Collin Morikawa’s longtime teacher Rick Sessinghaus saw the ‘it’ factor early in a curious 12-year-old

Rick Sessinghaus and his longtime student Collin Morikawa have a kinship when it comes to knowledge. They always want more.

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A dozen years have passed, but the conversation remains vivid in the scholarly mind of Rick Sessinghaus.

The noted golf instructor in Southern California who was giving 50-60 lessons per week back then, especially to those in the junior ranks, sat down next to his wife, Kathy, in their Burbank home. After talking about how each’s day went, Sessinghaus began chatting about one of his star pupils.

Not an 18-year-old stud, mind you. Or a 16-year-old prodigy.

Dial down the years.

“I told my wife I had this kid who had the ‘it’ factor,” said Sessinghaus, a PGA Golf Professional who earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Speech Communications and a Masters and Doctorate in Applied Sports Psychology. “I told her I really believe he is going to succeed at the highest level.

“And he was 12 at the time.”

His name? Collin Morikawa.

Collin Morikawa AJGA
A 16-year-old Collin Morikawa competing on the AJGA in July 2013. (AJGA photo)

Add another Masters in Prophesy to Sessinghaus’ list of degrees, for the youngster grew up to be a monster in the junior, collegiate and professional ranks.

HOW TO WATCH: TV, streaming info for PGA Championship

Sessinghaus was right there at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco in August 2020 when Morikawa won the PGA Championship, his first major triumph in just his second try, which is his biggest victory of four on the PGA Tour in just 45 starts.

“I didn’t say that flippantly,” Sessinghaus said. “There are plenty of kids who can hit the ball. That’s the baseline stuff. I just told her I had a 12-year-old who askes a lot of great questions, is super competitive, has a great attitude, is curious, whose parents were supportive but not getting in the way. His parents and Collin weren’t obsessed with winning at the time.”

Instead, Morikawa was passionate about learning how the mind works and how to check a chip shot and move the ball both ways. Sessinghaus realized that when they met for the first time shortly after Morikawa blew out eight candles on his birthday cake. Yes, Morikawa was 8 and Sessinghaus was 33 when they shook hands for the first time.

An Odd Couple? Only in age. Their kinship quickly took hold as much for each other’s love for the game as for their thirst for knowledge.

“I was on the right side of the driving range at Scholl Canyon Golf Course when his dad walked over to me and asked if I’d work with his son,” Sessinghaus said. “Collin was with him and he had this big smile on his face and his cute little golf bag. And after two swings, I said, ‘You bet I will work with him.’

“I could tell right away his engagement for his lessons. He was attentive, somebody who was very coachable, and would think things out. He wasn’t a huge talker, by any means, but when he talked, he had very good questions.

“He was very attentive, he wanted to learn, and he had that at a very early age.”

Collin Morikawa Cal
Collin Morikawa during his time on the Cal roster. (Photo: Eric Miller)

Morikawa was of the same mind as his much older instructor. He tapped into Sessinghaus’ ABC’s of mindset principles and appreciated him knowing the X’s and Y’s of the golf swing and being able to play the game at a high level.

“What was appealing with Rick was he was always competitive. As an 8-year-old, I was really competitive. I always wanted to compete against anyone. Rick brought that out of me even more,” Morikawa said. “At all our lessons, we always finished with a contest, whether it was putting, chipping, hitting a shot, whatever it was.

“We did that forever and ever and ever.

“As an 8-year-old you’re trying to beat Rick, who is your coach, and it just kept me wanting to become better, trying to find ways to beat him. I never made an excuse that he was older and could hit it farther. I just wanted to beat him.”

Sessinghaus, now 49 (Morikawa is 24), said he learned early on his young pupil had the makeup to understand and train for being in a flow state, otherwise known as being in the zone.

“Somebody’s DNA in flow states is someone who is completely in the present moment,” Sessinghaus said. “One of the flow triggers for focus is curiosity. What that means is if I can look at a situation in a curious way, it actually takes fear out of the equation. I just want to learn about the present moment. Some people are more wired like that than others.

Collin Morikawa
A young Collin Morikawa competing on the AJGA. (AJGA photo)

“Collin had an interesting mix. He was curious yet creative. He certainly wanted to know the causes and effects of how A+B=C, but he processed it in a way that I think is best for an athlete, which is creative and athletic and not trained to be perfect. He wanted to understand the why. Once he got that answer, it was awesome. I’ve always told him if I don’t have the answer, I will find it for him. He knew I was never going to BS him.”

And Sessinghaus quickly learned Morikawa never played the victim.

“We constantly assessed a tournament not on why he won or didn’t but what did he learn. When he was 16, he played in a tournament at PGA National where they play the Honda Classic, and he came back and said, ‘Rick, I played poorly because I don’t know how to flight my irons in the wind,’” Sessinghaus said. “He said, ‘We need to learn how to flight my irons.’ He wasn’t the victim because it was windy. He took ownership. He never made excuses. That was different.”

The connection grew by the day and remains as strong as ever. And both are continuing journeys to better places.

“The best thing Rick brings to me is his thirst for knowledge, his quest to learn new things and get better,” Morikawa said. “Yes, we’re trying to get better at what we are great at, but Rick is looking for things we’re not great at and try to get better in those areas, whether it deals with the mental process or the golf swing. We’re always trying to gain an advantage.

“I just want to observe and learn and know as much as possible with what’s going on around me. Whether I love the topic or not, if I’m in that situation, I want to learn about it. I want to know how something works; I want to know the history of something. That’s just kind of how my brain works.

“I’m a pretty observant person. So is Rick. So it’s a perfect match.”

[lawrence-related id=778103950,778104500]

How to watch the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island

Get a breakdown of the TV and streaming options for the fourth of six majors on the PGA Tour’s 2020-21 Super Season.

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The second men’s major of 2021 and the fourth of six during the PGA Tour’s 2020-21 Super Season is the PGA Championship at the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort in South Carolina.

