Golf courses in Maui are slowly reopening after the historic fires

Here’s an update on the island’s major resort courses.

The deadliest wildfire in recent U.S. history displaced thousands of residents in Maui back in August, killing more than 100, swallowing the historic Lahaina town in flames and closing many of the area’s golf courses.

Officials are unsure what started the blazes that prompted some locals to bolt into the ocean to escape marauding flames, but some experts said they suspect human development on the island is at least partly to blame for the destruction.

Wildfires have quadrupled in Hawaii in recent decades, and many scientists say the culprit is unmanaged, nonnative grasslands planted by plantations and ranchers and others unfamiliar with the island’s native ecosystems. The grass is dry and prone to fires.

Kapalua Golf’s Bay Course re-opened on Sept. 20, and its Plantation Course is set to do so on Oct. 18. Both golf courses had been closed since the Maui wildfires on Aug. 8. Located in West Maui, the golf courses and facilities at Kapalua Golf were spared from the fires, which devastated Lahaina, about 10 miles away.

According to a story on mauinow.com, another major resort on the island is also nearly back up to full speed.

Kā‘anapali reopened its driving range and Royal Kā‘anapali Golf Course on Sept. 18 and will reopen the Kā‘anapali Kai Golf Course on Nov. 20.

Kapalua Golf ‘s Bay Course’s practice range reopened on Aug. 28. Wailea Golf Club remained open after the fires with Wailea’s Gold, Blue and Emerald Courses continuing to welcome guests.

The fires impacted associates at all three golf resort properties with many losing their homes and possessions. As the Maui community heals, the properties continue to welcome back team members to work as they are ready to return.

All three properties have focused efforts to support team members who lost their homes or loved ones, while also continuing to help the larger Maui community recover through donations and fundraisers.

“As part of Mauiʻs recovery process, we need our visitors to help keep our community employed,” said Sherry Duong, executive director of the Maui Visitors and Convention Bureau. “We welcome respectful, responsible and compassionate travel to all accessible parts of Maui. We encourage our visitors to buy local, dine at local restaurants, enjoy Mauiʻs incredible activities and attractions including our beautiful golf courses, and most of all visit our island with patience and grace.”

“Our team truly appreciates the outpouring of support from around the globe over the past six weeks,” said Kapalua Golf & Tennis General Manager Alex Nakajima. “Our staff was deeply impacted by the fires, with nearly a third losing their homes and possessions. As associates and the community work to heal, we continue to support them; welcoming back team members to work as they are ready. As we continue the recovery process, we are reopening our two golf courses for Kamaʻāina (local residents) on island and for those planning their return to Maui. As millions discovered during the pandemic, a round of golf can be good medicine for the mind, body and soul.”

Kapalua Golf’s Plantation Course and Bay Course are open to resort guests and daily-fee play. Arnold Palmer designed The Bay Course first, in 1975, which is more forgiving than the Plantation, a Coore-Crenshaw design that the duo built in 1991 and renovated in 2019. The Sentry is played annually at the Plantation Course, which ranks No. 17 in Golfweek’s Best Resort Courses list.

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Want to look like a winner? Check out the TravisMathew gear Jon Rahm has been rocking during his two-win heater

Jon Rahm is taking the look good, feel good, play good mentality to a whole new level.

After winning back-to-back events and four of his last six starts, it’s safe to say that Jon Rahm is on a heater.

Thanks to TravisMathew, Jon Rahm is also in a Heater.

The Heater polo has become Rahm’s go-to look, and after lifting trophies in consecutive weeks at the Sentry Tournament of Champions and American Express, we’re getting used to seeing Rahm celebrate in his Heather Scooter polo.

After a rough start, Rahm carded three birdies and an eagle in his final five holes to not only make the cut, but put himself into a tie for 14th place heading into the weekend at the Farmers Insurance Open.

In order for Rahm to pull off the threepeat, he’ll have to continue his look good, feel good, play good mentality, that starts with TravisMathew. Here’s a breakdown of how Rahm has dressed for success during his winning streak.

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Dressed for Success: Jon Rahm at the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

See how Jon Rahm Dressed for Success in TravisMathew apparel at the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Jon Rahm shot a 10-under 63 during the final round of the Sentry Tournament of Champions to complete an incredible comeback victory.

