Erik van Rooyen continues to pay tribute to college teammate who died of cancer shortly after WWTC victory

“Yeah, that win last year meant so much.”

LOS CABOS, Mexico – Erik van Rooyen glanced at the oversized photo of him hanging in the back of the media center. There he is, clenching both fists and letting loose a guttural cry of celebration after holing a 20-foot eagle putt on the final hole to win the 2023 World Wide Technology Championship. Van Rooyen smiled and the memory of his heartwarming victory a year ago came rushing back.

“It’s pretty scary, man. Yeah, that’s a lot of emotion in a short space of time,” he said during his Tuesday press conference to kick off festivities at the PGA Tour FedEx Cup Fall event. “I think, you know, I pour my heart and soul into this sport like a lot of us do. Yeah, that win last year meant so much.”

Van Rooyen stormed home in 8-under 28 at the course Tiger Woods designed and erased a two-stroke deficit with three holes to play to win for the second time on the PGA Tour and do it for his terminally-ill friend. Moments later, van Rooyen hugged his caddie and former college teammate Alex Gaugert and both men broke into tears. Only a few days earlier, their fellow teammate at the University of Minnesota, Jon Trasamar, had informed them his cancer had returned and spread throughout his body. It was only a matter of time before his cancer fight would be over. Van Rooyen and Trasamar were college roommates for three years, teaming to win the 2014 Big 10 Championship, and Trasamar was van Rooyen’s best man in his wedding.

“He was like a brother to me,” said van Rooyen, who scribbled the initials “JT” on his ball all week.

After the win, van Rooyen canceled their flight to the next tournament in Bermuda and he and Gaugert flew home the next day and visited with their pal one last time. Trasamar died just days later on Nov. 11 from stage 4 melanoma at age 33.

Asked what he learned from his remarkable back-nine run to the winner’s circle, van Rooyen said, “I think I learned that I’m never quite out of it. I was four back going into the back nine. I know for a fact my mom and dad went to sleep when that happened in South Africa. They didn’t have faith. Yeah, I think regardless of how many I’m back, I think I’m always within a shot, so that gives me a ton of confidence.”

He added: “I’ve spoken about Jon a lot, but another thing I learned was even though this game means so much to me, it doesn’t really matter at the end of the day. So there’s much bigger things in life and that’s a lesson I’ve carried with me these last 12 months.”

Van Rooyen and his friends have established a scholarship in his name at the University of Minnesota.

This marks the first time van Rooyen has been able to defend a tournament he has won as a professional. He noted he arrived back a better player than a year ago when he was struggling to maintain his Tour card. Van Rooyen entered the week at No. 125 in the point standings and on the cusp of losing his playing privileges as his two-year exemption from winning the Barracuda Championship was set to expire. Van Rooyen sits at No. 67 in the point standings this season and called it his most consistent season. His game has improved across the board since he started working with swing instructor Sean Foley last year, and he’s particularly proud of the strides he’s made with his short game, which always had been a weakness.

Can the stars align for a repeat victory? Following his win at the SAS Championship last month, PGA Tour Champions player Jerry Kelly paid tribute to Trasamar. (Kelly’s niece Ali is Trasamar’s widow.) Van Rooyen may face a stouter test, especially on Thursday when the wind is forecasted to gust to more than 20 miles per hour, but he’s confident he can win another for JT.

“It came down to putting,” van Rooyen said of his victory a year ago. “If we get a bit of wind, it might be a different story this week, but if not, I’m a great putter, so I think all in all the course sets up beautifully for me.”

Caddie Alex Gaugert making a run for 2024 U.S. Open spot at Final Qualifying

Gaugert caddies for Erik van Rooyen, who’s already in the Open field.

RIDGEWAY, Ontario — One day after caddying at the RBC Canadian Open for Erik van Rooyen, Alex Gaugert is back in action at U.S. Open Final Qualifying. Only this time he’s competing in the 36-hole qualifier, not toting a bag.

“He missed a couple short putts but made a couple bombs,” said Gaugert’s brother, Austin, who carried a Sunday bag for his brother. “He hit a tee shot on the par-5 on the back nine and said I was right, so, he’s not a Tour player yet.”