Collin Morikawa comes in as the defending champ. He won the PGA last August at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco.

Rory McIlroy won the 2012 PGA Championship at Kiawah, his second major in all and the first of his two PGAs. He won by eight strokes at Kiawah and his final-round 66 matched the tournament’s low score in the final round. He also broke Jack Nicklaus’ 32-year-old record for largest victory margin at the PGA.

CBS Sports and ESPN and their respective streaming services on Paramount+ and ESPN+ have the coverage once again. It’s the second year an of 11-year media rights deal with the PGA of America. For CBS, 2021 marks the 31st consecutive PGA Championship on the network and 38th overall. The networks will combine to feature wire-to-wire, 72-hole coverage.

Golf Channel will also be on location at Kiawah with its signature Live From show all week.

In addition, SiriusXM will have radio coverage starting Thursday.

Here is the TV and streaming information for the 103rd PGA Championship.

Note: All times listed are ET.

Monday, May 17

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 7 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

Tuesday, May 18

PGA Coaching Live, 8 a.m., ESPN+

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Coaching Live, 11 a.m., ESPN+

Tuesday at the PGA Championship, noon, ESPN+
(First- and second-round pairings will be announced on this show)

PGA Coaching Live, 2 p.m., ESPN+

PGA Coaching Live, 5 p.m., ESPN+

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 7 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Championship

Wednesday, May 19

PGA Coaching Live, 8 a.m., ESPN+

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Coaching Live, 11 a.m., ESPN+

Wednesday at the PGA Championship, noon, ESPN+

PGA Coaching Live, 2 p.m., ESPN+

PGA Coaching Live, 5 p.m., ESPN+

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 7 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Championship player interviews powered by Zoom, throughout the day on PGAChampionship.com

PGA Championship

Thursday, May 20

TV

SportsCenter at the PGA Championship, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., ESPN

PGA Championship On the Range, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. CBS Sports Network

First round, 1 to 7 p.m., ESPN

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 7 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report, 8 p.m., CBS Sports Network

First round replay, 10 p.m., ESPN2

Streaming

First round, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m., ESPN+

Featured groups, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., ESPN+

Featured holes (Nos. 16, 17, 18), 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., ESPN+

PGA Coaching Live, 7 a.m., ESPN+

PGA Coaching Live, noon, ESPN+

PGA Championship player interviews powered by Zoom, throughout the day on PGAChampionship.com

Radio

First round, 1 to 7 p.m., SiriusXM

PGA Championship

Friday, May 21

TV

SportsCenter at the PGA Championship, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., ESPN

PGA Championship On the Range, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. CBS Sports Network

Second round, 1 to 7 p.m., ESPN

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 7 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report, 8 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Second round replay, midnight, ESPN

Streaming

Second round, 7 a.m. to 1 p.m., ESPN+

Featured groups, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., ESPN+

PGA Coaching Live, 7 a.m., ESPN+

Featured holes (Nos. 16, 17, 18), 8:15 a.m. to 7 p.m., ESPN+

PGA Coaching Live, noon, ESPN+

PGA Championship player interviews powered by Zoom, throughout the day on PGAChampionship.com

Radio

Second round, 1 to 7 p.m., SiriusXM

PGA Championship

Saturday, May 22

TV

Third round, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., ESPN

Third round, 1 to 7 p.m., CBS

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 7 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report, 8 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Streaming

Third round, 8 to 10 a.m., ESPN+

Featured groups, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., ESPN+

Featured holes (Nos. 15, 16, 17), noon to 7 p.m., ESPN+

Third round, 1 to 7 p.m., Paramount+

PGA Championship player interviews powered by Zoom, throughout the day on PGAChampionship.com

Radio

Third round, 1 to 7 p.m., SiriusXM

Wannamaker trophy

Sunday, May 23

TV

Final round, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., ESPN

Final round, 1 to 7 p.m., CBS

Golf Central – Live From the PGA Championship, 7 p.m., Golf Channel (Watch for free on fuboTV)

PGA Championship Clubhouse Report, 8 p.m., CBS Sports Network

Streaming

Final round, 8 to 10 a.m., ESPN+

Featured groups, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., ESPN+

Featured holes (Nos. 15, 16, 17), noon to 7 p.m., ESPN+

Final round, 1 to 7 p.m., Paramount+

PGA Championship player interviews powered by Zoom, throughout the day on PGAChampionship.com

Radio

Final round, 1 to 7 p.m., SiriusXM

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Rory McIlroy’s 2012 PGA Championship victory at Kiawah Island proved he was ready to become one of the game’s next superstars

Rory McIlroy’s 2012 PGA Championship victory at Kiawah Island was a major milestone in his career.

It’s easy to forget there were missteps.

Like on No. 3 during a stormy Saturday, for example, when Rory McIlroy’s tee shot rattled around in a cut-off limb hanging off a dead oak tree and stayed there, some eight feet above the ground. He and a search party had been scouring the high grasses frantically until a television crewmember broke the news. He retrieved his ball, declared an unplayable, wedged onto the green from 70 yards and saved a brilliant par.

Then there was the scene on the 16th hole during Sunday’s final round, when a club nearly came flying out of McIlroy’s hands as he pulled a shot left into a massive bunker. The way the Northern Irishman contorted his body belied the comfort of the moment, even if it was the 94th PGA Championship. And while greenside bunkers usually are not bad landing areas for second shots, the depth and scale of this one left a long, awkward recovery to a small green.

McIlroy was well in front of the field on the final day at Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course, and while this wasn’t completely foreign, even for a major — he’d lapped the field by eight strokes during the U.S. Open just 14 months before at Congressional Country Club — it felt different. Unlike his previous major victory, which seemed to introduce McIlroy as a potential heir, a convincing win here would cement his royalty.

Now in the deep bunker, perhaps he was displaying a crack in the armor, an opportunity not for those in pursuit to necessarily catch him, but simply to make things respectable.

