Jump to content
2024 Houston Open WITB Photos ×

Unpopular opinion: Pro caddies are extremely overrated


4thand11

Recommended Posts

42 minutes ago, Superbrit said:

A good caddie would have talked Mito out of hitting driver

driver wasn’t the problem. it’s the right club on a 490yd uphill par 4

 

JT hit driver to win the playoff. why didn’t Bones throw his driver in the creek?  kind of a tough stance to praise one caddy and say another messed up when they made the same call. 

 

Mito put a piss poor swing on the ball. end of story. 

Edited by ChipStrokes
  • Like 3

Ping G425 LST 9º | TPT 15LO

TM SIM2 4W 16.5º | Fujikura Ventus Blue TR 8TX

TM SIM2 7W 21º | Fujikura Ventus Black 10X
Titleist T100 4-PW | Dynamic Gold X7
Cleveland RTX Raw 52/mid 56/mid 60/full | Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400
Ping Custom PLD Anser 2

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, ChipStrokes said:

driver wasn’t the problem. it’s the right club on a 490yd uphill par 4

 

JT hit driver to win the playoff. why didn’t Bones throw his driver in the creek?  kind of a tough stance to praise one caddy and say another messed up when they made the same call. 

 

Mito put a piss poor swing on the ball. end of story. 

 

No no no you're all wrong. A great caddie would've talked Mito into pulling 3 wood off the tee--and then quit when they had 234yds uphill into a well protected green with a major on the line

 

"hey we got the tee shot in play didn't we? But i can't help you with this one fella----yoooooyyyyyyy" (runs away)

  • Haha 2

Srixon ZX5 w/PX Hzrdus Red 60

Srixon ZX 15 w/PX Hzrdus Red 70

Tour Edge C723 21* w/PX hzrdus black 80

Titleist T150 4-AW w/PX LZ 6.0

Titleist Jet Black 54/60 with PX LZ 6.0

Deschamps Crisp Antique 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, golfortennis said:

So I had a qualifier for a provincial tournament yesterday, and a buddy caddied for me.  Let's not confuse this with any kind of professional tournament, but it was a golf tournament.  On one hole, because, among other things, the two guys I was playing with were so slow, I thought I was helping by knocking in my 1 footer, but I had to take a strange stance to not step in the guy's line.  I likely don't need to say what happened next.

 

Walking to the next tee, I said something, and my buddy said, "Mark that every time.  They won't do a damn thing to speed up, so don't compromise your game for them.  F'em. "  Along with a few other things(like cracking jokes when I got a little hot under the collar at myself), he was certainly helpful.  And I actually cost myself a number of shots not consulting him early on on putts.  Just had trouble with uphill/downhill on this course's greens.  SO they certainly do add to the party.  Not to mention not pushing my cart on this course kept me much fresher at the end.

 

Some caddies might be "overrated", but very few bring no value.

Wonderful story.....two things, never ever rake putts no matter the length and never straddle the putt to avoid stepping on another players putt line. Simply say "i'll wait"......every time. If you miss shorties like that, they tend to haunt you.......

 

I know that you know this but it can not be emphasized enough.....You're welcome

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Ferguson said:

 

A good player would have known better. 

 

So I will have to take issue here.  Until you've been in that cauldron a few times(and you are a good player to even be there at that point), it's hard to say what a player knows.  You have a situation where a player is amped up, mental coaches or not, knows what is on the line, and for the most part, is likely feeling pretty good about themselves at that point.  ie., "this driver ain't going anywhere but the middle of the fairway."  

 

Perhaps you've never made a bad decision when the adrenaline is flowing, but that would put you in the very small minority of people.  These aren't robots, they're people.  

 

 

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Titleist99 said:

Wonderful story.....two things, never ever rake putts no matter the length and never straddle the putt to avoid stepping on another players putt line. Simply say "i'll wait"......every time. If you miss shorties like that, they tend to haunt you.......

