Shot – Ultra Golfing https://ultragolfing.com Golf news & updates Sat, 23 May 2026 03:12:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://ultragolfing.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/cropped-UG_Favicon-32x32.png Shot – Ultra Golfing https://ultragolfing.com 32 32 Si Woo Kim has shot at golf’s magic number. Then came adrenaline https://ultragolfing.com/si-woo-kim-has-shot-at-golfs-magic-number-then-came-adrenaline/ https://ultragolfing.com/si-woo-kim-has-shot-at-golfs-magic-number-then-came-adrenaline/#respond Sat, 23 May 2026 03:12:41 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/si-woo-kim-has-shot-at-golfs-magic-number-then-came-adrenaline/

For approximately 58/60ths of his round, Si Woo Kim was good. So let’s start with the overwhelming majority. 

He was good with playing partners Scottie Scheffler and Brooks Koepka, and he was good with their conversation, which apparently was so good that he said he couldn’t share what was said, and he’ll leave it at that. “But it was enjoyable,” he said. He was good, too, with TPC Craig Ranch, in McKinney, Texas, which is close to Kim’s home, and he was good with the event, the Byron Nelson backed by CJ Cup, which backs Kim. “So everything feels like home and feels comfortable,” he said. 

He was good on hole 1. Birdie on a 6-foot putt. And hole 3. Birdie again, on a 17-footer. And hole 5. Birdie again, after nearly getting home on the par-5 in two. And hole 6. Birdie again, after dropping a wedge to 4 feet. And hole 7. Birdie again, after rolling in a 19-foot putt. And hole 9. Birdie again, his sixth of the front nine, after sitting just over the green in two on the par-5. 

Then came the back nine. More good. 

Birdie on 10, on a 17-footer. Birdie on 11, after sticking an iron to 2 feet. Birdie on 12, after hitting to 5 feet from a greenside bunker on the par-5. Birdie on 14, after making an 8-foot putt. Birdie on 15, after hitting his tee shot on the par-3 to 8 feet, though Kim said he felt funky. “Some guy was making sneeze during my backswing,” he said, “so I pull out back and hit a wrong shot, and it went straight.” At this point, folks were starting to talk about a 59, which only 14 players have accomplished in PGA Tour history, or a 58, which only Jim Furyk has shot. Hell, if Kim birdied his last three holes, he could fire a 57. 

“I was joking there earlier,” Scheffler said, “I felt like I was hitting all my shots to 15, 20 feet and Si Woo was hitting all his shots to like 8 feet or closer.

“Yeah, it was fun to watch.”

Kim parred 16. But he birdied 17, which was good, and so was the putt. From just over the green and 16 feet away, Kim curled in a right-to-lefter. Maybe the most interesting stat of Kim’s round was that he took just 20 putts. He put himself in makable range, and he made putts — and when he was off the green, like he was on 17, he made those, too. 

On to 18, where a par would’ve given him the 59. From the tee, he found the fairway. Good. That was stroke 56. 

From 200 yards away, stroke 57 went 215 yards, and it sailed over the green. 

Adrenaline, he said. After 17, he admitted he was dreaming of the 59, though he said he even chose a 6-iron over a 5.

“I think it was too much pumping,” he said of his heart. “So it went farther than I thought.”

Stroke 58, from over the green, came up well short. Kim said he spun it too much. 

He had 18 feet left for par and the 59. 

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How to make Rory McIlroy’s low bullet drive your own go-to shot https://ultragolfing.com/how-to-make-rory-mcilroys-low-bullet-drive-your-own-go-to-shot/ https://ultragolfing.com/how-to-make-rory-mcilroys-low-bullet-drive-your-own-go-to-shot/#respond Tue, 03 Mar 2026 07:57:23 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/how-to-make-rory-mcilroys-low-bullet-drive-your-own-go-to-shot/

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Shot Scope enters launch monitor market with affordable LM1 https://ultragolfing.com/shot-scope-enters-launch-monitor-market-with-affordable-lm1/ https://ultragolfing.com/shot-scope-enters-launch-monitor-market-with-affordable-lm1/#respond Fri, 27 Feb 2026 23:20:07 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/shot-scope-enters-launch-monitor-market-with-affordable-lm1/


Shot Scope expands beyond GPS and shot tracking with the LM1, a $199 launch monitor designed to deliver simple, useful data without subscriptions.

For years, Shot Scope has lived comfortably in the space between obsessive data nerds and everyday golfers who just want to know how far they hit it and where the round went sideways. The Scottish company built its reputation on shot tracking, GPS watches and laser rangefinders that quietly collect information without turning golf into a science experiment.

Now Shot Scope is stepping into a new lane.