Any crisis was averted, however, when McIlroy calmly splashed the sand and stuck a shot to inside eight feet, leaving a par putt that he drained with supreme confidence.

There would be no mistaking this; as much as Tiger Woods had rooted himself as the supreme ruler of professional golf, the cheering masses now had a prince.

Rory was for real.

Rory McIlroy finds his ball lodged in a tree on the third hole during the third round of the 2012 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

Hot-and-cold leadup

Certainly, there were signs McIlroy was set to become a dominant force prior to Kiawah, but for every hot stretch — like a victory at the 2012 Honda Classic, where he held off Tiger Woods — there was the cold Rory McIlroy, missing three cuts in four starts in the middle of the year, including his U.S. Open defense at The Olympic Club in San Francisco.

And then there was the hot-and-cold Rory, one who fired an opening-round, 3-under 67 in the Open Championship, only to fade to a T-60 finish. But he followed it up with a T-5 at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, with closing rounds of 67-67-68.

It was tough to get a handle on just which McIlroy might be present that week.

“There were a few goals I set myself early at the start of the year, which I achieved: getting to No. 1 in the world, and playing well, winning a tournament early,” he said on the eve of 2012’s final major.

“And then the second half of the season has been – it’s still been pretty good. It’s been a little bit more of a struggle. I feel like I’m playing pretty well, so, I mean, if I had to give my season a grade to this point, I’d probably give it a B.”

But that grade was about to jump.

McIlroy knew Mother Nature was going easy on players in the first round of the PGA Championship and he needed to make the most of her mercy. He did so with an easy 5-under 67 that showed off a skill set that hadn’t been showing its full potential in previous months.

He missed just three greens and four fairways in his bogey-free tour of the Ocean Course. All his birdies came on putts of 15 feet or less. “It’s a great score to build on,” McIlroy said.

There was little wind and rains early in the week softened the layout, taking the bite out of its then-record-setting length.

Rory McIlroy watches his drive from the fourth tee during the second round of the 2012 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

“It’s a little bit softer, so that makes the fairways wider, and the wind really hasn’t blown, and the greens are still a little bit soft,” McIlroy said. “I think we’ve seen it about as easy as it can get this morning.”

The Ocean Course played at 7,668 yards, just eight yards off its maximum. McIlroy said the layout didn’t feel long, though, in that opening round. Nothing less than 8,000 yards would, he added. Soft fairways allowed McIlroy to rely on driver most of the day.

His day started with a birdie at the 10th hole, his first, after hitting a sand wedge to 12 feet. He hit 3-iron to 12 feet on the 249-yard, par-3 14th hole to get to 2 under par. He got up-and-down for birdie on the par-5 16th and made the turn in 3-under 33. He two-putted the par-5 second hole for birdie after hitting 5-wood to 40 feet, then made his final birdie of the day when he hit pitching wedge to 15 feet on No. 6. As McIlroy said, they were five “solid” birdies.

“I’m expecting this to be the best day of the week,” McIlroy said. “I think everyone is. … It’s just something that you’re going to have to deal with, and I’m just happy that I got off to a great start.”

McIlroy had famously has struggled at the Pete Dye-designed TPC Sawgrass, the Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, site of the Players Championship, where odd angles make for uncomfortable tee shots. Kiawah Island also is a Dye design, though the courses’ similarities are few. The Ocean Course is more reminiscent of another Dye design that hosted a recent PGA Championship, Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin, where McIlroy finished third two years before.

The majors had been a struggle for McIlroy that season, though. A 40th-place finish at Augusta National was his best of the year prior to Kiawah. He missed the cut at the U.S. Open and tied for 60th at the Open Championship.

“This is the last chance you have to put your name on a piece of silver that will be remembered forever,” McIlroy said.

But a fifth-place finish at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational was his best since a runner-up showing at the Wells Fargo Championship in May. He credited his putting instructor, Dave Stockton, who told McIlroy to smile more on the course. He also changed his practice habits.

“I was working very hard on technical stuff for the last few weeks, and then a slight mental adjustment as well,” McIlroy said. “I feel like I was hitting too many balls on the range. I just needed to go out there and play a bit more on the course and see shots.”

Rory McIlroy putts on the third green during the second round of the 2012 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

Weekend warrior

On Saturday, despite a bogey at the par-4 ninth, McIlroy still managed to blister the Ocean Course’s front nine in 32 shots, rocketing to the top of the leaderboard next to Vijay Singh, a man more than twice his age.

Three months past his 23rd birthday, a win by McIlroy would make him younger than Tiger Woods was when he captured his second major (the 1999 PGA, at 23 years, 7 months). But play was suspended midway through Saturday’s third round, and there was plenty of work to be done before any coronation.

“I’m going into the final day of the final major of the season tied for the lead, so I mean, I can’t ask for much more,” said McIlroy, who was 6 under, deadlocked with Singh and a single shot ahead of Adam Scott. “So, you know, I don’t care if it’s going to be 27 holes, 18 holes, 36 holes . . . I’m just happy to be going in there in a good position.”

Woods slid backward on Saturday (playing his first eight holes in 4 over), and that’s when McIlroy made a move. That’s not to say the nine holes he played were devoid of ample drama.

He rolled in a nice right-to-left curler for birdie at the first hole, then experienced two bizarre holes. At the par-5 second, he had 275 yards to the green and hit 5-wood, but immediately lost track of the shot. His initial reaction was one of concern.

“It came off a little higher than I anticipated, and I had no idea,” McIlroy said later. “I had to turn and ask JP (Fitzgerald, his caddie) where the ball was.”

His ball ended up in the center of the green, setting up a second consecutive birdie.

With his late-afternoon finish Saturday, he planned to return to the posh home he and his camp have rented for the week on the island, put his feet up and relax.

“You know,” he said, “I’ve come in here with a little bit of confidence from the way I played last week. It’s just been nice to take that into this week and show it out on the golf course. You know, there’s still a lot of guys with a chance to win going into tomorrow – 27 holes left, you’ve still got a long way to go.