 

I know that you know this but it can not be emphasized enough.....You're welcome

 

His other contribution:  the course we played is somewhat in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by lots of farms.  One farmer must have spread manure earlier(it is the best, and cheapest fertilizer if your own livestock are producing it), and it was quite strong.  I spent a lot of time on a dairy farm growing up, so for it to bother me, it had to be strong.  We were on about 13 and my round had gone to pot by then, and I said "that smell has to be a manure spread,", he came back "I thought it was your golf swing."  That was after a tee shot.  I think I stopped laughing by the time I got to the ball.  

  • Like 1
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, golfortennis said:

 

So I will have to take issue here.  Until you've been in that cauldron a few times(and you are a good player to even be there at that point), it's hard to say what a player knows.  You have a situation where a player is amped up, mental coaches or not, knows what is on the line, and for the most part, is likely feeling pretty good about themselves at that point.  ie., "this driver ain't going anywhere but the middle of the fairway."  

 

Perhaps you've never made a bad decision when the adrenaline is flowing, but that would put you in the very small minority of people.  These aren't robots, they're people.  

 

 

 

I said, "A good player would have known better." 

 

 

Here is the difference - the guys that choose correctly when "in the cauldron" have done so, because they've done so.   Experience outweighs everything, whether you are diving for abalone, pulling molten steel from an electric furnace or playing tournament golf. 

 

 

So, it begs the question - when does a player become a good player?  

 

.....and let's not go down the path that the caddie something to do with it. 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Ferguson
Link to comment
Share on other sites

49 minutes ago, ChipStrokes said:

driver wasn’t the problem. it’s the right club on a 490yd uphill par 4

 

JT hit driver to win the playoff. why didn’t Bones throw his driver in the creek?  kind of a tough stance to praise one caddy and say another messed up when they made the same call. 

 

Mito put a piss poor swing on the ball. end of story. 

Bizarre that there's even a discussion about whether it was the right club. Of course it was. It was a par 4 that was almost 500 yards long.

 

Problem wasn't the club, it was the weirdly ugly, almost bizarre swing. If he made the same swing with a 3FW he would have gotten equally horrid results (just further away from the green). 

 

The pressure of standing on 18, facing the hardest hole of the course, with a narrow lead in the final round of a major cracked the poor guy. Isn't all of this obvious?

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1

Titleist TSR3 10.5* ~ Ventus TR Blue 58g

Titleist TSR2 15* ~ Tensei CK Pro Blue 60g

Titleist TSR2 18* ~ Tensei CK Pro Blue 60g

Titleist TSR2 21* (H) ~ Tensei AV Raw Blue 65g

Mizuno JPX 923 Forged, 4-6 ~ Aerotech SteelFiber i95

Mizuno Pro 245, 7-PW ~ Nippon NS Pro 950GH Neo

Miura Milled Tour Wedge QPQ 52* ~ KBS HI REV 2.0 SST

Miura Milled Tour Wedge High Bounce QPQ 58*HB-12 ~ KBS HI REV 2.0 SST

Scotty Special Select Squareback 2

Titleist Players glove, ProV1 Ball; Mizuno K1-LO Stand Bag, BR-D4C Cart Bag

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Ferguson said:

 

I said, "A good player would have known better." 

 

 

Here is the difference - the guys that choose correctly when "in the cauldron" have done so, because they've done so.   Experience outweighs everything, whether you are diving for abalone, pulling molten steel from an electric furnace or playing tournament golf. 

 

 

So, it begs the question - when does a player become a good player?  

 

.....and let's not go down the path that the caddie something to do with it. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Well, first of all, I think we are setting an incredibly high bar(even by wrx standards) if a guy having the lead on the 72nd hole of a major championship is not a good player.  Your ranking has to be high enough to get into the field to begin with.   And how do you get experience in that cauldron if you don't get there the first time?  The guy got a battlefield promotion from KFT.  He can play.

 

No caddie would have known he would put the swing that he did on the club.  I don't know if a 5 iron would have gone anywhere with that club.

