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V1 Sports launches its largest iOS app update since 2010

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V1 Sports has completed a major overhaul of its popular iOS golf app. V1, as you know, produces the leading video instruction platform for teaching pros, and has done so before the smartphone era.

The new V1 Golf IOS App is built on a wealth of customer feedback.

“The new release is an example of our passion for empowering instructors and golfers to be their best,” Chris McGinley, CEO of V1 Sports, said. “By asking the right questions and listening closely to our users, we continue to help them improve.”

The new release is the largest update since the app debuted in 2010.

The new app makes it easier than ever for a golfer to capture his/her swing on video and share it with a V1 teaching pro. For teachers, the app allows them to deliver lessons created with V1’s Pro software that include video, telestration, voiceover and content directly to their student’s mobile device.

V1 Golf 2.1 feature an updated video manager with a cleaner design that makes storing videos easier. V1 has also created new tag, search and sort functions that help users navigate the swing videos they store.

You can find V1 in the App Store here.

 

Ben Alberstadt is the Editor-in-Chief at GolfWRX, where he’s led editorial direction and gear coverage since 2018. He first joined the site as a freelance writer in 2012 after years spent working in pro shops and bag rooms at both public and private golf courses, experiences that laid the foundation for his deep knowledge of equipment and all facets of this maddening game. Based in Philadelphia, Ben’s byline has also appeared on PGATour.com, Bleacher Report...and across numerous PGA DFS and fantasy golf platforms. Off the course, Ben is a committed cat rescuer and, of course, a passionate Philadelphia sports fan. Follow him on Instagram @benalberstadt.

5 Comments

5 Comments

  1. Tony

    Apr 2, 2018 at 6:34 am

    It’s absolute rubbish. Previous version is so much better, I’ve stopped using it now

  2. One Day At A Time

    Mar 30, 2018 at 3:11 pm

    Hudl- (still ubersense on my old old iPhone) is/was so ahead of everything else I really don’t see many switching from it unless they get a major camera upgrade. Frankly, it’s the 240/FPS that does the heavy lifting.

    Also, quit thinking golf swing….. note to self……

  3. impanderson

    Mar 29, 2018 at 4:15 pm

    Do you mean the “only” update since 2010? Talking about asleep at the switch, get a job at the MTA!! (much better pension, tracks are more dangerous when asleep). What kind of app, in business for a decade, is on release 2.1?

  4. NolanMBA

    Mar 29, 2018 at 12:39 pm

    Any comparisons to Hudl?

    • Brad

      Apr 2, 2018 at 9:16 am

      HUdl blows V1 away in every way shape and from. Only benefit V1 ever had is you could connect bodi track to it.

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Tour Photo Galleries

Photos from the 2026 CJ Cup Byron Nelson

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With the second major of 2026 now behind us, the PGA Tour arrives in Texas for the CJ Cup Byron Nelson.

GolfWRX Tour Photographer, Greg Moore, is on site at TPC Craig Ranch in McKinney, Texas, and he’s already captured several WITBs and a look at some new colorways of just-spotted L.A.B. Golf VZN.1i putters.

Check out links to all our photos below.

General Albums

WITB Albums

Pullout Albums

See what GolfWRXers are saying and join the discussion in the forums.

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How much each player won at the 2026 PGA Championship

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Aaron Rai upset the odds to win his first major championship on Sunday at Aronimink, firing a final round of 5-under par to see off his competitors and claim the winner’s check for $3,690,000.

Jon Rahm and Alex Smalley were the best of the chasing pack, with both men sharing runner-up spot which was good enough for each to receive a check for $1,804,000.

With a total prize purse of $20.5 million up for grabs, here’s a look at how much each player won at the 2026 PGA Championship.

Players who missed the PGA Championship cut each received $4,300 each.

