Wyndham Clark shoots 60, breaks Pebble Beach course record at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

No one has done what Wyndham Clark did Saturday.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. – Beset with putting woes since June, Wyndham Clark flew in early on Sunday and laid out nine different putters on the practice green at Pebble Beach Golf Links in hopes of finding some magic. Did he ever.

No player has ever had a better round of golf at Pebble Beach than Clark. The reigning U.S. Open champion made nearly everything he looked at and shot a course-record 12-under 60 at Pebble Beach Golf Links on Saturday to take the lead after the third round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

“I think in the past I would have kind of coasted in and shot a nice 8, 9 under,” he said. “To keep the pedal down and to stay aggressive mentally was the most impressive thing to myself. And then obviously making all those putts was, you know, out of the ordinary, it was pretty awesome.”

Preferred lies were in effect, but nevertheless, on some of the bumpiest poa annua greens the PGA Tour plays all year, he made 189 feet, 9 inches of putts, the most made by a competitor in a round at Pebble since they started tracking the stat in 2003, and three strokes better than the next-best round by Jason Day. When John Ellis, Clark’s caddie was asked if that’s the best he’s seen his boss putt, he answered, “I’ve never seen a human putt better let alone my own guy.”

Clark, who had shot 67 at Pebble a day earlier, his previous round on the famed links on the Monterey Peninsula, canned a 40-foot eagle putt at the par-5 second hole to get the party started. He made his first of nine birdies on the day at the fourth hole and when he rolled in a 42-foot eagle at the par-5 sixth, he joked to Ellis, “just give me eagle putts, I’ll make them.”

He wedged inside three feet at the famous par-3 seventh, which played just 99 yards downhill in the third round. He tacked on birdies on Nos. eight and nine to tour the front in 8-under 28, one of just four players ever to sign for that total. He had already made 150 feet, 10 inches in putts, nearly 25 feet better than the next best putting performance on the front nine dating to 2003 (Charley Hoffman, 126 feet, 3 inches, in the second round in 2021), and only 6 feet less than his 18-hole personal best of 156 feet, 6 inches in the third round of the 2020 Shriners Children’s Open.

The nerves kicked in at 10 as did the #59Watch, but he kept making birdies at Nos. 10 and 11.

“It was legit,” said Matt Kuchar, who played in Clark’s threesome. “When he birdied 10, it was like, wow, this is for real and then he dribbled it in at 11 and it was like, Wow.”

“The hole looked huge,” Clark said.

It’s hard to believe but Clark has struggled with his putting since winning the U.S. Open in June. He had asked putting guru Phil Kenyon for help, but his lesson book already is filled with the likes of Max Homa, Scottie Scheffler and Matt Fitzpatrick. He recommended his colleague Mike Kanski, who flew in to meet with Clark for the first time on Sunday. The big change? He removed the alignment aid, shortened the putter a bit and switched from a conventional grip to putting cross-handed.

“A lot of big changes, but when you’re in a spot where I was mentally in putting you kind of needed a change, just something totally different so you couldn’t complain or have those same feels that I had in previous tournaments,” Clark explained.

Clark began working with mental coach Julie Elion last year and her advice this week was to eliminate any goals associated with putting.

“We’re putting too much emphasis on the putting. We were trying to have the best attitude we could possibly have, especially coming into greens like this where they are really bumpy, so slopey and it makes it really hard to make putts,” he said.

Clark’s round of 60 included one bogey, at the par-3 12th, where his tee shot caught the bunker fronting the green and he had a fried egg lie. He hacked it out but ended up with a precarious lie and if he stood in the greenside bunker to play his third shot right-handed, the ball would’ve been so far above his feet that he worried he would hit the hosel. So, he elected to play it left-handed, advancing the ball to the fringe 26 feet from the hole and then made the most unlikely of bogeys – “a round saver,” he said — as he poured in yet another putt.

“Of any of the putts today that I was not really trying to make was that one,” he added. “I really was just focused on my speed and just trying to get it down there, two-putt, get the double, go to the next hole and move on. For that to go in, it was like all right, man, I’m hot.”

