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2008 Predictions

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With the 2007 golf season basically wrapped up and looking forward to 2008, and the new season I cannot help but think about what to expect in the coming year. Here are some predictions as to what I think might happen in 2008.

I can’t wait for 2008 to start. It is going to be a great year and if any of what I said comes true I will be totally amazed, as I am the furthest thing from a psychic. Like the rest of you I love golf, and this is my way to get through the off season thinking about the next year and all of the headlines that will become the water cooler talk of the year coming. I wish you all a happy and healty holiday season.

  1. FedEx Cup – It will be better than the first version, but some more underlying issues will surface and more refinement will be required to make it the season ending event that the PGA tour is hoping for. Would love to see 10 million in cash on a table behind 18 green, just like the World Series of Poker.
  2. PGA Tour – Look for another great year of golf on the PGA Tour. There are emerging talents, young and old as well as a very strong international contingent, all helping to make the competition as strong as it has been, arguably in the history of the game. Tiger will have another great year; the big question is who will challenge him? Phil? Ernie? Vijay? Or some new up and comer, maybe Jason Day?
  3. LPGA Tour – Look for a continuation of the late year battle between Ochoa and Petterson. It is shaping up to be a rivalry that the LPGA Tour needs, and if you can throw Pressel, Gulbis, Creamer, Stacy P, Lincicome, and Annika (if she can return to her dominant form) in the mix, that would be a recipe for some great tournaments, majors, and awesome competition to look forward to in ‘08. Ladies golf will continue to grow and become even more popular than in’ 07.
  4. Drivers – Look for more MOI. Square drivers have seemed to pass the litmus test and are being accepted and used by more and more golfers. I also would not be surprised if we see more in play on tour this year. Just like when the first 400 CC drivers came out and were looked down upon, the square driver was ugly initially and now is gaining acceptance, due in part to its excellent performance and technology. A driver tends to look a lot better when you are in the fairway all day, regardless if it looks like gopher masher.
  5. Putters – Just like drivers, ugly putters tend to stick around if they perform and win on the tours, and there will always be a place in the market for the classic designs. Look for more exotic inserts, materials, graphite shafts and shaft options, wild color grips, crazy head covers, and flashy designs. The emergence of boutique putter companies that offer custom “tour quality” putters for a fraction of the price will continue to prosper.  Why spend 3 hundy on a production putter when you can spend close to the same and get a putter that fits you, your stroke, and setup, get a few stamps on there, your initials, and maybe “Proto” or “Hand Made”, pretty cool if you ask me.  Tour treatment for a fraction of the price.
  6. Wedges – Aside from the emergence of the custom wedge market with companies like Chikara, and Scratch, there is not much to report here. There are rumors of a Vokey custom shop that if true, will be huge and I am sure people will be going crazy like with the Cameron Custom Shop. There are some great options out there in the wedge department, and now you have the high end custom wedge market emerging as well.  Great time to be in the market for some new wedges.
  7. Irons – Nothing super new to report here. You will have your normal influx of new game improvement irons and some forged cavity backs and blades for the better players. Same stuff new year, just with some new colors, badges, and slightly modified designs.
  8. John Daly – I sure hope that he gets his game in shape this year. JD is one of the good guys, although he comes with some demons. He means well, does a ton for charity, but can be a train wreck at times. I see a big year for JD, maybe even a victory. Keep after it my man, I am pulling for you.
  9. Tiger Woods – 2 majors, 6 tour wins, and 1 world golf championship. That should be a stock year for the world’s number 1. He is playing what he is required to play in. His life is in order, his priorities are in order, and he played some really amazing golf this past year. Why would 2008 be any different? Maybe Jason Day will change that? (sorry could not resist)
  10. Q School Grads – Tommy Gainey, is he going to cash in on the Big Break that he earned himself? Looked great in Q school, wish him the best and hope he has a good solid year. Lickliter should have a good year as well. He pretty much dominated the Q School the first three rounds then cruised to victory. He will get into a ton of events and if he plays like he did there, he might even win one. Great playing by a great guy.
  11. Majors – Tiger will win the US Open, and the PGA. Ernie Els will win the Masters, and the Open Championship is going to Sergio Garcia. 
  12. Senior Tour – Look for Fred Funk, Loren Roberts, and Jay Haas to continue to do big things on the Senior Tour. Nick Price will regain his form and show why he used to be the best player in the world. 
  13. USGA – Allowing the interchangeability of shafts. Amended to allow forms of adjustability other than weight adjustment. Cool idea and opens up the flood gates for fitting options. Shaft companies are super excited as now people can just have a few different shafts for the driver head that they like.
  14. Who to look out for in 2008 – Tiger Woods, what kind year will he have? Morgan Pressel, US Open is hers, a make up for the random hole out last year. Zach Johnson, can he follow up the Masters victory with another major?  Lorena Ochoa, is she ready to dominate like Annika? Jason Day, can he back up his talk? Rory Sabatini, will he have another monster year, and continue to get Tiger fired up? Tim Finchem, did he do enough to fix the Fed Ex Cup? Ernie Els, can he return to the winners circle and challenge Tiger? Nick Flanagan, he dominated the Nationwide and earned a battlefield promotion, can he do the same on the big tour? Phil Mickelson, what can we expect from Butch’s new star pupil? Vijay, is he done chasing Tiger? Suzanne Peterson, can she follow up her break out season?