“I’ve put myself in a nice position going into tomorrow. And as I said here on Wednesday, that’s all I really wanted to do. It should be exciting.”

Rory McIlroy takes his hat off on the 18th green after finishing Round 2 of the 2012 PGA Championship at the Ocean Course.

Fantastic finish

On Sunday, McIlroy was one of more than two dozen players who had to return to the course to finish their third round.

This was where he took charge, using birdies on Nos. 15 and 16 and a big par save on the 17th to close with a 67. That put McIlroy in front by three strokes and gave him the peace of mind to take a nap before the final round.

He went for the jugular soon after, burying a wedge from wood chips on the second hole to inside six feet and converting the birdie putt.

No. 3 is a fascinating little hole, with the chief issue being a top-hat green protected by two live oaks 35 yards short, right smack in the middle of the widest fairway on the course. Since the tees were moved up to make this a true risk-reward, McIlroy’s smooth drive led to a flip wedge that he got within 15 feet.

He made the putt and never looked back, finishing with a 66, his best round of the week when it seemed the pressure would have him wound the tightest.

McIlroy finished 13 under for the week, eight strokes ahead of Englishman David Lynn and nine ahead of a quarter that included Justin Rose and Ian Poulter.

“It was a great round of golf. I’m speechless,” McIlroy said. “It’s just been incredible. I had a good feeling about it at the start. I never imagined I’d do this.”

He went on to win two more majors in 2014 — the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool and the PGA Championship at Valhalla — and has finished in the top 10 at 22 total majors, counting his four titles.

And what about his return to see Kiawah as a major venue once again? McIlroy sees the significance.

“It will also be my own, personal defense, after a nine-year interval, of a title that meant so much to the 23-year-old me,” he said recently. “And now that I feel I have evolved and matured as a golfer, I will be more likely to give more attention to the old nuances and subtle changes made to The Ocean Course in the intervening years.

“I don’t think I will ever say I have mastered any of Pete Dye’s courses — I’m just happy to keep learning and taking new experiences from each visit.”

[lawrence-related id=778103424,778103367,778103064]

Rory McIlroy’s 2012 PGA Championship victory at Kiawah Island proved he was ready to become one of the game’s next superstars

Rory McIlroy’s 2012 PGA Championship victory at Kiawah Island was a major milestone in his career.

It’s easy to forget there were missteps.

Like on No. 3 during a stormy Saturday, for example, when Rory McIlroy’s tee shot rattled around in a cut-off limb hanging off a dead oak tree and stayed there, some eight feet above the ground. He and a search party had been scouring the high grasses frantically until a television crewmember broke the news. He retrieved his ball, declared an unplayable, wedged onto the green from 70 yards and saved a brilliant par.

Then there was the scene on the 16th hole during Sunday’s final round, when a club nearly came flying out of McIlroy’s hands as he pulled a shot left into a massive bunker. The way the Northern Irishman contorted his body belied the comfort of the moment, even if it was the 94th PGA Championship. And while greenside bunkers usually are not bad landing areas for second shots, the depth and scale of this one left a long, awkward recovery to a small green.

McIlroy was well in front of the field on the final day at Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course, and while this wasn’t completely foreign, even for a major — he’d lapped the field by eight strokes during the U.S. Open just 14 months before at Congressional Country Club — it felt different. Unlike his previous major victory, which seemed to introduce McIlroy as a potential heir, a convincing win here would cement his royalty.

Now in the deep bunker, perhaps he was displaying a crack in the armor, an opportunity not for those in pursuit to necessarily catch him, but simply to make things respectable.

Any crisis was averted, however, when McIlroy calmly splashed the sand and stuck a shot to inside eight feet, leaving a par putt that he drained with supreme confidence.

There would be no mistaking this; as much as Tiger Woods had rooted himself as the supreme ruler of professional golf, the cheering masses now had a prince.

Rory was for real.

Rory McIlroy finds his ball lodged in a tree on the third hole during the third round of the 2012 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

Hot-and-cold leadup

Certainly, there were signs McIlroy was set to become a dominant force prior to Kiawah, but for every hot stretch — like a victory at the 2012 Honda Classic, where he held off Tiger Woods — there was the cold Rory McIlroy, missing three cuts in four starts in the middle of the year, including his U.S. Open defense at The Olympic Club in San Francisco.

And then there was the hot-and-cold Rory, one who fired an opening-round, 3-under 67 in the Open Championship, only to fade to a T-60 finish. But he followed it up with a T-5 at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, with closing rounds of 67-67-68.

It was tough to get a handle on just which McIlroy might be present that week.

“There were a few goals I set myself early at the start of the year, which I achieved: getting to No. 1 in the world, and playing well, winning a tournament early,” he said on the eve of 2012’s final major.

“And then the second half of the season has been – it’s still been pretty good. It’s been a little bit more of a struggle. I feel like I’m playing pretty well, so, I mean, if I had to give my season a grade to this point, I’d probably give it a B.”

But that grade was about to jump.

McIlroy knew Mother Nature was going easy on players in the first round of the PGA Championship and he needed to make the most of her mercy. He did so with an easy 5-under 67 that showed off a skill set that hadn’t been showing its full potential in previous months.

He missed just three greens and four fairways in his bogey-free tour of the Ocean Course. All his birdies came on putts of 15 feet or less. “It’s a great score to build on,” McIlroy said.

There was little wind and rains early in the week softened the layout, taking the bite out of its then-record-setting length.

Rory McIlroy watches his drive from the fourth tee during the second round of the 2012 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

“It’s a little bit softer, so that makes the fairways wider, and the wind really hasn’t blown, and the greens are still a little bit soft,” McIlroy said. “I think we’ve seen it about as easy as it can get this morning.”

The Ocean Course played at 7,668 yards, just eight yards off its maximum. McIlroy said the layout didn’t feel long, though, in that opening round. Nothing less than 8,000 yards would, he added. Soft fairways allowed McIlroy to rely on driver most of the day.