 

  

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't find caddies overrated in general.  But it's like most things on this level...the Tour player's talent and abilities matter most.  It can overcome just about everything.  Without the talent...no amount of coaching, caddying, equipment, training will ever overcome the lack of ability and talent.

 

But most people don't understand how small the margins are on Tour.  Improve your scoring average by 0.25 strokes per round (1 stroke improvement over 4 rounds of golf) and that's worth nearly $1 million in earnings for a season.  So winning on Tour can happen without a full time caddie, but it's more likely to make a difference over the long haul.  

 

Some caddies are really good at reading greens and work fantastic with players that are not as good, but can trust their read.  Other caddies are really good at strategy and getting the player to play the shot that gives them the best odds of success.  Others are really good at knowing the player and their swing; helping them get back on track when their instructor is away or when they are in the middle of a round.

 

But mostly you need a caddie that you can jive with.  The average full-time tour pro plays about 25 events a year.  Spending all of that time with the same person for half a year requires a good partnership.

 

 

 

 

RH

 

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lots of differing opinions on why they do or don't matter.  IMO at the end of the day the best caddies DO matter.  To what degree who knows but all you need is that little edge.  The caddie that tells you correct yardages, adjustment for wind, slope, the pep talks when needed, knowing when to keep up/shut up, talking player into/out of a shot, calming their players down all gives said player that ever so slight competitive edge.  That edge can make all the difference between being a superstar or best player to never win a major.   The best caddies do become legends and stars in their own right.  Scottie Scheffler seems to be a good example.  He changes caddies and goes on a tear to become Masters winner and #1 in the world.  Is that a coincidence?  

Ping G430 10k 9 Tour Black 2.0 Stiff

Titleist TSI2 16.5 Tensei White Stiff

Titleist 818 21 KBS PROTO Stiff
Ping G710 4-PW

Ping S159 50 54 58

Ping Senita 38 Putter

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, bobfoster said:

Bizarre that there's even a discussion about whether it was the right club. Of course it was. It was a par 4 that was almost 500 yards long.

 

Problem wasn't the club, it was the weirdly ugly, almost bizarre swing. If he made the same swing with a 3FW he would have gotten equally horrid results (just further away from the green). 

 

The pressure of standing on 18, facing the hardest hole of the course, with a narrow lead in the final round of a major cracked the poor guy. Isn't all of this obvious?

 

Of course it's obvious.  The player hits the ball.  Mito made a bad swing.

 

The fact that some people are blaming his caddy shows how results-oriented people are when it comes to caddies in general.  Mito makes a good swing and everyone's talking about what a great job his caddy did, guiding an inexperienced player to a major title.

 

Likewise if Greller hooks up with Smylie K. way back when instead of Spieth, he's suddenly not such an amazing caddy (not to mention a lot poorer).   The fact that we even know some of these caddies by name is funny to me.  

Edited by 4thand11
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, 4thand11 said:

 

Of course it's obvious.  The player hits the ball.  Mito made a bad swing.

 

The fact that some people are blaming his caddy shows how results-oriented people are when it comes to caddies in general.  Mito makes a good swing and everyone's talking about what a great job his caddy did, guiding an inexperienced player to a major title.

 

Likewise if Greller hooks up with Smylie K. way back when instead of Spieth, he's suddenly not such an amazing caddy (not to mention a lot poorer).   The fact that we even know some of these caddies by name is funny to me.  

So they should walk around with hoods over their faces?  RH above explained it pretty clearly. RH probably knows more about golf stats and analysis than everyone on WRX combined---  If you don't want to acknowledge that then the ignorance is on you. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm near 100% confident in saying that if I was given the opportunity to caddy for a JT, Jordan, Tiger, or any average PGA golfer, they would win just as much and place just as high as with a professional on the bag.  Obviously you have to know golf well, study the course, and know the players yardages.  As much as I would like to say caddies are really important, they are extremely overrated.  Agree with OP.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

43 minutes ago, jsixman said:

I'm near 100% confident in saying that if I was given the opportunity to caddy for a JT, Jordan, Tiger, or any average PGA golfer, they would win just as much and place just as high as with a professional on the bag.  Obviously you have to know golf well, study the course, and know the players yardages.  As much as I would like to say caddies are really important, they are extremely overrated.  Agree with OP.  