2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. Dan

    Dec 12, 2007 at 3:41 pm

    Appreciate the comments, and as I said in the first paragraph these are “my predictions” and I am not going to be able to fit everything in this article.

    Point 1: Causing you to be perturbed by my one dimensional focus. I apologize if I did not include enough european mentions in there. Justin Rose had a great year and he could do big things this year. I did give Sergio the Open, and Ernie Els the Masters. Did you overlook that part?

    Point 2: Rory McIlroy. Great young talent. Did not have a section in there about the European tour, as I don’t really know that much about it or the players on the circuit. Coverage for that tour is rather lacking here in the states. I wish him the best and I hope that he does great. Did he go through the PGA Tour’s Q School? Oh yeah maybe that is why I did not mention him in that section.

    Point 3: Ryder Cup. Going to be a great event, and I wish Europe the best. I hope that the competition is strong and a fun event to watch. I did not have enough time to do research on the Ryder Cup for this year and come up with a prediction.

    If you feel that my article did not cover enough of the bases, feel free to write one on your own and then I can pick apart your article for what you failed to include in “your” predictions.

    Cheers,

    DG

  2. Reginaldo

    Dec 12, 2007 at 3:43 am

    Hm – I appreciate that this is an American article but even still I am a little perturbed by it’s it’s one-dimensional focus on golf for the coming year. I’d say look out for Justin Rose who has had a superb end of season having spent much of the year on the sidelines with back trouble. As for Q school, there’s a young lad called McIlroy who featured at the Open and qualified for the European Tour by winning enough cash in his first four invitational tournaments after turning pro. He didn’t even have to appear at q school! Finally I notice there is no mention of the Ryder Cup – easy prediction that one I reckon – Europe!

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5 Things we Learned: Friday at the U.S. Women’s Open

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Dumbo flies again! There is certainly a half-generation of golf fans without the slightest idea of how well In-gee Chun, aka Dumbo, can golf her ball. The Korean was the It Girl from 2015 to 2018. She won three LPGA events, with two being major championships. She returned to Korea to cure her homesickness, but made the occasional foray back to the Americas. In 2022, she captured a fourth LPGA title and, guess what? It was a third, unique major title.

The halfway cut line was set at four over par. Those at plus-five and beyond had their stay in Tinseltown cut short, at least when it comes to working rounds of golf. Among the 87 who fell on the high side of the cut line, Lydia Ko stood out as the biggest name. Others given a two-day furlough were Lilia Vu, Megha Ganne, Chizzy Iwai, and Leona Maguire. Making the cut on the number are Lottie Woad, Celine Boutier, Mao Saigo, and amateur Asterisk Talley. If you follow world football, imagine the feeling of relegation on a weekly basis. That’s the 36-hole cut in professional golf.

We learned five things on Friday at Riviera Country Club, and we’d love to share them with you. Find a comfy place and brighten the screen on your device. It’s time for Five Things We Learned on day two at the US Women’s Open.

Part One: the biggest movers

A golfer’s feel appears or slips away overnight. Although Saturday is known collectively as Moving Day, it doesn’t come with as sudden and final a feeling as Friday. Move the wrong way on Friday and you’re down the road. Improve in the proper direction and you save your week. Both Mao Saigo and Rio Takeda opened with plus-five rounds of 76, then signed for 70 on day two, and made the cut on the number.

Moving the other way were Stephanie Kyriacou (70-78) and Ina Yoon (68-79). Their respective eight- and eleven-shot declines propelled them from title contention to tournament departure. Minjee Lee and Minji Kang (seven shots higher) along with Rose Zhang (five shots) made the cut, but saw their opportunity for victory take a serious body shot.

