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WOTW: Shane Lowry’s Rolex Submariner 41 Date “Starbucks” in Green Ceramic

Shane Lowry won the BMW PGA Championship this weekend, just beating Rory and Jon Rahm by 1 shot. You could tell Shane was excited about the win and even was quoted saying, “I’m the happiest man in the world right now.” Shane showed his big smile off while holding the champion’s trophy, all while wearing a Rolex Submariner “Starbucks” on his wrist.
WOTW Specs:
Name: Rolex Submariner 41 Date
Reference: 126610lv-0002
Limited: No
Date: 2020 – Current
Case: 904L Oystersteel
Bezel: Green Cerachrom Ceramic
Dial: Black
Size: 41mm
Movement: Calibre 3235, 31 Jewels
Power Reserve: 70 Hours
Glass: Saphire Crystal
Waterproof: 300 Meters
Bracelet: Rolex Oyster, 904L Oystersteel
Price: $10,600 (~$18,500)
Shane’s Submariner was introduced in 2020 and is one of the newest color combinations in the Submariner lineup. There have been other green and black color ways since the Submariner’s introduction in 1953. The original Submariner watches were built to supply the growing diving industry. Diving was brought back from the war and started to turn into a great hobby instead of just work and salvage.
The current generation Submariner was introduced by Rolex in 2020 with an updated case and movement. The Submariner has become a legendary watch and influenced almost every dive watch since its introduction. The new case on the Submariner has been expanded 1mm to 41 and it is made from of a solid block of 904L Oystersteel. Rolex chose 904L stainless steel because it is highly resistant to corrosion and takes a polish that lasts longer than traditional stainless. The right side of the case contains the crown that features Rolex’s Triplock waterproof system with triple seals to ensure the Submariner can reach a depth of 300 meters. The caseback is solid stainless steel and screws down into the case.
The bezel on top of the case is made from stainless steel and contains an insert made from Rolex’s Cerachrom ceramic. The green ceramic is highly scratch resistant contains a divers scale etched into it. The combination of the green bezel and black dial have given this Submariner the “Starbucks” nickname. The colors are the same as in the logo for the famous coffee brand and collectors like to add these names to Rolex watches. The black dial contains large hour markers made from white gold and filled with Rolex’s Chromalight luminescent material. Shane’s Submariner has the date at 3 o’clock and that window is covered by a cyclops lens on the sapphire crystal.
Inside the Submariner is an updated Calibre 3235 self-winding, automatic movement that was designed and built in house. The 3235 features Rolex’s Paramagnetic blue Parachrom hairspring and Paraflex shock absorbers for added durability and accuracy. Thirty one jewels keep all the main parts moving smoothly and the perpetual rotor winds the watch to give you up to 70 hours of power reserve. A Rolex Oyster bracelet keeps the Submariner on your wrist and is crafted from flat links of solid 904L Oystersteel. A folding Oysterlock safety clasp keeps the bracelet together and contains the Glidelock system for extending the bracelet without the use of any tools.
The “Starbucks” Submariner is a pretty popular model and it will be very hard to find one at your local Rolex dealer. The retail price is $10,600 but expect to pay around $18,500 for a new Submariner on the secondary market.
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Morning 9: Aberg wins RSM Classic | Azinger out at NBC | Tiger in for Hero

