Harry Hall gets first PGA Tour win at 2024 ISCO Championship via 5-way playoff

What a way to get your first win.

Talk about a clutch moment worth the wait.

Harry Hall picked up his first PGA Tour victory late Sunday night when he chipped in for birdie on the third playoff hole to win the 2024 ISCO Championship. Hall’s chip-in came on the par-3 ninth hole after he, Matt NeSmith and Pierceson Coody made par on the par-4 18th hole twice.

Even better for Hall, he’s set to become a dad next week.

Initially, it was a five-man playoff with Rico Hoey and Zac Blair involved, but the duo bogeyed the first playoff hole and knocked them out.

The fivesome all finished at 22 under par for the week, but it’s Hall walking away with the trophy.

He will not get into the Open Championship field since there weren’t any spots available, but he did win $720,000 and earn 300 FedEx Cup points.

With most of PGA Tour’s best in Scotland, here’s a look at the field for the ISCO Championship

The purse is $4 million, and the winner will earn 300 FedEx Cup points.

New name, same tournament, same stakes.

The 2024 ISCO Championship is set to begin Thursday from Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky. The event is co-sanctioned by the PGA Tour and DP World Tour and is the opposite-field event from the Genesis Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club.

Vincent Norrman picked up his first PGA Tour victory last year in the former Barbasol Championship, beating Nathan Kimsey in a playoff.

This year, there are numerous past PGA Tour winners in the field, as well as Michael Thorbjornsen, who finished No. 1 in the PGA Tour University standings for 2024, and Luke Clanton, the amateur who has made the cut each of the past two weeks on Tour.

The purse is $4 million, and the winner will earn 300 FedEx Cup points. Also up for grabs is a spot in the Open Championship to the highest-finishing golfer who isn’t already exempt.

Here’s a look at the field for the 2024 ISCO Championship:

Vincent Norrman wins 2023 Barbasol Championship for first PGA Tour win

Vincent Norrman became the second Swede on Sunday to win at the highest level.

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Vincent Norrman became the second Swede on Sunday to win at the highest level.

A couple hours after Linn Grant won on the LPGA for the first time, Norrman won his first PGA Tour event, claiming the 2023 Barbasol Championship.

Norrman bogeyed the par-4 18th to finish at 22 under and he was shaky from tee to green on the closing hole. Nonetheless, he made a putt when he needed to in order to force some extra golf and when they replayed the 18th on the first hole of the playoff against Nathan Kimsey, Norrman parred it while Kimsey posted a bogey.

Norrman started the day a shot back but shot a final-round 66 – including 30 on his front nine – to post his ninth straight under par round.

“I don’t think I can process this for a while. I’m lost for words,” he said of winning the tournament. “It’s amazing.”

Norrman won $684,000 for winning the opposite-field event. In 22 previous starts on the Tour, his career earnings were $789,768.

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Trevor Cone leads, Lucas Glover one back at 2023 Barbasol Championship

In 20 previous starts this season, Cone has zero top-20 finishes.

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While the biggest names in the game are across the pond battling at the Genesis Scottish Open — Rory McIlroy leads at 13 under — there’s another PGA Tour tournament happening at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky.

After 54 holes of the Barbasol Championship, this week’s opposite-field event, Trevor Cone leads at 17 under thanks to a third-round 9-under 63. Cone, the 450th-ranked golfer in the Official World Golf Ranking, has made 20 starts this season, missing 11 cuts. His best finish came at the AT&T Byron Nelson, where he tied for 23rd.

One stroke behind Cone are Lucas Glover (3-under 69) and Vincent Norrman (5-under 67). While Norrman is looking for his first win on Tour, Glover hasn’t hoisted hardware since the 2021 John Deere Classic. The 2009 U.S. Open champ tied for fourth at the Rocket Mortgage Classic and for sixth at the John Deere in his last two starts.

Adrien Saddier is alone in fourth at 15 under while Nathan Kimsey and Jayden Schaper are T-5, 14 under.

Check the yardage book: Champion Trace at Keene Trace GC for the PGA Tour’s Barbasol Championship

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps of Champion Trace, host course for the PGA Tour’s Barbasol Championship in Kentucky.

The Champion Trace course at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky – site of this week’s Barbasol Championship on the PGA Tour – was designed by Arthur Hills and opened in 1987.

Not far from Lexington, the private layout meanders through rolling hills. It will play to 7,328 yards with a par of 72 for the Barbasol Championship. The event has been played on the Champion Trace layout since 2015.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the players face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Jim Herman has an idea for past Barbasol Championship winners: ‘A little head start’

Jim Herman has finished in the top 30 in each of his last three events, including a T-28 at last weekend’s John Deere Classic.

Just in time to play the delayed role of defending champion, Jim Herman seems to have found his golf game.

After a rough patch earlier this year, one in which he missed the cut eight times in 10 tournaments, the Cincinnati native has finished in the top 30 in each of his last three events, including a T-28 at last weekend’s John Deere Classic in Silvis, Illinois.

And now Herman heads back to Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky, just on the outskirts of Lexington. Two years ago, Herman hoisted the trophy after the Barbasol Championship, using a scintillating 62 in the third round en route to the win.

Since this event was cut from the PGA Tour schedule a year ago, Herman has had an extra 12 months to enjoy his reign over a tournament that’s just about an hour from his boyhood home.

As for defending, he’d love to put a new rule in effect for past champs.

“I wish you could start off with a little head start. If they’d give that to
you, I’d definitely take it,” he said. “It’s hard to get back into that mode where you were on that Sunday. We hit all these golf balls, we do all the practice to put ourselves in this position where we’re in the final groups on the weekend. There’s a lot that goes into it and just to say that you could just walk into a
course where you’ve won that following year and assume you’re going to be in the mix is very naive of myself or anyone else.

“Just trying to have some carryover of my form from the last couple weeks and … draw from the emotion and the positive vibes that I did have from two years ago here and see if we can build on that.”

For Herman, the key in recent weeks has been his putter, which has moved him back into contention for the FedEx Cup playoffs. Herman currently sits at 174th (the top 125 reach the playoffs in August), but he’ll need a big showing in the Barbasol and in upcoming weeks to qualify.

Herman said in advance of this week’s title defense that his driver has been clicking, yet the putter is perhaps the biggest key. Even with recent strong showings, he still sits 169th on Tour in Strokes Gained: Putting.

But with soft conditions, he’s expecting another low number will capture the big prize.

“I think we’re going to have some low scores again. I don’t know if it will be 26 under like two years ago, but you’re going to just have to go low. The course is in good shape, but wet,” Herman said. “The greens are putting really well, but they’re soft. We’re going to be throwing darts all week. If the fans like birdies, we’re going to be making them this week.”

The opposite-field event is certainly ripe for the taking. With most of the world’s best players off at the British Open, Herman has as good a chance as any against the likes of Charl Schwartzel, Seamus Power, Russell Knox, Richy Werenski and Patrick Rodgers.

And if it doesn’t work out he’ll simply wait for his next chance to defend a crown — at the Wyndham Championship in early August. His only previous Tour victory came in 2016 at the Houston Open.

“With Wyndham coming up in about three or four weeks, there’s a lot of positive energy in my camp. All my friends and family, a lot of people looking forward to this event coming down from Cincinnati here in Lexington,” he said. “Then look forward to Memphis, playing Memphis in a couple weeks, and then getting back out to defending at Wyndham. Great tournament there, had a great weekend at Wyndham last year.

“Winning three times obviously it’s been way exceeding my overall expectations, but it’s been a pleasure being the champion three times in three great events.”

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