Monthly Archives: September 2021

Kevin Kisner wins 2021 Wyndham Championship in Greensboro

The Wyndham Championship took place last month at the iconic Sedgefield Country Club in
Greensboro, North Carolina as the final event of the PGA Tours regular season which ended in
spectacular fashion.
The course designed by Donald Ross, which the Wyndham Championship had taken place at 26
times from 1938 to 1976 only to move Forest Oaks Country Club, underwent a $3 million renovation in
2007 by Kris Spence to incorporate golf technology, turf-grass, and other changes bringing the
championship back to the course in 2008 where it has been played every year since.
Kevin Kisner took the win at the championship after he eagled the second sudden death play-off
hole with a three-foot putt, ending a six-man playoff that tied the two-time record for most players in a
PGA playoff with the 2001 Nissan Open and the 1994 GTE Byron Nelson Golf Classic.
Kisner made birdie on two of his last three holes in regulation to end under 15 to be joined in the
playoff by Adam Scott, Si Woo Kim, Roger Sloan, Kevin Na, and Branden Grace. He was trailing behind
the rest when entering the playoff but his ending putt made it the 13th
straight PGA Tour event where a
player won after entering the final round behind.
After Kisner sunk the match-winning putt he proceeded to shake the hands of every player and
caddie in triumphant excitement. He has finished in the top 10 in three of his last five PGA tour events
marking a stellar regular season for the golfer after winning the biggest playoff event since 2001 which
also ties for the biggest playoff event in history. This victory now makes him a four-time PGA tour
winner having won in 2015, 2017, 2019 and now 2021. He is being eyed as a potential for the U.S. Ryder
Cup team which many argue he should be apart of.

 

Top 10 equipment stories of the 2020-21 PGA TOUR season

The TOUR Championship has wrapped, concluding the 2020-2021 PGA TOUR season. Patrick Cantlay hoisted the FedExCup trophy thanks in no small part to a putter switch he made late in the season.

We may be slightly biased here at the Equipment Report, but we think it’s the perfect time to look back on some of the most significant PGA TOUR equipment stories of the year — and we had some good ones!

Harris’ HoHum

In January, Harris English won the Sentry Tournament of Champions with the same putter — a Ping Scottsdale HoHum — he used for his 2013 Mayakoba Golf Classic victory. Unique-looking putter, and a unique equipment tale here as we got the story from Ping TOUR Rep Tony Serrano about what English loves about his HoHum.

Hideki’s Scotty switch

Eternally in pursuit of the perfect putter, Hideki Matsuyama made a switch two weeks prior to the Masters, putting a 2012 Scotty Cameron Newport 2 Tour Prototype in the bag that was outfitted with a different grip than his Cameron Timeless.

Rory returns to old Protos

Rory McIlroy made a number of equipment changes in 2021. Most significant among the switches, certainly, was his return to his 2017 TaylorMade Rors Prototype irons prior to winning the Wells Fargo Championship.

Phil’s PGA Championship-winning driver

En route to his incredible PGA Championship victory, Phil Mickelson wielded a Callaway Epic Speed driver with a 47.9-inch shaft (right up against the USGA limit of 48 inches). We got the inside story of Phil’s build.

Morikawa finds a putter that performs

Struggling with alignment, Collin Morikawa built himself a custom TaylorMade TP Juno putter using the same MyTP custom putter builder that’s available to the public. While his gamer was ultimately slightly different, it was a wild “they’re just like us” tale.

Rahm’s U.S. Open-winning wand

Jon Rahm switched to an Odyssey Rossie S the tournament prior to his epic U.S. Open triumph. We got the full story of what happened at the Ely Callaway Performance Center in Carlsbad and why Rahmbo made the move away from the 2-Ball Ten putter he had been using.

Rory calls a Cameron into Olympic duty

Full-bag TaylorMade staffer captured the full attention of the golf equipment world when he arrived in Tokyo not with his TaylorMade Spider putter but with a Scotty Cameron 009M flatstick. We went in search of the story, and even though Rory has now made a return to the TaylorMade mallet, it was a fun feature to fill out.

Phil takes the armlock plunge

Always willing to experiment with his equipment, Phil Mickelson tried his hand (and arm) at armlock putting. Additionally, he used a prototype putter that featured an interesting backstory. And while the experiment is over, the story is well worth digging back into.

JT takes a teen’s advice

A question from a 15-year-old junior golfer prompted Justin Thomas to reconsider benching the Scotty Cameron Phantom X 5.5 with which he won 14 of his 15 PGA TOUR titles.

Little changes, big playoff payoff for Cantlay

Most recently on the “significant equipment storylines” front, Patrick Cantlay switched to a Scotty Cameron X 5 putter with a sightline (from an alignment aid-free version) and had the best performance in strokes gained: putting history. He then rode the red-hot putter to a FedExCup victory at East Lake. Sometimes the smaller adjustments pay the biggest dividends!