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The Away Trip
In every sport I’ve ever played – mostly the ones where you try to beat the tar out of someone before he beats the tar out of you – one of the greatest things has been the away trip. It never mattered if we were on the other side of the world or just down the road, only that we were a bunch of guys out to play sport, have some fun and maybe, just maybe, drink a couple of beers.
Some of my best memories and some of my best lack of memories have been on tour: being handcuffed to a minibus in Wales, waving my friend off in an Argentinian police car (lobbing firecrackers under police cars is never a good idea, especially when you don’t speak the language and especially when you are drunk) and watching the final nail-biting match of the 2005 Ashes in a Melbourne pub. Most of all there is the great camaraderie that is generated from living cheek by jowl out of a suitcase with a bunch of blokes that just happen to be as mad about sport as you are.
Having played no other sport but golf for a couple of years now (since I got too old and too broken for organised violence like rugby or AFL) I realised that the only way I was going to go on an away trip was to sort one out myself. Anyone who has organised a sports trip either for just a couple of days or a full-on tour will know that this is no easy task. Not only do you have to take into account what dates everybody who has expressed an interest is available for, you also need to match the location and facilities to everyone’s budget and sporting ability. Herding cats would be simpler, easier and decidedly less painful.
When you first suggest the idea to your friends, every man and his dog wants to come. Very soon after their enthusiastic protestations that they ‘absolutely will come’ they realise that either the date is wrong as it clashes with Auntie Margaret’s 90th birthday or they are counting the pennies to send little Tabitha to private nursery or more often that the wife has put her foot down and said no (that word often being followed by the phrase ‘those shelves won’t go up by themselves you know’ or something similar). Suddenly the 30 people you thought were going have become you and some friend of a friend who you have never met and apparently has body odour issues.
I figured that the easiest way to do it would be to find a place and time that suited me perfectly and sod everyone else. Completely selfish, it sounded brilliant provided I could convince at least 2 other people to come with me.
First things first, I needed to see what options were available. Pretty much every golf magazine you pick up has a large section of the back dedicated to golf trips abroad. I don’t know of any other sport where the magazines have so many adverts for trips away. While the magazine adverts were great for people who already knew what they wanted, the internet seemed the place to go as I has no idea what our destination would be.
There is an absolute plethora of companies out there who deal with golf trips. These specialised travel agents are effectively one stop shops, covering everything from flights, accommodation, green fees and even car hire or transfers from the airport to the hotel and everything in between. Not only do they seem to cover everything that a golf trip could involve they also offer the widest range of locations. As it was the depths of winter, somewhere hot was a must. As an Englishman, when I say hot I don’t mean the sort of place that will have the skin falling from my back in great sunburnt sheets (yes Australia, I’m talking about you) but the sort of place where lying in the sun by the pool with a refreshing beverage is the required behaviour for a golfer who has just finished his round. Preferably this balmy idyll would not involve going halfway around the world so no more than a few hours flight at most would be nice.
If you are making the effort to go on a golf trip, it only makes sense that the course you play on is a decent one. I fancied testing my skills against something that the pros would and preferably do play on. And one that would be pretty enough to make me bite my putter in half at its manicured beauty. Also, and most importantly, it should not require the selling of one of my kidneys to finance the trip.
In coming up with this list I thought that the shortlist would be just that, short. The reality is that there are an incredible number of top class courses out there ready and able to take a bunch of hackers and show them what a golf course should look like.
After much deliberation, the winner was Penina in southern Portugal. Only a couple of hours flight from London, it met all the requirements and more: balmy weather, a top quality hotel with a championship course (designed by 6 time major winner Henry Cotton) that has hosted Tour events, brilliant facilities including a swimming pool, tennis courts and no less than 6 bars. At the price the travel agent was offering, it was a steal.
Mentioning it quietly to about 15 guys produced about half a dozen interested parties and from that group, 3 that were prepared to put their money down.
Having not gone on a golf trip before, I checked out some forums to see if I could get any advice that would make it as painless as possible. The advice boiled down to a few things. Most of them were generic travelling tips but there were also a few that were specific to travelling with golf gear. Of the ones that weren’t just the standard ‘travelling to a foreign country’ type advice: ‘take sunscreen’, ‘check the weather before you go’ etc, I’ve included the more useful ones at the end of this (see, aren’t I nice!).
Not that I’ve ever needed much of a reason, this was a great excuse for a bit of equipment ‘hoing’. Unless you’ve been on a trip, there is no reason for you to have travel case but frankly you’d be mad to go away without one. As in all other areas of golf equipment, there is something for everybody, from cheap and cheerful (and apparently made out of old T-shirts) to hard cases tough enough to canoe down the Colorado River. I chose a soft case that would be secure and study enough to keep my beloved clubs in one piece rather than a hard case purely as it would be easier to get into the transport at the other end. The fact that it is a lurid red colour that makes it easy to see on the baggage carousel is pretty nice too. It’s embarrassing enough picking up the wrong suitcase and then having to explain it was a genuine mistake and not an attempt to nick someone’s dirty laundry, let alone someone else’s phenomenally expensive and lovingly collected clubs just because the have the same drab coloured travel bag.