Hot enough to make birdies at Nos. 13 and 14 to improve to 11-under for the day and two shots clear of the field. He caught a good break when he tugged his tee shot into the left rough at 16. He was granted a free drop from a burrowing animal hole. But left his 10-foot birdie putt short. He had another good look from 14 feet at No. 17 and was short again. Standing on the 18th tee, he said he thought to himself, “My gosh, it would have been really nice to have one of those last two because then I only have to birdie 18.”

Could he make a third eagle of the day at the par-5 18th?

“Once I hit the fairway on 18 I knew I was going to have a chance to hopefully try to shoot that special number,” he said of a 59.

From 230 yards, Clark drilled his second shot to 26 feet. He backed off the putt and went through his routine a second time.

“I thought I had maybe like a little sand on it,” he explained. “I was like, all right, I’m gonna make sure if I’m hitting this putt I’m completely committed.”

It was all for naught. He missed short on the right, tapping in for one final birdie to shatter the tournament record by two and the old men’s record of 61 held by Texas Tech golfer Hurly Long in the 2017 Carmel Cup, a men’s collegiate event. (Rose Zhang set the women’s course record in 2022 at the same tournament, shooting 63.) He had started the round six back and leapfrogged one stroke ahead of Ludvig Aberg (67). With high winds and rain in the forecast, there’s a chance that Clark will be declared the winner and the signature event shortened to 54 holes. Clark said he factored that into his approach on Moving Day.

“You’ve got to have that mentality that today’s the last day so try to go for broke,” he said.

With a sheepish grin, he waved to the spectators and gave a thumbs up as he walked off the green, knowing how close he was from joining an exclusive group to break the sub-60 club in Tour history. But Clark still was proud of his slice of Pebble Beach history, which was also the 54th 60 in PGA Tour history.

“I haven’t shot 59, but I would say even if I had shot 59 somewhere, I don’t think it would compare to shooting a score like this at one of the most historic golf courses in the world,” Clark said.

The words inscribed on his caddie’s cap read “Have A Day,” and that Clark most definitely did.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 tag=451204418]

8 athletes playing at the 2024 Pebble Beach Pro-Am, including Tom Brady and Aaron Rodgers

Some big names in sports are teeing it up at the 2024 Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

The 2024 Pebble Beach Pro-Am is here, and that means we’ve got a bunch of big names who play golf on the side joining the field of PGA Tour stars.

Among that group are eight athletes — current and former pros in their respective sports — some of whom are REALLY good at the sport. Sometimes, their appearance results in a funny moment or two, like that time Aaron Rodgers told the world he wasn’t going to the San Francisco 49ers with just five words.

Take a look at the big names from sports in the field as we head into the weekend:

Thomas Detry’s walk-off birdie among 5 things to know at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Here’s what you need to know from the opening round of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Less than a week ago, Thomas Detry was leading the Farmers Insurance Open in the third round when he spun a wedge from 90 yards back into the water and made double bogey. He admitted it was “a punch in the face.” He went on to shoot 2-over 74 a day later and finished T-20. On Thursday at Spyglass Hill, he was cruising along once again when he fatted his approach at the final hole. But this time there was no penalty area to ruin a good round. This time, he pitched in from about 20 yards short of the green to shoot 9-under 63 and take a one-stroke lead over Patrick Cantlay after the first round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

“It was an uphill lie, I felt pretty comfortable I would put it within 3 feet to be honest,” Detry said in his post-round interview. “And it rolled nicely, just trickled in the hole. It was lovely to watch.”

Pebble Beach Pro-Am: Best celebrity photos | Friday tee times

Detry, a 31-year-old pro from Belgium, said having an extra day to get over last week’s disappointment – the Farmers Insurance Open is the only PGA Tour event that ends on Saturday – helped put it behind him.

“Last weekend was a tough pill to swallow,” he said. “I played some great golf and I didn’t really have the finish that I wanted to. I was in contention the whole weekend except the last five or six holes.”

On Thursday, the weatherman was wrong with his dreary forecast and sunshine prevailed during the opening round. It still was breezy and the tree-lined Spyglass course served as a buffer and allowed for slightly better scoring than at Pebble Beach Golf Links. Detry birdied his first three holes of the day and came home in 30 with a flurry of three straight birdies to cap the day.

Here are four more things to know from the first round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

MORE: Rory McIlroy assessed two-shot penalty for illegal drop at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Rory McIlroy assessed two-shot penalty for improper drop at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

McIlroy was 6 under thru 14 holes before the sloppy finish.