Collin Morikawa began the day six shots ahead of the field, adding his name to an infamous list of Sunday collapses on the PGA Tour.

Rahm took home a casual $2.7M for his efforts, vaulting him to the top of the money list for the 2023 season.

If you weren’t paying close attention, you might’ve thought Rahm looked like Tiger Woods on Sunday, as the Spaniard rocked a red shirt and black pants during his impressive round. According to Rahm, it was less of an homage and more of a “I forgot a few of my things” type of situation.

We’ve already taken a look into Rahm’s winning equipment, so now let’s dive into the champion’s closet and see how Rahm dressed for success at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Adam Scott becomes 7th PGA Tour golfer to surpass $60 million in career earnings

Scott leaves the island of Maui as the seventh Tour golfer to reach the money milestone.

Adam Scott came into the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions with $59,873,599 in career on-course earnings on the PGA Tour.

He’ll leave the island of Maui as the seventh golfer on Tour to rake in more than $60 million.

Scott banked $210,000 for his solo 29th-place finish at Kapalua. He was in the field not as a 2022 tournament champ but by virtue of a change in the qualifications that allowed those who made the previous season’s Tour Championship eligible for the Sentry.

He remains about $8 million behind Rory McIlroy, who skipped the Sentry. Among those still in front of Scott on the all-time list include Tiger Woods followed by a pair of LIV golfers and a pair of PGA Tour Champions golfers.

The top seven on the money list:

  1. Tiger Woods: $120,895,206
  2. Phil Mickelson: $94,955,060
  3. Dustin Johnson: $74,897,059
  4. Jim Furyk: $71,507,269
  5. Vijay Singh: $71,236,216
  6. Rory McIlroy: $68,064,549
  7. Adam Scott: $60,083,599

Right behind Scott on the all-time list are Justin Rose ($57,432,647) and Matt Kuchar ($55,183,496).

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TCU alum Tom Hoge flies to College Football Playoff National Championship game against Georgia between PGA Tour’s Hawaii stops

Why the detour? College loyalties die hard.

Hours after tying for third (and banking $840,000) in his debut appearance at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, Tom Hoge was headed to Los Angeles for a quick trip before returning to the islands for the Sony Open in Hawaii.

Why the detour? College loyalties die hard.

Hoge played college golf at TCU, graduating in 2011, and his Horned Frogs are enjoying a magical ride to the College Football Playoff National Championship. He attended the semifinal game against Michigan on New Year’s Eve in Glendale, Arizona. Monday’s tilt against Georgia kicks off at 7:30 p.m. ET. He and his wife, Kelly, will be among the thousands of purple-clad TCU fans at SoFi Stadium.

Hoge was scheduled to take a late Sunday flight from Maui to Los Angeles, according to the pgatour.com. He will then catch a 5 hour, 30 minute flight to Honolulu on Tuesday morning. Hoge, not among those scheduled to meet the media Tuesday at Waialae Country Club, simply doesn’t want to miss the Sony event.

“I never thought about skipping Sony. That’s one of my favorite events. I’ve had a lot of success on that course,” Hoge told pgatour.com. “There were some thoughts after I booked flights and hotels and all that stuff, whether I should really go to the game or not, but I think I want to be there for it. So we’ll do both.”

After his final round Sunday, Hoge was asked to put on his analyst hat.

“Oh, man, how much time do we got?” he said. “I’m hopeful that we can hang with ’em. The start’s going to be important, kind of like it was for the Michigan game, where we got ahead early and kind of hung on.

“But it’s going to be a fun game to be at. I’m hopeful that we’ll be in the fourth quarter with a chance to win. Max Duggan has kind of been our hero all year leading us back, so hopefully he can do it again.”

No word if fellow Sentry participants Brian Harman or Russell Henley, who both went to Georgia, will also be making the trip to L.A.

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Jon Rahm explains the ‘stupid’ reason why he wore Tiger Woods’ red and black Sunday at Sentry Tournament of Champions

“You want to know the honest truth? I forgot almost all the belts I was supposed to bring.”

KAPALUA, Hawaii – Jon Rahm wore a red shirt and black pants Sunday on his way to shooting 10-under 63 at Kapalua Resort’s Plantation Course and pulling off an improbable comeback to win the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

During his winner’s press conference, Rahm explained why he chose to wear an outfit made famous by Tiger Woods.

