Hideki Matsuyama narrowly avoided disaster during the first round of the Sony Open when his driver flew out of his hands toward some fans.
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.
HONOLULU (AP) Five shots behind at the turn, Hideki Matsuyama figured all he could do was keep his head down and try to stay in the game Sunday in the Sony Open. And when he finally looked up ...
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.
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.
The PGA Tour's FedEx Cup season stays in Hawaii ... The Sony is the first full-field event, with 144 players, after 58 finished the no-cut Sentry last week in Kapalua. Hideki Matsuyama won last ...
Hideki Matsuyama, who won the PGA Tour's opening event of the season on Jan. 5 at The Sentry, was in a tie for 29th entering the final round of the Sony Open on Jan. 12 at the Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Ten players within two shots of each other at the top of a competitive leaderboard in Hawaii; top five after second round have never won on PGA Tour; watch the concluding rounds from the Sony Open on
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 as he tries to make it a two-week sweep at the Sony Open in ...
The Farmers Insurance Open is the fourth tournament in the PGA Tour roster after the American Express which was won by Sepp Straka with a score of 25 under.
Torrey Pines South is the sort of course where Aberg's ball-striking quality is shown to great effect. Not many players are good enough from tee to green to handle the demands of this long, punishing track, but the sweet-swinging Swede is comfortable.
The PGA Tour starts its network television schedule this week with CBS at Torrey Pines for the first of its 19 tournaments. Just over a year ago, Thomas was hesitant to get involved with tour policy,