Alex, who played competitively at University of Minnesota and Monday qualified for the 3M Open last summer, shot 4-under 67 in the first of two rounds on Monday at Cherry Hill Club, which was good for T-10. Sixty-six players were expected to compete for seven spots into the U.S. Open, which begins next Thursday at Pinehurst Resort’s No. 2 Course in North Carolina.

Gaugert shot 69 and was co-medalist at local qualifying at the Country Club of Sioux Falls in Sioux Falls, South Dakota on May 6. He told Golfweek on Saturday that he had only played nine holes since the local qualifier.

“For some reason, the less I play, the better I score,” he said.

Gaugert’s boss, van Rooyen, already has secured a spot in the field so Gaugert will be there no matter. Austin caddies on the PGA Tour for Ryan Moore and Alex said his brother likely would caddie for Van Rooyen if he were to qualify for Pinehurst, or he might just withdraw.

“I just want to see what happens,” he said Saturday.

On a warm sunny day at the Walter Travis layout, PGA Tour pros were at the top of the leaderboard. Davis Thompson birdied half the holes and shot 8-under 63, one better than Greyson Sigg and Mark Hubbard after the first round. Canadian Adam Svensson and Scotland’s Martin Laird shot 65 along with reigning Canadian Amateur champ Ashton McCulloch.

5 things: Erik van Rooyen hot in Mexico once again, leads Mexico Open at Vidanta over cousin of NHL player

This is the 63rd Mexico Open but just the third at Vidanta Vallarta.

The Mexico Open at Vidanta may not have the high-profile leaderboard as some other PGA Tour events, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t great storylines coming out of Vidanta Vallarta.

Defending champion Tony Finau is looking to go back-to-back south of the border. Raving about a place where he can play a par-3 course with his kids, Finau, the highest-ranked player in the field, is looking to win on Tour for the fourth season in a row.

He had four birdies in his first-round 69, but did post a double-bogey on the par-4 eighth hole, his second-to-last of the day.

Four golfers defended their title last season. Finau is seeking to be the first to do it in 2024. He was solo second two years ago, losing by a shot to Jon Rahm.

Mexico Open: Photo gallery

After a few weeks of wind and rain, the Tour is enjoying some fantastic weather along the Mexican coast. Here are five more things to know about the first round of the 2024 Mexico Open at Vidanta.

2023 Golfweek Awards: On-Course Moment of the Year

There were almost too many on-course moments to chose from in golf over the last year.

As the month of December winds down and January approaches, it’s time to look back on 2023 and reward some of the best moments the game of golf provided fans over the last year.

The staff at Golfweek originally had plans for a “Moment of the Year” but there was too much that happened both on and off the course to pick just one, so we’ve split the honor into two different awards.

From the Solheim Cup to the Masters to the PNC Championship and the World Wide Technology Championship, here are the Golfweek staff’s favorite on-course moments of the year in 2023.

Who’s up and who’s down in the FedEx Cup Fall standings after the World Wide Technology Championship

Here’s who moved up and down the point standings south of the border.

LOS CABOS, Mexico — Erik van Rooyen’s victory at the World Wide Technology Championship on Sunday took care of his concerns about keeping his job on the PGA Tour for not only next year but the one after that as Tour wins equate to a two-year exemption.

But for others, it’s getting late in the game to make a big splash and take care of business. One golfer who can rest easy over the final two weeks is Justin Lower, who has been a perennial bubble boy both on the Korn Ferry Tour and PGA Tour. But after a T-23 this week, Lower improved three spots to No. 107 in the standings.

“I thought about it a little bit. I did the math, I think I had a 75-point lead over the 125 spot, and I haven’t looked at projections at all this week,” he said. “It’s nice to just kind of relax a little bit, but it’s hard for me to relax out here.”

Asked what he will miss most about being on the bubble, he answered, “Absolutely nothing.”

Here’s who moved up and down the point standings south of the border.

