Watch: In PGA Tour’s return, Sung Kang makes hole-in-one at Charles Schwab Challenge

In the PGA Tour’s first event back, watch Sung Kang make a hole-in-one at the Charles Schwab Challenge.

The PGA Tour is officially back this week with Thursday’s opening round of the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

Despite being professional golfers, after a three-month hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic you’d expect the players to be a little rusty, right?

Nope.

Justin Rose shot out to an early lead — using new clubs — with a 7-under 66, and Harold Varner III followed suit to join Rose at T-1. At the time of this post, 24 players were at 4-under par or better. Oh yeah, and Sung Kang made an ace and acted like it was just another fairway hit.

Kang made a hole-in-one on the par-3 13th hole for his second career PGA Tour ace. His first came at the 2011 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

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J.B. Holmes aces fourth hole at Waste Management Phoenix Open in up-and-down opener

J.B. Holmes’ early hole-out did much to erase a double-bogey at the second hole and help him chart a path to the clubhouse lead early in the day.

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It’s hard to lament the timing of a hole-in-one, but at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, everything is more exciting at the par-3 16th, also known as the stadium hole at TPC Scottsdale. Alas, when J.B. Holmes made an ace in the opening round, it came at the par-3 fourth, not the 16th.

Still, the early hole-out erased a double-bogey at the second hole and helped Holmes chart a path to the clubhouse lead early in the day.

RELATED: All the aces on Tour, 2019-20 season
MORE: Scores | Tee times | Updates | Photos

Holmes, who also got considerable TV time at last week’s Farmers Insurance Open when he drew a final-round pairing alongside Tiger Woods, opened with 7-under 64.

At the fourth hole, which checked in at 175 yards, he chose a 7-iron for his tee shot. When he walked away with the hole-in-one, it helped Holmes on his way to quite the rollercoaster round. After a double, a bogey, two birdies and the hole-in-one on the front, he straightened things out for the second half of his round.

Holmes closed with six birdies on his back nine and, oh yeah, one of those just happened to be in front of the crowd at No. 16.

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You’ve never seen a hole-in-one like this before

Laurent Hurtubise, who was born with one arm, aces the 151-yard 4th hole at PGA West’s Stadium Course in the pro-am at The American Express.

With apologies to PGA Tour veteran Martin Laird, who made an ace at the No. 6 on PGA West’s Stadium Course on Thursday, the shot of the day at The American Express — heck, for all of golf — belongs to Laurent Hurtubise, an amateur competitor in the pro-am for the seventh time, who made a hole-in-one of his own at the Stadium Course alongside his pro partner, Troy Merritt.

According to the PGA Tour, Hurtubise was born with one arm and started playing golf at age 11. (His right arm ends just below the elbow.) He and Merritt combined to shoot 5-under 67 and sit T-74 after the first round.

The video of his ace in the tweet will make your day.

It shows Hurtubise at the 151-yard fourth hole setting up as a lefty, gripping an iron with his left hand and sending the ball in the direction of the green, where it lands and makes a bee line for the hole. It was coming in hot but hits the center of the flagstick and drops for an improbable 1 on the scorecard.

MORE: Leaderboard | Photos | Round 2 tee times

The gallery roared with approval. Hurtubise lifted his left arm to the sky, flicked his hat off, and celebrated with high-5s. As he walked to the green, he took a bow and can be heard saying to a caddie, “What a feeling, huh?”

He grabbed the ball from the hole, held it aloft to the fans and pumped his fist.

Congrats, Laurent. We’ll all drink to you.

For more on his story, here’s a Desert Sun piece from 2018.

Charley Hoffman, Chez Reavie join hole-in-one club for 2019-20 season

Charley Hoffman and Chez Reavie both made an ace this weekend at the QBE Shootout.

NAPLES, Fla. — Most of the golf world’s attention was trained on Royal Melbourne for the Presidents Cup over the weekend.

And with good reason.

But golf junkies probably spent the earlier parts of their weekend days watching the QBE Shootout in Florida.

If you were among those who tuned in, you saw some pretty great shot-making, including a pair of aces.

The first one came in Friday’s first round off the club of Charley Hoffman.

On the par-3 12th hole, which was measuring 207 yards, Hoffman got a hole in one to help him and teammate Kevin Kisner get to 9-under for the day.

RELATED: All the aces on Tour, 2019-20 season

Then, during Sunday’s final round of the 54-hole event, Chez Reavie joined the fun with a hole-in-one, a 9-iron on the 175-yard eighth hole.

