VPAR Review – US OPEN

For those of you that watched the recent US Open at Pinehurst No.2, you would have seen the small margins and harsh consequences that players had to face off the tee and around the greens. Course management was crucial and plotting yourself around the course in the right areas was the recipe to success.


Martin Kaymer won the 2014 US Open at Pinehurst No.2 by eight shots. To this day, it is remembered as some of the highest quality golf that has ever been played. His ball striking and short game was relentless that week, however, he stood out from the field in one simple way, his course management. Course management is something that goes unnoticed to most golf fans but by the end of the week, it was the main reason that he was standing on the 18th green as the US Open champion!


Kaymer’s caddy, Craig Connelly, was on the bag at Pinehurst in 2014. He sure knows how to plot his way around the Donald Ross masterpiece! When talking about the course itself, Connelly commented, “You’ve got to be aggressive to conservative areas and give yourself every opportunity to make the par.”. He also added, “picking your target and hitting the right spots is very, very difficult” and you have to “have your distance control sorted and (hit the ball) in the right spot on the green because there are only small portions that you can hit too.” Kaymer executed these tactics perfectly with a final score of -9, separating himself from the rest of the field!


At this year’s US Open at Pinehurst, Bryson DeChambeau played smart and calculated golf. Off the tee, he hit a variety of shots depending on what distances he wanted in to the green to have a comfortable number to hit the areas he wanted. He knew what yardages he wanted to give himself on his approach to give him the best chance of making a par or better. His approach to the US Open 2024 was the perfect balance between risk and reward. He took risks but they were calculated and well thought out beforehand.


In amateur golf, course management is something that players don’t talk about enough. It is a crucial aspect to lowering your handicap however it’s hard to figure out on your own. The VPAR App is what you need! The app’s features include GPS, yardages, club recommendation, course maps, and course notes. By using these features, you are giving yourself the best chance of improving your golf and most importantly, enjoying it more. It will simplify your game and make every aspect of your golf more consistent. You can rely on the VPAR App just like the professionals rely on their caddies.

VPAR Newsletter – October

We’ve all got our favourite golf story. One that can defy the possible, exalt friends to legendary status or forever relegate them to the gutter of history thanks to a final hole shank.

We see your scores on VPAR and who has beaten who, but perhaps not all the juicy details behind them. Here is one of our favourites, but be sure to send in your best stories, via DM on Instagram & Twitter @vpargolf and we will reshare some of the best submissions!

On the morning of November 1st 1992, Jason Bohn woke up on the floor of his apartment in Tuscaloosa Alabama with a kick from his housemate.

“You’ve got to get up” his housemate said “you’ve got the semi-finals of that golf thing..”

Jason’s thumping headache from too much Halloween punch the night before trumped the necessary will power to get up and his floorboard pillow became comfortable once more.

A few minutes later, the housemate was at it again with more success. “Alright, alright” Bohn said “I’ll get up just to hear you shut up”.

Costume Halloween parties were a big deal in Tuscaloosa. The whole neighbourhood was celebrating and before Jason got home at 4.30am he had more or less visited the entire county.

A week earlier, Jason had borrowed $10 from a friend for ten shots at hitting a golf ball into a ten-foot circle from 135 yards. For every ball in the circle, he would get one shot the following weekend in the semi-finals of the contest.

“I hit one ball in the circle, so I had one shot in the semis,” he said. “I hadn’t thought about it again until that morning.”

Thanks to his housemate’s persistence, a bleary-eyed Jason just about arrived at the golf course. He was drawn third out of one hundred and fifty entrants to hit his shot, with the twelve best progressing to the final.

Jason was delighted that he was so early, knowing that a return to bed would be sooner than expected.

“I went third, hit my ball to 3 feet, 8 inches, went back to my car and took a nap. Our coach, Dick Spybey, did not like the way I looked. He knew what state I was in, saying I was a disgrace to the team and not properly representing the golf program”.

When woken up for the second time that morning, Bohn was informed of some better news. He was one of twelve to reach the finals, with guaranteed prizes for all and an unlikely million dollars for a hole in one!