At one point Thursday, Rory McIlroy held the lead alone during the first round of the 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. However, at day’s end, his score is going to be a bit worse than it could have been thanks to a penalty.

Before signing his scorecard, McIlroy was assessed a two-shot penalty for an improper drop on the par-5 seventh hole at Spyglass Hill. McIlroy’s drive was wayward on the hole, and he had to take an unplayable. Where he dropped it was determined to be illegal, so what he thought was a bogey 6 turned into a triple bogey 8.

PGA Tour rules official Mark Dusbabek joined the Golf Channel telecast and said McIlroy “totally owned the mistake” when it was brought to his attention in the scoring area.

The rule states a ball can roll up to a club length, whereas McIlroy dropped his ball a club length to the right off the original line, which is where the penalty came from.

“So I took an unplayable on 7 and I took it back on line,” McIlroy said after his round. “Then unbeknownst to me the rule changed in January 2023 where you used to be able to come back on line, take a club length either side. That was changed in 2019 to be able to do that. I wasn’t aware that that rule was changed again in 2023, so I took a drop thinking of the 2019 rules when everything was sort of changed not knowing that the rule was changed again in 2023, so got a two-stroke penalty there.”

McIlroy was 6 under thru 14 holes, then he went bogey-triple-bogey and signed for a 1-under 71 at Spyglass Hill.

It’s his first PGA Tour start this season. The last time he teed it up, he won the Dubai Desert Classic on the DP World Tour.

‘Better than being in class’: Nick Dunlap is adjusting to PGA Tour life on the fly at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

“Happy to be here, and it’s better than being in class.”

To say the past two weeks for Nick Dunlap have been a whirlwind would be an understatement.

First a trip from Alabama to La Quinta, California, where by week’s end he would make history, becoming the first amateur to win a PGA Tour event in 33 years. Then back to his home state and to the University of Alabama, where the 20-year-old was in the midst of his sophomore season. He had a big decision to make, whether to turn professional or remain an amateur and finish out the season.

“I would say I knew that I was probably going to turn pro just with the opportunity that had been presented, but also I wanted to go back and talk to my teammates and talk to my parents and my coach and get their opinion and their two cents worth before I did anything,” Dunlap said.

“I’ve dreamed about doing this my whole life and playing golf on the PGA Tour. To finally be here and to be able to do that as a 20-year-old is pretty cool.”

His first professional start will be Thursday when he tees it up alongside Xander Schauffele at the 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the first full-field signature event of the PGA Tour’s season. Although Dunlap didn’t receive the first-place prize money or FedEx Cup points from his win at the American Express, he did receive fully exempt Tour status through 2026 and entry into the remaining signature events of 2024.

Pebble Pro-Am: Odds, picks to win | Sleepers 

Guaranteed money, job security and more were too much to pass up for the reigning U.S. Amateur champion.

“Hectic, but also really cool,” Dunlap said of his past couple weeks. “To kind of — I’ve had numerous moments where you just kind of have to take it all in, it’s overwhelming.”

2024 American Express
Nick Dunlap celebrates sinking a putt on the 18th green to win the 2024 American Express at PGA West in La Quinta, California. (Photo: Andy Abeyta/The Desert Sun)

Instead of tracking due dates for homework and managing test schedules, Dunlap is tasked with developing a professional schedule on the whim, one that includes stops at the first three majors of the year.

During his pre-tournament press conference Wednesday, Dunlap said he hasn’t quite figured out his full schedule but is piecing it together.

Dunlap’s rise shouldn’t be a surprise. Last summer, he became the best amateur golfer in the world, capped with his U.S. Amateur victory at Cherry Hills Country Club outside of Denver. He became the second golfer ever to win a U.S. Junior and U.S. Amateur. The other? Some guy named Tiger Woods.

He played a practice round Tuesday with world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Sam Burns. He also is plenty familiar with Ludvig Aberg, who he played with in college a handful of times.

“Yeah, it’s been really cool, so it’s kind of come full circle in a short amount of time,” Dunlap said. “Scottie and Sam were awesome. I’ve reached out to them on numerous occasions the last week just seeing what their advice is on certain things and their opinions on some of the things I’m doing moving forward.”