His day started with a birdie at the 10th hole, his first, after hitting a sand wedge to 12 feet. He hit 3-iron to 12 feet on the 249-yard, par-3 14th hole to get to 2 under par. He got up-and-down for birdie on the par-5 16th and made the turn in 3-under 33. He two-putted the par-5 second hole for birdie after hitting 5-wood to 40 feet, then made his final birdie of the day when he hit pitching wedge to 15 feet on No. 6. As McIlroy said, they were five “solid” birdies.

“I’m expecting this to be the best day of the week,” McIlroy said. “I think everyone is. … It’s just something that you’re going to have to deal with, and I’m just happy that I got off to a great start.”

McIlroy had famously has struggled at the Pete Dye-designed TPC Sawgrass, the Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, site of the Players Championship, where odd angles make for uncomfortable tee shots. Kiawah Island also is a Dye design, though the courses’ similarities are few. The Ocean Course is more reminiscent of another Dye design that hosted a recent PGA Championship, Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin, where McIlroy finished third two years before.

The majors had been a struggle for McIlroy that season, though. A 40th-place finish at Augusta National was his best of the year prior to Kiawah. He missed the cut at the U.S. Open and tied for 60th at the Open Championship.

“This is the last chance you have to put your name on a piece of silver that will be remembered forever,” McIlroy said.

But a fifth-place finish at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational was his best since a runner-up showing at the Wells Fargo Championship in May. He credited his putting instructor, Dave Stockton, who told McIlroy to smile more on the course. He also changed his practice habits.

“I was working very hard on technical stuff for the last few weeks, and then a slight mental adjustment as well,” McIlroy said. “I feel like I was hitting too many balls on the range. I just needed to go out there and play a bit more on the course and see shots.”

Rory McIlroy putts on the third green during the second round of the 2012 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

Weekend warrior

On Saturday, despite a bogey at the par-4 ninth, McIlroy still managed to blister the Ocean Course’s front nine in 32 shots, rocketing to the top of the leaderboard next to Vijay Singh, a man more than twice his age.

Three months past his 23rd birthday, a win by McIlroy would make him younger than Tiger Woods was when he captured his second major (the 1999 PGA, at 23 years, 7 months). But play was suspended midway through Saturday’s third round, and there was plenty of work to be done before any coronation.

“I’m going into the final day of the final major of the season tied for the lead, so I mean, I can’t ask for much more,” said McIlroy, who was 6 under, deadlocked with Singh and a single shot ahead of Adam Scott. “So, you know, I don’t care if it’s going to be 27 holes, 18 holes, 36 holes . . . I’m just happy to be going in there in a good position.”

Woods slid backward on Saturday (playing his first eight holes in 4 over), and that’s when McIlroy made a move. That’s not to say the nine holes he played were devoid of ample drama.

He rolled in a nice right-to-left curler for birdie at the first hole, then experienced two bizarre holes. At the par-5 second, he had 275 yards to the green and hit 5-wood, but immediately lost track of the shot. His initial reaction was one of concern.

“It came off a little higher than I anticipated, and I had no idea,” McIlroy said later. “I had to turn and ask JP (Fitzgerald, his caddie) where the ball was.”

His ball ended up in the center of the green, setting up a second consecutive birdie.

With his late-afternoon finish Saturday, he planned to return to the posh home he and his camp have rented for the week on the island, put his feet up and relax.

“You know,” he said, “I’ve come in here with a little bit of confidence from the way I played last week. It’s just been nice to take that into this week and show it out on the golf course. You know, there’s still a lot of guys with a chance to win going into tomorrow – 27 holes left, you’ve still got a long way to go.

“I’ve put myself in a nice position going into tomorrow. And as I said here on Wednesday, that’s all I really wanted to do. It should be exciting.”

Rory McIlroy takes his hat off on the 18th green after finishing Round 2 of the 2012 PGA Championship at the Ocean Course.

Fantastic finish

On Sunday, McIlroy was one of more than two dozen players who had to return to the course to finish their third round.

This was where he took charge, using birdies on Nos. 15 and 16 and a big par save on the 17th to close with a 67. That put McIlroy in front by three strokes and gave him the peace of mind to take a nap before the final round.

He went for the jugular soon after, burying a wedge from wood chips on the second hole to inside six feet and converting the birdie putt.

No. 3 is a fascinating little hole, with the chief issue being a top-hat green protected by two live oaks 35 yards short, right smack in the middle of the widest fairway on the course. Since the tees were moved up to make this a true risk-reward, McIlroy’s smooth drive led to a flip wedge that he got within 15 feet.

He made the putt and never looked back, finishing with a 66, his best round of the week when it seemed the pressure would have him wound the tightest.

McIlroy finished 13 under for the week, eight strokes ahead of Englishman David Lynn and nine ahead of a quarter that included Justin Rose and Ian Poulter.

“It was a great round of golf. I’m speechless,” McIlroy said. “It’s just been incredible. I had a good feeling about it at the start. I never imagined I’d do this.”

He went on to win two more majors in 2014 — the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool and the PGA Championship at Valhalla — and has finished in the top 10 at 22 total majors, counting his four titles.

And what about his return to see Kiawah as a major venue once again? McIlroy sees the significance.

“It will also be my own, personal defense, after a nine-year interval, of a title that meant so much to the 23-year-old me,” he said recently. “And now that I feel I have evolved and matured as a golfer, I will be more likely to give more attention to the old nuances and subtle changes made to The Ocean Course in the intervening years.

“I don’t think I will ever say I have mastered any of Pete Dye’s courses — I’m just happy to keep learning and taking new experiences from each visit.”

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Collin Morikawa’s Goliath-sized game, curious mind give the defending PGA champ staying power

As Collin Morikawa brings his big game to a monster Kiawah course, get a look at what got the 24-year-old to major-champ status.