Part Two: the leaders

Allison Lee and Ruoning Yin took the conservative path to the 36-hole medal. Lee posted four birdies and a bogey for a total of 68 on day two. Yin had two birdies and sixteen pars for her second consecutive card of 69. Their 138 places them one shot clear of the aforementioned Dumbo Chun, who followed an opening 71 with 68. First-round leader Jennifer Kupcho added seven shots to her total, from an opening-day 66 to a follow-up 73, yet remained within the inner circle of leaders at -3, tied with Chun and four others. Four more golfers sit at minus-two, two shots behind the top duo. An even dozen of golfers sits within two shots of the lead.

The day’s biggest move of gravitas came from Nelly Korda. After a disappointing 73 on Thursday, the world number one improved six shots, thanks to a five-birdie round of 67. Korda slid inside the top ten with her recovery, and certainly reclaimed her place as most frightening chaser at Riviera. No one is likely to shoot in the low 60s at Riviera, but Korda just might post a mid-sixties score on Saturday, to seize the lead on Sunday morning.

Part Three: Ams verse Champs

Five current amateur golfers were among the 68 golfers to reach the weekend. Kiara Romero posted the best non-pro score on Friday, a one-under 70, to move from plus-two to plus-one figures. She is joined there by Aphrodite Deng, who reversed those numbers for her two rounds. Maria Jose Marin (143), Farah O’Keefe (145), and Asteriks Talley (146) joined the #WeDidIt brigade to earn a spot for the final two rounds.

Six former US Open champions, led by In-gee Chun(2015), also punched a ticket for round three. Allison Corpuz (2023), Maja Stark (2025), Ariya Jutanugarn (2018), A Lim Kim (2020), and Minjee Lee (2022) preserved their dream of a second US Open trophy for the mantle. Nineteen amateurs failed to earn a post for the final 36-holes, while five former champions joined them on the sidelines. Yuka Saso, twice a winner in this event in the past half-decade, missed the cut by five shots. 24 amateurs against eleven former titleists suggests that it is easier for the young to qualify, but harder for them to find success.

Part Four: the golf course

Scoring went up by .6 shots per player, from round one to round two. Statistically speaking, it became harder to make the cut as the day wore on. Birdies dropped by 50, while pars remained constant. Both bogeys and doubles increased markedly. The first and the sixth holes played under par on the front nine, while the second and ninth were nearly tied for most difficult traces on the road to the turn.

Coming home, holes ten, twelve, fifteen, and eighteen played as an impregnable quadrilateral. Odds are, you gave a shot back on each of them. Despite number seventeen’s accessibility for birdie, no one got out of the back nine alive. If conditions continue toward the extreme, Riviera will extract a pound of flesh from the contenders over the weekend.

Part Five: what to expect

From my vantage point, the tee times to watch are the 4:55 EST and the 5:05 slots. Nelly Korda pegs her ball in the sixth-last pairing with Sora Kamiya. The little-known Kamiya will get an up close and personal look at the crowds that follow the best in the world. Korda will need to ignore Kamiya’s expected struggles and golf her own ball. Ten minutes later, Lauren Coughlin begins play with Casandra Alexander at her side. It’s a similar situation, with the experienced Coughlin alongside an unseasoned partner.

Both Sei Yong Kim and Gaby Lopez have turned in strong performances, and their 5:15 pairing might produce some explosive numbers. From back in the pack, the tasty duo of Brooke Henderson and Jeeno Thitikul at 4:20, might see double digits in birdies. The unexpected at unknown Riviera is likely, so your guess is as good as mine.

 

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5 Things we Learned: Thursday at the U.S.. Women’s Open

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Gone are the days when the U.S. Women’s Open was held at Scenic Hills or Churchill Valley. Fine courses that they are (or were, as Churchill Valley went bankrupt a decade ago) there is something to be said for the venue. Not all Women’s Open playings need to take place on Men’s Open venues, but some should. This week in Los Angeles, the Women’s Open visits Riviera Country Club for the first time. Down the road, we will visit Inverness, Oakmont, Interlachen, Oak Hill, Chicago Golf, and Merion. That is quite the murderer’s row (1927 Yankees reference) of golf clubs.

What can we expect from the 2026 tournament? Greatness and uncertainty. Unlike the PGA Tour, which visits Riviera each February, the LPGA does not, so the women will not have nearly the body of work over the George C. Thomas layout. Maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe they’ll play #10 smarter than the men do. Maybe they’ll figure some things out that their male counterparts can not. For today, we’ll try to find five things to learn, and share them with you.