Pebble Beach is definitely an upgrade over a college classroom. However, the learning has only started for Dunlap on learning to be a professional golfer.

“Happy to be here, and it’s better than being in class.”

Bye, bye Bill Murray, hello best field ever: AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am to showcase several changes next month

Get ready for an AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am unlike any other.

Get ready for an AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am unlike any other.

Bye bye Bill Murray, Ray Romano and Steve Young, hello world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, former major champion Rory McIlroy and reigning FedEx Cup champion Viktor Hovland.

The old Crosby Clambake, in its 87th year, will have a reduced field from 156 two-man teams down to 80, with amateurs playing just two rounds instead of three or possibly four, on only two courses with Monterey Peninsula CC cut out of the equation, and the weekend reserved simply for the best pros in the game.

It’s all happening as a result of the PGA Tour selecting the tournament as one of eight signature events offering a purse of $20 million at a limited-field, no-cut event with elevated FedEx Cup points (750 for the winner compared to 500 at regular events).


Prize money payouts for the 38 tournaments on the 2024 PGA Tour schedule


“If you turned it around and we were never a pro-am and the Tour said, hey, guys, guess what? We’re going to give you two days of a pro-am, Thursday and Friday. We would be elated,” said Steve John, CEO and tournament director of the Monterey Peninsula Foundation, the non-profit that runs the tournament at Pebble Beach Golf Links and Spyglass Hill. “Yes, we’re two days instead of three, possibly four, but it’s going to be a darn good two days. The experience for the amateurs will be the best ever.”

In recent years, the tournament has struggled to attract an elite field, and something needed to be done to restore the luster of a once-beloved event: just 21 of the top 100 in the Official World Golf Ranking were in last year’s field and more than half of it was ranked outside the top 300.

“For years I’d hear I’d love to come to Pebble, but it just isn’t working for me,” said John, who is in his 12th year overseeing the tournament.

Of the Tour’s efforts to breathe new life into the event by making the star-studded field the attraction rather than the celebrities of music, the big screen and the sports world, John said, “It worked. They are coming.”

He’s no longer recruiting; he’s enrolling. He boasted that 48 of the top 50 in last year’s FedEx Cup standings already have committed, and he expressed confidence the other two would soon join, too. Ticket sales reflect the appetite to see the tournament’s best field: John said sales are $200,000 ahead of last year’s pace.

“To see nearly every person that is eligible come, that is a statement,” John said. “This is as close as you’re going to get to a major.”

But John recognizes that change is never easy. The size of the field dropped from 180 to 156 in 2010. To trim it to 80, the tournament needed a financial commitment from its title sponsor and secondary partners.

“Not everybody can play,” John said. “It was really difficult to determine who gets the golden tickets. To give at the level we have given before, people have to step up, and they did in a big way. Of that we are deeply appreciative.

The notable amateurs in the field will be strictly athletes: Tom Brady, Alex Smith, Aaron Rodgers, Pau Gasol, Larry Fitzgerald and Buster Posey. The Celebrity Shootout on Wednesday is no more. With fewer amateur competitors, the sky suites at the 18th have been reduced  As a result, the 18th green will be surrounded by grandstands and open to the public, doubling the number of seats available for general admission customers. Moving from three courses to two means a reduction of some 300 volunteers. There will still be 1,600 volunteers, including close to 100 who have volunteered for more than 40 years.

John is adamant being a signature event is the future of the pro-am, telling KSBW Action News 8 the plan is for the AT&T to be a signature event “in perpetuity.”

“The feeling, belief and mindset of the PGA Tour is to keep this event as a signature event, not knowing what our future holds for us,” John told Golfweek.

Despite the reduced field, which many feared would have the potential to slice charitable donations, John confirmed that the Monterey Peninsula Foundation still expected to give out more than $18 million, as it did last year.

“I think there’s no reason we won’t give out that number if not more,” he said.

To do so, AT&T has agreed to bear the cost of the purse rising from $9 million to $20 million, with a winner’s share of $3.6 million. Sources say the golden ticket for amateurs to play alongside one of the pros skyrocketed from $38,000 to $70,000 this year to offset the loss of nearly half the field. John wouldn’t confirm those numbers, saying only they were within the ballpark.