(Editor’s note: This is the first installment in a four-part series about defending PGA champion Collin Morikawa.)

Collin Morikawa has rarely been the biggest guy in the room.

Mind you, he isn’t the 97-pound weakling on the beach, but he’s never been mistaken for the muscle-bound bully kicking sand on people, either.

He tips out at 5 feet, 9 inches, about 160 on the scales. He’s heard the jokes of being vertically challenged – prompt the joker saying the rain takes longer to hit his head – but has never wept he didn’t top out at 6 feet, 3 inches and 200 pounds.

He’s brushed off the jokes and even enjoyed a laugh at his expense, especially when he stands next to his caddie, J.J. Jakovac.

“It’s always funny that I look like a child next to him; his massive 6-4 frame over my 5-9 frame,” he said.

But since childhood, Morikawa has more than made do with his size and never shied from dealing with bigger kids, teens, adults. He certainly didn’t go all Napoleon complex. Instead, whatever the size and scope of the challenge, be it on the golf course or in the classroom, Morikawa has put his head down and worked, experimented and moved forward.

It sure did work out.

Despite not being the longest player on the lot, he’s always played large. Goliath large. So as he defends his title in this week’s PGA Championship on the enormous Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, he’ll figure out a way to battle the beast of a course and the best in the world. Just as he has since he followed his parents to the golf course at age 5 and started standing out on every golf course he visited.

Morikawa put together a top-notch junior career followed by a monster amateur career, which included his All-American star turn at Cal. He made his first 22 cuts as a pro, a feat bested only by Tiger Woods.

He won the 2019 Barracuda Championship in just his sixth start on the PGA Tour as a pro. After losing in a playoff to Daniel Berger in the 2020 Charles Schwab Challenge, the first tournament played after the COVID-19 global pandemic shut down the PGA Tour for 13 weeks, he toppled major champion Justin Thomas in a playoff to win the Workday Charity Open.

Collin Morikawa
Collin Morikawa takes a sip of a Memorial Tournament milkshake, given only to the winner this week, while holding the championship trophy after winning a three-hole playoff against Justin Thomas in the final round of the Workday Charity Open. Photo by Adam Cairns-The Columbus Dispatch via USA TODAY NETWORK

Morikawa won the 2020 PGA Championship in just his second start in a major, his “shot heard ‘round the world” a drive that found the green 294 yards away on the 70th hole. It showed he could hang with the longest players in professional golf with the longest club in the bag.

That was his third victory in 29 starts on the PGA Tour. He added his fourth at the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship at The Concession this year. That’s four wins in his first 45 starts on the PGA Tour. And he’s No. 6 in the Official World Golf Rankings.

So that size of the dog in the fight thing? Well, Morikawa proves it’s the size of the fight in the dog that matters.

“From a very young age, I’ve always had the belief that I could overcome any obstacle and I never thought about quitting. I felt like if I gave myself enough time and effort to give myself a shot, I could do it and go out and beat the best,” Morikawa said. “It takes a lot of luck, support from people around you and I’m fortunate to have that in my corner. I never took anything for granted. Everything I did had a purpose and everything I do has a purpose. I put full effort into everything. I’m trying to learn as much as I can. There’s always an unknown.

“I think I was just born with my competitive fire. I hate losing. I will compete against anybody at anything.”

Rick Sessinghaus found that out immediately. He’s one of the key members of Morikawa’s team, which also includes his parents, Blaine and Debbie; caddie J.J. Jakovac; agent Andrew Kipper; and girlfriend Katherine Zhu, who played collegiate golf at Pepperdine and understands the rigors of playing golf at a high level, which Morikawa appreciates.

PGA Championship - Final Round
Collin Morikawa and his coach Rick Sessinghaus with the Wanamaker Trophy after the final round of the 2020 PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Sessinghaus, a PGA Professional, eagerly agreed to start teaching Morikawa when he was 8, and they’ve been together for 16 years and counting. Despite Sessinghaus’ size advantage and superior golf skills – he was 33 when they met – the two waged battles on the golf course after every lesson, Morikawa never giving an inch and never sulking if he lost.

And while Morikawa insists he’s never heard anyone say he wasn’t long enough to compete against the best – likely in one ear and out the other – Sessinghaus has heard it and was equally dismissive.

“He’s not the longest, but he is Iron Byron,” Sessinghaus said. “He gets the ball closest to the hole more times than anyone else. Collin is creative, a precise player who wins. We have a plan moving forward; he has a trainer, and we will make incremental advances to try to get longer if need be.

“But this is a game to be played; it’s not a long drive contest. There are a lot of variables. Lowest score wins. So you don’t change the essence of the player.”

Despite the age difference – Morikawa is 24, Sessinghaus 49 – the two meshed instantly for two huge reasons. One, their love for the game. And two, they both have – cue Samuel L. Jackson in Pulp Fiction – a big brain.

“Everything about Collin looks like he’s got ‘it,” said two-time U.S. Open champion and ESPN analyst Curtis Strange. “Nobody has this game figured out or any part of it figured out, but he looks like, at such a young age, he has such a mature a golf IQ as anybody that’s come along in a long time.”

PGA Championship
Collin Morikawa watches after teeing off on the 16th hole during the final round of the 2020 PGA Championship golf tournament at TPC Harding Park. (Photo: Kelvin Kuo-USA TODAY Sports)

Off the golf course, too. Morikawa has a Bachelor’s degree in business administration; Sessinghaus a Bachelor’s Degree in Speech Communications and a Masters and Doctorate in Applied Sports Psychology. They both are curious souls, both crave knowledge, both don’t fear change. And that, to Morikawa, is as important as what he does with a golf club in his hand.

“I’m always trying to figure out how to get better,” Morikawa said. “That’s the nature of what we do. I’m going to keep trying new things.”

Especially when it comes to the shortest club.

“In college we would joke sometimes. Let’s say he had a top 5 and I would tongue in cheek say, ‘So, which putter did you use? Or which putter grip did you use?’ Through college he was experimenting,” Sessinghaus said.