Winner’s Bag: Erik van Rooyen, 2023 World Wide Technology Championship

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

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A complete list of the golf equipment Erik van Rooyen used to win the PGA Tour’s 2023 World Wide Technology Championship:

DRIVER: Callaway Paradym Triple Diamond (9 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana 60 TX shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop EVR’s driver” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/DKJvdd”]

HYBRID: Callaway Apex UW (17 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Blue 8 X shaft

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop EVR’s driver” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/rQBmN3″]

IRONS: Callaway X Forged UT (18 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD DI-95 X Hybrid shaft, Apex TCB (4), Apex MB (5-PW), with KBS Tour V 120X shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop EVR’s driving iron” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/k0Nr2d”]

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop EVR’s iron set” link=”https://globalgolf.pxf.io/eKbLZz”]

WEDGES: Callaway JAWS Raw (50, 54, 58 degrees), with KBS Tour V 120X shafts

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop EVR’s wedges” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/LXWMdM”]

PUTTER: Toulon Design San Diego

BALL: Callaway Chrome Soft X

[afflinkbutton text=”Shop EVR’s golf ball” link=”https://worldwidegolfshops.pxf.io/xkRg61″]

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

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‘Meant to be’: Erik van Rooyen wins 2023 World Wide Technology Championship for terminally-ill friend

“He used to play to not get embarrassed. It’s gonna take a little bit to let the predator out.” The predator came out on Sunday.

LOS CABOS, Mexico – As soon as Erik van Rooyen struck his 2-iron into the fairway at the par-5 finishing hole, he turned to his caddie Alex Gaugert and said, “One more of those,” implying he planned to use the same club again for his next shot.

Van Rooyen was tied for the lead on Sunday at El Cardonal at Diamante and when he heard he had 272 yards to the front and 304 yards to the hole, he said, “Perfect for the 2-iron.”

Gaugert had another idea.

“I’m like, Dude, I don’t mind something landing front edge and getting back there,” he said.

He started to run through a series of reasons why van Rooyen would be better off using a 17-degree 3-hybrid. He reminded him of the beauty he hit with the same club at 14 just a few holes earlier and the one at the first hole on Friday that set up an eagle.

“Oh, hell yeah,” van Rooyen said with a glint in his eye.

“Clear and committed,” Gaugert said.

Then as he had done on every shot all day, van Rooyen thought of their college teammate at Minnesota, Jon Trasamar, who had texted them on Tuesday with the news that he had about six weeks to live due to stage 4 melanoma.

“Then I flushed it,” van Rooyen said.

“Be as good as you look,” Gaugert barked at the ball and it more than obliged.

It stopped 20 feet past the hole and van Rooyen removed any doubt by rolling in his third straight putt of that length for a birdie-birdie-eagle finish.

“There’s nothing quite like it in life,” Van Rooyen said of his clutch 3-hybrid to the 18th green. “Yeah, that shot will be with me forever.”

Van Rooyen stormed home in 8-under 28 at the course Tiger Woods designed and erased a two-stroke deficit with three holes to play to win the World Wide Technology Championship.

How did he pull off an improbable two-stroke victory over Matt Kuchar and Camilo Villegas? To Gaugert it was simply meant to be.

“That should be the headline of every news article that’s written because there’s no reason he should have won this golf tournament. There’s no way to describe it other than it was it was meant to be,” Gaugert said.

It was meant to be even after van Rooyen opened with a bogey on a par 5 after dumping his approach in the front bunker and failing to extricate himself on his first attempt.

“The start we got off to today made you want to puke,” Gaugert said.

But then van Rooyen rolled in a 35-foot birdie at the second and thought to himself, “this is a silly game so just keep playing.”

But by the seventh hole, van Rooyen turned to Gaugert in the fairway and said it was time to press. Gaugert, who remains a good enough player that he was a Monday qualifier for the 3M Open in July, talked him out of it and advised him to stay patient, “let it happen,” as he put it, and stay disciplined. Van Rooyen listened, agreeing it was too soon to hit the panic button.

“And then I sprayed (my next shot) right of the green. So it’s funny how that works. Hit a really good chip,” he said.

Meanwhile, Villegas made birdies on four of the first six holes and Kuchar reeled off five in his first 12 holes to assume the lead.

This was a big week for van Rooyen. The 33-year-old South African native entered the week ranked No. 131 in the FedEx Cup standings and his two-year exemption for winning the 2021 Barracuda Championship was expiring in a few weeks if he didn’t have a good finish. He suffered through a stretch of seven missed cuts in a row from early May to early June and in 27 previous starts on the season had more missed cuts (14) than he had made (13). He began working with instructor Sean Foley, who helped him more with the mental game than the golf swing during their hour-long conversations. Van Rooyen’s final-round 63 marked his 13th consecutive round of par or better. Gaugert went so far as to send Foley a text six weeks ago thanking him for his efforts.