First, this ain’t your momma’s U.S. Open course

How do we know? Well, so far, only one previous champion currently sits inside the top thirty. That would be Minjee Lee, the 2022 winner at Southern (NC) Pines. Lee made par on her first nine holes, the inward side at Riviera. She dropped birdie putts on the first and ninth holes (ten and eighteen for her day) and tallied another seven pars, for 69. She sits three shots off Jennifer Kupcho’s opening 66. Don’t worry about Kupcho; we’ll get to her. After Lee, defending champion Maja Stark ranks T30 at even par, joined by three other, former winners.

What Minjee did, is the sort of thing that wins U.S. Open titles. She guided her ship safely past swells, and made a move when the waters calmed. The fewer the bogeys, the more likely Minjee figures in the outcome on Sunday evening in Pacific Palisades. Off the tee, Lee was unmatched. She hit 14 of 14 fairways. Her iron play was a bit loose in comparison. She putted for birdie on 12 of 18 holes, which meant that her recovery short game was on point. Lee was ten yards longer on measured driving holes than the field average, and was below the field average (a good thing) in putting.

Second, the amateurs beat a loud drum

Three of the world’s top amateur golfer posted 70, placing them four off the lead, in a tie for 14th place. Canada’s Aphrodite Deng, Spain’s Paula Francisco Llaño, and Colombia’s Maria José Marin, showed the professional world that their game is strong. Both Deng and Francisco Llaño collected five birdies on the day. Should they match that output on day two, and minimize the foozles, they’ll be the topic of conversation on Saturday morning. Marin, the 2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion and an NCAA team semifinalist last week, played a game similar to Minjee Lee: few mistakes and few taken risks.

The last amateur to post the low medal score for 72 holes was Jenny Chuasiriporn in 1998. She lost a playoff to Se Ri Pak, who matched her plus-six effort at Blackwolf Run. The last amateur to win the U.S. Women’s Open was Catherine Lacoste in 1967. The amateurs are stronger than they’ve ever been, but the professionals have not allowed them to close the gap. A victory by one of the college set would be a cannon shot heard round the world. Could it happen? Absolutely. Is it likely? Not at all.

Third, let’s talk Kupcho

Jennifer Kupcho won the inaugural Augusta National Women’s Amateur. She won three times on tour in 2022, including the Chevron, a major title. She won a fourth event in 2025, but has not established the winning credentials projected on her after 2022’s marvelous coming-out.

Kupcho hails from Colorado, and spent four years in the Carolina Piedmont, at Wake Forest Universtiy. Neither of those locales cries out I’ll be at home at Riviera, but here we are, after a seven-birdie performance. Kupcho posted birdie on each of her first three holes, and added four more (against two bogeys) to assume a one-shot advantage over Korea’s Sei Young Kim.

Kupcho drove the ball decently, approached moderately well, but putted lights out on Thursday. Her 26 putts were tied for best in show on day one. There might just be something about the putting surfaces at Riviera that aligns with Kupcho’s vibe. If that is the case, just get the ball on the green, anywhere, and let the flatstick do the lifting.

Fourth, how young is Sei Young?

Sei (pronounced “So”) Young Kim won a dozen times from 2015 to 2020. She took time off from winning until 2025, shen she captured a thirteenth LPGA title. Like Kupcho, Kim has hardware from one major event, the 2020 Women’s PGA Championship. How to explain the five years away from victory? No idea. When Sei Young was in contention during the prime of her career, the outcome was a foregone conclusion.

What to expect over the next three days at Riviera? Anyone’s guess. It might be the 2015-2020 Sei Young, or it could be the 2021-2025 version. Kim began her day with birdies at 10 and 11, then settled into a stretch of pars before her solitary bogey at the 4th (her 13th) hole. Kim regained her composure and reeled in three birdies to close the front nine. Her four-under performance trails Kupcho alone, and there is a real chance that Sei Young will produce a second score in the 60s and take a bit of control of the tournament.

Fifth, we’re giddy for Gaby

Although I cannot place my finger on why, it seems that each year, Gaby Lopez pops up on the U.S. Open leaderboard. She hasn’t figure out how to remain in contention, but here we are, in 2026, and Lopez is once again in the mix. The three-time champion on the LPGA circuit had a stunning first nine holes, turning in minus-five. She reached six deep at her tenth hole, but then gave three shots back coming home. Which Gaby will show up on Friday, and for how long? If back-nine Gaby can somehow channel front-nine Gaby, all outcomes are within reach. If the loose play continues, Lopez’ wiki page will add one more T41 to her majors column.

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Photos from the 2026 U.S. Women’s Open

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GolfWRX Tour Photographer made the trip from the Memorial Tournament across the country to the U.S. Women’s Open at Riviera. Check out links to all the photos below!

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