T he first tournament of 2025 goes to Hideki Matsuyama. The Japanese, bronze medalist at the Paris Games, won The Sentry in Hawaii with a total of 257 (65 65 62 65, -35) shots. In
On the ninth hole at the Sony Open in Hawaii, the former Masters champion hit an iffy tee shot, but it was his driver that ended up being the truly errant projectile. Matsuyama lost grip of the club on his follow through, sending it into the observers' area.
Matsuyama won The Sentry on Sunday with a 35-under-par 257, the lowest 72-hole score in relation to par in PGA Tour history.
We’ve had one Signature Event, a runaway victory by Hideki Matsuyama, and one Full Field ... questions and answers as we say aloha to Hawaii. The incoming U.S. Ryder Cup captain has remained ...
Hideki Matsuyama opened the PGA Tour season in record-breaking style last weekend at the Plantation Course in Kapalua, Hawaii. The Japanese star will ride a wave of birdies to Honolulu this week ...
It was another Signature victory for Hideki Matsuyama and an all-time PGA Tour ... 5 18th hole of the Kapalua Plantation Course in Maui, Hawaii on Sunday on an 8-foot putt to set the 72-hole ...
Scores from the PGA Tour Sony Open in Hawaii on Sunday5Kyoung-Hoon Lee (Korea Republic)73Harry Higgs (USA)740Joel Dahmen (USA)70-2Brendon Todd (USA)703Will Gordon (USA)705Chandler Phillips (USA)72-2Bi
It's Round 3 of the Sony Open 2025 in the PGA Tour Opening Drive. Follow for score updates and highlights, plus how to watch.
Patrick Fishburn had a fast start at the Sony Open. Denny McCarthy overcame a sluggish start. All they share in common is being atop the leaderboard at Waialae going into
Japan's Hideki Matsuyama, coming off a record-breaking victory at The Sentry last week in Kapalua, Hawaii, is tied for 42nd place at 4 under after a 1-under 69 on Friday. Matsuyama captured the Sony Open championship three years ago.
Amid a round filled with higher scores and frustrating moments, six men scratched to the top of the leaderboard, all sharing the lead at 6 under through 18 holes.
Considering the horrified reaction to the tee shot, you might be surprised to learn that Matsuyama actually birdied this hole, which goes to show that it doesn't matter what your swing looks like as long as you make solid contact. And while holding a pose looks cool, it doesn't ensure the ball lands in the fairway.