The player would be so frustrated with your ignorance he'd never make a cut,,,,,,,once he got rid of your nonsense he could then concentrate, therefore going on to make millions.......Yeah, a good caddy can't be underestimated.......(I kid)

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 hours ago, mshills said:

 

How about a different angle to the question:

What is different about players who rely heavily on the caddie, versus the "show up, keep up, shut up" player, or the one who does not want a caddie at all?

 

It is certainly not ability, as I've been up close and personal with FINE players in all categories.

 

 

I would say that I've gotten some experience with this going from being an individual contributor in my career to managing others. 

 

I've always been a "don't micromanage me" kind of employee. You see I'm doing something wrong? Tell me. You see something I'm doing right that you want to see more of? Tell me. But generally I'm not going to go to my boss for daily task assistance, to bounce ideas off him [or, currently, her], or generally require much other than answer a question when I need it or intervene when he/she thinks it has to happen. 

 

I just assumed other people were like me. Then when it comes time to manage others, I QUICKLY found out they weren't. 

 

Yeah, some people are more talented than others. But that wasn't the case with the example I bring up. When I changed companies ~15 years ago, I came into a new company and one of my peers in the same job function was someone that I then, and still do, look up to. He knew how to do the job, and was excellent at it. I have learned a LOT from observing him. After a few years, I ended up getting promoted, and I was his manager. And all of a sudden he'd come to me to ask me questions, bounce ideas off of me, generally all about things that I knew he could do at least as well as I can. 

 

What I realized is that he simply needed a different relationship from a boss than I need from a boss. It wasn't talent. And rarely did I ever guide him other than the direction he already thought he should be going. But it helped him to talk things out sometimes. It was part of how he processed information and came to decisions.

 

Some players want very little from a caddie, carry the bag and keep the clubs clean. Some simply want technical information (yardage, wind, etc). Some want someone calming on the bag (Cink, Westwood, etc). Some want someone to bounce ideas about what shot to hit off of someone, as part of their process to develop confidence in their plan. 

 

It's not necessarily any difference in talent between these players; it has to do with their own personalities and need. 

  • Like 1

Ping G25 10.5* w/ Diamana 'ahina 70 x5ct stiff (set -0.5 to 10*)

Sub70 Pro Tour 5w w/ Aldila NV NXT 85 stiff

Wishon EQ1-NX 4h, 5i-GW single-length built to 37.5" w/ Nippon Modus3 120 stiff

Sub70 286 52/10, 286 56/12, and JB 60/6 wedges, black, built to 36.75" w/ Nippon Modus3 120 stiff

Sub70 Sycamore Mallet putter @ 36.5" with Winn midsize pistol grip

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, jsixman said:

I'm near 100% confident in saying that if I was given the opportunity to caddy for a JT, Jordan, Tiger, or any average PGA golfer, they would win just as much and place just as high as with a professional on the bag.  Obviously you have to know golf well, study the course, and know the players yardages.  As much as I would like to say caddies are really important, they are extremely overrated.  Agree with OP.  

I bet you you wouldn’t last a day before being fired. If you haven’t caddied as a professional before and you were to do the job of a ‘professional’ I assure you you’d make a mistake before the round even begins. 
Like any job, it takes time to get good at and know all the ins and out you have to do. 
 

Not saying you couldn’t get taught how to be a good caddie and your responsibilities, just saying if you haven’t done it before and you walked into the job and took up a professionals role for a player. You wouldn’t last the day. 
 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

^^^^ Factual! As mentioned before, it’s like lots of things from painting a room to a musical performance. Most of the work is in the preparation. You don’t just show up, bag up, and get your money….that’s not how it works. 