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Tour Rundown: Close-the-laptop Edition
This is the Tour Rundown that I dread writing. It means, simply, that I have to close the laptop and become a fan for about six weeks. True, there will be Q-Schools and Heroes, but the official work is done for the year. Q-Schools and Heroes are way better than Skins Games and the silliest of silly-season events, but I much prefer the official work of the world’s golf tours. Thank you for riding along in the cart with me this year, and for always picking up the beverage cart drinks. It does not go unnoticed.
As Americans head toward Thanksgiving week, the DP World Tour closed its season at its Tour Championship in Dubai, while the LPGA had its CME Race To The Globe along Florida’s Gulf Coast. As for the PGA Tour, it headed to coastal Georgia to end the FedEx Fall at my event (RSM — same initials). As always, lots of great golf led to dramatic finishes, so let’s begin this week’s Tour Rundown with Nelly Korda’s first LPGA ace.
NELLY. KORDA. ACE. ??? @nellykorda pic.twitter.com/Yjw6DyenLe
— LPGA (@LPGA) November 18, 2023
LPGA @ CME: It’s a Yang Thang in Naples
Amy Yang has been around the golf wires for a long time. It all began in 2006 when, as a precocious, 16-year-old, she won on the Ladies European Tour. Her first win on the LPGA came in 2013, and she recorded three more by 2019. It’s hard to believe that she has been among the ranks for 18 years, but after a four-year drought, Yang was the cream of the crop at the CME this week in Naples. She posted middle rounds of 63-64, and closed with 66, to win by three.
Chasing Yang the entire fourth round were her playing partners, Alison Lee and Nasa Hataoka. Hataoka hung with Yang for the majority of the day, until they reached the 16th hole. It was there that Hataoka flinched with bogey, to drop one back. Yang surged with birdies at the final two holes, to establish her margin of victory. Tied with Hataoka for second was Lee. She also surged late, and turned in a clean card, with six birdies and twelve pars on the day.
For the first twelve holes, the tournament seemed to be in Hataoka’s hands, until Yang made magic happen at the 13th. Faced with a wedge to the green, she…well, just watch what she did.
Amy Yang is putting up a fight at @CMEGroupLPGA ?
Watch now on NBC! pic.twitter.com/jmLPeXBya3
— LPGA (@LPGA) November 19, 2023
DP World Tour @ Tour Championship: Elder Hojgaard claims victory in Dubai
There are times when younger brother must defer to elder brother. No matter what heights Rasmus Hojgaard scales in the future, 2023 will forever be the year of his by-a-few-minutes-older brother, Nicolai. On Sunday in Dubai, Hojgaard won the only thing worth debating, the DP World Tour Championship. As Rory McIlroy had clinched the season-long points race, all eyes were on the leaders as day four teed off.
Beginning play in fifth position, Hojgaard cruised through 11 holes in four under par. A top-five finish looked certain, especially after a speed-bump bogey caused a stumble at the twelfth. The missed, five-feet, par attempt got under his skin, and the Danish Ryder Cupper ignited a five-birdie run through the penultimate hole. Suddenly, Hojgaard had the lead, with the gettable 18th left. A par there gave his chasers hope of a catch.
Tommy Fleetwood, Matt Wallace, and Viktor Hovland all began the final round ahead of Hojgaard. Fleetwood played solid golf to the closing stretch, reaching 17 tee at five-under on the day, and twenty-deep for the week. His tee shot to the short hole came up woefully short, and his approach putt went dangerously past. His missed, seven-feet putt for par was off-target, and Fleetwood would finish on 19-under, two behind the Dane.
Joining Fleetwood at that number were Wallace and Hovland. Wallace had the bad fortune of shooting 60 on Saturday. How do you follow a 60? Well, a 67 would have tied the top spot, and a 66 would have won outright, but Wallace posted 69. Four birdies and one bogey were not enough to catch the scorched trail that Hojgaard laid down. As for Hovland, his 68 was also solid; just not explosive.
Finishing off the year behind McIlroy along the points list were, in order: Jon Rahm, Adrian Meronk, Ryan Fox, and Victor Perez.
Ryder Cup rookie Nicolai Højgaard wins the DP World Tour Championship! ???#DPWTC | #RolexSeries pic.twitter.com/y52cIzvce4
— DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) November 19, 2023
PGA Tour @ RSM Classic: Oh-Boy! Aberg
Oh-boy leads into Oh-Bear (how you should pronounce Aberg). I wished to clarify that, before moving on to Ludwig’s first PGA Tour title summary. In terms of data, for which Aberg is known, two numbers stand out: 61 and 61. Those digits represent the 18-hole scores that the Swede signed off on, in rounds three and four. Let’s be honest: Unless you are on the cut line, 122 on the weekend will move you darned close to the podium, if not to its summit.
In Aberg’s case, he had the lead through 54 holes. Hot on his heels were the guy who HAS to win, Eric Cole, and fan favorite Mackenzie Hughes, the 2016 RSM champion. Cole stood two over through five on day four, so he was done. He rallied to tie for third spot. Hughes stayed close all day, with six birdies through ten holes. The closing octet was not kind to him, as he played it in seven pars and one birdie. That will not get the job done at Sea Island, unless a maelstrom washes in.
As for Aberg, the rookiest of rookies on the European Ryder Cup side in September, ten birdies and one bogey came his way on day four. Long off the tee, deadly with the wedges, and accurate with the putter, he was a wrecking crew and he capped his first professional year in the most positive of ways.
In just his 11th professional PGA TOUR start, Ludvig Åberg wins @TheRSMClassic ? pic.twitter.com/R4jDtDYhsS
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) November 19, 2023
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Tour Photo Galleries
Photos from the 2023 RSM Classic

GolfWRXers got a late-in-the-year treat this week with our photos from the RSM Classic in Sea Island, Georgia.
First looks at a new Cobra driver, a new Ping driver, and new Ping wedges filled the forums, as well as new Bettinardi and Mizuno putters.
Also featured: A Toulon Golf x Sea Island collab.
Add to this a handful of WITBs — including Courage Award winner Chris Kirk — and it was a good week in the Peach State.
Check out links to all of our photos below.
General Albums
- 2023 RSM Classic – Monday #1
- 2023 RSM Classic – Monday #2
- 2023 RSM Classic – Tuesday #1
- 2023 RSM Classic – Tuesday #2
- 2023 RSM Classic – Tuesday #3
WITB Albums
- Jacob Tilton – GA PGA Section Champ – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
- Josh Teater – WITB 2023 RSM Classic
- Grayson Murray – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
- Chris Kirk – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
- Ben Kohles – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
- Ben Carr – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
- CT Pan – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
- David Ford – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
- Cameron Champ – WITB – 2023 RSM Classic
Pullout Albums
- Ping S159 wedges – 2023 RSM Classic
- Ping G430 Max 10K driver – 2023 RSM Classic
- New Toulon Seaside putter – 2023 RSM Classic
- SeeMore putters – 2023 RSM Classic
- Cameron putters – 2023 RSM Classic
- New Bettinardi putters – 2023 RSM Classic
- Custom Swag putter & cover – 2023 RSM Classic
- Two Thumb prototype grip – 2023 RSM Classic
- Cobra Dark Speed driver – 2023 RSM Classic
- New Ping S159 wedges – #2
- Justin Lower & Eric Cole testing new PXG Black Ops drivers – 2023 RSM Classic
- Version #2 graphite shaft putter adapter – 2023 RSM Classic
- New Mizuno putters – 2023 RSM Classic
- Harris English’s raw Ping S159 wedges – 2023 RSM Classic
Join the discussion and see what members are saying in the GolfWRX forums.
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James Colhoun
Sep 15, 2022 at 6:29 pm
No one should fooled by these people, Human rights ,have we forgotten what happened to the Washington Post Journalist what Did the great Bob Dylan write when at the height of his powers .
Stating I can see through your Mask so the are not fooling anyone?
.
FB
Sep 13, 2022 at 4:36 pm
Get in ma belly