“We were psyched. There were big-screen TVs, things like that,” Bohn remembered. “Then Coach Spybey tells us if we accepted any prize with a value of more than $500, we’d forfeit our NCAA eligibility.”

With a sarcastic glint in his eye, Bohn said to Spybey “Looks like I’m going pro, Coach, thanks for everything!”

Bohn chucked the ball down without a tee. Took a couple of deep breaths to steady himself. Then hit a heel cut 9 iron that took two hops and wham in it went.

Jason started running down the hole, throwing his club in the air and high stepping up the hill, when all of a sudden his body remembered what it had been through the night before and collapsed underneath him. Dirt and dust flew everywhere.

The excitement was initially about the fact that it was his first ever hole in one, let alone the million bucks.

As Bohn got up to the green his coach is standing there reiterating “if you sign this, you will lose your eligibility…” when Bohn cuts him off mid-way asking “where is the ****ing pen?! It’s one million dollars!”

Jason then proceeded to round up all his buddies, asking them to get out some cash to go party with the promise of an IOU – a list he still has. With a wad of cash in hand, Bohn strolled up to the Brass Monkey at 11.45pm (the county was dry on Sundays until midnight) and said to the landlord here is $1,100 let me know when we’re done.

By 3.30am they had opened up the rib shack next door and it was one hell of a party.

At 7am the next morning, SportsCenter flashed up on the TV much to the jubilation of everyone. The tone changed however when it informed the bar that Jason was 19 (and underage)… The owner quietly took Jason to one side of the bar, paid for his cab home and never spoke of it again.

The insurance company offered him $167k as a lump sum instead of the million. Instead Jason took $50k each year, for twenty years.

And each year when the cheque arrived in his mailbox on November 1st, he would get out the insurance video tape of the shot and make his family watch it over and over.

November 1st will forever be known as Jason Bohn day.

VPAR Newsletter – September

The FedEx Cup was launched in 2007 to create a culmination to the PGA Tour season. The best players from that season would compete in a short series of ‘playoff’ events in order to work out the Tour champion (and hand out a boat load of cash).

The format has been fraught with issues since its inception.

The Cup’s inaugural year saw Tiger miss the first event and go on to win the end of season title. Vijay Singh in 2008 won the first two playoff events meaning that as long as he continued to breathe, he was assured of the title. Billy Horschel in 2014, won the whole thing when starting 69th on the points list.

Surely by now, in its 15th edition, the courier cup has delivered a better package (… I’m so sorry) of end of season delights..?

Unfortunately not. As recently as last year, Jon Rahm said “I don’t think it’s fair”, citing that if you don’t perform in the final ‘playoff’ event, then you won’t go home with the big prize.


What are the issues with the regular season

As a hardcore golf fan, I cannot make the connection between performance in the regular season and playoff standing. Each tournament distributes 500 FedEx Cup points – with the majors and a couple of elevated status events earning more and some opposite field tournaments earning less – which instantly confuses the fan as to what is “must watch” golf.

What the PGA Tour struggles with is that they have, quite impressively, sold $10+ million title sponsorship deals to 47 tournaments on their schedule. All of which they promise that some of the top guys will play, resulting in higher media ratings and happy Chief Marketing Officers.

However, the issue is that for a pro there is more incentive to play in weaker fields than the elevated status events. More competition equals a reduced likelihood of a strong performance, and therefore are events to be avoided. To summarise, playing the 3M Open and Rocket Mortgage classic will do you better than Riviera and Bay Hill.

The pros and the tour are therefore at loggerheads with their intentions for the FedEx Cup. Maximum points vs. the top guys at the top events.

Why the FedEx Cup it isn’t a playoff

In other season-long leagues that have playoffs, e.g. premiership rugby, NFL, NBA, MLB, the end of season battle is the zenith of the entire season.

Harlequins run in the 2021 playoffs will be remembered for ever, rather than the season itself.

In baseball there are far too many games, but the World Series is unmissable entertainment.

“Football season starts after thanksgiving” is Bill Belichick’s mantra regarding the regular and post-season.