Foley’s response speaks volumes: “He used to play to not get embarrassed, and it’s gonna take a little bit to let the predator out,” Gaugert recalled Foley wrote.

The predator came out on Sunday. Van Rooyen birdied four of the first five holes on the back nine and then came to the difficult par-4 15th, where one day earlier Kuchar had a five-stroke lead before making a quadruple-bogey 8 there.

Van Rooyen aimed his 9-iron about 10 yards right of the flag and tugged it five yards left of it. “It was a putrid shot,” Gaugert said. Yet it defied gravity and stayed on the fringe.

“I have no clue how other than our buddy Jon was with us,” Gaugert said. “Erik’s ball should have never ever stayed up there.”

“We both kind of looked at the sky and we were like, maybe it’s written in the stars,” van Rooyen said. “When that happened, I was like, ooh, we might have a chance.”

That wasn’t Gaugert’s only thought. He told van Rooyen that etiquette be damned, they needed to play their next shot before the ball rolled down the slope. Van Rooyen sheepishly asked Kuchar if he could play out of turn.

“He was very nervous to do so. And I go, ‘Ask him now.’ The wind was picking up, if the wind gives us any sort of gust his ball is going down,” Gaugert said.

They left the green with a par and then van Rooyen rolled in back-to-back 20-foot birdie putts to tie for the lead. On his ball, van Rooyen had written the initials “JT,” for Trasamar, the first person he met when he arrived from South Africa to attend Minnesota, his roommate of three years and his best man at his wedding nine years ago. Despite job security for next season being shaky at best coming into this week, van Rooyen and Gaugert had booked a flight on Saturday afternoon to fly home to Minnesota on Monday morning to go see their ill friend Tuesday. Depending on how the final round played out, they had a reservation to Bermuda that would arrive at 11pm on Wednesday and they would tee it up on Thursday without seeing the course in advance.

“We ain’t playing Bermuda now,” said Gaugert.

It was meant to be that the win will allow them to spend more precious time with JT.

After van Rooyen sank the winning eagle putt for a 72-hole aggregate of 27-under 261, he and Gaugert embraced in one of the longest bro-hugs ever on the 18th green. Van Rooyen said that Gaugert, usually the stoic one who keeps the more volatile van Rooyen in line and helps balance him out, simply cried. But Gaugert also had a memory flash through his head. During his senior season in 2013, their pal Trasamar earned Big Ten Golfer of the week honors after placing second at the Barnabas Health Intercollegiate. It included a career-low 66 in the second round.

“He beat me by a stroke with a back-nine 28, just like Erik,” Gaugert said.

It turned out Gaugert’s memory was off by a stroke. Trasamar had shot a back-nine 29, but that only made Gaugert smile.

“He just wanted to give Erik an extra stroke,” he joked.

Sometimes it’s just meant to be.

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Top 125 bubble watch: Which PGA Tour players are on the verge of losing their cards?

Some golfers are in danger of losing their status.

Some players have work to do to ensure themselves of a PGA Tour card come 2024.

With only three events left in the FedEx Cup Fall, numerous golfers will have to battle it out to remain inside the top 125 in the FedEx Cup Standings to ensure they keep their card for the 2024 season. The World Wide Technology Championship, Butterfield Bermuda Championship and RSM Classic could be the difference in someone playing on the PGA Tour next year or losing their card.

Plenty of FedEx Cup points remain up for grabs, and a win could even vault someone into the 51-60 spot, which earns spots in the first two signature events of 2024 at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and Genesis Invitational.

Additionally, in a new change, players who finish 126-200 in the FedEx Cup Standings can accept full membership on the DP World Tour.

Here’s a look at which PGA Tour pros have work to do to retain their card for the 2024 season.

(Note: some golfers may be below the top 125 in the standings but are exempt because of career achievements.)

Editor’s note: A previous version of this story incorrectly included Cameron Champ. 

Ecco Golf, Erik van Rooyen introduce signature edition Biom H4 shoe

Ecco Golf and Erik van Rooyen have had a successful partnership for years.

Ecco Golf and Erik van Rooyen have had a successful partnership for years, and they have come together to redesign and showcase van Rooyen’s passion for fashion and music through the new Biom H4 shoe.

