The Wingo Network

Trey Wingo

The Wingo Network is the podcast network led by Trey Wingo, built for fans who want substance over noise. This is the home for smart, adult sports conversation across multiple shows, anchored by credibility, access, and experience. From long-form analysis and reporting to thoughtful interviews and on-course storytelling, every show respects the audience and the game. Shows include Straight Facts, Homie and Trey Wingo Golf, with more to come. Each show is united by one standard: real insight, no hot takes.

  1. Tiger, the Masters, and a Surging PGA Tour | GOLF LIVE

    -1 DIA

    Tiger, the Masters, and a Surging PGA Tour | GOLF LIVE

    Tiger’s Masters return? Ryder Cup captain? Golf’s power shift is happening now. The debut episode of GOLF LIVE with Trey Wingo and Justin Ray tackles the biggest questions in professional golf right now. Will Tiger Woods return to play in The Masters at Augusta National? And should he become the next United States Ryder Cup captain at Adare Manor in 2027? Trey and Justin break down the real debate, including Tiger’s physical readiness, his historic Ryder Cup record, and what his presence would mean for Team USA. The show also dives into the PGA Tour’s transition from the California swing to the Florida swing, including what it signals about the Tour’s evolving schedule. With rumors of a reduced PGA Tour calendar and signature event restructuring, is the Cognizant Classic at risk? What does the future format of the Tour look like? Plus: - LIV Golf receives another $300 million investment from the PIF — what does that actually mean? - Nelly Korda and Jin Young Ko headline a strong start to the LPGA season - A powerful moment at the DP World Tour’s Kenyan Open - The growing global dynamic across men’s and women’s professional golf - This is high-IQ, no-fluff golf analysis built for fans who want context, consequences, and what’s coming next. Welcome to GOLF LIVE. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    50 min
  2. Joel Dahmen Breaks Down the PGA Tour Reality Most Fans Don’t See

    -4 DIAS

    Joel Dahmen Breaks Down the PGA Tour Reality Most Fans Don’t See

    Joel Dahmen joins Trey Wingo for an honest, in-depth conversation about what life is really like on the PGA Tour — especially when you no longer have full status. After becoming one of the breakout personalities of Netflix’s Full Swing, Dahmen’s popularity exploded. But fame doesn’t equal security on Tour. In this episode, Joel explains what “conditional status” actually means (the 101–125 category), how it impacts tournament access, and why even established players sometimes need sponsor exemptions just to get into events. If you’ve ever wondered how PGA Tour status works — this is the inside explanation. We break down: • What conditional status on the PGA Tour really means • The difference between full status, signature events, and sponsor exemptions • How Joel got into the WM Phoenix Open (WMPO) with a creative sponsor invite strategy • Why asking for sponsor exemptions is “like dating” • The business realities of Tour life that fans don’t see • How the Netflix “Full Swing” effect changed Joel’s career • The pressure of being more famous than your FedEx Cup ranking • Why Justin Rose’s resurgence might be underappreciated • Whether modern PGA Tour players will retire earlier due to massive prize money • The emotional decision to split with longtime caddie and best friend Gino • What really happens behind the scenes with Tour eligibility Dahmen also discusses his relationship with Max Homa, the evolution of golf careers in the era of bigger purses, and the delicate balance between chasing greatness and enjoying life. This is a candid conversation about PGA Tour structure, Tour status, conditional status rules, sponsor invites, and what it takes to stay relevant in modern professional golf. If you follow golf closely — or if you’re just trying to understand how PGA Tour access actually works — this episode delivers clarity straight from someone navigating it in real time. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    47 min
  3. From Adelaide to Pebble: Golf’s Wildest Weekend (Explained)

    19/02

    From Adelaide to Pebble: Golf’s Wildest Weekend (Explained)