NBA regular season games often lack the presence of superstars if they need to be rested for the playoffs.

In golf, the playoffs look like normal tournaments albeit with smaller fields and with no cut. There are 125 players for the FedEx St. Jude Classic, 70 for the BMW and 30 for the Tour Champs (in 2023 this is becoming 70, 50 and then 30 respectively).

If I turn on the PGA Tour in August I don’t know if it is a playoff event by look and feel. There is no jeopardy or finality, just convoluted hype through the commentary team. That’s before you get me started on the gross/net leaderboard at the Tour Championship…

How to improve it

In an era of long term broadcast and sponsorship deals it isn’t possible to do much of the below (cue the “do you not understand contracts bro?” guy on twitter), but from the comfort of my armchair this is what I would like to see.

1. Make the regular season count

Strip back the tournaments that count to the playoffs to 11: Riviera, Bay Hill, The Players, WGC match play, Memorial, the four majors and the first two playoff events.
Only these tournaments count towards the end of season order of merit. When a fan watches these, they know that they are getting the best of the best. The pros must play in them to earn FedEx Cup points.

2. Other tournaments become all about keeping their card

For the other tournaments, they still have a place in the schedule, but jack up the narrative around golfers keeping their card. The current system is so convoluted, that I have no idea who is actually going to be on the tour next year even if they are outside the coveted ‘125’.
This is primarily due to a suite of ridiculous exemption categories: major medicals, 400 starts on tour, partial status etc. etc.
Simplify this to be if you don’t play well enough, see you on the Korn Ferry Tour. A more fluid system would have seen Cameron Young and Will Zalatoris (today’s world beaters) on the scene much, much earlier.

3. Make the final playoff event match play

For the final twelve players that make it to our last playoff event, make them duel it out in knockout match play format (bottom four to have a wildcard round before QF, SF and Final).
Match play is made for television, creates rivalries and, crucially, is actually a playoff.
Whoever beats three guys is the champion. Simple.

VPAR Newsletter – June

Women’s sport has been having time in the sun of late.

Arguably the catalyst for this trend was the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup. Broadcast figures were lauded at reaching over a billion viewers – 1.12 billion to be exact – and the world’s most popular sport had finally woken up to the potential of targeting the other half of the globe’s population.

For reference, a year earlier, the men’s tournament had a viewership of 3.57 billion. Whilst at a 3x ratio, this may seem like a ginormous gap, but a billion people is still a billion people.

Cricket, slightly surprisingly, is the most watched women’s sport in the UK at 41% of the 33 million total viewership in 2021. We can likely attribute this to The Hundred’s free-to-view broadcast and as a consequence of England’s World Cup win in 2017 at Lords.

The Netball Superleague has become a case study in how to run a sports federation. In 2019, Sky Sports dedicated an entire channel to netball, and they broadcast all 60 games of the world cup held in England free on YouTube with participation numbers increasing as a result.

So where does that leave us with golf?

The headlines over the past six months have been encouraging. Prize money at the top end of the game has increased significantly.

The USGA announced that their US Women’s Open prize purse be $10 million in 2022 thanks to their presenting sponsor ProMedica. The Chevron Championship followed suit by raising theirs to $5 million as a part of their new sponsorship deal. With the PGA of America following suit, doubling their women’s purse to $9 million.

However the women’s game is still criminally under promoted and supported. The talent level is no less, and yet the commercial realities are troublesome to say the least. For a more articulate view on this I would encourage you to read some of Meg Maclaren’s written word.

Alongside the dollars and cents, the women are playing a different game at the moment. In a time of infinite data and cutting edge performance tools on the men’s side, the LPGA only starting utilising strokes gained last summer. The knock on effect is a lag for the professionals in how to improve, practice and train.

Broadcast coverage is secondary in terms of time windows and scheduling. Ultimately this is understandable from a broadcaster perspective due to the viewing figures, but is there room for innovation here? Could you play Sunday to Wednesday for some tournaments perhaps? Equally, wherever you sit on the LIV debacle, wasn’t it a huge miss not to include women in some fashion?