“I didn’t want to wear navy every day. So I just put on the black ones, not that I even had hope, but I’m like we’re going to need a small miracle. After bogeying 1, I was going to need somewhat of a larger miracle. It goes to say, you just got to do the little things properly,” Rahm said.

Left unsaid was why exactly Rahm had worn blue pants every day through the third round while competing in Maui.

“You want to know the honest truth?” Rahm said. “I forgot almost all the belts I was supposed to bring. So I had a navy belt and a black belt. And I told (wife) Kelley, ‘I’m not about to be a hot as hell all week wearing black pants and darker shirts, so navy it is.

“Then I went to Sunday and I said, ‘I do not want to wear navy pants again.’ So, because we’re teeing off at 10 a.m., there goes the black pants. And that’s all I can tell you. I know it’s a stupid answer to a stupid question, but that’s the truth. I usually don’t want to wear anything that’s close to red with black on Sundays because of Tiger. That’s his outfit. That’s why I wear gray or navy or other things usually. I don’t want to get close to him.”

But on this occasion, Rahm, who also confessed that he forgot socks too, had to have sponsor Travis Mathew ship him a black belt so he didn’t only have his blue belt.

“Yeah, I forgot a few things,” he said.

But not his game. Rahm notched his eighth career Tour title.

“I brought my clubs, that’s kind of all I was thinking of,” he said. “Brought my clubs, kid stuff, but I forgot a few of my things.”

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‘I’m willing to put in that work’: Collin Morikawa reacts to historic collapse at 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

“Sadness. I don’t know. It sucks,” he said of his immediate feelings after the round.

Three poor swings at the wrong times.

That’s how Collin Morikawa explained his historic collapse in the final round of the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions – won by Jon Rahm – that saw him join the list of nine players who squandered six-shot leads after 54 holes on the PGA Tour.

“Sadness. I don’t know. It sucks,” he said of his immediate feelings after the round. “You work so hard and you give yourself these opportunities and just bad timing on bad shots and kind of added up really quickly.”

Unfortunately for the 25-year-old American, Sunday wasn’t the only late blunder of his career. He also fumbled a five-shot lead in the final round of the 2021 Hero World Challenge.

“Hero is different. Hero started off bad, never found it, never felt good, just bad. Today it felt fine,” explained Morikawa, who faced the media with poise just minutes after his blunder-filled back nine. “Just made three poor swings, really, at the wrong times. It’s never a good time to put a poor swing on it, but sometimes it works out and these never worked out.”

Morikawa’s first bogeys of the week came Sunday on Nos. 14-16 at Kapalua’s Plantation Course and led him to match the second-worst score of the day, a 1-under 72. He knew he was in trouble when he reached the 15th green and realized he was putting for par to stay tied for the lead.

“At that point it’s a little different feeling than what you had early on,” said Morikawa. Rahm played his final seven holes at 6 under, whereas Morikawa was 2 over down the final stretch.

Morikawa said he’ll take a few days off to enjoy what Hawaii has to offer – admitting it won’t be as fun now – and will tee it up next at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in San Diego at the end of the month, followed by the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale (Feb. 9-12) and the Genesis Invitational (Feb. 16-19) at Riviera near Los Angeles, where he finished T-2 last season.

After an impressive college and amateur career at Cal, Morikawa found immediate success after turning pro with his win at the 2019 Barracuda Championship. In just 77 PGA Tour starts, Morikawa already has five wins on Tour – including a pair of majors at the 2019 PGA Championship and 2021 Open Championship – and 26 top-10 finishes.

So far this season, Morikawa has made the cut in all three of his official starts, but remains winless dating back to July 2021.

“We’re still getting there, but for me I know there’s still a lot of work to do,” he said. ” Obviously it shows today, but I’m willing to put in that work.”

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Prize money payouts for each PGA Tour player at the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, especially at the new designated events.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, especially at the new designated events. Just ask this week’s winner, Jon Rahm.

The 28-year-old Spaniard won the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions at the Plantation Course at Kapalua in Hawaii after a 10-under 63 in Sunday’s final round and a historic collapse on the part of Collin Morikawa. The win is the eighth of Rahm’s career, and for his efforts, the 2021 U.S. Open champion will take home the top prize of $2.7 million.