1: Aaron Rai, $3,690,000

T2 : Jon Rahm, $1,804,000

T2 : Alex Smalley, $1,804,000

T4: Justin Thomas, $843,866

T4: Ludvig Aberg, $843,866

T4: Matti Schmid, $843,866

T7: Cameron Smith, $637,050

T7: Rory McIlroy, $637,050

T7: Xander Schauffele, $637,050

T10: Kurt Kitayama, $496,707

T10: Chris Gotterup, $496,707

T10: Justin Rose, $496,707

T10: Patrick Reed, $496,707

T14: Matt Fitzpatrick, $364,762

T14: Scottie Scheffler, $364,762

T14: Max Greyserman, $364,762

T14: Ben Griffin, $364,762

T18: Maverick McNealy, $229,128

T18: Jordan Spieth, $229,128

T18: Stephan Jaeger, $229,128

T18: Padraigh Harrington, $229,128

T18: David Puig, $229,128

T18: Harris English, $229,128

T18: Min Woo Lee, $229,128

T18: Joaquin Niemann, $229,128

T26: Nick Taylor, $125,523

T26: Alex Noren, $125,523

T26: Cameron Young, $125,523

T26: Andrew Novak, $125,523

T-26: Daniel Hiller, $125,523

T26: Tom Hoge, $125,523

T26: Sam Burns, $125,523

T26: Hideki Matsuyama, $125,523

T26: Bud Cauley, $125,523

T35: Christiaan Bezuidenhout, $78,805

T35: Patrick Cantlay, $78,805

T35: Ryo Hisatsune, $78,805

T35: Daniel Berger, $78,805

T35: Ryan Fox, $78,805

T35: Haotong Li, $78,805

T35: Aldrich Potgieter, $78,805

T35: Si Woo Kim, $78,805

T35: Martin Kaymer, $78,805

T44: Chris Kirk, $53,743

T44: Matt Wallace, $53,743

T44: Shane Lowry, $53,743

T44: Jhonattan Vegas, $53,743

T44: Denny McCarthy, $53,743

T44: Chandler Blachet, $53,743

T44: Taylor Pendrith, $53,743

T44: Dustin Johnson, $53,743

T44: Nicolai Hojgaard, $53,743

T44: Michael Kim, $53,743

T44: Kristoffer Reitan, $53,743

T55: Collin Morikawa, $34,186

T55: Corey Conners, $34,186

T55: Andrew Putnam, $34,186

T55: Brooks Koepka, $34,186

T55: Mikael Lindberg, $34,186

T60: Sami Valimaki, $29,218

T60: Sahith Theegala, $29,218

T60: Rico Hoey, $29,218

T60: Rickie Fowler, $29,218

T60: Brian Harman, $29,218

T65: Casey Jarvis, $26,900

T65: Jason Day, $26,900

T65: Rasmus Hojgaard, $26,900

T65: Keith Mitchell, $26,900

T65: Sam Stevens, $26,900

T70: Luke Donald, $25,070

T70: Ryan Gerard, $25,070

T70: John Parry, $25,070

T70: William Mouw, $25,070

T70: Kazuki Higa, $25,070

T75: Elvis Smylie, $24,158

T75: Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, $24,158

T75: Alex Fitzpatrick, $24,158

T75: Daniel Brown, $24,158

79: John Keefer, $23,970

80: Ben Kern, $23,930

81: Michael Brennan, $23,910

82: Brian Campebll, $23,900

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Pro’s must-see putter grip at the PGA Championship

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When it comes to the PGA Championship, we get some first-timers. With that, there are great stories and experiences about the players that arrive. This week has been the first trip to the PGA Championship for Bryce Fisher. Bryce plays out of Arrowhead Golf Club in Molalla, Oregon, and qualified for this week’s event through the PGA Professional Championship at Bandon Dunes, where he finished in a tie for 10th, battling the wind and links conditions. Certainly, he trusted his clubs when it came to the event at Bandon, especially when it came to holing the final putt. Some of the GolfWRXers had a grip on things from GolfWRX PGA Tour Photographer Greg Moore’s photos this week of Fisher’s golf bag.

When it comes to Bryce’s bag, we see a Titleist GT3 driver with a Graphite Design Tour AD VF-7 shaft and Golf Pride Tour Velvet Align grip. For fairway woods, Titleist GT2 three and GT3 five woods, the hybrid is a GT2 21 degree with a Graphite Design Tour AD VF-hybrid 95-X. 

Keep working with me here.

Titleist T100 irons, 5 through pitching wedge, Vokey wedges, all black setup with custom hand stamping on the wedges with black Dynamic Gold S400 shafts. Very sleek! All from the years 2024 and 2025.

We get to the putter, an Odyssey White Hot XG Marxman. A putter that was released in 2007! With a putter in play from 2007, my radar is up for some nicely played golf in this period.

Bryce is no stranger to playing golf at a high level. He played at Scottsdale Community College, where he was a part of two national championship teams. He then finished his college career at Oregon State University from 2001 to 2004. After college, he played events on the Gateway Tour, Spanos Tour, and the Nationwide Tour, aka the Korn Ferry Tour today. Around 2006 he wrapped up golf to raise a family and in 2015 began to get back to tournament golf, fast forward to today, this week he is playing in the PGA Championship at 46 years old. 

Piecing together this timeline, if Bryce got this putter brand new, this is right after the Tour days. Now I do realize this could have been a gift or anything else, as we know, acquiring putters is a world of its own. 

Then it gets better. Take a look at this grip, doesn’t get much more game-used than this. The tennis wrap was layered up so much it would make Scott Verplank proud. It is truly incredible that the original grip is buried under the wraps with the butt end of the grip worn down to the steel! 

This putter alone got some good reactions on the GolfWRX Forum. “MikuTheGolfer” states ‘I got sick looking at that putter grip. “Cmb71 says, “I feel like that putter grip requires surgical gloves.” 

These are reactions of emotion, this to me shows that the putter and especially the grip are a work of art. Art evokes emotion as well. 

Layers of tennis wrap, a grip worn through to the shaft. If the putter has been in the bag off and on since 2007, Fisher has literally made miles of putts with it. The thing I like about the whole setup is that we have all-new clubs in the bag, and the tried-and-true putter that has seen it all and been there for everything. How fitting to be at the PGA Championship this week. 

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