Reavie’s reaction seemed a bit subdued, maybe because it was his sixth ace on the PGA Tour and (yawn) 22nd overall.

“It was a solid shot from the outset, going straight at the flag,” said Reavie, who took the ball out of the hole, then gave it to a youngster alongside the gallery ropes.

Reavie and teammate Kevin Chappell finished 10th out of 12 teams. Hoffman and Kisner finished T-8.

Greg Hardwig of Naples Daily News contributed to this article.

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QBE Shootout: Bubba Watson says his game is just fine

Bubba Watson: “People forget I won three times in 2018 and was ranked just out of the top 10 in the World Ranking at the end of the year.”

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Bubba Watson is not finished nor is he wallowing in golf purgatory, or even remotely disturbed about the status of his game.

The reports from the critics or golf nerds on social media, noticing he is nowhere near Australia and the Presidents Cup this week, are running the gamut on what and why is wrong with the popular Watson.

Watson, while being besieged for autographs at Tiburón Golf Club after the QBE Shootout pro-am, delivered what amounted to a stern “state of Bubba’s golf game” message.

“The critics and social media are very premature with my situation and they just continue to make up stories,” said Watson, who lives near Pensacola and is involved with numerous business ventures in the Florida Panhandle.

“I didn’t win a tournament this past year so everyone says that’s it for a 41-year-old. I plan on winning again as soon as next year.”

QBE SHOOTOUT: Round 2 tee times, TV info

What prompted the growing chorus of concern about the two-time Masters winner was a year when he missed six cuts, had only three top-10 finishes, saw him drop to his current World Ranking of 41, and 81st in the FedEx Cup standings.

“People forget I won three times in 2018 and was ranked just out of the top 10 in the World Ranking at the end of the year,” said Watson, making his fifth appearance in the QBE Shootout.

Fueling additional speculation on his status was Watson not being a captain’s pick for the Presidents Cup team or even a vice-captain, a position he served at the 2016 Ryder Cup.

“I told Tiger at his tournament in the Bahamas last week that I’m probably way down the alternate’s or vice-captain’s list and I joked with him that I might hole up on the plane and show up at Royal Melbourne,” he said. “I do have a lot of confidence that I have the leadership skills to be helpful with team events.

“I enjoy helping, even if it’s just getting a team member a sandwich or a bottle of water. I still view being selected as a captain for a team event a Hall of Fame moment, an honor and privilege. Now other considerations have come into the selection process like trying to get the right people for TV ratings.”

While Watson is focused on getting back closer to the top or into a team event, he has a good reason to be happy when he comes home.

“In the old days there was a special feel when they selected you, but today the only thing I feel special about is having a wonderful wife and two great kids,” he said. “I would give up my two green jackets for their happiness.”

Watson joked that he would be a different captain, especially with a player like Tiger Woods.

“I would tell Tiger ‘You’ve won 82 times, just sit here and eat ice cream,’” he said.

Watson is teamed up with Charles Howell III. They shot a first-round 13-under 59. They are four back of Harold Varner III and Ryan Palmer, who tied the tournament mark with a 55.

Ace for Hoffman

Charley Hoffman was planning on an expensive post round cocktail hour after making a hole on the 207-yard par-3 12th hole with a 6-iron.

“I played the shot high in the air to the right and then let it come back in,” Hoffman said. “It landed soft and Kevin told me it rolled right in.”
Partner Kevin Kisner was waiting to start the celebration.

“He owes me some drinks starting right now upstairs,” Kisner said.

Hoffman’s partner last year, Gary Woodland, made a hole in one on the eighth hole.

“Neither one of us won a car,” Hoffman said. The ace was his fifth in PGA Tour competition and the 15th overall.

OSU coach watches Hovland, Wolff

Oklahoma State coach Alan Bratton followed former players Viktor Hovland and Matthew Wolff during the first round on Friday.

“You never know how you’re going to do out here,” Bratton said in an interview with Golf Channel’s Billy Ray Brown. “I know they would end up out here eventually, but I’m just really proud of the performance that they’ve had so far. Hopefully their career looks like this and just keeps taking off.

“We had Viktor for three years prepping him, whether it was Coach (Donnie) Darr and I, and all of our former players. It’s nice, OSU has four of the 24 players this week. They’ve had plenty of mentoring. They’ve been set free now, and they’re ready to take on the world. And hopefully they keep doing what they’re doing.”

The proteges didn’t do something they’d like to keep doing Friday, shooting a 7-under 65 and sitting in last place.

“We hit it good today but made no putts,” Wolff said. “This was my first scramble ever in competition but we’ve got two days left so we need to put up some low numbers.”