Last summer, the duo launched the first edition of EVR’s signature shoe. The revamped design is equally striking and eye-catching with hints of the South African’s love for guitar, his iconic jogger pants and his famous mustache.

“I’m very excited to once again join forces with Ecco Golf to create another signature edition style,” said van Rooyen. “The previous version that we created together was super cool, and I received plenty of compliments out on tour. I didn’t think it would be possible to top those, but with this new model I think we’ve done exactly that.”

Ecco Golf and Erik van Rooyen introduce signature edition Biom H4 shoe
Ecco Golf and Erik van Rooyen introduce signature edition Biom H4 shoe. (Ecco Golf)

The Biom H4 features an updated leather upper, specifically around the toe area to produce a slimmer look, while the tongue has been entirely redesigned to produce a more ergonomic shape that fits more comfortably to the foot.

This shoe continues to feature the Biom 2.0 last and the Biom Natural Motion Technology to helps the foot move naturally, close to the ground and forms like a second skin around the foot.

Erik van Rooyen Signature Edition Ecco Biom H4
Erik van Rooyen Signature Edition Ecco Biom H4. (Ecco Golf)

The Ecco MTN Grip outsole includes three sections to provide a blend of traction, stability and rotational support. Ecco’s popular Fluidform Direct Comfort Technology allows for a high level of cushioning and rebound support.

From the outsole to the midsole, the shoe features X-Tensa technology, which connects the TPU element on the side of the Biom H4 with the lace system to enhance lateral stability.

The Biom H4 is 100 percent waterproof and breathable using Ecco’s Gore-Tex technology that keeps feet dry and comfortable in all conditions. 

“Anyone that’s seen me play knows that I really enjoy being different and innovative on the golf course, and it’s awesome that the Ecco Golf team allows me to reflect that in my signature edition styles. To be able to create my own shoe is a real honor, and Biom H4 is such a great model to do it with.”

To shop and learn more about the shoe go to golf.ecco.com.

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Caddie who Monday Q’d into 3M Open shares special moment with boss on final hole

“It was a dream.”

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BLAINE, Minn. — Erik van Rooyen’s eyes welted with tears as he stood next to his caddie in the interview area.

Alex Gaugert was holding his daughter in his left arm while trying to find words to describe what his past few days had been like. Gaugert’s family stood behind a handful of reporters watching as he detailed his week.

Gaugert, who Monday qualified into the 3M Open, is van Rooyen’s full-time caddie. This week, however, he played alongside his boss for the first two rounds at TPC Twin Cities.

“It was a dream,” Gaugert said. “It happened fast. Monday qualifiers, you know, never done one and to get through was pretty cool. Then the Tour allowed us to play together. That was really memorable and something we’ll never forget.

“I know after I qualified there was definitely a few tears shed and it was really, really cool. And all the support, all the caddies and even the players, it was nice to get that feeling where everybody’s kind of trying to — everyone’s lifting you up and telling you ‘good job.’ It was cool to kind of have the light shine on you for a week, so it’s fun.”

Added van Rooyen: “I was talking to a few people earlier in the week, when we were playing college together, this was what we were all talking about. Oh, man, we’re gonna play the PGA Tour together, we’re gonna room together, play practice rounds together. We get to share that a little bit with him on the bag, but with him playing a tournament, it was really, really cool.”

The duo were teammates at Minnesota from 2010-13. Gaugert became van Rooyen’s full-time caddie in 2019.

Gaugert finished at 6 over for the week, following an opening 6-over 77 with an even-par performance on Friday. Meanwhile, van Rooyen shot 3-under 68 on Friday and sits at 3 under for the week, right on the projected cut line as the afternoon wave gets underway.

On their final hole Friday, the duo embraced, celebrating an incredible week.

“You don’t get these special moments every single week,” Gaugert said. “This game’s hard and it was — it’s cool to share that with my best friend, something I’ll never forget.”

The moment was also special for van Rooyen, as it makes him appreciate playing on the PGA Tour even more. As far as Gaugert’s job security down the road?

“Oh, yeah, his job’s safe,” van Rooyen said. “Trust me, we’ve been through some highs and we’ve been through some lows together. Nothing can shake us, so we’re all good.”