“It’s hard to really put a number on it because they’re tied to different assets. Some have tickets and upgrade venue, some come by contract, some by relationships. It makes it impossible to put an exact number on the entry fee,” he explained. “I’ll tell you this: it’s worth every penny and whatever the entry fee is no one balked.”

Time will tell if an iconic course and the deepest field ever to play the AT&T will produce a TV-ratings bonanza the way seeing Clint Eastwood, Murray and other A-listers did back in the day, especially when much of the country was blanketed in snow.

“My crystal ball broke years ago,” John joked.

Keith Mitchell seemed so salty about Aaron Rodgers’ golf game and he probably wasn’t joking

Mitchell seemed SO disgusted!

As he mulls his NFL future, Aaron Rodgers — who was paired with Ben Silverman — can celebrate having won the amateur portion of the 2023 Pebble Beach Pro-Am. However, one established professional golfer isn’t a fan of the path Rodgers took to notch his victory.

At the end of the tournament, Keith Mitchell stood in front of the podium to discuss his and his partner Josh Allen’s performance. Mitchell wasted no time maintaining that he and Allen — who finished in fourth at -22 — actually won the whole thing.

Why?

Mitchell thought Rodgers’ handicap was “crap” and, as such, invalidated anything he accomplished on the course at Pebble Beach. And it doesn’t seem like he was joking at all:

Phew. To assert Rodgers’ winning results don’t matter because of his handicap from the get-go is … well, some straight heat!

If only we could get Mitchell’s honesty on Rodgers considering his long-term pro football plans yet again. Something tells me that would be a popcorn-worthy affair.

Justin Rose ran away with the Pebble Beach Pro-Am and stunned the betting public

Rose was a sneaky pick to win at Pebble Beach.

Justin Rose hadn’t won a PGA event in more than four years. A European had never won the Pebble Beach Pro-Am period.

Monday saw both streaks fall.

The 42-year-old finally picked up his 11th win on Tour by running away with the annual Pro-Am event despite delays forcing the final round to finish up Monday morning. Rose won by three strokes at 18-under par with Brendon Todd and Brandon Wu tying for second place at 15-under.

According to John Ewing at BetMGM, that was a welcomed win for the sportsbook. Only 1.5 percent of outright bets had Rose (+2500). A three-stroke victory was +650.

The veteran’s odds dipped to as low as +5000 at some books during play.

Despite opening up his final round with a bogey on the first hole, Rose went six-under on Sunday/Monday. His back-to-back rounds of 69 on Friday and Saturday stood as his worst mark of the weekend as his game only continued to heat up from there.

Tom Hoge (+2000), who won the event last year, finished tied for 48th while 2022 runner-up Jordan Spieth (+1000) tied for 63rd after finishing the tournament at even par after Monday’s finish.

Not the best tournament for the big names, but it may have been exactly what Rose needed as the season starts to heat up.

[listicle id=2009967]

[mm-video type=video id=01grc85jree2q62y6tg2 playlist_id=none player_id=01gp1x90emjt3n6txc image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01grc85jree2q62y6tg2/01grc85jree2q62y6tg2-66ea27f9198666128f29314a4cd39e8b.jpg]

How much money each PGA Tour player earned at the 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour.

It pays to play well on the PGA Tour, folks. Just ask this week’s winner, Tom Hoge.

The 32-year-old earned his first PGA Tour win on Sunday at the 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am by going low late in his final round on the Monterey Peninsula. Hoge made four birdies over his final eight holes to hold off the likes of 12-time Tour winner Jordan Spieth as well as Patrick Cantlay, Beau Hossler and Troy Merritt to win at 19 under and claim the top prize of $1,566,000.