 

The truth is somewhere in the middle. I think this thread started as a gripe against the media making stories out of caddies. Then the exaggeration started, and caddies are either worth multiple shots per round or are actually negative value (meaning someone who paid for the opportunity to caddie would do just as good a job.) Both are ad absurdum, used as a thought exercise, and of course I am exaggerating too. 

Adaptive Golf.....look out for the one-armed man:

  Ping G425 Max Driver, 5W, 7W....+2"

  PXG 0211 hybrids, 25*, 28*, 31*….+2”

  PXG 0211 8i - SW….+3” or Sub70 699 8i - SW….+4”

  Bobby Grace F-22 side saddle

Link to comment
Share on other sites

40 minutes ago, betarhoalphadelta said:

 

I would say that I've gotten some experience with this going from being an individual contributor in my career to managing others. 

 

I've always been a "don't micromanage me" kind of employee. You see I'm doing something wrong? Tell me. You see something I'm doing right that you want to see more of? Tell me. But generally I'm not going to go to my boss for daily task assistance, to bounce ideas off him [or, currently, her], or generally require much other than answer a question when I need it or intervene when he/she thinks it has to happen. 

 

I just assumed other people were like me. Then when it comes time to manage others, I QUICKLY found out they weren't. 

 

Yeah, some people are more talented than others. But that wasn't the case with the example I bring up. When I changed companies ~15 years ago, I came into a new company and one of my peers in the same job function was someone that I then, and still do, look up to. He knew how to do the job, and was excellent at it. I have learned a LOT from observing him. After a few years, I ended up getting promoted, and I was his manager. And all of a sudden he'd come to me to ask me questions, bounce ideas off of me, generally all about things that I knew he could do at least as well as I can. 

 

What I realized is that he simply needed a different relationship from a boss than I need from a boss. It wasn't talent. And rarely did I ever guide him other than the direction he already thought he should be going. But it helped him to talk things out sometimes. It was part of how he processed information and came to decisions.

 

Some players want very little from a caddie, carry the bag and keep the clubs clean. Some simply want technical information (yardage, wind, etc). Some want someone calming on the bag (Cink, Westwood, etc). Some want someone to bounce ideas about what shot to hit off of someone, as part of their process to develop confidence in their plan. 

 

It's not necessarily any difference in talent between these players; it has to do with their own personalities and need. 

i was gonna make a post driving at the same point but you said it better than i was going to. 

 

putting a blanket label of “overrated” on something that varies so much from player to player is almost impossible.

 

im sure there are guys who would be just fine if caddies went away. and i’m sure there are guys who wouldn’t be. the fact that they’d struggle without their caddy doesn’t negate their skill as a pro golfer. 

 

that kind of stuff exists in all sports. if you got rid of the headset connection between nascar drivers and their crew chief, some guys would struggle and some would be like “eh, fine, no big deal, i’m the one who drives the car anyway.”

 

that doesn't mean crew chiefs are overrated or that some drivers don’t belong on the track. 

Ping G425 LST 9º | TPT 15LO

TM SIM2 4W 16.5º | Fujikura Ventus Blue TR 8TX

TM SIM2 7W 21º | Fujikura Ventus Black 10X
Titleist T100 4-PW | Dynamic Gold X7
Cleveland RTX Raw 52/mid 56/mid 60/full | Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400
Ping Custom PLD Anser 2

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Mark_Crossan said:

I bet you you wouldn’t last a day before being fired. If you haven’t caddied as a professional before and you were to do the job of a ‘professional’ I assure you you’d make a mistake before the round even begins. 
Like any job, it takes time to get good at and know all the ins and out you have to do. 
 

Not saying you couldn’t get taught how to be a good caddie and your responsibilities, just saying if you haven’t done it before and you walked into the job and took up a professionals role for a player. You wouldn’t last the day. 
 

 

 

Mark is a hoot at parties, I bet.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, 4thand11 said:

JT at +5 and on his way to a missed cut... guess Bones is just having an off week 🙄

He did his job and let JT enjoy his major victory without getting on him to focus back in for this week.