Greg Hardwig contributed to this article.

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Patton Kizzire makes a hole-in-one at RSM Classic

The ace was a bright spot on an otherwise forgettable final round for Patton Kizzire, who shot a 75 on Sunday.

It took an entire week but the PGA Tour has another hole-in-one.

On Sunday, in the final round of the RSM Classic in Sea Island, Georgia, Patton Kizzire aced the par-3 sixth hole.

He used an 8-iron from 181 yards.

The ace was a bright spot on an otherwise forgettable final round. Kizzire shot 69-69-67 the first three days but just didn’t have his best stuff on Sunday.

Two holes before his ace, he triple-bogeyed the 4th hole to fall to 8-over on the day. He ended up shooting a 75 and after his round quipped that he needed the ace to break 80.

It’s the 10th hole-in-one on Tour this season.

The National Hole-in-One Registry says that the odds of a PGA Tour pro getting a hole-in-one is 3,000-to-1. (It also says the “average” golfer has a 12,000-to-1 shot at making an ace).

In all, there were 36 holes-in-one last season.

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Matt Kuchar, Brian Gay drop Mayakoba aces within minutes of each other

Matt Kuchar and Brian Gay upped the PGA Tour’s season-long hole-in-one count by making aces within minutes of each other at Mayakoba.

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At Mayakoba, aces apparently come in packages of two. For the second time this week, holes-in-one were logged within minutes of each other. On Sunday, Matt Kuchar holed out at the par-3 eighth just minutes before Brian Gay, playing two groups ahead, logged an ace at the par-3 10th.

Interestingly, the par-3 fourth hole swallowed back-to-back aces during Friday’s first round (the tournament was pushed back a day after rain saturated El Camaleon Golf Club). First, Cameron Tringale holed out, then in the very next group, Chase Seiffert did the same.

It marked the first time since the 2004 Masters that aces were made in back-to-back groups.

Mayakoba: LeaderboardTV info | Photos

On Sunday, Kuchar moved from 3 under to 5 under on the day after dropping his tee shot at No. 8 right in front of the hole then watching it trickle the last few feet into the cup.

Gay’s shot into the 10th also landed a few feet short then curled back right and disappeared into the hole.

The PGA Tour season is young, but Kuchar and Gay went down as the eighth and ninth players to make a hole-in-one so far this season. There were 36 holes-in-one last season.

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Aces wild at Mayakoba Golf Classic

Not one, but two pros will be buying drinks tonight after acing the par-3, 4th hole at the Mayakoba Golf Classic.

Aces are wild at the Mayakoba Golf Classic.

With only one round in the books, there already have been two holes-in-one at the fourth hole – in back-to-back groups, no less.

First, it was Cameron Tringale, who teed off at 8:10 a.m. on Friday and marked a one on his scorecard at the 112-yard, par-3 fourth at El Camaleon Golf Club.

“It looked good the whole way,” Tringale told PGA Tour.com. “It landed about two inches short and went straight in.”

It was his second career hole-in-one on the PGA Tour (2011 Valspar Championship) and the second ace at the fourth hole in tournament history (Aaron Wise did the trick in Round 1 in 2016). Tringale signed for 2-under 69.

“It was early, so there weren’t too many spectators,” he said. “They cheered, threw their hands up. I wasn’t really paying attention to them. I was slapping fives with the guys in the group (Fabián Gómez and K.H. Lee).”

 

But, Tringale can split the bar bill for his heroics with rookie Chase Seiffert, who shot 68 and recorded his first hole-in-one on Tour, also at the fourth.

“We were in the fairway and heard the applause and saw (Tringale) kind of high-fiving everyone. I just tried to hit a 106 shot, downwind. It landed maybe a foot right of it and spun back into the pin. It’s kind of cool to go back-to-back there. Very rare,” Seiffert said. “There may have been six or seven people around the green, so it was quiet except for us on the tee. My caddie (Brian Fitch) and I high-fived way too hard, and my hand got a little sore for a few minutes.”

There were no keys to a car up for grabs, but Tringale and Seiffert were rewarded with bottles of Patrón tequila. The two aces ups the tally to seven in the first 10 events of the 2019-20 season. There were 36 holes-in-one last season.

When was the last time aces were made in back-to-back groups, you ask? Padraig Harrington and Kirk Triplett did so at the 16th hole in the final round of the 2004 Masters Tournament.

The National Hole-in-One Registry says that the odds of a PGA Tour pro getting a hole-in-one is 3,000 to 1. (It also says the “average” golfer has a 12,000 to 1 shot at making an ace).

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