The arrangements have all been made, money has been paid and I’m looking forward to this like a kid before Christmas. I’ll let you know how the trip pans out.
Top Travel Tips for Golfers
• Get a travel case, absolutely 100 percent get one. Soft cases are fine 99% of the time, especially if you put in a ClubGlove Stiff Arm or bit of broom stick longer than your driver to take any blows. Hard cases offer more protection but are a pain to get into any car, especially when there’s a group of you.
• Remember your passport and make sure it is valid. Now this one is not something I’ve ever thought about too much but a travel agent of my acquaintance tells me that one of the commonest cries for help they get is when someone turns up and the airport either without their passport or with one that has expired. Remember also that some countries require at least 6 months validity past your travel date and can also require at least one clear page in your passport.
• Get travel insurance. No on wants to get to the baggage reclaim to find out that their equipment off to Zanzibar via Ulan Baator but it’s nice to know that if it does happen hiring a replacement set is covered and should your kit never make it back, someone else buys you a brand new set.
• Check your free luggage allowance when booking your flights. Many airlines are cutting back on the size of your allowance but you should be aware that some airlines exclude sporting equipment from this restriction. For example, on both British Airways and American airlines flying with a golf bag is free but on Air France it depends on the destination and on Ryanair it costs 25 euros (34 USD).
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J.T. Poston delivers career-changing victory after major gear changes
J.T. Poston required extra holes Sunday to earn a handshake from Jack Nicklaus himself and walk away with the biggest victory of his career.
Poston outlasted Ryan Gerard on the second playoff hole at the Memorial Tournament, and the victory at Jack’s place was aided by two significant gear switches ahead of the tournament in Ohio.
Firstly, Poston swapped from the Titleist Pro V1x to the new Pro V1x Left Dash in his last start at the Charles Schwab Challenge. It’s the ball that made headlines just a month ago, when Jordan Spieth also transitioned into the low-spinning variant at the Cadillac Championship.
Poston’s ball change was spurred by a discussion with Titleist Tour reps about testing some options that could be a little better for him in the wind, after the now four-time PGA Tour winner had gained slightly more speed of late and was feeling like his irons and full wedge shots were overspinning.
Poston spent time testing both the current-generation Pro V1 and the new Left Dash at home the week after the PGA Championship, and at Colonial Country Club, he spent more time dialing things in on the range with J.J. Van Wezenbeeck before deciding to tee up the Left Dash that week. At the time, Poston was 85th in SG: Approach (+0.024); he gained +1.402 at Colonial.
“So we felt like today was going to be a good test of that and it obviously performed really well,” Poston said after a second-round 65 at Muirfield Village which propelled him into the lead. “We had a couple shots that I felt like didn’t quite hit ’em perfect and it hung in there pretty well. So I feel like just having that confidence in that too is big, where I just — we’re trying to hit the smart shot and hit the right shot and just trying to execute and go from there.”

On his way to victory, Poston delivered a dominant performance from tee-to-green and was +8.081 in approach and tied for fourth in greens in regulation.
Poston’s Memorial victory was also the first on Tour for the new torched line of TaylorMade’s 2026 Spider putters. Poston also added the L-Neck Tour X at the Charles Schwab Challenge the week prior, something prompted because “it seems to be working for a lot of the other guys.”

A usually reliable putter, Poston had dropped to as low as 89th on Tour in strokes gained, and when he saw his good friend Denny McCarthy using the Spider, he thought about the change. With the new flatstick in hand, Poston gained close to seven shots on the field at the Memorial and ranked third in SG: Putting for the week.
Poston was the first to agree, though, that neither switch was more important than the other.
“The ball got me there, the putter helped me get it in the hole,” Poston said.
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Final U.S. Women’s Open storylines as Nelly Korda takes title
As is expected at a major championship, many story lines developed throughout the day at Riviera Country Club. There were amateurs in the mix. There were young and old professionals without major wins, seeking an initial one. There were major winners seeking another on the way to hall of fame status. As for the golf course, there was concern that the competition committee might lose control over green speeds and rough heights (they didn’t) and that they might eliminate cool features like the backstops on the first and sixth greensites (they didn’t.) Riviera was a spectacular success for the USGA, at a time when it needed one. Riviera will host two men’s major competitions over the next half decade (the 2028 Olympic tournament and the 2031 men’s U.S. Open) and the blueprint has been laid down for how to set the course.
