Current:Home > MyLucas Glover overcomes yips to win 2023 Wyndham Championship on PGA Tour -FinanceAcademy
Lucas Glover overcomes yips to win 2023 Wyndham Championship on PGA Tour
View
Date:2025-04-18 09:48:51
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Lucas Glover was at the end of his rope.
The yips, the involuntary wrist spasms that occur most commonly when golfers are trying to putt, had plagued Glover for the better part of a decade. But thanks to a long putter and a different putting grip, he has regained his confidence on the greens and he holed enough putts on Sunday to win the Wyndham Championship and earn his fifth career PGA Tour title.
Glover closed with a 2-under 68 at Sedgefield Country Club and finished with a 72-hole total of 20-under 260, one stroke better than Russell Henley and Ben An.
Glover, the winner of the 2009 U.S. Open, had tried just about everything, including putting with his eyes closed. The stats tell the ugly story. In the 2020-21 season, Glover missed 24 putts from 3 feet and in (863 for 887), a miss rate of 2.71 percent that ranked 196th on Tour. In 2021-22, he missed 27 shorties (193rd). The 43-year-old was struggling so mightily this season – already 26 misses from short range through July – that he considered a switch to putting left-handed or with a long putter.
"I just tried the long putter first," he said. "I got to a point with putting, I needed a whole new – basically a whole new brain function, a whole new method. … I had two weeks off before Memorial and just ordered [a new putter] and taught myself how to use it and been kind of sticking to that." He added, "It's been fun to teach myself something in the game I've been doing for literally 40 years."
Last month, at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, Glover added a broomstick putter to his bag, an L.A.B. Mezz.1 Max with a mallet head and ranked fifth in Strokes Gained: Putting and registered his first top-10 finish of the season.
"It's been all the difference in the world," said Glover, who ranked 15th in SG: Putting this week. "Making all your tap-ins is nice. Yeah, just I feel good with it. When my speed's good, I seem to make a lot of putts, so it's been really good."
Glover ranked 167th in the FedEx Cup heading into the RBC Canadian Open in June, but reeled off three straight top 10 finishes – tied for fourth at Rocket Mortgage Classic, tied for sixth at John Deere Classic and tied for fifth at the Barbasol Championship. After a missed cut last week, he climbed back in the trophy hunt at Sedgefield CC, where he made his 19th career start – the most of any player since 2004 – after rounds of 66-64-62. Beginning the week at No. 112 in the FedEx Cup Playoffs, he needed to finish no worse than a two-way tie for second to make the playoffs and did better than that, vaulting to No. 49 in the season-long points race.
In the final round, Glover, who shared the 54-hole lead with Billy Horschel, got off to an inauspicious start with a three-putt bogey from 27 feet. But he knocked his approach from 141 yards to 4 inches at the fourth and tapped it in. He drained a 7-foot birdie at No. 8 and 15-footer at No. 11 to reach 20 under. He and Henley were tied for the lead when play was suspended due to inclement weather for 2 hours and 3 minutes.
When play resumed, Henley, who has done everything but win this tournament the last four years, grabbed the lead with a 2-putt birdie at 15 but bogeyed his final three holes to shoot 69 and suffered another disappointing result.
"Felt a little jittery out there, just never got into a good sync with my swing, felt kind of rushed from the top of my swing, just didn't do a good job of handling the restart," Henley said.
At 18, Glover caught a lucky break when he pulled his drive left. It appeared to be headed into tree trouble but bounced off a golf cart and closer to the fairway. Glover opted to lay up and got up and down for a closing par, fittingly sinking an 8-foot putt. When it dropped, Glover held his trusty long putter and smiled with glee.
"I've gone back and forth through many different types of putters and styles to where I know that those don't work, so this is where I'm at. And it's resurrected a lot of guys' careers and for the same reasons, whether they planned it that way or not. … When you struggle as long as I have, or had, it just happened to be what happened to be the answer."
veryGood! (429)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- A smarter way to use sunscreen
- Helping the Snow Gods: Cloud Seeding Grows as Weapon Against Global Warming
- 24-Hour Ulta Deal: 50% Off a Bio Ionic Iron That Curls or Straightens Hair in Less Than 10 Minutes
- Average rate on 30
- 21 of the Most Charming Secrets About Notting Hill You Could Imagine
- Putin calls armed rebellion by Wagner mercenary group a betrayal, vows to defend Russia
- U.S. Energy Outlook: Sunny on the Trade Front, Murkier for the Climate
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Judge tells Rep. George Santos' family members co-signing bond involves exercising moral control over congressman
Ranking
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Growing without groaning: A brief guide to gardening when you have chronic pain
- American Climate Video: On a Normal-Seeming Morning, the Fire Suddenly at Their Doorstep
- CDC tracking new COVID variant EU.1.1
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Inside Jeff Bezos' Mysterious Private World: A Dating Flow Chart, That Booming Laugh and Many Billions
- Donald Triplett, the 1st person diagnosed with autism, dies at 89
- Here's How Succession Ended After 4 Seasons
Recommendation
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
America Now Has 27.2 Gigawatts of Solar Energy: What Does That Mean?
American Climate Video: Giant Chunks of Ice Washed Across His Family’s Cattle Ranch
Ultimatum: Queer Love’s Vanessa Admits She Broke This Boundary With Xander
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Biden's sleep apnea has led him to use a CPAP machine at night
Special counsel asks for December trial in Trump documents case
Wind Takes Center Stage in Vermont Governor’s Race