The women’s game does have a few aces up its sleeve to play. In a time of the golf ball going too far, the women have a distinct advantage: tournament venues. The mouth salivates in the US at the Country Club of Charleston in 2019, this year’s Pine Needles and Riviera CC in four years time. Whereas in the UK, the WBO will head to Muirfield, Walton Heath and Royal Porthcawl over the few years.

The talent level has never been higher. Jin Young Ko at the end of last year had 15 consecutive rounds in the 60s, earlier this year hit 66 consecutive greens in regulation, and also set the LPGA record for most straight sub par rounds (lol).

Couple the above with some genuine super stars at the top of the game, namely the Korda sisters, Minjee Lee, Lydia Ko’s and a dozen others, and you have yourself some real excitement to get your teeth into.

The Volvo Scandinavian Mixed tournament was a great success with long hitting Swede Linn Grant beating Open champion and compatriot Henrik Stenson by 9 shots. The vista of having the same course played by men and women, competing for the same prize pool is another step in the right direction that the LET and DPWT should be lauded for.

The green shoots of change are there. We would urge you to watch this documentary on the Stanford Women’s Golf Team for instance. The narratives created are so rich that when Rose Zhang and Rachel Heck make it out on tour, they will have a plethora of fans that should begin to solve some of the issues laid out above.

We at VPAR are bullish on Women’s Golf, and believe more should be too.

VPAR Newsletter – May

Do you remember what happened on the 6th of March 2021? Let us give you a hint … it had something to do with Bryson. Still struggling? It was the 3rd round at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill.

Fine, here you go. It was when Bryson “chocolate milk” Dechambeau hit a 370 yard drive over the lake on a Par 5 to within 70 yards of the hole. Arms raised as the ball reached its 34 second apex, he bellowed at it, using his protein shake enlarged torso to propel it even further.

It was the most memorable moment in golf of 2021 (bar of course the actual most memorable moment, when Hideki’s caddie bowed to Augusta National after his Masters win) and will stick in the memory for a long time.

Content aggregators leapt on the shareable views. Sports fans from every nook and cranny were talking about Bryson. Did it matter that his 60 yard pitch languished 40 feet from the hole? Not in the slightest. We had reached another ‘overpowering of golf’ moment.

Putting Bryson to one side, which is no mean feat, let’s take a look at the macro picture.

Fitness in golf has become a hot topic in recent times. The greater athleticism of golfers has been on a steeply inclining curve. You only need to look at the Instagram profiles of the top 20 men and women in the world to see it cluttered with PTs and TRXs.

Brooks Koepka’s four-major-heater reaffirmed the benefits of being in unbelievable shape. As his rippling sm-edium Nike shirts overpowered the rest of the field in golf and in the weight room.
Tiger Woods, naturally, was the godfather of this trend. Immortalising navy seal fitness regimes and four hour weight sessions becoming the norm.
So how has that filtered down to the amateur golfer? I wonder if you the reader have changed your fitness regime to better your golf? Would you even admit it to your fourball if you had?
On the whole, it seems that amateurs are becoming more fitness conscious as a consequence of the professional game. Snacks pulled out of golf bags are much more likely to be a cereal bar rather than a mars equivalent – pro shops will have their fridges filled with protein shakes alongside the obligatory Lucozade.
‘Fitness for golf’ twitter accounts followers are booming as they plug a way to keep the dream alive that doesn’t include a £1,000 driver.

Where do the Harry Higgs, Shane Lowry’s and Joel Dahmen’s of this world then fit in?

Are they a romantic nod to the ‘gamers’ of yesteryear who would look a single digit body fat percentage opponent up and down on the first tee, in full knowledge it would be them that would be opening their wallet at the end of the round?

Or are they a declining trend in the midst of swing speed and “smash factor” Trackman golf that is present on college golf driving ranges at the moment?

Speaking of Trackman, we leave you this month with a comparison of Bryson’s 2018 and 2020 seasons. His 2018 season saw him rise to 5th in the world, with four victories (three of which were stellar PGA Tour events). His 2020 season, post lockdown bulk, saw him win only twice (crucially one of which was his US Open victory).