The lead was passed around throughout the day like a trip photo album. Riviera gave up a few low scores, with 67 from Charley Hull and Pajaree Anannarukarn leading the pack. Makes sense, since today is 6/7. What Riviera did not do, was offer up a 64 or 65 that would have allowed a distant chaser into contention. The old dame of the Palisades made it clear that you would earn the open by consistent play throughout the week, not with one dazzling effort over 18 holes.
As mentioned, so many story lines. We’ll hold ourselves to just four as we conclude Open week and say goodbye to Pacific Palisades and her barrancas and kikuyu. Here’s what we learned on day four of the U.S. Women’s Open.
Storyline One: The Amateurs
Four amateurs finished inside the top twenty-five players at this year’s celebration. Kiara Romero was not one of the three mentioned yesterday, but she was the class of the crew on Sunday. Romero closed with two birdies and a par, to finish on three shots under par. That was enought to edge Maria Jose Marin for the gold medal. Marin also made birdie at 16 and 17, but she slipped to bogey on 18 to finish T8, just behind Romero’s T6. Also representing the non-working class with distinction were Aphrodite Deng at T17 and Asterisk Talley at T22.
Storyline Two: Charley comes close again
I’m not counting, but Charley Hull has a dozen, top-ten finished in major titles. She began competing full-time in these prestigious events in 2014, which works out to one close call a year. On Sunday, Hull played magnificently through the first eleven holes. She had five birdies and one bogey through eleven holes, and reached eight-under par. Perhaps aware that she had assumed the lead, Hull gave two shots back over the next three holes., and slipped to minus-six. One final birdie at 17 brought her agonizingly close to another major title. Hull underclubbed on her approach at twelve, then took three putts from distance. On fourteen, she once again came up short, this time in a bunker, but came out briliantly to three feet. Whether it was a misread or an open face is left to the mists. What is known is that she missed for a second bogey in three holes.
Some who have not felt the sharp blade of competition will carelessly toos comments like she just can’t putt or he putting lets her down to give plausible explanation for why Charley Hull did not win. Check out the two-putts that she made at 15 and 16. Over 100 feet of putts combined, and she got the ball in the hole in four strokes. If I had to guess, it would come down to adrenaline and the ability to manage it, but only on certain holes. Truth is, no one played better than Hull on Sunday. Her 26 putts were tied for 6th on the day. On the three holes where she made bogey, she had a putt for birdie. In the end, it was rotten luck that Hull didn’t raise the trophy.
Storyline Three: Lopez almost gets it done for the kitchen staff
Politics and culture rarely take any stage during a major golf event. Once in a blue moon, Payne Stewart discusses race relations or Scottie Scheffler gets arrested, but nearly always, the golf occupies 100% of the media production. That’s why it was so heartwarming to hear Gaby Lopez discuss the pride she felt all week, when greeting the kitchen staff at Riviera. Lopez is Mexican, and she acknowledged that all of the kitchen staff at Riviera is Hispanic, mostly Mexican. Lopez beamed with pride when she revealed how supported she felt, and how she longed to win the title for them and for her home country. She nearly made the dream a reality.
Lopez made nine consecutive pars on Sunday, which did nothing to label her a contender. If you check the USGA highlights for the co-runner up, you’ll see only a putt on ten and eleven, and an approach and putt on thirteen. Let me fill in the spaces: Lopez had five feet and in for birdie on all three holes. Like Hull at 16, Lopez played beyond the hole, then took three putts from distance. Lopez could not get up and down for birdie from the penultimate hole’s right greenside bunker, but she did drop a twenty-feet putt for birdie at the last.
Storyline Four: Nelly Korda has the first two legs of the Grand Slam
Nelly Korda was the picture of consistency on Sunday. She had one boegy on her card, courtesy of a three-putt green. No one completely mastered the George Thomas greens in the valley. Hogan’s Alley, though, became Nelly’s Valley, as the Floridian won her second major title of 2026, and created a buzz for the Women’s PGA, to be held next month in Minnesota.
Like the other challengers, Korda hit around 10 greens and 10 fairways in regulation. The massive putting surfaces place a premium on proximity to the hole. Every element of Korda’s game was better than the field, save for putting. Off the tee, from the fairway, around the green, Nelly was nasty. As for the putting, all that she needed was one putt fewer than the rest, and she got it, but just barely. Her open-faced tug from two feet caught the left edge and fell. It was about the worst putt, at about the worst time, as one might imagine, but it was good enough.