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions, which had a total purse of $15 million.

Sentry TOC: Winner’s bag | New gear spotted | Gallery

Sentry Tournament of Champions prize money payouts

Position Player Score Earnings
1 Jon Rahm -27 $2,700,000
2 Collin Morikawa -25 $1,500,000
T3 Tom Hoge -23 $840,000
T3 Max Homa -23 $840,000
T5 Tom Kim -22 $555,000
T5 J.J. Spaun -22 $555,000
T7 Tony Finau -21 $368,750
T7 K.H. Lee -21 $368,750
T7 Scottie Scheffler -21 $368,750
T7 Matt Fitzpatrick -21 $368,750
T11 Will Zalatoris -20 $292,500
T11 Luke List -20 $292,500
T13 Cameron Young -19 $265,000
T13 Jordan Spieth -19 $265,000
T13 Sungjae Im -19 $265,000
T16 Patrick Cantlay -18 $241,000
T16 Brian Harman -18 $241,000
T18 Viktor Hovland -17 $229,000
T18 Corey Conners -17 $229,000
T18 Aaron Wise -17 $229,000
T21 Mackenzie Hughes -16 $220,000
T21 Sepp Straka -16 $220,000
T21 J.T. Poston -16 $220,000
T21 Hideki Matsuyama -16 $220,000
T25 Seamus Power -15 $213,333
T25 Scott Stallings -15 $213,333
T25 Justin Thomas -15 $213,333
28 Trey Mullinax -14 $211,000
29 Adam Scott -13 $210,000
T30 Billy Horschel -12 $208,500
T30 Russell Henley -12 $208,500
32 Sam Burns -11 $207,000
33 Sahith Theegala -10 $206,000
34 Keegan Bradley -9 $205,000
T35 Chez Reavie -7 $203,500
T35 Ryan Brehm -7 $203,500
37 Adam Svensson -5 $202,000
38 Chad Ramey -2 $201,000
Xander Schauffele WD

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Collin Morikawa joins list of largest blown 54-hole leads in PGA Tour history

It was an amazing turn of events at the first tournament of 2023.

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He breezed through 54 holes at the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions without a bogey. He went to sleep on a six-shot lead after shooting 64-66-65 over the first three days.

His lead grew to seven during the final round but when Collin Morikawa bogeyed the 14th hole, things seemingly started slipping away and fast. He then bogeyed the 15th and then the 16th. To recap: Morikawa had 67 straight holes without a bogey and then three bogeys in a row.

Meanwhile, Jon Rahm started heating up. A first-hole bogey actually dropped him nine shots back of Morikawa but he then birdied five of his next eight holes to make the turn in 32. Three more birdies on Nos. 12, 13 and 14 and an eagle on the 15th hole rocketed Rahm into the outright lead.

Rahm then birdied the 18th hole for a 63 to get to 27 under and claim a two-shot win over Morikawa.

It was an amazing turn of events at the first tournament of 2023, as Morikawa joins a short list of nine golfers who also blew a six-shot, 54-hole leads on the PGA Tour.

Winner’s Bag: Jon Rahm, 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

Check out the clubs that got the job done in Hawaii.

A complete list of the golf equipment Jon Rahm used to win the PGA Tour’s 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions:

DRIVER: Callaway Paradym Triple Diamond (10.5 degrees), with Aldila Tour Green 75 TX shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Jon Rahm’s driver – $599.99″ link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/zaWJkG”]

FAIRWAY WOOD: Callaway Paradym Triple Diamond (16 degrees), with Aldila Tour Green 85 ATX shaft, (18 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD SI-8 shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Jon Rahm’s fairway wood – $349.99″ link=”https://pga-tour-superstore.pxf.io/NKgjyq”]

IRONS: Callaway Apex TCB (4-PW), with Project X 6.5 shafts

WEDGES: Callaway JAWS Raw (52, 56, 60 degrees), with Project X 6.5 shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Jon Rahm’s wedges – $179.99 each” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/x9BQ6v”]

PUTTER: Odyssey White Hot OG Rossie S  

BALL: Callaway Chrome Soft X

[afflinkbutton text=”Jon Rahm’s golf ball – $49.99 per dozen” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/rnVON3″]

GRIPS: Golf Pride MCC

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