Check out how much money each PGA Tour player earned this week at the 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Pebble Beach Pro-Am: Leaderboard

Prize money payout

Finish Name Score Money
1 Tom Hoge -19 $1,566,000
2 Jordan Spieth -17 $948,300
3 Beau Hossler -16 $600,300
T4 Troy Merritt -15 $391,500
T4 Patrick Cantlay -15 $391,500
T6 Matt Fitzpatrick -14 $293,625
T6 Joel Dahmen -14 $293,625
T6 Andrew Putnam -14 $293,625
T9 Jonathan Byrd -13 $237,075
T9 Pat Perez -13 $237,075
T9 Seamus Power -13 $237,075
T12 Keith Mitchell -12 $193,575
T12 Denny McCarthy -12 $193,575
T14 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -11 $163,125
T14 Nick Taylor -11 $163,125
T16 Adam Hadwin -10 $119,842
T16 Taylor Moore -10 $119,842
T16 Lanto Griffin -10 $119,842
T16 Brendon Todd -10 $119,842
T16 Mackenzie Hughes -10 $119,842
T16 J.J. Spaun -10 $119,842
T16 Robert Garrigus -10 $119,842
T16 Sean O’Hair -10 $119,842
T24 David Lipsky -9 $74,602
T24 Bo Van Pelt -9 $74,602
T24 Dylan Frittelli -9 $74,602
T24 Jason Day -9 $74,602
T28 Nate Lashley -8 $59,595
T28 Ryan Armour -8 $59,595
T28 Trey Mullinax -8 $59,595
T28 Kelly Kraft -8 $59,595
T28 Vaughn Taylor -8 $59,595
T33 Austin Smotherman -7 $43,548
T33 Mark Hubbard -7 $43,548
T33 Russell Knox -7 $43,548
T33 Seth Reeves -7 $43,548
T33 Maverick McNealy -7 $43,548
T33 Satoshi Kodaira -7 $43,548
T33 Greyson Sigg -7 $43,548
T33 Doc Redman -7 $43,548
T33 Jimmy Walker -7 $43,548
T42 Ryan Moore -6 $29,195
T42 Peter Malnati -6 $29,195
T42 Jonas Blixt -6 $29,195
T42 Luke Donald -6 $29,195
T42 Seung-Yul Noh -6 $29,195
T42 Sung Kang -6 $29,195
T42 Austin Cook -6 $29,195
T49 Taylor Pendrith -5 $21,089
T49 Mark Baldwin -5 $21,089
T49 Davis Riley -5 $21,089
T49 Hayden Buckley -5 $21,089
T49 Camilo Villegas -5 $21,089
T49 Curtis Thompson -5 $21,089
T49 Tyler Duncan -5 $21,089
T49 Adam Svensson -5 $21,089
T49 Chris Stroud -5 $21,089
T49 Matthias Schwab -5 $21,089
59 Dylan Wu -4 $19,749
T60 Johnson Wagner -3 $19,488
T60 Brian Stuard -3 $19,488
62 Justin Rose -2 $19,227
63 Ben Kohles -1 $19,053
MDF Matthew NeSmith -4 $18,879
MDF Brandon Hagy -4 $17,748
MDF D.J. Trahan -4 $17,748
MDF Aaron Rai -4 $17,748
MDF Nick Watney -4 $17,748
MDF Wyndham Clark -4 $17,748
MDF Brian Harman -4 $17,748
MDF Chan Kim -4 $17,748
MDF Austin Eckroat -4 $17,748
MDF Sahith Theegala -4 $17,748
MDF David Hearn -4 $17,748
MDF Grayson Murray -4 $17,748
MDF Bill Haas -4 $17,748

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

Winner’s Bag: Tom Hoge, 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Check out the clubs that got the job done on the Monterey Peninsula.

[mm-video type=video id=01es22ba2d9ajd3e5m playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01es22ba2d9ajd3e5m/01es22ba2d9ajd3e5m-1a7ed570fcdcea461c8cdf137e2d3ab5.jpg]

A complete list of the golf equipment Tom Hoge used to win the PGA Tour’s 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am:

DRIVER: Titleist TSi3 (9 degrees), with Fujikura Ventus Black 6X shaft (From $549 at Global Golf & PGA Tour Superstore)

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist TS2 (13.5 degrees), with Fujikura ATMOS Blue 8 X shaft

HYBRID: Titleist 913Hd (18 degrees), with Fujikura Speeder 904 X shaft

IRONS: Titleist 620 CB (4), 620 MB (5-PW), with Project X 6.5 shafts (620 CB from $1,399 at GlobalGolf and MB from $1,399 at GlobalGolf)

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM8 (52, 56, 60 degrees), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts

PUTTER: Odyssey White Hot OG Two-Ball (From $269.99 at GlobalGolf

BALL: Titleist Pro V1 Left Dot

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

[vertical-gallery id=778213736]