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5 Things we Learned Saturday at the U.S. Women’s Open
Despite Colin Jost being so over the expression That was not on my bingo card, so much of what happened on Saturday at Riviera was precisely defined by that 2026 catch-phrase. Seasoned professionals faltered while young amateurs soared. Leaders posted par rounds while afterthoughts amassed birdie after day-three birdie. What transpired set up the potential for the best duels in USWO history. In the mixing bowl are the world’s number one, former champions, former contenders, and a host of the game’s top names.
Over the first three days, Riviera has played more like a golden-age gem than it ever has in modern times. Players are using greenside slopes and fairway cambres to propel the ball into proper position. Green speeds are manageable, yet daunting from the absolute worst place (read: above) in relation to the hole location. Nothing is unfair (fingers crossed for the same in two weeks on Long Island) and everything is earned.
Could it be Nelly, or Charley, or Sei Young or In-gee? How about Gaby or Jennifer, Nasa or Ruoning? All have contended before in the U.S. Women’s Open, but only In-gee Chun has raised the Semple trophy in triumph. A Hollywood sound stage is set for a dramatic finish, but prior to the conclusion, let’s revisit the five things that we learned on Saturday at the U.S. Women’s Open.
Saturday Thing One: Nelly Korda is tied at the top
If it were anyone else, after consecutive rounds of 67, the dam would break. That’s not the case with Korda. If anything, we expect that she might go lower on Sunday, to the tune of 65, and walk off with her first U.S. Women’s Open title.
We know that ruling bodies and host clubs adore name champions. They salute all victors, but the success of a current top golfer, a media darling, or a proven veteran serves to legitimate and venerate the event and the venue. The USGA and Riviera would be thrilled to have Nelly Korda as a champion.
What will propel the three-time major titleist to a fourth grand slam victory? Another 67, for starters. Reaching double-digits under par would place the Floridian in a marvelous space. It would require Sei Young to keep pace, and would demand that all the trailers post 66 or better.
Saturday Thing Two: How about those amateurs?
1 2 3 5 6 10 13 16 17 18
Those are the holes that Maria Jose Marin (68), Aphrodite Deng (68), and Asterisk Talley (66) birdied on Saturday. That’s a minus-ten ringer score for the trio. As we sleep one more sleep before the final round, consider that Marin and Deng are four strokes back of the leaders, while Talley is five shots behind. To have three amateur golfers within striking distance of the top ladder rung is heady stuff. Can Talley possibly follow up her minus-five with another one on Sunday? Even that might not be enough. How about Marin and Deng. Can they drop a mid-60s scorecard on the professionals, and throw a scare into them? Our intuition suggests no on both counts, but the potential for a top-five amateur finish is certainly in the cards.
Saturday Thing Three: the Korean Kontingent
Sei Young Kim and In-gee Chun would win any partner event this week, given their current form. Kim will tee off with Nelly Korda in the last game, and she will have a front-row seat to Chun’s performance, as In-gee will play in the game just ahead. Of the two, Sei Young appeared to have less control over her shots, as a substantial number of spproach shots turned inordinately left.. Time and again, her short game bailed her out of the bogeytown prison, although she did miss a fair number of short putts. Dumbo (aka Chun) seemed more in control from tee to green, but will need to channel her early-2020s self to insert herself into the narrative.
Saturday Thing Four: Kupcho’s Komeback
It’s not like she went very far away, but Jennifer Kupcho’s 69 on day three had to be gratifying. The Colorado native and Wake Forest alumna was in fine Friday position to make a statement and expand her lead. She had posted 66 on Thursday, but fell off form on day two with 73. There were 67s and 68s at Riviera that day, but Kupcho’s birdie production fell from seven to two, as her bogey line increased from two to four. She reduced the bogey output on Saturday, and redoubled birdies to four. She finds herself precisely one shot off the lead, in a tie with In-gee Chun, her Sunday walkabout mate.
What will Kupcho need on day four, to provide an opportunity for victory? Fairways and greens always help, but that electric, day-one start of birdies on holes one, two, and three will be massive. Stay on the proper side of the green-center bunker on six, and survive the dautning holes. Kupcho has made bogey on 13 and 15 twice in three days. Should she come to the final stretch in a place of power or hope, those two holes will test her worth and mettle. Kupcho has also played the closing triumvirate of holes in par or better, each of the three days. That sort of clutch-time performance will stand her well on day four.
Saturday Thing Five: How will it all transpire?
No one expects that both of the top two will struggle on Sunday. One of them will shoot 68, to reach nine-under par. That means that the trailers will have to light up the western sky with fireworks, to keep pace. There is a golfer with nine, top-ten finishes in major championships, who has never won a major. That golfer is Nasa Hataoka, and she is poised to break through and make a victory out of her tenth, top ten finish at a major. Hataoka finished T2 and T4 in this event in, respectively, 2021 and 2023. A missed cut in 2025 was a shock to the system, but the Japanese golfer will bounce back in style and claim the title.
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