TSR3 10.0 D1 HZRDUS Black 60 
TSR2 16.5 HZRDUS Black 70
TSR2 21 Hybrid HZRDUS Black 90
T200 4 iron bent weak PX LZ
T100 5-9 PX LZ
SM9 46, 50, 56, 60 PX LZ
Scotty NP2

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As I poorly prefaced before, you would obviously need to know golf.  In my case, I know golf well, I'm a good golfer or maybe used to be, I've played many tournaments, I can read greens, wind, weather, read yardage books, etc.  In good shape to walk the whole course with a 50 lb. bag on consecutive days.  Give me a couple days to prepare with the player, and yeah, I think I'm good to go.  They're all saying their so important because in most cases the caddy and player are close, often childhood buddies or met through an acquaintance, college roommate, etc, and they pay them handsomely.  What's a player supposed to say? No, they're not really that important. 

 There's so many cases where this happens; Rory, DJ, Patrick Reed, Lee Westwood.  Yeah it's low percentage wise, but there's still a lot and the vast majority I'm sure we haven't even heard.  Who actually knows all the player/caddie combos on tour.  

I don't know, I've always wondered about this and have just concluded in my mind that their importance is really overrated. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, jsixman said:

As I poorly prefaced before, you would obviously need to know golf.  In my case, I know golf well, I'm a good golfer or maybe used to be, I've played many tournaments, I can read greens, wind, weather, read yardage books, etc.  In good shape to walk the whole course with a 50 lb. bag on consecutive days.  Give me a couple days to prepare with the player, and yeah, I think I'm good to go.  They're all saying their so important because in most cases the caddy and player are close, often childhood buddies or met through an acquaintance, college roommate, etc, and they pay them handsomely.  What's a player supposed to say? No, they're not really that important. 

 There's so many cases where this happens; Rory, DJ, Patrick Reed, Lee Westwood.  Yeah it's low percentage wise, but there's still a lot and the vast majority I'm sure we haven't even heard.  Who actually knows all the player/caddie combos on tour.  

I don't know, I've always wondered about this and have just concluded in my mind that their importance is really overrated. 

So you're saying you could loop at say the Byron Nelson tournament at Trinity Forest for a Pro and do Ok ? Sorry Cyclone dude, a couple days on the bag isnt going to cut it. You couldn't read the greens like a club caddie who has seen a  thousand putts from all angles on all the greens. 

My witness your Honor... " I called ahead to reserve a local, worked out great.

I think the guy saved me two shots, which was worth a lot of money to both of us." Undercover Tour Pro Golf Digest May 2019 @

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Our picks

    • 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open - Discussion and links to Photos
      Please put any questions or Comments here
       
       
       
      General Albums
       
      2024 Texas Children's Houston Open - Monday #1
      2024 Texas Children's Houston Open - Monday #2
      2024 Texas Children's Houston Open - Tuesday #1
      2024 Texas Children's Houston Open - Tuesday #2
      2024 Texas Children's Houston Open - Tuesday #3
       
       
       
       
      WITB Albums
       
      Thorbjorn Olesen - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Ben Silverman - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Jesse Droemer - SoTX PGA Section POY - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      David Lipsky - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Martin Trainer - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Zac Blair - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Jacob Bridgeman - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Trace Crowe - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Jimmy Walker - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Daniel Berger - WITB(very mini) - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Chesson Hadley - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Callum McNeill - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Rhein Gibson - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Patrick Fishburn - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Peter Malnati - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Raul Pereda - WITB - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Gary Woodland WITB (New driver, iron shafts) – 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Padraig Harrington WITB – 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
       
       
       
       
      Pullout Albums
       
      Tom Hoge's custom Cameron - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Cameron putter - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Piretti putters - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Ping putter - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Kevin Dougherty's custom Cameron putter - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Bettinardi putter - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Cameron putter - 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Erik Barnes testing an all-black Axis1 putter – 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
      Tony Finau's new driver shaft – 2024 Texas Children's Houston Open
       
       
       
       
       
      • 9 replies
    • 2024 Valspar Championship WITB Photos (Thanks to bvmagic)- Discussion & Links to Photos
      This weeks WITB Pics are from member bvmagic (Brian). Brian's first event for WRX was in 2008 at Bayhill while in college. Thanks so much bv.
       