    Starting Tuesday, March 3, Trey Wingo Golf is launching a new weekly live show: Golf Live — a fast, information-rich recap of everything you need to know happening across the world of golf. Trey will be joined every week by Justin Ray (the “Tiger Woods of golf researchers”) — one of the sharpest statistical minds in the sport and a constant source of context, history, and data-driven insight. If you’ve ever wanted a golf show that blends big-picture perspective with real numbers and real consequences, this is it. This kickoff episode sets the table for what Golf Live will be: informed, opinionated, and built around what actually matters — not noise. We start with a simple reality: the first full weekend without NFL games opened a lane for golf to dominate the sports calendar, and it absolutely did. The conversation spans two major storylines that captured the sport: Anthony Kim’s win at LIV Adelaide, and why it resonated beyond the LIV ecosystem Colin Morikawa’s return to the winner’s circle at Pebble Beach, ending a 28-month drought and looking like the Morikawa who won majors early in his career Scottie Scheffler’s continued run of dominance, including a Sunday surge featuring three eagles and the kind of week-to-week consistency that inevitably triggers Tiger-era comparisons Trey and Justin also dig into what LIV can (and can’t) take from a moment like Anthony Kim’s — specifically the value of an authentic sports story that you can’t manufacture, buy, or script. On the PGA Tour side, they address the reaction to scoring at Pebble Beach and why the U.S. Open setup is a completely different animal than the Pro-Am environment, including the time-of-year differences and how the USGA defends the course. From there, the conversation touches on the broader landscape: where Morikawa fits among the elite when his iron play is dialed, what makes Scheffler’s consistency so rare, and why golf’s mental game can expose even the best players in the world. Finally, the episode pivots into TGL — what it is, who it’s for, why it’s been working early, and why it’s best understood as an additive product to the golf calendar rather than a replacement for traditional competition. Golf Live will be interactive — Trey will have the comments open during the show and will pull viewer questions and reactions into the conversation in real time. The weekly cadence starts March 3. See you live. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    43 min
  4. Colin Morikawa Wins at Pebble — And Scottie Scheffler Isn’t Slowing Down

    17/02

    Colin Morikawa Wins at Pebble — And Scottie Scheffler Isn’t Slowing Down

    Colin Morikawa is back in the winner’s circle. After 28 months without a victory, the two-time major champion closed out a loaded field at Pebble Beach, holding off a late charge from Scottie Scheffler to win on the PGA Tour. It wasn’t just another February event on the schedule. It was a reminder of who Morikawa has been — and who he may still become. Morikawa burst onto the scene in 2020 by winning the PGA Championship at Harding Park, then followed it with an Open Championship in 2021. Before turning 25, he had won two major championships and a World Golf Championship — a résumé shared by only one other player in modern golf history: Tiger Woods. But after that meteoric rise came a stretch of inconsistency, including a painful Sunday collapse at Kapalua that seemed to stall his momentum. At Pebble Beach, he looked composed again. Elite iron play. Control under pressure. Birdies when he needed them. And most importantly, the ability to respond when the best player in the world made a move. Scottie Scheffler continued his remarkable run of consistency, firing a 63 on Sunday with three eagles to briefly tie for the lead. He now owns eight straight top-four finishes on the PGA Tour — a streak matched only by Tiger Woods over the last 40 years. Scheffler didn’t win, but he once again proved he is the most reliable force in the game right now. In this recap from Pebble Beach, Trey Wingo breaks down: How Morikawa rebuilt his game after nearly three years without a win What his iron play still says about his ceiling Why Scheffler’s consistency deserves appreciation — and perspective The historical comparisons to Tiger Woods and why context matters The conversation around Pebble Beach as a future U.S. Open venue Why panic over low scores at Pebble is misplaced There has also been chatter about whether Pebble Beach has “run its course” as a championship test after a winning score of 22-under par. That debate ignores reality. The course setup for a February PGA Tour stop is not the same as a U.S. Open in June. Pebble Beach remains one of the anchor venues in championship golf, not just because of difficulty, but because of history, atmosphere, and its place in the sport’s identity. Pebble is not going anywhere. The U.S. Open will return. And the mystique of Stillwater Cove, 17-Mile Drive, and the Monterey Peninsula remains part of what makes major championship golf compelling. Morikawa’s win reopens the conversation about his long-term trajectory. Scheffler’s run continues to invite comparison to the modern standard. And Pebble Beach once again reminded us why perspective matters when evaluating great performances in golf. This episode looks beyond the final leaderboard and puts the week in context — where Morikawa stands, how Scheffler fits into history, and why Pebble Beach still matters. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    16 min

Sobre

The Wingo Network is the podcast network led by Trey Wingo, built for fans who want substance over noise. This is the home for smart, adult sports conversation across multiple shows, anchored by credibility, access, and experience. From long-form analysis and reporting to thoughtful interviews and on-course storytelling, every show respects the audience and the game. Shows include Straight Facts, Homie and Trey Wingo Golf, with more to come. Each show is united by one standard: real insight, no hot takes.

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