News
Steve Stricker Wins Barclays
Tiger Woods may not have been in the Barclays field, but what it lacked in star power, it more than made up for with exciting final round play as Steve Stricker birdied four of the final five holes to win the Baraclays and take the initial lead in the first leg of the FedEx Cup playoffs.
The past six and a half years have not been easy for Steve Stricker. Nor has the past year. After finding himself poised to win both the U.S. Open and Open Championships, only to be betrayed in the final round as pressure began to build. Yet Sunday would be Stricker’s day alone to shine. "I’ve put in a lot of hard work at the end of the 2005 season. I went back to TOUR School and I think that was a big wake-up call. I put a lot of effort there and I think I missed my TOUR card there by a couple of shots. I just worked real hard at it at the end of the 2005 season. I came out with I think kind of a fresher attitude and I caught on to many things during the winter in Wisconsin hitting a lot of balls," said Stricker.
Much like his road back to contention on the PGA Tour, Stricker’s victory on Sunday was an uphill battle the entire way. The goal of the FedEx Cup was to bring the best players on the PGA Tour in contention for a series of weeks, and it appears they did just that. On the back nine of the final round, ten players were within three strokes of the lead including Phil Mickelson, Geoff Ogilvy, and Ernie Els. However, towards the end, it was clear the tournament would come down to the final pairing of K.J. Choi and Steve Stricker.
K.J. Choi who is having the best year of his career began the round in an uncharacteristic fashion, bogeying three holes before finally making his first birdie on the ninth which seemed to turn the momentum in his favor. After collection two more birdies on 10 and 12, Stricker began wondering if he would be able to stop Choi’s charge, "I thought, here he goes. I was in contention there at AT&T and he holed it out of the bunker at 17. I thought, ‘Well, here he goes.’ He made a bomb and then he made one earlier, too. You know, I just had to pay attention to myself and I didn’t really worry about what he was doing. I just tried to stay focused on what I was doing and trying to do."
It would have been the perfect time for Stricker to fold, for the pressure to overcome him. Clearly it came close to doing just that. Bogies on 10 and 13 after wayward drives brought Choi and Stricker very close. Then Stricker erupted with four birdies on the last five holes: "You know what, I felt good. I was thinking that after birdying 16, I’m like, you know, I finally — you know, I got deeper into the round having a chance to win. Those other tournaments, it kind of — piddled it away there mid-round. So I felt like, you know what, I’m deep into the round; anything can happen."
Perhaps Stricker’s success at the Barclays was because of, and not in spite of his earlier disappointments this year. Despite the difficulties he experienced Stricker took the positives from the previous tournaments and used them to fuel his victory on Sunday. He said, "I didn’t see them as disappointments. I think that’s the first thing. I didn’t see those as a negative deal. I thought that was another building block in what I was doing. Even though I didn’t finish them off, you know, the way you’re supposed to, I still felt like those were positive things for me. I was moving in the right direction."
| Pos | Player | Points |
| 1 | Steve Stricker | 104,950 |
| 2 | K.J. Choi | 102,900 |
| 3 | Rory Sabattini | 100,650 |
| 4 | Tiger Woods | 100,000 |
| 5 | Phil Mickelson | 99,613 |
| 6 | Vijay Singh | 99,000 |
| 7 | Jim Furyk | 98,850 |
| 8 | Zach Johnson | 97,350 |
| 9 | Adam Scott | 97150 |
Tour Photo Galleries
Photos from the 2026 OccuNet Classic
With the PGA Tour across the border in Canada this week, GolfWRX Tour Photographer Greg Moore stayed stateside and headed to the OccuNet Classic presented by Amarillo National Bank in Amarillo, Texas.
It’s always interesting to see what the guys are playing on the KFT, and this week certainly hasn’t disappointed so far, with some incredible wedge stamping on display.
Check out links to all our albums below.

General Albums
WITB Albums
- Ryan Palmer – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Mahanth Chirravuri – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Josh Creel – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Phichaksn Maichon – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Brandon Berry – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
- Ryan Burnett – WITB – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
Pullout Albums

Luke Potter’s custom Cameron putter – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)
News
From the GolfWRX Classifieds: Scotty Cameron GOLO 6 with BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition
At GolfWRX, we are a community of like-minded individuals who all experience and express our enjoyment of the game in many ways.
It’s that sense of community that drives day-to-day interactions in the forums on topics that range from best driver to what marker you use to mark your ball. It even allows us to share another thing we all love – buying and selling equipment.
Currently, in our GolfWRX buy/sell/trade (BST) forum, @HuskerFlyer is sharing a Scotty Cameron GOLO with a BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition shaft. While the putter is certainly enviable, the Augusta-inspired shaft is equally noteworthy.

From the listing:
Scotty Cameron Golo 6 with BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition Scotty Headcover 34″ $375
To check out the full listing in our BST forum, head through the link. If you are curious about the rules to participate in the BST Forum, you can learn more here: GolfWRX BST Rules.
News
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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