      Please put your comments or question on this thread. Links to all the threads are below...
       
       
       
       
        • Like
      • 31 replies
    • 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational - Discussion and Links to Photos
      Please put any questions or comments here
       
       
       
      General Albums
       
      2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational - Monday #1
      2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational - Monday #2
      2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational - Monday #3
       
       
       
       
      WITB Albums
       
      Matt (LFG) Every - WITB - 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
      Sahith Theegala - WITB - 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
       
       
       
       
       
      Pullout Albums
       
      New Cameron putters (and new "LD" grip) - 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
      New Bettinardi MB & CB irons - 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
      Custom Bettinardi API putter cover - 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
      Custom Swag API covers - 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
      New Golf Pride Reverse Taper grips - 2024 Arnold Palmer Invitational
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
        • Like
      • 15 replies
    • 2024 Cognizant Classic - Discussion and Links to Photos
      Please put any questions or comments here
       
       
       
       
      General Albums
       
      2024 Cognizant Classic - Monday #1
      2024 Cognizant Classic - Monday #2
      2024 Cognizant Classic - Monday #3
      2024 Cognizant Classic - Monday #4
       
       
       
      WITB Albums
       
      Brandt Snedeker - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Max Greyserman - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Eric Cole - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Carl Yuan - WITb - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Russell Henley - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Justin Sun - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Alex Noren - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Shane Lowry - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Taylor Montgomery - WITB - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Jake Knapp (KnappTime_ltd) - WITB - - 2024 Cognizant Classic
       
       
       
      Pullout Albums
       
      New Super Stoke Pistol Lock 1.0 & 2.0 grips - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      LA Golf new insert putter - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      New Garsen Quad Tour 15 grip - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      New Swag covers - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Jacob Bridgeman's custom Cameron putter - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Bud Cauley's custom Cameron putters - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Ryo Hisatsune's custom Cameron putter - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Chris Kirk - new black Callaway Apex CB irons and a few Odyssey putters - 2024 Cognizant Classic
      Alejandro Tosti's custom Cameron putter - 2024 Cognizant Classic
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
        • Like
      • 2 replies
    • 2024 Genesis Invitational - Discussion and Links to Photos
      Please put any questions or comments here
       
       
       
      General Albums
       
      2024 Genesis Invitational - Monday #1
      2024 Genesis Invitational - Monday #2
      2024 Genesis Invitational - Tuesday #1
      2024 Genesis Invitational - Tuesday #2
      2024 Genesis Invitational - Tuesday #3
      2024 Genesis Invitational - Tuesday #4
       
       
       
       
      WITB Albums
       
      Rory McIlroy - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Sepp Straka - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Patrick Rodgers - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Brendon Todd - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Denny McCarthy - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Corey Conners - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Chase Johnson - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Tiger Woods - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Tommy Fleetwood - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Matt Fitzpatrick - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Si Woo Kim - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Viktor Hovland - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Wyndham Clark - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Cam Davis - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Nick Taylor - WITB - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Ben Baller WITB update (New putter, driver, hybrid and shafts) – 2024 Genesis Invitational
       
       
       
       
       
      Pullout Albums
       
      New Vortex Golf rangefinder - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      New Fujikura Ventus shaft - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Tiger Woods & TaylorMade "Sun Day Red" apparel launch event, product photos – 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Tiger Woods Sun Day Red golf shoes - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Aretera shafts - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      New Toulon putters - 2024 Genesis Invitational
      Tiger Woods' new white "Sun Day Red" golf shoe prototypes – 2024 Genesis Invitational
       
       
       
       
       
      • 22 replies

×
×
  • Create New...