It didn’t stop when he turned pro, either.

Ahead of this year’s Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles, Morikawa hooked up with two-time major champion Mark O’Meara, who employs the saw grip. Morikawa soaked it in and changed grips.

“He doesn’t do anything haphazard,” Sessinghaus said. “The rationale behind the change made sense to me. He was achieving what he wanted to achieve. The putter was moving through the impact area much freer, he was releasing the putter head much better, so it looked like something we wanted to try.

“That week when J.J, saw it, he said it looked great. But the stats didn’t back it up that week. He had a poor putting performance on that Sunday, but he said he felt comfortable over the ball and I said great. He doesn’t change for change’s sake.

“And the next week he won.”

PGA Championship
Collin Morikawa celebrates with his caddie J.J. Jakovac after winning 2020 PGA Championship at TPC Harding Park. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Back to the size thing.

Despite Morikawa’s vast, rapid success – he’s won nearly $10 million in prize money; has sponsor deals with TaylorMade, Adidas, Zurich Insurance, Omega, Grant Thornton, Therabody and US Bank; and is a regular presence during golf tournaments on commercials – he hasn’t gotten a big head.

For starters, he’s always believed he’d be where he is, one of the best players in the world. For another, he’s extremely humble.

“He doesn’t come across as the guy who wants to tell you how good he is,” said Viktor Hovland, another young stud who met Morikawa at college tournaments and now goes toe-to-toe against him on the PGA Tour. “I’m very impressed about what he does inside the ropes. His attitude out here is very relaxed, and he obviously knows he belongs. He’s very professional. To play as good as he has without a long game that is super long, is a testament to how the rest of his game is and his mental strength.

“He’s just really good at so many things.”

Sessinghaus added he’s never heard Morikawa brag.

“He is always looking at what is next, and when you look at what is next, you don’t wallow in what has been done,” he said. “He stays humble because there is more to do. If he thinks about what he’s done, that could derail him going forward.

“I’ve told him to embrace successes and reaffirm what you did well. We want to reinforce things. He knows what he did was great but there’s more to do.”

Starting this week on the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island. The course could play at 7,876 yards – making it the longest course in major championship history.

“It’s a big golf course, I’ll tell you that,” Morikawa said. “Pars are your friend out there. Obviously very wind dependent. If you don’t have any wind it’s playable, but if it’s windy that back nine can pick up.

“It’s going to be a great test because it’s going to test every part of your game.”

Which suits Morikawa just fine.

“He doesn’t have a weakness in his game,” Tony Finau said. “He doesn’t have a weakness mentally. So when you’re dealing with that type of talent, he’s going to be somebody to beat in major championships.

“This isn’t a guy that’s just going to pop up and disappear for the next five years.”

Paul Casey, who tied for second in the 2020 PGA Championship, knew that long before Morikawa hoisted the Wanamaker Trophy.

“There’s always a bunch of guys that rock up on the scene, and he didn’t necessarily get the most publicity out of the group he was in, but you know, I can consider myself veteran. I’ve been around the block, so I know talent when I see it,” Casey said. “We could just tell. Those of us who knew, knew that he’s the one.

“And we weren’t wrong.”

Matthew Wolff’s strange season continues with WD from PGA Championship

The young PGA Tour star has battled a hand injury and has had several withdrawals and other lackluster performances.

A strange season continued for Matthew Wolff.

The former collegiate standout and NCAA champion, who won the 2019 3M Open in just his third professional start, withdrew Tuesday night from next week’s PGA Championship on the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort in South Carolina.

No reason was given for the WD.

Tom Hoge replaced Wolff in the field.

Wolff, 22, has been dealing with a nagging right hand injury and has often looked disgruntled on the course this year. After opening with a 78 in the Farmers Insurance Open in January, he withdrew because of the injury. He also withdrew from the WGC-Workday Championship at The Concession in February after posting an 83 in the first round.

In last month’s Masters, he was disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard.

In his most recent start, he and Collin Morikawa teamed up and missed the cut in the Zurich Classic the third week of April.

Wolff has not finished in the top 10 in his most recent 10 starts and has fallen from a career-high rank of 12th in the Official World Golf Ranking to 27th.

No one in golf expected this plunge from Wolff.

It was just six months ago that he led by two shots heading into the final round of the U.S. Open at Winged Foot. A final-round 75 had him finishing runner-up to Bryson DeChambeau, who won by six shots. In his next start, he tied for second in the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. And in his debut in the PGA Championship in August, he tied for fourth.

Pain in neck nearly derailed Rory McIlroy, but he’ll head to Kiawah, PGA Championship as one of the favorites

How neck pain almost kept Rory McIlroy from competing at the Wells Fargo Championship.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Rory McIlroy enjoyed turning 32 on Tuesday and was feeling just fine hitting balls on the range Wednesday getting ready for one of his favorite tournaments.

One swing, however, had him wondering if he’d even get to play.

“I hit a 3‑iron, flushed it and I turned back to talk to Harry (Diamond, his caddie) and as I turned, my left side of my neck just completely locked up and I couldn’t move it,” McIlroy said. “It was really, really strange.”

McIlroy immediately shut his work on the range down and headed for treatment hoping to play in the first round of the Wells Fargo Championship.

“I iced it all of Wednesday afternoon, Wednesday night. I woke up Thursday, didn’t have much movement. Was trying to make a backswing and could only maybe take it half the way back before it started to catch,” McIlroy said. “If I had been playing Thursday morning, I probably would have pulled out, but I had enough time to get treatment Thursday morning, get it loosened up. It was still bothering me on Thursday afternoon. People probably saw the tape that was on my neck, but it sort of loosened up as the week went on.”

Wells Fargo Championship: Leaderboard | Photos

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And what a week it turned out to be. McIlroy, who hadn’t won in just over 550 days and hadn’t made it to weekend play in two months, won for third time at Quail Hollow with a final-round 68.