The company has rolled out the LM1 Launch Monitor, its first foray into the launch-monitor category and a clear signal Shot Scope wants to be part of a golfer’s practice life, not just their rounds. Available starting March 26, the most eye-popping number associated with the device is hard to believe: $199.99, with no subscription fees. In a category where prices can quickly drift into four and five figures, that alone will make plenty of golfers pause and take notice.

The LM1 is designed to be simple, portable and approachable. It uses radar-based technology to measure core ball data such as ball speed, carry distance, total distance, launch angle, and smash factor. In other words, it tells you how fast the ball is going, how high it launches and how far it actually flies, which are the building blocks of understanding your swing and your contact. Set it up behind the ball, hit shots and review the numbers through Shot Scope’s ecosystem without needing a monthly subscription to unlock your own data.

That simplicity is the point. The LM1 is not trying to replace a tour-level launch monitor or turn your garage into a simulator bay. It does not measure club path, face angle, or angle of attack. It does not provide spin-axis data, shot-shape modeling or video swing capture. There is no virtual golf, no courses to play indoors and no promises of fitting precision down to the last decimal. This is a practice tool, not a teaching studio.

And that limitation is exactly why it may appeal to the right golfer.

If you are the type of player who wants to know whether your 7-iron really carries 150 yards or if that number only exists on perfect summer days, the LM1 gives you honest feedback. If you are trying to understand gapping, ball speed consistency or whether solid contact is actually happening more often, the data is there without the intimidation factor. It fits neatly into Shot Scope’s broader philosophy: measure what matters, then get out of the way.

The LM1 is launching alongside two other products that reinforce that same idea. The new H50 handheld GPS is aimed at golfers who want detailed hole maps and green contours but would rather not wear a watch. The LoopOne GPS speaker combines audible distance information with full-course mapping and a built-in speaker, blending utility with a little fun. All three products feed into Shot Scope’s growing ecosystem, which also includes the updated Shot Scope 6 platform that organizes more than 100 performance metrics, including Strokes Gained, into something golfers can actually use.

There is a common thread here. Shot Scope is not chasing the most features or the flashiest tech. It is chasing relevance. The LM1 will not tell you everything about your swing, but it will tell you enough to make practice sessions more meaningful. For many golfers, especially those curious about launch monitors but unwilling to commit to premium pricing or ongoing fees, that may be exactly the point.



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Rarely used rule lets DP World Tour tourney end … after pitch shot to 8 feet https://ultragolfing.com/rarely-used-rule-lets-dp-world-tour-tourney-end-after-pitch-shot-to-8-feet/ https://ultragolfing.com/rarely-used-rule-lets-dp-world-tour-tourney-end-after-pitch-shot-to-8-feet/#respond Tue, 03 Feb 2026 11:44:43 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/rarely-used-rule-lets-dp-world-tour-tourney-end-after-pitch-shot-to-8-feet/

Freddy Schott pitched to 8 feet, and about 5 seconds later, he extended his hand. He was your winner of the DP World Tour’s Bapco Energies Bahrain Championship.

Wait. 

How?

After all, the tournament at Royal Golf Club was neither a match play event, nor a pitching contest like the ones you have with pals. The event was stroke play. It was played over a 7,347-yard course. 

So what gives?

In play here was a rarely used rule. And a pro all over the map. 

All of it happened on the second hole of a playoff on Sunday. On the first hole, Schott and Calum Hill parred, while Patrick Reed bogeyed, and the newest full-time DP World Tour pro was done while Schott and Hill played on. Hill then struggled. Hitting first, the Scotsman hooked his tee shot into the driving range and out of bounds, and his third stroke found the first cut of rough on the left side of the hole. More trouble followed. On his follow-through on shot four, he flung his iron into the ground behind him. His ball had sailed right — and off the video board right off the green. 

“Hosel rocket,” an announcer on the Golf Channel broadcast said. “Oh my goodness. That’s going to sting.”

“A professional golfer’s nightmare,” another announcer said. 

Indeed. After a drop, he was now hitting six. Schott, meanwhile, hit the right side of the fairway with his tee shot, and the German’s second shot finished in the rough right of the green. At this point, the announcers started to wonder: Could Hill concede? 

“I don’t think he’s allowed,” the first announcer said. 

“I think you are right,” the second announcer said. “I think you have to take all the misery on board, drop it and knock it on.”

According to the Rules of Golf, under Committee Procedures, there is an out, though. A concession is allowed. Procedure 7a (1) reads this way:

“In a stroke-play playoff between two players, if one of them is disqualified or concedes defeat, it is not necessary for the other player to complete the playoff hole or holes to be declared the winner.”

And that’s what was declared. 

After Hill’s sixth stroke found the green, and Schott pitched to 8 feet, Hill said he was done, and the tournament was over. The players slapped hands and hugged. Rarely has a stroke-play tournament ended this way, but it can.  

“Looks like it has been conceded,” a Golf Channel announcer said. 

“Not sure I’ve ever seen that before.”

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