of survey respondents reporting AI use by their organizations jumped to 78% from 55% in 2023, indicating accelerating enterprise adoption that creates receptive markets for golf AI platforms addressing facility management and customer experience optimization. The convergence of record AI investment activity with historic golf participation creates unique opportunities for golf AI platforms like Golf participation demographics support premium AI technology adoption Golf industry participation trends demonstrate sustained growth across demographics that typically drive technology adoption and premium spending. More than 3.35 million golfers maintained a Handicap Index in 2024, up over 6% year-over-year and up nearly 30% since 2020, according to USGA data analyzing over 77 million scores posted through the World Handicap System. Demographic shifts particularly favor technology-forward segments that represent ideal customers for golf AI applications. Golfers in the 18-34 age group are now the largest group of on-course players at an estimated 6.3 million, with 2024 on track to be the fifth consecutive year where more than 500 million rounds of golf will be played in the U.S. The industry's beginner influx creates sustained demand for technology-enhanced learning. The NGF reports that a record number of 3.4 million people played on a golf course for the first time in 2023, with over 3 million beginner golfers each year for the past four years, far above historical norms and creating ongoing opportunities for golf AI technology that enhances instruction and facility operations. Leading golf AI platforms demonstrate comprehensive value propositions Clive Mayhew, CEO and founder of has positioned his artificial intelligence golf platform to capitalize on both AI investment trends and golf participation growth. His company embodies what he describes as 'the world's first fully comprehensive AI golf assistant spanning the entire spectrum of golf experience. It covers golf fanatics while they watch (the media), while they play (caddie and rules), and even while they seek off-course activities.' The integrated approach demonstrated by aligns with broader AI adoption patterns favoring comprehensive solutions over point applications. 'At our mission is to blend technology with tradition, enhancing the game while keeping it authentic,' Mayhew explained when unveiling advanced artificial intelligence golf features including AI Caddie™, AI Scorecard™, and What's In My Bag™. Golf AI platforms possess structural advantages that differentiate them within the broader artificial intelligence investment landscape. The sport's operational complexity creates multiple value creation opportunities, from course maintenance optimization and tee time scheduling to personalized instruction and equipment recommendations that address real customer pain points while generating recurring revenue streams. comprehensive approach demonstrates how golf artificial intelligence can address multiple operational challenges simultaneously. Golf facilities manage sophisticated operations spanning maintenance scheduling, customer experience optimization, revenue management, and staff coordination that benefit from AI-powered automation and analytics capabilities. 'Our mission at is to make golf intelligence, simple and accessible to every fan,' Mayhew stated when launching artificial intelligence-powered golf podcast. The data-rich golf environment provides competitive advantages for AI platforms that can effectively process comprehensive information streams. Every golf interaction generates quantifiable performance metrics, course condition data, weather patterns, and customer behavior information that artificial intelligence golf systems can transform into actionable insights for both facilities and individual players. Investment outlook for golf AI technology platforms The investment case for golf AI platforms strengthens when considering sustained industry fundamentals. Rounds continue to trend more than 10% ahead of the five-year, pre-pandemic average from 2015-19, indicating durable demand patterns that support technology investment and adoption across golf facilities seeking competitive advantages. Companies like that successfully integrate comprehensive artificial intelligence capabilities may benefit from both macro AI investment trends and golf-specific growth drivers including demographic expansion, operational challenges, and technology adoption patterns that create multiple revenue streams and customer acquisition opportunities. For institutional investors evaluating AI investment opportunities, golf artificial intelligence represents a specialized application with proven market demand, expanding customer demographics, operational complexity that benefits from automation, and established revenue models that distinguish it from experimental AI applications with unclear value propositions. Early-stage investors in established golf AI platforms such as may capture value from the intersection of record AI funding availability, historic golf participation levels, and industry operational needs that create sustainable competitive advantages for comprehensive artificial intelligence golf solutions. Media Contact Company Name: Golf Contact Person: James Smith Email: Send Email City: Sydney State: NSW 2000 Country: Australia Website: Press Release Distributed by To view the original version on ABNewswire visit: Golf Enters a New Era: Artificial Intelligence Sparks Unprecedented Investment