McIlroy finished at 10-under 274 and one shot clear of Abraham Ancer. The former world No. 1 and four-time major winner now has 19 PGA Tour titles.

And now he’ll head to Kiawah Island as one of the favorites in the PGA Championship in two weeks. He won the 2012 PGA there by eight shots.

“Hopefully history repeats itself and I can get a lot of confidence from this and go forward,” he said. “But I’m just happy that I can hit the golf shots that I need to under pressure.

“It’s certainly great timing. This is obviously a huge confidence boost going in there knowing that my game is closer than it has been. I’ll be able to poke holes in everything that I did today, it’s certainly far from perfect, but this one is validation that I’m on the right track.”

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PGA Championship to allow 10,000 fans per day at Kiawah in 2021

The PGA of America announced the 2021 PGA Championship to allow 10,000 fans per day at Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course.

On Tuesday morning the PGA of America announced that the 2021 PGA Championship, scheduled for May 20-23 at Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course, will allow “a spectator capacity of approximately 10,000 per day.”

The decision was made in coordination with the state of South Carolina, MUSC Health (the official medical services provider of the 2021 PGA Championship) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We’re excited to welcome spectators back to the PGA Championship this May in a way that is responsible and aligned with current South Carolina health protocols,” said PGA of America President Jim Richerson via a release. “While we wish we could accommodate the sellout crowds who had purchased tickets, the 2021 PGA Championship will be steeped in gratitude as the best players in the world compete on the historic Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

“While crowds will be smaller than originally planned, we know the passion for golf in the Carolinas will create a memorable atmosphere on-course and excitement throughout the region.”

Information on tickets, COVID-19 protocols and more can be found here.

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Augusta National, Southern Hills, The Country Club, the Old Course: 2022 should be special

Augusta National, Southern Hills, The Country Club and the Old Course make for a special lineup compared to other upcoming years’ majors.

Let’s get this out of the way first: The powers that be don’t take men’s major championships to dirt tracks, although that might be fun to watch every so often. All the courses that have been selected as future sites for the game’s most important events would be a dream to play, once-in-a-lifetime splurges for many players.

That said, some major sites are better than others.

Likewise, the group of four courses chosen – three, really, as Augusta National is static – in some years is stronger than other years. And with the courses selected for all four men’s majors through 2024, the year 2022 stands out as among the best ever.

Based on Golfweek’s Best ratings of courses around the world, utilizing votes from more than 750 volunteer raters on a 1 to 10 basis, we can compare the design, playability, conditioning and memorability of various courses. All the upcoming major sites rank highly, with only one course averaging a rating below a 7.

With the PGA of America’s recent decision to move the 2022 PGA Championship from Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, to Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma, 2022 got even stronger. The host sites for 2022 are Augusta National for the Masters, Southern Hills for the PGA; The Country Club’s Composite Course in Brookline, Massachusetts, for the U.S. Open; and the Old Course at St. Andrews in Scotland for the British Open.

The average Golfweek’s Best rating ­– with data based on the past 10 years of ratings with a cutoff date of Jan. 28 for the purpose of this story – for those four 2022 major sites is 8.50, which is incredibly high. The average for the 2021 majors is 8.17, with 2023 checking in at 8.16 and 2024 at 8.22.

These comparisons end at 2024 because that is the last year for which each tournament organizer – the USGA, the PGA of America and the R&A – has announced major sites.

The Masters
Fall leaves and November shadows highlight the 13th hole as Bubba Watson and Webb Simpson walk to the green during a practice round for the 2020 Masters Tournament at Augusta National. (Rob Schumacher/USA TODAY Sports)

Augusta National leads the ratings for each year. Bobby Jones’ playground rates a 9.57 and is No. 3 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list for all layouts built in the United States before 1960. Pine Valley and Cypress Point are the only two courses rated higher, and they don’t host majors.

Taking Augusta National out of the mix, because it is a static site, reveals the strength of the other three 2022 major sites even better. Ignoring Augusta National, 2022’s major sites have an average rating of 8.14. For 2021, that average rating is 7.71, 2023 is 7.68 and 2024 is 7.76.

Any course that averages above a 7 on Golfweek’s Best averaged ratings is a great track, not a dog track in the bunch. Any layout averaging above an 8 is among the best in world, with only 61 courses achieving that status among the nearly 4,000 courses in the Golfweek database.

As for courses over a 9? There are only eight of them in the world.

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And as strong as 2022’s major sites looked before the PGA’s recent decision to move its championship, it looks even better now. Trump National’s Old Course at Bedminster, New Jersey, has an average rating of 6.79, while Southern Hills sports a 7.67. The change lifted the average rating of 2022’s four courses from 8.28 to 8.50, further elevating it beyond the other years. Not counting the static Augusta National, the other courses in 2022 would have averaged 7.85 with the former President’s layout in the mix, while they average 8.14 with Southern Hills as its replacement.

Its worth noting, Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner in 2019 completed a restoration of Perry Maxwell’s original 1936 Southern Hills layout. It’s more than feasible that the average rating of the course will rise as more votes come in, further elevating Southern Hills and the average rating of all four major sites in 2022 even further before that year kicks off.

Check out all the upcoming major sites and their rankings:

Golfweek’s Best 2021: Top 200 Resort Golf Courses in the U.S.

Golfweek’s Best 2021: Top 200 Resort Golf Courses in the U.S.

Welcome to Golfweek’s Best 2021 list of top resort golf courses in the United States, first published in the print issue of Golfweek’s Ultimate Guide.

(Pictured above: Bandon Dunes Golf Resort’s new Sheep Ranch, which breaks into this Resort list at No. 8.)

The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged to produce a final, cumulative rating. Then each course is ranked against other courses in the region.

We hope you enjoy poring over these rankings, and we look forward to hearing your thoughts .

Each course is listed with its 2020 ranking, its location, architect(s), the year it opened and an average ranking from all the Golfweek Raters who reviewed it.