Indoor golf league created by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy has a loud,
swift debut match
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[January 08, 2025]
By TIM REYNOLDS
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Ludvig Aberg will be the answer to a
trivia question: He made the first birdie in TGL history.
And with that, the indoor golf competition that Tiger Woods and Rory
McIlroy had envisioned for years was finally underway.
TGL had its debut match Tuesday night, with Rickie Fowler, Matt
Fitzpatrick and Xander Schauffele of New York Golf Club taking on
Shane Lowry, Wyndham Clark and Aberg of The Bay Golf Club in the
opener. The 15-hole match took just under two hours, which is
exactly how TGL envisioned this to work. Final score: The Bay 9, New
York 2.
“The last time I've had that much fun was probably last September,”
Lowry said, turning toward Clark as he said that — the obvious
reference being how he and Aberg were part of the European Ryder Cup
team that beat Clark and the United States in the fall of 2023.
Yes, trash talk is part of TGL as well — even among teammates.
“Look, I had an amazing two hours,” Lowry said.
Lowry struck the first shot at 9:15 p.m. Four minutes later, the
first hole in TGL history was complete when Aberg rolled in a
9-footer for the first point in league play. Yes, it moves that
quickly.
“This was just a dream conjured up,” Woods said on the ESPN
broadcast. “Rory and I were talking about it; it's hard to believe
that dream came into reality and we were able to take golf into
another stratosphere, really.”
Woods and McIlroy — part of the brain trust that put together this
venture — were there, as expected. DJ Khaled was there too, milling
about while players were warming up, showing off his swing with an
imaginary club.
The venue is a 250,000-square-foot facility at Palm Beach State
College. Players hit some shots into a video screen, some off real
grass, some off turf, and the bunkers are not just real sand — it's
sand from Augusta National Golf Club, the same sand Woods has at his
home practice facility. It's super-high-tech, with data collected
off every shot.
“Nobody had more fun than us,” Clark said.
Players wore microphones, there were betting options and fans
surrounded the “course” in an intimate arena where music blared and
noise was welcomed.
“A glorified man cave in a way,” Fowler said.
Once teams moved within 50 yards of the pin, they headed to a
short-game complex — with a green that sits on a 41-yard-wide
turntable and has about 600 devices underneath to change the
contours. Players said it was difficult to make putts, which might
be understandable.
Fans cheered. And they booed — a little, anyway. Schauffele heard
those after he botched a chip, part of a night where not much went
right for his team.
“I probably would have booed me too,” Schauffele said.
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Tiger Woods, right, and Rory McIlroy and stand on the green as they
watch New York Golf Club and The Bay Golf Club warmup for the
inaugural match of the TMRW Golf League, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025, in
Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. TGL features six teams of four players
competing against each other in a tech-infused arena the size of a
football field. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
The players seemed to love it. Lowry had one-liner after one-liner.
A couple of examples:
— “I'm going to be the Scottie Scheffler of indoor golf.”
— “A bit like myself. A bit chunky,” he said after one shot came up
a touch short.
It ended with a 729-yard par-5 — a reachable 729-yard par-5, if that
makes any sense. Handshakes and cheers all around when it was over,
Lowry gave a big wave to the fans and the night was done.
“So much fun," Aberg said.
Woods loved it when some fans were, let's say, not exactly quiet as
Clark lined up a putt on one of the early holes.
“You don't normally hear that at events,” Woods said. “You're going
to hear that here.”
Woods is expected to debut for his Jupiter Links club on Jan. 14.
McIlroy's debut could be Jan. 27 when Boston Common plays Jupiter
Links. The regular season goes until March 4. There are 24 players —
six teams of four — and the top four teams advance to the playoffs
with a best-of-three championship series two weeks before the
Masters.
Each team activates three players for a match, and the 15-hole
competitions will be done in about two hours. It'll all be shown on
ESPN platforms, often in prime time. The league has been in the
works for a few years; the original plan was for it to start last
year, but a storm slowed construction and organizers pushed the
debut back to 2025.
“It's not traditional golf, yes,” Woods said. “But it is golf. And
that's the main thing.”
And, as Fowler pointed out, the crowd in the arena is one thing, but
how television viewers accept it will be the big test.
“If it does well there, the sky’s the limit with what you can do,”
Fowler said. “You can put up arenas in different places. This is
just the start.”
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