All we know is that we favour golf not being purely a game of carry distance. It should still require skill, imagination, feel and the control of your emotions. Hitting it incredible distances accurately is a skill, which the likes of Bryson should be rewarded for. However it should not be the only skill that is rewarded.

How much does fitness impact your golf game? Are you a Bryson, or a Dahmen? Feel free to reach out and let us know.

Finally, head over to the VPAR fitness section in your app to discover some great golf related workouts!

VPAR Newsletter – April

The slate of golf courses that will play host to this year’s quartet of men’s major championships is truly one to celebrate. The venues will showcase a tremendous mix of the two most famous courses in golf – Augusta National and St. Andrews, with two recently restored American gems – The Country Club and Southern Hills. We take a deep dive on how each course is remaining relevant as the Professional game continues to push the boundaries of distance.

In the run up to the tournament, the 11th and 15th holes (named Dogwood and Firethorn if you’re into that sort of thing) were lengthened by 15 and 20 yards respectively.

For the 11th, this was intended to place players’ tee shots further back so that they have a more challenging second shot with the greenside pond more in play. Equally, players that bail out into the right pine straw are hampered by the left to right dogleg.

For the 15th, when players like Bryson are hitting a nine iron into a par five, it is no wonder that it is the easiest statistical hole (average score of 4.78 strokes is the lowest to par across in Masters tournament play). A longer and therefore more dispersed tee shot brings in the overhanging trees on the left or the rough on the right more in play.

Great examples of how this extra length were showcased in the final round last week. Scheffler’s 239 yard and Smith’s 249 yard approaches were incredibly high tariff shots, struck with a long iron or three wood. When you compare that to Garcia’s victory-securing and pin-hitting mid-iron in 2017, you now have a much sterner hole presented to the players.

As the driving gap between amateurs and professionals widens, Gil Hanse’s restoration of Southern Hills attempts to occupy a philosophical middle ground. How can you bring back the iconic features of Perry Maxwell’s 1936 design, whilst at the same time challenge the game’s best under major championship conditions?

Hanse summarises – “It’s all about the greens … What [the Pros] are looking for is a predictable result on every single shot. Well, if a green’s firm, you’re not sure if it’s going to bounce and check, bounce twice and check, not check … You hit it in the rough and you have firm greens, you’re done.”¹

Equally, by reducing the collars of these firm greens back to their Maxwellian design, approaches will run off into collection areas instead of staying put. This infuriates professionals, whilst offering a minimal penalty for the amateur membership.

What more is there to say about the golf course that started it all? It is a truly marvellous course that stirs the deepest of emotions in all golfers.

However, could this be the year that the ‘Old Lady’ becomes irrelevant for the modern game? In over a century of hosting The Open, the course has only been lengthened 350 yards.² In 2022 eight out of fourteen par fours will be less than 420 yards (think: driver, flip wedge for most players) and those that will be down-wind could be driveable.

After watching what young Collin did to a benign Royal St. George’s (15-under was a 72 hole Open scoring record), the R&A may be quaking in their boots if the wind doesn’t puff its cheeks once more.

In a similar fashion to Southern Hills, The Country Club has undergone a restoration project to maintain its proficiency in hosting major championship golf. Gil Hanse again was trusted to walk the politically charged tightrope with the members on one end of his balancing stick with the tournament committee (in this case the USGA) at the other.

The key hole to keep an eye on for this tournament will be the 131 yard par 3 11th.

In the 1963 and 1988 US Opens, players simply walked past this little terror. In the 1913 edition however, this hole was in play. When little known amateur Francis Ouimet would take the two greats of the game Harry Vardon and Ted Ray to an 18 hole playoff, all were tied when they reached the short 11th. Twenty year old Ouimet made a par three, whereas his two legendary playing partners made bogey. This would be a lead he would not relinquish en route to winning, thus encouraging the production of the film “The Greatest Game Ever Played” some ninety two years later